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Blog: We're Three A Story About Families and the Only Child (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Jessica Burkhart (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I love Fireworks! :) I should be outlining, yet I'm playing...
and

Blog: rhcrayon: The Blog! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Easter Island, October 2006
One of the happiest weeks of my life.
I've been enjoying a little holiday from this blog . . . not because I don't have plenty to say or even a couple already-written entries that I'd like to post. (I do.) It's because every time I come here, I see my last post—about how happy Cornelia Funke's words on writing for children made me. And that makes me happy again, and then I go away to write.
:)
rita
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Blog: Crazy For Kids Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: reading, fun, avatars, widgets, Voki, Add a tag
Well I am feeling mighty pleased with myself now that I have my own talking avatar or Voki. Just click the arrow for play and you'll hear my voice welcoming you to the blog. It was fun and easy to create. Check it out. There is lots to choose from in customizing your Voki. But the voice is yours. You can record your message over the telephone as I did or upload an audio file. It's one more way to add some personality to your blog and make readers feel welcome.
Many thanks to Sue Waters at The Edublogger for highlighting this nifty item. The Edublogger is an online magazine that publishes "Tips, tricks, ideas and help with using web 2.0 technologies and edublogs" for the Edublog community.
Although I am dismayed at the general decline in the amount of time people spend reading, I do love technology. However, at the end of a long day at the computer, the last thing I want to curl up with in front of the fire is a piece of hardware. I want to read print. However, when it's time for technology, I like to think I'm as game as the next gal. Explore what is out there that you can make your own. It can be a lot of fun.

Blog: Barbara Bietz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Sid Fleischman, The Entertainer and the Dybbuk, Sid Fleischman, The Entertainer and the Dybbuk, Add a tag
I was saddened today to hear of the passing of Sid Fleishman. Sid was a gifted writer and his contributions to children's literature will continue to enlighten generations of children. More importantly, Sid was a kind and generous man. I was so thrilled to have the opportunity to interview Sid. To honor him, I am re-posting the interview with a heavy heart. Sid, may your memory be a blessing. Last week at the Jewish Literature for Children conference in Los Angeles, I had the honor of sitting with Newbury author Sid Fleischman. I have read and admired Sid's work for many years, but never had the opportunity to meet him in person. Sid was charming, kind, and gracious enough to blog chat with me about his newest book, THE ENTERTAINER AND THE DYBBUK(Greenwillow), which won a Sydney Taylor Book Award for older readers. Both children and adults should read THE ENTERTAINER AND THE DYBBUK, a tribute to the children of the Holocaust. The story brings to life an important part history through the character of Avrom the dybbuk, who takes over the life of Great Freddie, a ventriloquist. The relationship that develops between the two characters is warm, touching, and surprisingly humorous. I'm thrilled to interview Sid about his latest work.
The Entertainer and the Dybbuk is your first book about the Holocaust. What was the inspiration for the book?
I think every Jewish novelist wants to deal with this most dramatic and disturbing event in our lives. But what can you say? Through the years my thoughts have returned again and again to the nightmare and in particular to the murder, beyond belief, of the 1 1/2 million Jewish children. It was only after I began thinking of a dybbuk as the illuminating character in a novel that I found a fresh way of dealing with the Holocaust.
Do you have experience as a ventriloquist?
None as a performer, though many of my magician friends do vent acts. It is, after all, a bit of magic to throw the voice. Still, when I was nine or ten, I saw an adv in a Johnson Smith catalogue of novelties (magic tricks, joke books, stage beards and makeup, etc.) offering Ventrillo, a device that allowed you to throw your voice into a trunk, and so forth. I believe the price was ten cents. Anyway, I sent for one and was disappointed to receive a rubber warbling device you put on your tongue -- the same device sold to make bird calls. My career as a ventriloquist or bird caller ended on the spot. But in writing the book, I talked over technical problems with friends who were pros.
The concept of a dybbuk might be unfamiliar to kids. How have readers
responded to this aspect of the story?
Yes, even among Jews, I have found only spotty familiarity. But they respond immediately and with fascination when the dybbuk is explained. Kids, especially, to discover there is a well-defined Jewish ghost lurking about. From mail I have received so far, kids especially are enchanted with Avrom, the dybbuk in the novel, and particularly the ending when he tricks the villain into confessing.
Of all the books you have written, do you have a favorite?
Almost always the last book I have written, out of sheer relief to have gotten the story on paper. I'd have to say, the novel I find myself thinking about the most these days is The Entertainer and the Dybbuk. At other times the book that has pleased me the most is By the Great Horn Spoon! and more recently, ESCAPE! The Story of the Great Houdini. Impossible to pick an absolute favorite.
Can we expect another book soon?
Yes. THE TROUBLE BEGINS AT 8

Blog: rhcrayon: The Blog! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Three Men in a Tub (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Some great writing tips from one of my favorite authors, Sid Fleischman, can be found at his cool website. Grazi, Mr. Fleischman.
Looks great! :)
Love the new avatars... and how do you get a twitter icon on your blog?
Teri
Thanks Jessica!
Teri