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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: author/illustrator, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 7 of 7
1. Jonathan Bean – Illustrator Interview

Jonathan Bean has a knack of writing picture books with families I want to belong to and characters I want to be. Such levels of identification are rare for me with picture books compared to MG and YA novels. I … Continue reading

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2. Picture Book Game Show- Guess The Children's Author



Game show music playing
Come on down! Today we are playing a quiz called Guess The Children's Author.


It's simple to play. I'm going to give you clues (hopefully not too obvious) to guess who the author is. The answers will be at the bottom of the page. My son and I were playing a similar game recently showing off our knowledge of movie stars. So let us begin.

      Who Am I?

1. *I was born in Kent, in the United Kingdom.
    *My family moved to South Australia to set up a farm in 1879.
    *When I was eight years old my father bought me a pony, Brownie.
    *I fell in love with the bush and spent my childhood painting with watercolours and writing stories.
    *I studied Art back in the UK and published my first book 'About Us.'
*  I am best known for my stories about gumnut babies or bush babies.


2.  *I was born in Hampstead, London.
      *I studied Drama and French at the University of Bristol.
      *I have written a number of plays for school drama groups, songs for children's t.v and a phonics   reading scheme called 'Songbirds.'
      *I am well known for writing in verse and in 1993, my song, 'A Squash and a Squeeze' was made into my first children's book.
      *My picture books have sold more than 4 million copies in 31 editions worldwide and have also been made into stage productions and a short animated film.


3.  *I was born in Schelffield, Yorkshire.
     *My parents owned a pub in Wyke, Yorkshire.
     *I studied Graphic Design at Leeds College of Art and graduated in 1976.
     *I am fascinated with gorillas and use them often in my picture books.

4.  *I was born in 1949.
     *I write mainly children's comedy books and I have written over 70 picture books.
     *I attended The Canterbury College of Art and I've also worked at the BBC creating children's programs.
     *My best selling book is Doctor Dog.

5.  *I was born in 1977 in Portland, Australia.
     *My art work is illustrated in New York, Dublin, London, Sydney, Washington D.C and Belfast.
     *I am well known for writing and illustrating picture books for children, published by Harper Collins UK and Penguin USA.
     *My picture book, Lost and Found, has been made into animation by London based Studio AKA.

6.  *Husband and wife team, started writing picture books when their children were young.
     *Our first picture book, The Big Honey Pot, was published in 1962 as an imprint of Dr. Seuss's Beginner Book imprint.
     *Our picture book series have been made into child-friendly television shows and have been especially popular in America since 1974.

7. *I was born in Melbourne, Australia in 1946 but grew up in Southern Rhodesia, South Africa.
    *I started my career studying drama and decided to retrain in literacy studies.
    *I worked as an Associate Professor of Literacy Studies, in the School of Education, Flinders University, South Australia.
 &n

4 Comments on Picture Book Game Show- Guess The Children's Author, last added: 8/9/2011
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3. My First Interview


Author and Illustrator, Deirdra Eden Copper, has kindly offered to interview me on her blog
A Storybook World.

I am so grateful for the opportunity Deirdra has given me, because let's face it, it's incredibly hard as an aspiring author to get published in the year 2011. Aspiring Authors today are encouraged to build a social network, an online presence, and a writing platform, to make the transition into being a published author a rewarding experience for all involved.

I'm building that platform by making amazing writer friends, developing my writing skills, entering competitions, and fine tuning my stories so that they sound as good as they read.

Thanks Deirdra for helping me build that platform.

http://astorybookworld.blogspot.com/

0 Comments on My First Interview as of 1/1/1900
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4. Book Signing – Clinton Book Shop

Lisa Falkenstern is having a book launch and signing at the Clinton Book Shop on August 13th from 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM for her new book, A DRAGON MOVES IN.  There will be refreshments along with some dragon theme cupcakes.  She will be happy to sign any books, and she will be doing a little drawings in each one.   If anyone wants a signed book, they have to pre-order it at the Clinton Book Shop at 908-735-8811.

If you can stop out to support Lisa and make sure you pre-order her book if you plan to attend.

