A new book just hit the shelves, last week. Buddy's Bedtime Battery by Chirstina Geist (published by Random House) is my latest book and I want to take you behind the pages to see how the project progressed.
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Blog: Tim Bowers Art Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, robots, book illustration, pajamas, oil painting, bedtime, children's book, moon, kids books, stars, painting process, rocketship, art studio, tim bowers, beep, christina geist, buddy's bedtime battery, Add a tag
Blog: studio lolo (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: trees gotta dance, twilight, landscape, painting process, studio lolo, Add a tag
Blog: Kayleen West (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ayres Rock, painting process, painting process, lanscape painting, Ayres Rock, Add a tag
Stage 3: Rainbow Over Ayres Rock Oil Painting Contrary to my last post I have not worked much of the foreground. Instead I wanted to work the sky more, lift out the rainbow and finish Ayres rock. I did manage to lift the rainbow however it is too yellow and will need reworking. The sky has improved however I need to remove some of the yellow in the lower area and work the horizon so it ties the
Blog: Kayleen West (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ayres Rock, painting process, oil painting, landscape, Ayres Rock, painting process, Add a tag
Stage One - Rainbow Over Ayres Rock I started the painting from the photo I took of Ayers rock and the rainbow this week. I will post the progress. This is the initial block in which I used acrylics. The second stage will be in oil as I find oil paint easier to blend for things like sky and I am more familiar this medium especially for landscape painting. It was an incredible photo so I hope I
Blog: Neil Gaiman (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: jet lag, William Gibson, Bathing Children - a good thing?, Susanna Clarke on the Stage, Criterion Reading, everybody ought to have a maid?, Add a tag
The event with Susanna Clarke was lovely, except for the, oh, 45 minutes or thereabouts that all 250 of us spent standing outside on the pavement in the cold, waiting for the fire brigade to establish that the problems in the nanotech lab next door were a false alarm.
I was asked tonight who'd win in a fight -- probably a no holds barred cage match, I suspect -- between me and Bill Gibson. I said me, but my daughter Holly, who was there, just laughed at me afterwards and said she couldn't imagine me fighting anyone. Holly says that Me vs Bill Gibson would be like a fight between a baby bunny and a duckling, and she is probably right.
I'm still really jet-lagged. I feel as if the going-to-Japan and the coming-back-from-Japan crash came at the same time -- just had a completely failed conversation with my agent, who soon figured out that the communication things simply wasn't happening, and told me to call him back tomorrow.
...
If you're in the UK, remember that next Tuesday, Oct 2nd is the big event at the Criterion:
Tuesday 02 October 07 Event 422 at 18:00
Neil Gaiman in conversation
Featuring: Neil Gaiman
Exclusive event-only book signing afterwards, at Waterstone's Piccadilly
Don't miss this one-off London appearance by one of the world’s greatest imaginative minds, and author of many bestselling novels, including American Gods, Anansi Boys, and the cult novel Stardust . The film of Stardust, directed by Matthew Vaughan and starring Claire Danes, Charlie Cox, Sienna Miller, Ricky Gervais, Michelle Pfeiffer and Robert De Niro, premieres in London on Wednesday 3 October at Odeon Leicester Square. We have a pair of tickets to the premiere: all ticket-holders to the event will be entered into a draw and the winner will be announced after the performance.Price: £5.00
Venue: Criterion Theatre, Piccadilly http://www.criterion-theatre.co.uk/
http://www.hayfestival.com/wales/browse.aspx?type=date&value=02-Oct-2007
I think I'll probably do a reading from Stardust as part of it. If you want to come, it's always wisest to order tickets early -- there will probably be seats on the night, but you can never be too sure.
(Also the Bath Children's Literary Festival event is this Saturday at 6.00pm -- http://www.bathkidslitfest.co.uk/event_J19.htm for details.)
Mr. Gaiman,I live in Beijing and your CCTV interview just aired (Sept. 25). I was really impressed that you could follow her random questions. I was disappointed that you were not deemed important enough to get the male reporter who usually interviews heads of state. I wanted you to know that the piece had aired and may air again Sept. 26. Thanks, Kade
Not to worry. I'm not a head of state.
