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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: my half day, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Sylvan Dell's Blog

Sylvan Dell Publishing does a fantastic job of promoting their books in unique and meaningful ways. Have a look at this week's blog post about kids in the kitchen and how you can use cooking to teach science and math skills.

In addition they offer e-books in English and Spanish, all their books have For Creative Minds sections in the back that extend the topic of each book in fun and engaging ways, all the books are curriculum aligned, are Accelerated Reader, and offer tons of online teaching activities online. They are truly unique - delicious, wholesome, healthy brain food. Plus recipes!




2 Comments on Sylvan Dell's Blog, last added: 1/13/2010
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2. Writing with a partner


Current word count: 23,886

New words written: 811

Words til goal: 16,114 / 403 words a day til the end of September

Finished the chapter I was having some problems with this morning. Yay! Looking forward to getting a bunch more done this weekend.

But now, I have a treat: an interview with picture book author Doris Fisher who has a number of books on shelves, some she wrote by herself and some with a partner. I haven’t written with a partner, and I’ve wondered how it works. Does one write and another revise? Do both write during meetings together? Doris will fill us in.

First a little about Doris. She wrote her baby animal rhyming book Happy Birthday to Whooo? by herself, and she has a series of math picture books — One Odd Day, My Even Day and My Half Day — written with Dani Sneed.

Now, onto Doris:

Did you write your first book by yourself or with a partner?

I wrote my first published picture book, Happy Birthday to Whooo? by myself. It is baby animal birth announcements involving word play. Guess which animal has been born, then turn the page to see if the guess was correct. The words and illustrations provide hints.

How did you get together with your co-author, Dani Sneed, for the math books?

My co-author, Dani Sneed, and I had been going to conferences and children’s writing events together for three years. In that time, I discovered I could write rhyme and write it well. Dani had written a math book about odd numbers in paragraphs. One day, she asked me to try to write it in rhyme. Luckily, it rolled right out and became our first book together, One Odd Day, about odd numbers.

How did you and Dani work on the picture books? Did you write only when you were together, or did one write, the other revise?

Because I was writing the entire book in rhyme, by myself, Dani and I got together when the stanzas were basically complete in a first draft and discussed the meter, rhyme and the beginning, middle and end of the book. It was a lot of fun for both of us. She provided the idea and the text, while I put her words into verse. Of course, we went back and forth a lot, until it was what we both wanted.

Our first book, One Odd Day, led to the requests from our publisher, Sylvan Dell, for our following books, My Even Day and My Half Day. They introduce odd numbers, even numbers and fractions. They are not textbooks, but math with a laugh!

What are the differences between writing a picture book by yourself as opposed to writing as a team? Are there benefits/challenges to each?

 When you write with someone, you consider each other’s ideas and comments. The book is not totally your own. Patience and diplomacy are good qualities to have for this type of team work. Give and take and cooperate!

The benefit to writing alone is a complete feeling when finished. With a co-author, there may always be changes and suggestions made in the text, by one of the authors. Co-authorship is fun, but not for everyone.  

On the other hand, two creative minds are always better than one!

What advice do you have for writers who are writing, or considering writing, with a partner? 

Be sure to lay out the groundwork for partnership. How the income will be split, the expenses, the submitting, the author events (hopefully to come) and unexpected bumps in the road. 50/50 for everything is usually expected by a publisher, otherwise, the payments, etc., become too complicated.

Be aware of differences in writing habits, amount of time devoted to the project and the determination to succeed of your partner. Hopefully, both authors have similar goals for the book.

Thanks so much, Doris. Great books and great info.

Anyone else writing with a partner? How are your experiences? Got any other advice or comments?

Write On!

5 Comments on Writing with a partner, last added: 8/22/2009
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3. IRA in ATL


I was in Atlanta for the International Reading Association Annual Convention last week. It was fantastic! We lived in Atlanta for fourteen years but it was different to be a visitor and stay in the Marquis downtown with no worries about driving in horrible traffic. It is also a different city than when we moved away ten years ago - Atlanta gathers no moss. There is a terrific vital feeling to Atlanta but with a casual freshness. It made me miss living there - but then again I didn't have to drive anywhere. I had dinner downtown at a Mexican restaurant on quatro de Mayo with my friend and crit buddy Jenny Murray who was attending the conference, and dinner with my brother in law Robert Lee on the rooftop of Six Feet Under in westside Howell Mill area near my old studio in Murray Mill. Great food, great view, great company!

The convention was a fantastic experience but I never even took my camera out of my bag - so no visual aids. Highlights For Children commissioned David Harrison to do a delightful poem titled You Come, Too! and me to do the art for a poster that they gave away in their booth. David and I were sent to sign and sign we did - hundreds of them! I also had a chance to buy David's new book bugs; poems about creeping things and get that signed by the author as well. It is silly, whimsical, and lovely in its smallness with lots of white space and pitch perfect line drawings by Rob Shepperson. Although I planned on sneaking off the exhibit floor for some of the sessions upstairs I never did find a chance to get away. I really wanted to drop in on Sara Pennypacker and Marla Frazee's session. And Mark Teague's. And about ten other missed opportunities.

It was also very interesting to see an entire catalog from each of the publishers. I got a better sense of what they are all about by seeing the body of work. And I got a ton of freebies! I love freebies! I got Cartooning, The Ultimate Character Design Book by Chris Hart, signed and doodled in. And I picked up a bunch of free f&g's - my very most favorite and sure to be a huge sucess is Grace For President by Kelly DiPucchio, illustrated by LeUyen Pham. It is a fabulous girl-power story with a splash of civics and is illustrated by one of my all time favorites.


I also had a chance to see the advance copy of the next book in the math series I illustrated for Sylvan Dell Publishing, My Half Day by Doris Fisher and Dani Sneed. I am so delighted with this one! Hurray. I was able to sign in the Sylvan Dell booth as well.

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4. Good Times, Noodle Salad*: Grandma’s Feather Bed

Grandma's Feather BedAuthor: John Denver (John Conner)
Illustrator: Christopher Canyon
Published: 2007 Dawn Publications (on JOMB)
ISBN: 1584690968 Chapters.ca Amazon.com

We know, we know! Celebrity-linked children’s books certainly don’t need a mention from little old us, but with a song this belt-outable and illustrations so happy and full of popping off the page family fun, how could we resist?

Other books mentioned:

Other favourite sing-along books on JOMB:

** supply your own tune.

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