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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Teri Brown, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 13 of 13
1. Book Review: Velvet Undercover by Teri Brown

Title: Velvet Undercover
Author: Teri Brown
Published: 2015
Source: Edelweiss

Summary: After her father disappears, Samantha Donaldson is conscripted to spywork in Germany during WWI.

First Impressions: This felt very WWII to me, perhaps because I've read so many more WWII spy stories in the last few years, so any detail that screamed WWI tripped me up a lot. Not particularly memorable honestly.

Later On: Yep. I still don't remember it very well. Everything sort of fades into a wartime mush in my head.

More: Both Bookshelves of Doom and Ms. Yingling liked it rather more.
Bookshelves of Doom for Kirkus
Ms. Yingling Reads

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2. Ypulse Essentials: PopeTube, 'Hunger Games' News, 'Spore' Game To Target Kids

MTV vamps it up (advertising a new online vampire series called "Valemont" within "The Hills." Plus check out NewTeeVee's review of "Anyone But Me," a coming of age story about young lesbians. The Pope now has his own YouTube channel. And more... Read the rest of this post

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3. She Said- She Said RWA National Conference

What happens when two 2K8ers who've only met online, get together and become roomies for the 2008 RWA (Romance Writers of America) National Conference? Answer: Cute clothes, lots of networking, and really great workshops. And, oh yeah, don't forget the margaritas! Authors Teri Brown and Brooke Taylor ask and answer questions about their conference experience:


Q: What’s it like sharing a room with someone you’ve only “met” online? Were you nervous you wouldn’t get along?

Teri: Oddly enough, I wasn’t that nervous. Brooke and I have known one another for two or three years and I knew I could be a good roomie. It’s all about being courteous. Turns out we got along fabulously. We were both social and independent, so we did things together and apart. Brooke has a wicked sense of humor and we laughed a lot.

Brooke: I’ve exchanged emails with Teri for a long time now, we critted each other’s work, and acknowledged each other in our books, so rooming with her wasn’t scary at all. It turned out to be a lot of fun, and we had a whole “kismet” moment when I unpacked my Magic Bullet blender and she unpacked two margarita glasses.

Q. How do you keep it real as a YA author at a non-YA centric conference?

Teri: There were so many YA people there it wasn’t that hard. I met lots of YA writers that I’d only previously met online. I took workshops aimed at YA writers and then a couple of workshops that were more about the writing life. You know, creative energy type workshops. If I went to a publisher’s spotlight, I made sure they had a YA line so I wouldn’t be wasting time. Also, I was very upfront about my genre… see the t-shirt I wore for the book signing!



Brooke: YA has been growing in RWA by leaps and bounds. We’re even starting a YA chapter. There are more workshops—two years ago there was only one, this year there were 3 or 4. Last year Meg Cabot was even the keynote speaker! Still, I find I must keep my YA identity—I too did it with clothes, check out the sparkly skull-n-crossbones under my signing suit:





Q. How much networking can you really do at a conference? Any tips for introverted writers?

Teri: I did a TON of networking at the conference! It seems like every time I turned around I was meeting an important person. You just have to learn to bring up conversations whenever you meet someone. I once asked someone the type of writing they did, only to learn that it was the senior acquisitions editor for an important publisher.

For introverted writers, it can be quite challenging. Nothing is louder than a group of mostly women writers. I suggest taking breaks, I took myself out to a fancy restaurant for one of my evening meals. I really needed that alone time to recharge.

Brooke: Teri’s not kidding. Almost every time we’d reconnect, she tell me about some one she’d met. I’m not quite that good at meeting new people. For me it is much easier when I’ve met someone online. That gives me some things to talk about. So I try to be part of YA loops and keep up with YA bloggers. That and I bring a blender so if all else fails I can always invite them up to my room for drinks!

Q: What was more valuable for you—the workshops or meeting people?


Brooke: Both. When I first started going to the RWA conference, every day was packed with workshops. I had my schedule and highlighter and used them well. Now, I’m more into catching up with my writer friends and having that all important face time with my agent. It is so much easier to talk face to face about works in progress and career directions. I’m looking into conferences where I can do the same but with my editor.

