Several years ago I attended the SCBWI summer conference and one of the wonderful people I met was Rachel Marks. Super talented as both a writer and an artist, she had an incredible joy for life, due in part to being a cancer survivor. Rachel was rooming with Paige Britt and both of them had […]
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Blog: Write About Now (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Write About Now (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I don’t know if it’s the longer days, or the fact that I’m forever on a school schedule, but I definitely have more energy in the summer. And for me, more energy means more writing, more cooking and baking and more exercise. I’ve never been a fan of the gym, but point me in the […]

Blog: Seize the Day (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: work ethic, respect, writing journey, Add a tag
Hi, folks, this month I'm focusing the blog on the writing journey of PLUMB CRAZY. I'm calling this series: PLUMB CRAZY Journey -- The Good, The Bad, The Ugly and The Transcendent. I'm going to dig deep into the generation of my novel and dynamics of that creative journey. Be aware that I write as Cece Barlow for this work. It will be released at the end of this month.
This week I'm focusing on the the bad. That right! THE BAD! Every third person you meet ( not a scientifically proven fact but a personal observation) wants to write a novel. They also want to spend between fifteen minutes to an hour explaining that novel to you at every event you attend. Then they may suggest that you write it for them, for free of course, since you are a writer and basically have nothing to do. Writing a novel comes with the bad bonus that very few people respect your work. Anyone can write a book. If you are a children's writer, you work for peanuts, and that's if your lucky. Don't expect applause.
Writing a novel is no fun. Bad, bad, stuff. You sit in a chair. My sciatica is terrible. You stare at a blank page, then you write entire chapters that are totally worthless. The next day you repeat this experience. For me, I will repeat this experience 5 days a week for at least 8 months to reach Draft Number One! That draft has more holes than pumice. There will be many many drafts. I work hard. I spend months refining my work. Hours at critique group, hours reading support books, hours rewriting scenes and upping the stakes in anyway I can. There is monotony in this work. No one tells you when you are done. No one tells you when you should just drop this novel and work on something else. There is no way to know if anyone will ever read what you writing. And yet you write anyway.
I don't write novels in a vacuum. Novels are written in the real world. It can be very bad. I wish it were all about drinking cups of tea. I wish it were all about sitting in a beautiful spot and considering my imaginary world. It is not about that. It is about writing in a corner of a hospital waiting room. It's in the middle of a day job that is about a mindless as it gets. It's not just exterior stuff that will get you down. It's about writing yourself into a corner that there is no way out of and you have to scrap the whole draft and work on something else. It't about receiving tons of rejections and still pushing forward. It's about hoping against hope. No easy road, folks..
I hope that you are kind to yourself this week. I get it. We all are facing battles. No work comes easy to any of us. We have to pour our our souls sometimes to find our way.
I hope this doodle makes you smile. Yes, good work comes out of a lovely blobby brown mess.
Because sometimes you have to do something bad to do something good. Oscar Wilde

Blog: Seize the Day (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: writing life, encouragement, writing journey, Add a tag
Hi folks,
I'm continuing my series called Gifts. In the Bible, in the book of Jeremiah, there is a startling prophesy that so resonates with me. A holy people have been sent into exile for seventy years, and they really need to know what is coming to put up with this long exile.
The Lord spoke to his people through Jeremiah. He sent encouragement. I don't know if you have ever read something that you felt was speaking to your situation and your life. I feel that about these words in Jeremiah. This is what I hear.
Your writing life isn't where you want it to be right now, but I am the one who brought you to this place. Don't despair. I want you to keep writing and keep helping other writers. Enjoy any small success that comes your way. And also, the things you learned back you were in the thick of it, I want you to think about those things. Let your creative self prosper and don't complain that you don't have a place to share a voice, that you don't even know how to get there. That's a waste of your time.
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Blog: Write About Now (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: editing, writing, novel writing, outlines, outlining, rewriting, writing inspiration, first draft, writing journey, Wish You Weren't, Add a tag
Many years ago I attended a writing conference and one of the authors recommended writing your entire story, then throwing it away and writing it again. The rationale was that writing the first time was to help you get to know the characters. Writing the second time was to finesse it and tease out your […]
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Blog: Stories. Read'em. Write'em. (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Teachers have to be concerned about whether their students are ready to learn specific concepts. I have found the same thing true with my writing and reading. I recently read Revision and Self-Editing: Techniques for transforming your first draft into a finished novel by James Scott Bell. I got so much out of it! The advice seems clear and meaningful with specific examples. Each chapter ends with writing exercises to help improve your writing craft. The last chapter is a comprehensive revision checklist.