Here’s the Kirkus Review:

A DRAGON MOVES IN
Author: Falkenstern, Lisa
Illustrator: Falkenstern, Lisa

Review Date: August 1, 2011
Publisher:Marshall Cavendish
Pages: 32
Price ( Hardcover ): $16.99
Price ( e-book ): $16.99
Publication Date: September 1, 2011
ISBN ( Hardcover ): 978-0-7614-5947-7
ISBN ( e-book ): 978-0-7614-5995-8
Category: Picture Books

It takes a lot of love—and imagination—to raise a dragon.

Rabbit and Hedgehog enjoy a nice spring picnic on a hillside below their house, while two mice and a frog patiently sit nearby, waiting for crumbs.   Suddenly, the rock that Rabbit is sitting on begins to rumble ominously.   It’s not an earthquake, it’s an egg about to hatch. Out comes a baby dragon! The picnic’s definitely over; Hedgehog and Rabbit take the tiny beast home.  While he’s small, the trio has a lot of fun, at tea parties, fairs and campouts and in the pumpkin patch. But as the little dragon begins to grow bigger and bigger, so do the problems of his adoptive parents in raising him. Dragon’s appetite is enormous, and so is his body, literally busting out of Rabbit and Hedgehog’s home at one point. There’s only one thing to do. Working together, the three of them build a big castle, all gray stone with several red-roofed turrets, for them to live in. And their dragon ward shows his appreciation by breathing a sky full of fireworks into the air. Falkerstern’s oils have depth and warmth, and, though her animals are anthropomorphized, they’re closer in authenticity to nature photos than cartoons.

Gentle country concoction, two parts Beatrix Potter and one part Cressida Cowell. (Picture book. 3-6) 

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


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5. Illustrator Saturday – Brian Lies

I thought I would start with Brian Lies latest book cover, which recently won Brian the Crystal Kite Award.  I figured one look and you would see why his book won that award and too many others to list.

Brian Lies is a native of Princeton, NJ, who graduated from Brown University in 1985 with a degree in British and American Literature. He attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for two and a half years, and began doing editorial page illustrations for numerous publications, including the Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune and Christian Science Monitor. He illustrated his first children’s book for Houghton Mifflin Co. in 1989, and has since illustrated twenty others, including his New York Times bestsellers Bats at the Library (2008) and Bats at the Beach (2006), as well as Hamlet and the Enormous Chinese Dragon Kite (1994) and Hamlet and the Magnificent Sandcastle (2001), which he also wrote. Brian is a frequent contributor to Cricket, Spider, and Ladybug magazines, has shown his work in galleries around the country, and enjoys visiting schools to talk with students about writing and illustrating stories. He and his wife, Laurel, live in Duxbury, MA with their daughter, a cat and a hamster.

I love how Brian shows us his process. Here’s Brian:

In setting up a scene, I draw from imagination, but bring in research. For Bats at the Library, I wanted the setting to be my favorite library building, the Riverside (IL) Public Library, in the town where my Dad grew up. I live in Massachusetts, and hadn’t seen the library in the 28 years since my grandparents died, so I flew to Chicago and spent three days in the library, taking over 300 photos, doing detailed drawings of the building, and working on revisions, with an eye to having the feel of the building infuse the writing. I’m not slavish about copying from reference photos—I don’t set up a complete scene and then just copy it. But I like to get details right—that helps readers slip into the world I’m trying to create—and so lots of different elements I’ve seen will find themselves in a drawing I do after the research. When I visit schools, I talk about using unusual, specific details in both writing and artwork to create a feeling of reality within a story. A car in the driveway is dull; a blood-red convertible with ivory seats and a broken headlight awakens the brain and draws you into the storyteller’s voice.

Brian’s final sketch. When I’m working on a book, I get feedback on my sketches from the art director. He may have some production concern I’m unaware of, and has a fresh eye and can point out inconsistencies or weaknesses in storytelling I can’t see because I’ve been too close to the story. My editor also comments on the pictures as well as the story, and between the two of them, I’ve got a great team to help steer the story to its strongest self. 

The transfer. When I’m painting one of my pictures, the first step is to transfer a copy of the finished drawing to the paper on which I’ll be painting, most often Strathmore Series 400 or 500 vellum surface paper. I use

3 Comments on Illustrator Saturday – Brian Lies, last added: 5/22/2011
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6. Illustrator Saturday – Amalia Hoffman

Amalia Hoffman is the author and illustrator of several picture books including The Klezmer Bunch and Purim Goodies. She also illustrated Friday Night with the Pope, written by Jacques J.M. Shore. Currently she is completing a picture book about the Spanish architect, Antonio Gaudi.