Teri: Absolutely meeting people. Not only was my networking fabulous, but I made some great long term friends. Don't get me wrong, the workshops were great too, but I loved meeting all the people. I think because writers work on their own so much, the social aspect is very appealing...at least for awhile!

Q: Was there someone you met That you had always wanted to meet?

Brooke: This year I was excited about meeting fellow YA author Alyson Noel. She’s always so supportive and encouraging on the Yahoo teenlit loop and we’ve commented back and forth a few times on each other’s blogs. Plus I’m a total fan girl—love her books!! Anyway, I’d coordinated the National Reader’s Choice Award YA category and knew she had won. I wanted to be sure she was at the conference, because we have a wonderful award ceremony, but I couldn’t tell her she’d won. So I kept asking, so you’re going to be there aren’t you? It was touch and go, but she did come and I’m soooo glad she did. It was wicked cool getting to meet her!! And I was dying to meet Teri Brown, of course!

Teri: There were so many! I've been wanting to meet Rachel Vincent for a long time and we actually got together several times. It was awesome. Also, I have been a fan of Lynda Sandoval's work for ages and she just seems so nice online. We not only met, but hung out awhile with fellow 2K8er's Terri Clark and Brooke Taylor. Lynda is so funny. Just love her.

Q: What tips would you give other writers to get the most out of a conference?


Brooke: Pace yourself. Take breaks, like Teri said. I always take one night off for room service and to rest my feet (they don’t do well in conference shoes!). If you’re a workshop junkie—buy the CD’s—well worth it. I’ve listened to workshops from each year. I pull out my CD’s whenever I have a writing issue to work through and it is just like being there. So don’t kill yourself to get to them all. Make sure you get out and meet people. Take advantage of your local chapter, online friends, and any other networking group you are involved in, find an outgoing person and ask them to introduce you around. Talk to the person sitting next you—I’m still friends with a lady I met at my first conference, at the very first workshop—we were both new and hung out from that point on.

Teri: Don't pack your schedule too full. Leave room for serendipity. At one conference I started talking to a woman who turned out to be Julia Quinn. She invited me to sit with her friends, Jayne Ann Krentz, Catherine Coulter, and Stella Cameron. I had a workshop I was going to take, but figured I could learn more where I was!

Stay tuned all week for more conference advice and gossip from both RWA and SCBWI!

1 Comments on She Said- She Said RWA National Conference, last added: 8/11/2008
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4. Shameless Saturday


Reviews:

N.A. Nelson’s BRINGING THE BOY HOME found to be “refreshing, well put-together, and completely original” at teensreadtoo!

Brooke Taylor’s UNDONE “completely spell binding” at And Another Book Read… AND "seriously amazing!" at Midnight Twillight's Book Blog (be sure to leave a comment for a chance to win an ARC of Undone!)
The Gollywhopper Games by Jody Feldman garnered a couple of local newspaper reviews far away from her hometown ... from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Book Reviews: These puzzlers are treats for tweens and from the Miami Herald Breezing through summer with books that are fun - 06/07/2008 - MiamiHerald.com

Interviews:

Susan Van Hecke interviewed M.P. Barker for Authorlink.com. You can read it out HERE and then go check out the trailer for A DIFFICULT BOY and more on Susan’s blog "Adventures in Authorhood"

Busy Busy:

Teri Brown takes time from her Read My Lips Simon Pulse Launch Gala for a guest blog at And Another Book Read…

Daphne Grab has been very busy the launch of ALIVE AND WELL IN PRAGUE:

Check out her guest blog on Teen Book Review, her interviews with Sea Heidi and Jessica Burkhart, and a review from School Library Journal- here's Daphne’s favorite line:

"The story provides a safe and positive alternative to teens who are hoping for happy endings in their own lives."
Going Live:

The microsite for Sarah Prineas' The Magic Thief is live at http://www.magicthief.com/. It includes games, exclusive content, wallpaper, podcast, etc. so be sure to check it all out!

Check out Terri Clark's funny and fierce book trailer on Youtube for her short story, DON’T MIND ME, in the YA anthology BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO with Ellen Hopkins, Lynda Sandoval and Niki Burnham. Sometimes...breaking up is for the best.