I have read other great books about craft. Is this one better than those? Maybe. But the more likely answer is that I am at a point in my writing journey when I was ready to hear what the book had to offer.
I hope you find the right books and resources when you are ready for what they have to tell you.
Blog: Peg366's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I have been fortunate in this life to be blessed with a child that is not mine biological but truly mine in my heart. Jessica is my niece and we have always shared a special bond. I couldn’t be prouder if I was her mom.
On May 23, 2010 0f this year, I got the chance to see her graduate with honors. It’s hard to believe the little girl who swirled gracefully in front of the TV pretending to be Kristi Y. and Michelle Kwan (as we watched ice skating) is now a young woman.
That young woman has been so supportive of my writing career and I hope I make her as proud of me as I am of her. She’s dared me to dream, helped me learn how to live that dream and pushed me to write on.
Congratulations Jessica.

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Blog: Write About Now (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: writing journey, Oceano Dunes, Oso Flaco Lake, Add a tag
If you knew how long the road ahead was, would you have ventured on?
My husband had the day off yesterday so we drove up the coast to Pismo Beach for brunch. We walked out on the pier, let the kids play in the sand, then headed home the back way, down Highway 1. As we neared Guadalupe, a road sign caught my attention. It was for Oso Flaco Lake, a place I'd never heard of. We decided to check it out, see what we would find.
The road dead ended in a parking lot. We walked down a gravel path that led to a foot bridge that crossed this 75-acre lake. On the other side of the lake, the boardwalk continued for a mile, over a wetland area into the Oceano Dunes. At the end of the trail, we were staring at the Pacific. The wind was howling in our faces, but staring out at this beautiful, protected expanse of sand and water was totally worth the discomfort.
My writing journey has been like this. And I wonder, if I had known ahead of time how far I had to go, how much I had to learn, how much ground I had to cover, would I have been overwhelmed? Would I have given up before I started? Would I have been brave enough to keep going?
I don't know. Because there are still some days when I feel like giving up. But then I read about a friend's success after eight years of trying to get published and I see other friends announcing their book deals. And I realize I can't stop trying. Perseverance is key to success and really, the harder you have to work, the more it means in the end. Right?
No matter how long I'm on this road, I'm going to enjoy the journey. And someday, when I'm staring a book deal in the face, I'll know. Every part of the journey was totally worth it.
Blog: Peg366's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Uncategorized, Writing Journey, Aspiring Writers, Newsletter for Writers, Dare to Dream, Add a tag
Emails of good news are always something I look forward to. Yesterday, I got two of them. The Institute of Children’s Literature’s Web Editor Jan Fields has taken two more articles from me for their newsletter. One article will appear in November 2010 and the other will appear in December 2010.

Blog: Peg366's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Uncategorized, Children's Magazines, Writing Journey, Aspiring Writers, Writer's Tip, Children's Stories/Fiction, Add a tag
http://www.guardian-angel-kids.com is the link if you would like to click on over and see what the new magazine is all about. It’s new to the scene but is destined for success.
Getting one’s foot in the door with regards to a writing career just might start with building “writing credits” by submitting stories and articles to magazines for publishing consideration. Magazine editors are always looking for top-rate articles and stories.
Wondering what type of articles to send. Well, be sure to check out the individual magazine’s submission guidelines before sending in your submission. Read current and back issues to see the style of stories published in it. The more you know about the magazine you’ve selected, the better chance you have at a possible publication.
My most recent acceptance came from the same editor, Jennifer Reed (former Wee Ones Editor now Editor at Guardian Angel Kids), that gave me my very first acceptance in 2006. Jennifer know her stuff and is a pleasure to work with.
Here is an excerpt of my article from Guardian Angel Kids:
The Ragbrai Race
By Peg Finley It’s a warm July day. It’s Ragbrai (pronounced Rag Bray) and means Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Across Iowa. You might ask what is Ragbrai? It is the longest and largest bicycle ride in the state of Iowa with 8500 week-long riders and 1500 daily riders which is when most families participate.