She received the prestigious Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators 2005 award for picture books illustration in the category of Fantasy.  In 2007 she was a finalist in The Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators storytelling competition.

Her art is included in the permanent collections of the New York City Public Library and the senate offices in Washington DC.  She has exhibited widely in galleries and museums around the country.  You also may have seen her artistic talent while shopping in New York, since she has created many of the innovative window displays you have seen in some of the top leading stores in New York City.

Amalia holds a Masters degree in art and art education from New York University and a Bachelor of Fine Arts, with honors from Pratt Institute.

Here is some examples of Amalia’s talent:

Next Five Illustrations from From The Klezmer Bunch.  Amalia works in watercolor and color pencil.

From Friday Night with the Pope

From Purium Goodies

Collage Picture Book

Example of Paper Sculpture

Art for Store Window

To see more visit http://www.amaliahoffman.com

Hope you enjoyed viewing Amalia’s art and thanks for visiting.

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


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7. Aaron Zenz: Inside the Creative Mind of a Rising Author/Illustrator


aaronzenzAaron Zenz is the author/illustrator of Hiccupotamus and he’s the hip, groovy dad behind Bookie Woogie, a blog where he and his eldest three children review books and share their fan art. It’s obvious the Z-Family loves kidlit.

Aaron, have you always wanted to be an author/illustrator?

 

Hip and groovy! Lands sakes alive, I’ve never been called either of those before… I’m going to have to look up their definitions.

 

I’ve been writing and illustrating my own stories ever since I was a wee bitty guy. In fact the last time we were over at my folks’ house, the kids and I were looking at the little books my mom has saved that I made when I was as young as three. The creative drive has always been in me, but it wasn’t until later on in life that I thought about it vocationally. Storytelling was just so fun, I think I never really associated it with the “work” world.

It wasn’t even until part way through college that it dawned on me that I wanted a career in art. Later my attention became even more focused when I realized how much I loved the narrative aspect of illustration. I had already begun collecting picture books, long before I dreamed I’d have a chance to participate in that world.

Writing has been interesting. All through life I’d received more comments and recognition for my writing than for my art. I think people simply already knew me as the “art guy,” so my writing came as a surprise. But for me, writing and illustrating are very comparable. They’re both forms of storytelling, and the process for both seems very similar to me.

 

Speaking of collecting picture books, you’ve amassed nearly 3,000 of them. Who are some of your favorite author/illustrators? Whose work has inspired you?

 

cindereyedThe picture book that changed everything for me was Eric Rohmann’s The Cinder-Eyed Cats. From the moment I saw those golden felines staring out at me from the cover, I knew — “I want to do that.” Something inside me leapt from mere interest to passionate longing. I wanted to make images that had the power to summon emotions, be it a sense of mystery… or a belly laugh… or tears. Pictures are powerful. So I’ll always have a soft spot for Eric Rohmann’s work, particularly that book. 

Another person whose work I find consistently engaging is Adam Rex. Whenever I catch wind of his next new project, I find myself waiting with the kind of anticipation people usually reserve for Hollywood’s summer blockbusters.

Many apologies for slipping into name-listing mode, but I’m also greatly inspired by the work of animator Glen Keane and the art of folks like PJ Lynch, Scott Gustafson, and Peter deSeve. Winsor McCay is amazing. And so is NC Wyeth…but for illustrators, loving Wyeth is a requirement.

On the writing side, I read a lot of Beverly Cleary growing up. I also loved HG Wells and Sir AC Doyle. But I think it was Lloyd Alexander who influenced me the most. I lived in his Chronicles of Prydain as a kid.

Your website features two picture book dummies for Hiccupotamus, one from 1996 and another from 2000. Your book was published in 2005. What kept you driving toward the goal of publication year after year?

