Leaf Press (BC) seeks chapbook manuscripts. Accepts wide variety of forms from traditional to experimental. New and established writers welcome. Submit a collection or a sequence of poems (20 pages). Deadline: March 31, 2008. More details...
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Blog: places for writers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: poem, Calls, manuscript, Deadlines: June 08, chapbook, Add a tag
Blog: places for writers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Calls, manuscript, Deadlines: Ongoing, call, Add a tag
Small feminist publisher Second Story Press (ON) is currently accepting unsolicited manuscripts of special interest to women. Accepts fiction, non-fiction and children’s books. More details...
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Blog: Fox In Socks (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: picture book, siblings, sketches, manuscript, Add a tag
A BW and color sketch from my manuscript.

Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: quotation, marks, cases, Reference, UK, publishing, professional, A-Featured, worth, flip, manuscript, Add a tag
By Kirsty OUP-UK
Today I’m bringing you an excerpt from our book The Art of Punctuation by Noah Lukeman. Here Lukeman talks about how a feast or famine of quotation marks can say a lot about the kind of writer (and even the kind of person you are). Who knew that a writer’s use of quotations marks could be so revealing?
In many cases a publishing professional need only flip through a manuscript to get an immediate idea of its worth: quotation marks tell the story. (more…)

Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: halloween, picture book, manuscript, dia de los muertos, Add a tag
This is one of my new picture book manuscripts. I hope it would become a picture book in the future.

Two nights in a row, I have tons of fun.
First I have a magic night and then I have una noche mágica.
My Mamá and Papá help me carve a big pumpkin.
Triangles, circles, goggled eyes, knives going up and down and around and around.
We light the candle inside and the jack-o’-lantern casts a giant shadow.
Magic night, Halloween, here I come!

“Boooo!” I holler and dash to the door. My friends are waiting for me.
Magic night, Halloween, here I come!
We knock at our neighbors’ doors.
“Trick or treat,” I say and smile from ear to ear.
Big, round, colorful, tasty candies fill my bag.
Magic night, Halloween, here I come!
Spooky music starts, children parade, everyone claps.
A little mermaid shakes her tail. A pirate carries a treasure chest.
I moan and move my arms, “Boo!”
Magic night, Halloween, here I come!
In the haunted house, bats fly in the ceiling. Spider’s webs cover the doors. A mummy follows us.
Magic night, Halloween, here I come!
Back at home, we eat our candies and tell scary stories.
“Too bad Halloween is over,” my friends say.
“This is only the beginning. I invite all of you tomorrow to una noche mágica.”
¡Noche mágica, día de los muertos, aquí voy!

My friends help me spread a white tablecloth on our table. We put marigolds in vases and light the candles.
“Uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco,” we say.
Then we put my abuelitos and tíos pictures on the table.
“¡Noche mágica, día de los muertos, aquí voy!”
My friends and I draw and cut bones. We put them together and make calacas.
We dress them with fancy hats, colorful skirts, and elegant suits.
“La Catrina and Señor Calavera!” we say, dancing with the skeletons.
“¡Noche mágica, día de los muertos, aquí voy!”
“The sugar skulls are here!” Papá says.
“Bravo!” we all cheer.
We decorate the skulls with beads, feathers and colored foils. We write our names on the skull’s foreheads.
“¡Noche mágica, día de los muertos, aquí voy!”

“We are ready to help,” I say as my friends and I roll up our sleeves.
We mix water, yeast and flour in a bowl. Then, we add eggs, milk, butter and sugar. We roll the dough to make bones.
“¡Noche mágica, día de los muertos, aquí voy!”
We carry the delicious dishes to the altar: abuelito’s favorite mole, abuelita’s yummy carne asada, and tíos’ special hot chocolate.
We lick our lips.
“¡Noche mágica, día de los muertos, aquí voy!”
Mamá and Papá tell us stories about my abuelitos and tíos. We dance to their favorite music, cha cha cha. The windows open and cool air touches my cheek. The breeze hugs and kisses me just like my abuelitos and tíos used to do.
“¡Noche mágica, día de los muertos, aquí voy!”
We eat the yummy food. Then we go outside and listen to the mariachi music, visit the cemetery, and have a great time.
Yeah! Once a year, I have a double delight.
A magic night and una noche mágica.
Next year, you are invited too!
I love these drawings! You can really feel that pulling and the expressions are brilliant.
Paige, every one of these last sketches and paintings are marvelous. You are able to capture the moment!
And even though it is a moment in time, I don't want to stop looking at these children and enjoying their antics.