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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Adam Jay Epstein, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Take Two

For better or for worse, as parents, librarians, and teachers, we rely a lot on series to get reluctant readers to keep reading.  Heck, even very strong readers love the predictability and familiarity they have with characters and storylines they’ve encountered before.  To that end, there are some #2 books coming out in new series this fall and they just might be the perfect recommendation for the kids in your library or classroom (or home):

THE FAMILIARS #2: SECRETS OF THE CROWN by Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson

THE MYSTERY OF THE MISSING EVERYTHING by Ben H. Winters

MO WREN, LOST AND FOUND by Tricia Springstubb

THE MAGNIFICENT 12: THE TRAP by Michael Grant

What other series are your kids

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2. While you’re waiting for the last Harry Potter movie…

Just because we work for HarperCollins doesn’t mean that we only read our own books – we frequently exchange books with our colleagues in other publishing houses.  That being said, there are some die-hard Potter fans here in our office (Me!  Me!  Me!) and we’re all completely psyched for the upcoming HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS, PART II.

So while I’m waiting with bated breath for the last movie to come out (July 15th!), I have a few suggestions of Harry Potter read-alikes (click through to read synopses and additional info).  Feel free to share this with the kids in your library!

What do you recommend for kids who have devoured the Harry Potter series and are looking for more of the same?

Also, check out these Harry Potter Read Alike booklists from your colleagues in libraries around the country:

And because we’re just THAT excited, here’s the preview for the last movie, HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS, PART II:

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3. “The Familiars” Halloween Blog Tour

By Adam Jay Epstein & Andrew Jacobson, for The Children’s Book Review
Published: October 7, 2010

With Halloween fast approaching, we thought it was only appropriate for “The Familiars” to celebrate their favorite holiday with a blog tour! We will be trick-or-treating through the blogosphere, and are so excited to be stopping by your neighborhood.

We are also having a special Familiars-themed Halloween Scavenger Hunt! At each stop along the blog tour, we will be asking a trivia question from our book. After you fill in your answer, the letter that falls in the place of the * can be placed in the corresponding number of the larger puzzle. So for example, since this is question number 13, the letter that lands in the space where the * is can be filled in where the 13 is in the larger puzzle. The larger puzzle will form yet another clue, and anyone who answers it correctly will be entered into a drawing for an autographed book as well as a few other Halloween treats!

Be sure to visit The Familiars blog at thefamiliars.blogspot.com to find links to all other blog stops and find out where to send in your answers! All entries must be entered by November 15.

13. Grimslade chases Aldwyn and Gilbert with the aid of an

___ ___ ___ ___ ___     ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___      ___ _*_ ___ ___ ___

Hint:  Chapter Ten, Page 206

11    5    18    8    15    1       9            7    19    14    23    2    25    16    10    12    20
__  __  __  __  __  __  ‘  __        __  __  __   __   __   __   __   __   __   __

17    3    22    6          21     4   24   13
__  __  __   __       __  __  __  __

www.thefamiliars.com (official website)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0djEE4OzdQ (book trailer)

Happy Halloween everyone!
Andrew & Adam

4. Guest Post: “The Familiars” by Adam Jay Epstein & Andrew Jacobson

By Adam Jay Epstein & Andrew Jacobson, for The Children’s Book Review
Published: August 9, 2010

“Archimedes did it in the bathtub, we do it in the shower”

Andrew Jacobson & Adam Jay Epstein

ADAM JAY EPSTEIN spent his childhood in Great Neck, New York, while ANDREW JACOBSON grew up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, but the two met in a parking garage out in Los Angeles. They have been writing for film and television together ever since. The Familiars  is their first book.

One day, Adam asked Andrew, “Are you familiar with what a familiar is?” And from that simple question, Vastia was born, a fantastical world filled with the authors’ shared love of animals and magic. They wrote every word, sentence, and page together, sitting opposite each other.

Adam Jay Epstein lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Jane, their daughters, Penny and Olive, and a black-and-white alley cat who hangs out in their backyard. Andrew Jacobson lives with his wife, Ashley, and their dog, Elvis, four traffic lights away.

THE FAMILIARS will be produced for film by Sam Raimi and Sony Animation.

When faced with the blank computer screen, why is it that sometimes the light goes on in our heads with the proverbial “aha” moment, and other times it’s nothing but tumbleweed? Archimedes, the Greek mathematician and inventor, is said to have shouted “Eureka” upon jumping out of his bathtub after discovering how to calculate whether or not his king’s crown was really pure gold: by measuring how much water it displaces. Thousands of years later, the exclamation can be applied to Einstein’s theory of relativity, Newton discovering gravity, or M. Night Shymalan coming up with the twist ending of The Sixth Sense. The question is, can we train our brains to be more open to these Eureka moments, or is that simply a neurological impossibility?

If you want your own Eureka moment, whatever you do, don’t be actively looking for it. Like a lonely single desperately searching for a mate, oft times the best chance of finding someone is by not looking at all. You can spend all day sitting in front of your computer or a pad of paper struggling to find a great idea, but nine times out of ten the real inspiration will hit you when you’re in the shower or right before you fall asleep.

Here are three techniques that we use to come up with ideas.

1. Keep a notebook next to your bed, in the car, and in the bathroom. This is the Holy Trinity. The three places where inspiration strikes with the greatest frequency and often the best results. Whether you’re starting to doze or just zoning out in mid-day traffic, it seems like these moments of Zen are some of the most consistent idea incubators we’ve come across.

2.
Take a walk. This is one of our favorite times to think. Like John

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