In 1996 I took a college class on Children’s Literature. It was actually geared toward teachers — how to use books in the classroom kind of stuff. At the end of the course the teacher had everyone try their hand at writing a picture book. That’s where the first dummy came from — worked up over a weekend for that class.

hiccupotamus1Over the years I continued to write and draw. I came up with scores of picture book ideas that I personally found way more exciting than Hiccupotamus. But when I shared things with people, they tended to gravitate to that first story. In fact people would randomly ask me years after seeing it — “Did you ever do anything with that hippo book?” I dinked around with it off and on over the years, pulling it out, working on the tricky rhyme, developing the characters further.

Eventually (and you’re not going to want to hear this…) out of the blue, it was a publisher who approached me. A friend of mine was participating in building a new publishing company. He had seen that first dummy years earlier when we worked together and wondered if I would “let” them publish it as their debut trade book. I had to think about that for all of three seconds! 

So sadly, I don’t have a story about thousands of rejection letters and years of knocking on doors. I invested lots of time into it over those years, but had never yet tried submitting it anywhere. 

The sad part of my story comes later when, after the book’s astonishing sales and whirlwind success, the company folded shortly after the release of Hiccupotamus due to the underhanded dealings of my friend’s partner. But from my understanding, it sold 17,000 copies in its first 4 months, and it continues to do well via a version in Scholastic’s book clubs.

And Marshall Cavendish plans to put it back in print this fall. Woo hoo! Hopefully sales pick up for them just as strong as where they left off. Be watching for it!

I will! And why wouldn’t I want to hear that? It’s an amazing story.

You’ve also illustrated the work of other writers. Can you tell us about the process of interpreting someone else’s words into pictures? How do you get started?

howiemodelsheetFor stories that are character-based, like with Howie, I’ll spend my first energies doing character development. This is my very favorite part of the whole process. I love all the pre-production work… designing the people and critters, trying to infuse them with life and personality. Sara Henderson had described such an energetic ball of fun when writing about Howie. I set two personal goals for myself on the visual side: attempt to make him the cutest little dog you ever saw, and to fill him bursting with life. Hopefully I came close. So before even thinking about the stories themselves, I spent a few days with a tottering stack of library reference books, filling a sketchbook with page after page of Bichon Frise doodles.

leaf21After all the doodling, I make model sheets of the characters with different poses and expressions. Then I’ll finally turn my attention to the actual story and create quick thumbnail sketches of the story, trying to achieve good variety in the compositions. Sometimes this is a challenge. I recently illustrated a story about three leaves, fastened into place on their branch throughout the entire 32 pages. Lots of work went into finding ways to make each page a fun surprise - through coloring and vantage point and framing devices.

The last step, actually making the final art, is the least fun for me — then it becomes work. The subject matter and timetable often dictate the medium. I like working in colored pencil and do it whenever I can, but sometimes I’ll create everything on the computer. For example, with my two Nascar books, it was so much better for me to create mechanical objects digitally - cars and trucks and racetracks. Other times when deadlines are tight, I work on the computer because it’s much faster. The way I use colored pencil is a very timely process.

What is your best advice for new author/illustrators just starting in the business? What do you know now that you wish you knew then?

Well, I’m still among those just starting out, so I myself am listening for anyone who’s got advice!

createheart1createheart2I suggest making sure that you keep your creative endeavors fun. Don’t get caught up in checking off x-number of items on a list in order to obtain a successful career. Create what you love because you love it.

I also know that networking is just as important as what we produce. So try to find creative ways to cross paths with lots of other people. Blogging can be a great way to grow a circle of influence. Like hosting a month long “Love a Kidlit Author” celebration — perfect example of a creative way to strengthen contacts and increase a presence! Good thinkin’! Eventually, the right person will make an offer at the right time, so have a stack of things ready to go when that happens.

Aaron, it’s been a pleasure learning about your creative process. One last question…what’s your favorite kind of chocolate?

I’ll never be a coffee drinker, but I Love a big mug of hot chocolate.  Oooo… I’m going to need one now.

howie1Me, too!

Aaron is generously giving away a signed four-book set of the Howie I Can Read series. Leave a comment to enter the drawing!

Blog or Twitter about Aaron’s interview and receive another two entries.

I’ll announce the winner one week from today!

And stop by again soon…Aaron will share his thoughts on sharing books as a family.

10 Comments on Aaron Zenz: Inside the Creative Mind of a Rising Author/Illustrator, last added: 2/12/2009
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