Neil, Neil, Neil, Neil! Reading your blog can be so bloodly frustrating! What was your opinion of that Lolita restaurant? What do you, as a father of a young teenage daugther on the threshold of her maidenhood thinks of those young women exploiting the idea of pedophilia?
I'm not comfortable enough with the by-roads of Japanese pop culture to be able to say what exactly was going on in that place, but it didn't seem to be about paedophilia, not in any way I understand the term. It seemed to be about a whole set of cultural cues that I wasn't really able to read -- the clientele were about 60/40 male to female, most of the men were the same age as the girls working there (early 20s), and I got the impression it was much more about the girls getting to exercise their fantasies of being maids, whatever maids were in this context, and the customers of both genders seemed to enjoy playing rock, paper, scissors with them. My opinion was one of, mostly, complete bafflement and bemusement, and I was there because the guide felt that, like the fish market and the Meiji Shrine and the modern art museum, going to one of the maid cafes was one of the unique things about Tokyo.
Hi Neil, I have a quick question about agents and the submission process...
Months ago, shortly after completing my first novel (YA fantasy), I drew up a list of agencies that I thought might be a match. Several envelopes were dispatched to said agents. Fingers were crossed.I waited.Three weeks later, the replies began trickeling in. A few were form rejections; others had some decent comments, but were rejections all the same.Then an unfamiliar envelope fell through the letterbox. It turns out that this was the reply from my Dream Agency (why not aim high?). The gist of the letter was this: Your writing shows great promise, but this is not yet ready for representation. Send us your next project.
Here is my question:My second novel, which I think is a stark improvement on the first, is almost ready. Should I send it exclusively to my new contact at The Literary Agency Of My Dreams? Or should I treat the process exactly as I did first time round, and send out simultaneous submissions? Many thanks for your time.
I don't think there are any rules. If it was me, I'd send it to the new contact who thought you had potential, with a letter saying, you said to send you my next project and this is it, and I'm not showing it to anyone else until you've seen it, because they were nice, and deserve something for that, and if they feel they grew you from a bean they will work harder for you. But there aren't any rules. And if it was me I'd be sending my book to editors and not to agents anyway.
...
Why am I typing? Why aren't I sleeping?
Blog: Neil Gaiman (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Doctor Who, Stardust movies, jet lag, Michael Chabon, get all the way well amacker bullwinkle, Neverwhere deja vu, Roger Avary, Add a tag
So, I'm home and writing this in bed before the day starts and the phone begins to ring. Am expecting the jet lag this week to be pretty hellacious, as it was last time I did one of these "nip across the Atlantic for a few days" jaunts.
Let's see...
The screening for 50 People on Sunday night was nerve-wracking (these were not people chosen for their diplomatic abilities -- if they'd disliked it, I would have known) not least because this was the first time I'd seen something close to a finished cut.
I put up some links to reviews in the last entry. I've noticed a few more: Here's big hairy Mitch Benn on his myspace blog, for example.
Monday morning I had breakfast with Michael Chabon, who had also been to Hay and was staying in my hotel, and then it was interviews, from early in the morning -- mostly magazine pieces with long lead times, but also some TV and radio, most of which will come out in the UK in October when the film does. Lunch was on Rotten Tomatoes UK, and was recorded in a Japanese restaurant for a podcast which will mostly consist of chewing noises I expect.
The oddest moment of the day was being interviewed by the BBC for a BBC4 documentary on Fantasy. They did the interview in an old church in Paddington, in the crypt, and as the car pulled up I had one of those feelings of deja vu that only get when you really have been somewhere before. And as I went down into the crypt, I knew. "We filmed Neverwhere here!" I told the interviewer. "This was the Black Friars' place." I was being interviewed where Richard Mayhew was given his nice cup of tea, before the ordeal.
Then back to Soho for food -- Ten Ten Tai in Brewer Street, which is my favourite unpretentious little Japanese restaurant in London, and is also the nearest eating establishment to Paramount London, so when I'd eaten I walked around the corner and went downstairs and was interviewed by The Man at the Crossroads, Paul Gravett, and answered questions for people who'd just seen Stardust.