Ragbrai started in 1973 as a challenge issued by Don Kaul, a Washington columnist, to his friend John Karras. John Karras then wrote an article encouraging others to join them. Originally, 300 riders began the ride. At the end, 115 riders completed the tour. The event is an annual ride. Riders come from all over the United States and the world. According to tradition, bicyclers dip their back tires in the Missouri River at the start of the ride and their front tires in the Mississippi River at the ride’s end.
Ragbrai’s average distance is 472 miles. Riders, even kids, bike an average of 68 miles per day. Along the route, eight host communities are picked to be, using one as the starting point and one as the end point. The other six are overnight stopping points.
Bikes of all kinds and bicyclers of all ages, from ten months to 83 years, make the seven day trip with the help of their friends, family and other bicyclers. Tents are pitched and suppers cooked over the grill. Kids sit on the ground listening to music.
Months in advance preparation begin. Local residents offer spots for cyclists to pitch a tent or park their buses. Results from pies baking contest welcome the cyclist. Spaghetti dinners are prepared. Kids’ bike safety courses are offered as well as races are offered.
Blog: Peg366's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I love this post. My friend Bonnie is not only smart and helpful, she’s funny,too. She co-host two chats on twitter. She co-host with Greg Pincus for #kidlitchat on Tuesdays and is also the co-host of #kidlitart on Thursdays with Lyon Martin.
Over the River and Through the Woods
By Bonnie Adamson
When Peg asked me to guest blog about the unique perspective of a writer/illustrator, I immediately thought of hats. I often talk about wearing my writer hat or my illustrator hat–or my designer hat, since I spent a huge chunk of my professional career as a graphic designer.
I tried to picture myself in these hats, working on a story I wanted to write and illustrate. Were the hats perched one on top of the other? Which one did I put on first?
I realized I had stumbled upon a truth about how I work: I don’t wear more than one hat at a time. With me, it’s first one, then the other.
At this point, I was going to move on to a dance metaphor, but that implies a creative process that is much too elegant and refined.
The truth is, two (or three) areas of my brain are constantly bickering like whiny kids on a long car trip with no onboard DVD player. Squabbling siblings! At last, an analogy I could get behind.
Most of my story ideas come first in the form of words: titles, phrases, rhymes or alliterations, some sort of word play. I should stop here and clarify, because I’ve been known to say that my story ideas start with a drawing, usually a tiny pencil sketch. What happens is that the word-association falls flat and plays dead if I can’t develop some sort of image from it.
So the initial conversation goes something like this:
Writer-brain: Crocodile’s Song!
Illustrator-brain: Cool! Green, bumpy thing holding a microphone.
Writer-brain [let’s call her Gwendolyn]: The other animals—
Illustrator-brain [she likes to be called Pookie]: Wait—OTHER animals? Hard-to-draw animals, like, um, zebras?
Gwendolyn: Zebras! What fun. Let’s go research African wildlife.
Pookie: Hold on: is this a jungle or American Idol? I thought the crocodile was SINGING–ooh, I know! He’s in a tuxedo on the deck of a ship—
Gwendolyn: Don’t be ridiculous. This is a bedtime story about sleepy animals.
Pookie: Hmmph. Sounds boring. Unless . . . we could put all the animals in polka-dot jammies—
Gwendolyn: That would be highly inaccurate.
Pookie: Says you.
At which point the different areas of my brain begin insulting one another, and I go make myself a cup of tea while I consider a different career.
The above conversation is a fairly accurate account of the internal arguments over one idea (titled, oddly enough, “Crocodile’s Song”), which after ten years (!) is still trailing around after me, generating file-folders full of revisions and refusing to earn its keep. Gwendolyn and Pookie have never been able to agree on images to match the words, or words to match the images—which also explains why there are lots of crocodiles and sleepy jungle animals who live in my portfolio and will never find another home.
Occasionally, an idea comes along that both Gwendolyn and Pookie can get excited about. This doesn’t mean that I will end up submitting text and art as a package, but it does mean that I have workable images in my head that help me structure the story: sometimes the images are stati
Blog: Peg366's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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They say March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb. I just realized after I posted this that I got the quote wrong. That is how it has been for me, this year at least. It’s fast and furious.