Dear Neil,
I was lucky enough to be at the Stardust screening in London on Monday where you also talked about the process of writing the original story, and about your involvement in the film.
I wanted to ask you how it feels to see your original idea filtered through so many different people - going from you, through (in some regards at least) Charles Vess illustrating it, and then through Jane Goldman & Matthew Vaughn in production of the film's script. How does this process change your feelings about & connection to that original idea - if at all?
You see, I really did want to be intelligent and to ask this on Monday. But I was so excited at seeing the film that my brain went a little bit gloopy and wouldn't work properly. So instead I asked about your dog.....
Lou M
The expression on Paul Gravett's face when he realised that the first audience question was "How's your dog" was a wonderful one.
You always fall short of the original idea. Sometimes you make something else on the way. But I feel like Stardust, especially the illustrated one, is very similar to the thing I set out to make in the first place.
The film is a film (and a really good one) which squeezes and pushes and slides in order to tell the story as a movie, and, I think, succeeds beyond my dreams. I think I must like collaborating.
Anyway yesterday Holly and flew home. My dog was happy to see me. Maddy and Holly and Holly's friend Sarah and I watched the first part of the Dr Who two parter (how could I not like an episode which begins on my minus forty-seventh birthday? And has a little girl holding a red balloon?). I had a fight with Holly and Sarah about not watching the next episode without us, of the dammit this is a communal family TV watching experience variety, which I suspect in retrospect I only won because they didn't know where the second half DVD was, so we'll watch that today. Lovely stuff, Paul Cornell should be justly proud. And an enormous relief after the last couple of episodes.
And then bed and, with my sleep schedule all mixed up, not much sleep at all. Oh well.
Hi Neil,
BBC Radio 3 is repeating the documentary on HP Lovecraft you contributed to -- Sunday 10th June at 20:00 BST.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/sundayfeature/pip/96knh/
Best wishes
Tom
Particularly good news as I missed it the first time.
Also, this coming Saturday the Times (the UK newspaper, which is just called the Times) will be publishing an article of me talking about H. G. Wells's short stories.
Which reminds me...
Why is your voice different when you're talking to some anonymous interviewer about Lovecraft from when you're talking to a con audience about Fragile Things? Your "I can't tell you why that is, other than that Lovecraft is Rock and Roll" voice is much lower than your "They're buying my books, just waiting to get sued" voice. Do you deliberately modulate the pitch of your voice to match the situation, or did you get your soul eaten along the way, rendering your voice higher for some unfathomable reason?
which just left me shaking my head in puzzlement. (Does your voice always sound the same, and not change with what you're talking about?)
I met Lynn Hacking from Final Draft at a trade show this weekend, and he told a very funny story about being caught between you and Roger Avery in an argument. So I have to ask: one space or two after the period?
You can actually tell from a script Roger and I have collaborated on, who wrote what, because I always put one space after a full stop, and he puts two. The reason you can tell now is because he has finally given up carefully going through anything I write and inserting that extra space, having given it up as a lost cause.
...
Friends of Amacker's (and those who worry) can follow her medical progress as they put her back together over at http://bullwinkle.org/amacker/, which is the blog her brother is keeping.
...
And I feel guilty I didn't mention this before, as some of the events have already happened, but go to http://www.wkrac.org/stardust/stardust.html to learn about the exhibition of Charles Vess Stardusty stuff at the William King Regional Arts Center "serving far Southwest Virginia and Northeast Tennessee". They have amazing Charles Vess original art, along with the books I handwrote the story in and lots of other cool things.
Blog: Neil Gaiman (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: bees, best books for boys, jet lag, ice cream, Add a tag
Still getting over jet-lag, which seems to have hit me from both directions at once, which is what you get for flying to the UK for three days.
Lots of people have written to tell me about the UK 160 top Books for Boys initiative -- http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/article1796075.ece. It's a sort of government sponsored Guys Read initiative. I'm pleased to be on it (three times), but am a bit puzzled by the list -- I suspect because The Times has left out the categories, age groups and so on that it comes with (eg, the first 14 are obviously "Books of Facts"). I think Neverwhere or Good Omens would be better on the list than the Mirrormask book, but there may have been categories I don't know about.
I didn't really like Michael Hearst's Music For Ice Cream Trucks when I first heard it, but I've discovered it to be the perfect palate-cleanser when iTunes is on random -- the Ice Cream Trucks songs always make me smile and relax when they turn up. I'm not sure I like them as a meal in themselves, but they are amazing at the right time. Much like ice cream.
http://cdbaby.com/cd/michaelhearst
I missed the last visit to the bees this weekend, what with being at Alan and Melinda's wedding, but the Birdchick writes about it at http://www.birdchick.com/2007/05/belated-bee-report-unregulated-comb.html
(you can also read her account of birds spotted out here at http://www.birdchick.com/2007/05/everything-but-oriole.html and her review of the copy of Clan Apis I forced her to read at http://www.birdchick.com/2007/05/clan-apis.html).
I love it! I guess sometimes the trees tire of whispering, so they gotta sing!
This is lovely Lo. Thanks for showing us the steps.
xoxo
Oh how wonderful your post is. I love seeing the progression of the piece. Lovely as always. You are on a roll.
I like so many things about this. But first tell me is this acrylic or oil paint please?
I love how the music bars in the foreground look like a fence across the field...and the notes in the trees like paper that got let loose and flew up and got stuck in the leaves of the trees. A breezy musical day.
thanks for showing your process. Helpful to me to see all the layers.
you've inspired me with this painting! I love watching the steps and the title of the painting is spot on! Trees Gotta Sing...you've touched my heart today!
See what a little retreat will get you?
You KNOW I adored it! Bravo to your husband - great title! Music makes my heart sing.... and the trees, the birds, the flowers, the wind, the sky.....
Beautiful painting - and I think you captured the hues of the sky perfectly! Only a fool would reject this painting!
Love,
♥ Robin ♥
Laurel, this is soooo beautiful. I love the subtle colors. The mysterious "They" have Gotta accept this. How could "They" not?
O my goodness!!!!
What a beautiful work you have created!!!
I was a delight to see this one evolve!
I clicked on each picture and admired everything.
What a talent you are blessed with!
And that sky and colors . I really thought : this is a Lolo sky.
Hope you can stay in this mood....
♥♥♥
>M<
love seeing your process and the painting is just lovely. i do adore trees.
Hi,
Thanks for visiting! I love seeing artist's spaces too. Your painting is lovely-I love the way you have used the musical notes!
I love to see works in progress like this... I learn so much...This piece is an artistic symphony unto itself...absolutely delightful...Hope you sell it immediately! :)
What a treat to see the process. I think this is fantastic. Trees Gotta Sing...perfect title. Some years ago I wrote a poem about trees singing. I will see if I can find it and send it to you.
Great title,,,and I'm lovin' the collage elements to this one.
Great piece! (at each stage)
Very cool piece! I like how you illustrated the process here.
what did i say when i left a comment earlier today...which blogger unceremoniously gobbled up?
first, probably: i love seeing your process
second,probably: the imbedded notes are so cool
third, definitely: this is so serene and vastly calm. somebodies will be very uninformed if they even think about passing over this piece from the artist ms. gaylord.
and last, definitely: when is a chatterbox not a chatterbox? :)
love
ms. kj
I totally agree with you the trees Gotta sing.
The process is so wonderful and thank you for creating trees that sing!
Happy week:)
Hi Laurel! What a wonderful, joyful post this is. Your singing trees do just that and I really enjoyed seeing your painting/collage process. What a clever girl you are!
I think I saw a rabbit being chased over the hill by a bumble bee ... he was the same vanilla-ice-cream-color as your sky, so one can't be certain.
LOLO! this is just FABULOUS!! I love every piece of it and so neat to see the steps! WOW again.
Wonderful!Great painting and concept!I hear music in the air:)
Hello!
Thay sing indeed! Glorious! Thanks for showing your process!
Bravo!! You always inspire me and this is just fabulous!
I'm happy you are sharing your talents and love :)
Have a splendid weekend!
Great idea and execution! The pieces of sheet music and the playful shapes of the trees are a wonderful combination.
This looks so good, Lolo. At first I thought the music bars were going to be a fence. I still kinda like that idea, but your finished painting is definately better. I like this one a lot.