I’m busier than I have ever been before. Of course, most of it is stuff I brought on myself. It’s a fine line balancing a personal life and a writing life and sometimes I have a tendency to want to do both extremely well at the same time.
On the personal front:
Helping to raise kids means dealing with the stuff that comes up in every day situations like getting homework done, or having friends over, or making sure they have clean clothes, etc. It means I have to teach them to pick up after themselves so that they, the two boys, aren’t total slobs. I tell them someday their girlfriends and wives will thank them and me but that doesn’t mean they believe me. They’re only 9 and 11, after all. The good news is they are more helpful than I had thought they would be.
They have challenges that make consistency a must. The older of the two has ADD and the youngest has Aspergers. Helping a sibling with raising his sons is doable but does require patience and lots of planning at times. I’m on a first name basis with most of the teachers, secretaries and other school personnel. I have a huge wall calendar that holds all of the upcoming events. I get emails on a daily basis from the school so that I can track grades, etc. The good news is the boys are doing well.
On the writing front:
Then, there is the uphill struggle to have a writing career. I’m determined to do it but the road has been a long and winding one.
I love writing so that part is the easy part for me. The hard part is chiseling out time for writing. I need time to read, research and write my own stories and books. I need time to find articles, tips, blogsites to recommend and people to interview. The good news is I have never needed a lot of sleep so project are getting done.
All these add their own extra work. For example, once I find people to interview, there’s research on the person, interview questions to write and revise, photos to locate and getting the pull-together interview posted. The good news is that I have several interviews lined up for the next few months.
I’m involved in three critique groups and they take time. I want to give as good as I get if not more. The good news is that I’m the type of person who needs a deadline and there are plenty of those in these groups. The other good news that I’m encouraged to submit my work and am getting it accepted.

Blog: Peg366's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Uncategorized, Picture Books, Author Interviews, Writing Journey, Advice to Writers, Aspiring Writers, On Being a Writer, Add a tag
My guest interview today is with the delightful Rebecca Janni and we’ll be talking about her new picture book, Every Cowgirl Needs a Horse.
Peg: Welcome Becky. It’s so nice to talk with you again. Thanks for taking time away from your busy schedule to chat with my readers.
Becky: Hi Peg. Thank you for the privilege of this interview — and for always encouraging writers to “write on!”
Peg: Did you always know that you wanted to write? I read something about you as a young girl and a novel about a pigtailed girl and her horse. Was she an older version of Nellie Sue the main character in your picture book Every Cowgirl Needs a Horse?
Becky: Yes — always! When I was seven years-old, I set out to write a novel about a girl and her horse — but she was no relation to Nellie Sue and the manuscript is long gone.
Peg: You and I share a passion for writing picture books. But you also write other genres.
Becky: Short stories, poetry, grocery lists. I dabbled in journalism for a little while, and I’ve had some fun freelance gigs. I would still love to write a novel someday . . .
Peg: There will be time for that.
Peg: Every writer’s journey is different. What led you to your writing journey? Were your parents and family supportive of your earlier writings? Was there a teacher somewhere along the time that cheered you on?
Becky: I have amazing parents, and they supported just about anything I wanted to try — except, my dad did tell me that pursuing my fortune in an Alaskan fishery was a bad idea.
Peg: I think I’d probably have to agree with him on that one. Lol.
Becky: They applauded everything I wrote, though my mother is a meticulous proofreader. She’s still catching the typos on my website! She’s a huge help. My teachers were more balanced, giving encouraging but honest feedback on writing projects. They kept me going and growing. In recent years, I’ve discovered the limitless support of local writing groups and SCBWI. And my husband — he’s a gem. He always told me I would be published someday, but I thought he was just teasing me about the production our Christmas letters have become.
Peg: I think it might be a safe thing to say that many authors were first readers. As a child or young adult did you have a favorite author or two?
Becky: Or ten? I loved Laura Ingalls Wilder and Beverly Cleary.
4 Comments on Rebecca Janni’s Every Cowgirl Needs a Horse., last added: 3/1/2010
Such a great point, Stephanie. I also find that if I return to a craft book on writing, I get something different from it the second time. I guess that must be because that's what I'm ready to learn about at that moment!