Summer Events:

Look for Zu Vincent at these Upcoming Events:

ALA Book Signings: Front Street will host two signings for Zu Vincent's young adult novel The Lucky Place at the American Library Association's Annual Conference on June 28th & 29th in Anaheim, California.

Zu will present on the panel “Managing Your On-line Career” at Vermont College Masters Program Alumni Weekend on July 13th.

Zu joins other 2K8ers for a panel presentation "Turning Old Writing Tricks into New Reading Tricks for Today's Young Audience " at the 110th California Library Association's Annual Conference & Exhibition in San Jose, California, November 14-17.

Zu's radio interview about writing her novel The Lucky Place first aired on "Nancy's Bookshelf," KCHO 91.7 FM, Saturday, May 24, 2008, at 3 P.M. Pacific Standard Time.
And don't forget Terri Clark, Teri Brown, Brooke Taylor, and Regina Scott will be signing at Readers for Life Literacy Event in San Francisco July 30th.

1 Comments on Shameless Saturday, last added: 6/14/2008
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5. Romance is What Summer is All About!



Attending the Romance Writers of America's National Convention in San Francisco (July 30-August 2nd) will be Terri Clark, Teri Brown, Brooke Taylor, and Regina Scott! All will be participating in the annual “Readers for Life” Literacy Autographing, where over 450 romance-fiction authors will be signing romance books donated by publishers. The signing is open to the public an proceeds of the sales go to literacy charities, so make sure you come by and meet the all the authors!


Regina Scott provides some insight into the Romance Writers of America National Conference held every July:


One of my must-go conferences is the national conference for Romance Writers of America. I’ll be there this year in San Francisco with several other members of the class, including Teri Brown, Terri Clark, and Brooke Taylor. The literacy signing Wednesday afternoon is amazing: over 400 authors packed cheek-to-cheek in a ballroom, madly schmoozing with fans and autographing our books for charity. But my favorite part of the conference is a little-known event called the Beau Monde Soiree. The Beau Monde is the chapter of RWA focused on writing about the Regency period. Wednesday evening after the literacy signing, we gather for period dancing, period card games (and gambling with chocolate coins), exceptional food, and excellent conversation. Many members come in costume. Because it’s a bit difficult to get into the dance moves when everyone dancing is generally female, I decided to come in costume as the “girl dressed like a guy” made famous in romance and historical novels. Thus, Sir Reginald Scott was born. The only problem is that he’s more popular than I am! Now everyone who sees me on Wednesday asks, “So, is Sir Reginald coming tonight?” But at least I get my pick of dance partners, including cool gals like Avon romance author Shirley Karr and Kensington romance author Nonnie St. George.
Isn't Sir Reginald Scott handsome!

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6. Thanks Teri!

We've really enjoyed having her this week, but it's time for us to say goodbye to the wonderful Teri Brown! Be sure to check out her debut book Read My Lips!

1 Comments on Thanks Teri!, last added: 6/6/2008
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7. Day 2: The Inside Scoop on Teri Brown


As promised, today we're getting down with Teri Brown, asking her lots of questions about her life as a writer and her new book Read My Lips! Check it out:



So, where do you do most of your writing? What's it look like? (maybe
include a picture if you can get it!)

I actually work in my dining room, only it’s no longer a dining room. We took out the kitchen table and I bought a corner desk. I have all of my stuff (fax, computer, printer, filing cabinet, supplies, etc.) in one area, which I never had before. And I also have this… the best Christmas present I have ever received.

Oooh, a framed cover flat of Read My Lips! Very nice! Can you tell us how the book came about? How did you begin writing it?

My deaf niece told me about an experience she had with someone who tried to speak to her in sign language even though my niece doesn’t sign. I took that experience and fictionalized it. That turned out to be the first scene in the book.

It's amazing the things that spark our imagination. Did anything surprise you or catch you off guard when you were writing your book?

The first YA I wrote (which wasn’t published) was written pretty much straight through. Maybe it was because I was less experienced as a writer, but the process seemed pretty straight forward. When I started on LIPS I was amazed at how much the characters changed and grew as the story progressed. The plot kept changing too, and I had to go back and rewrite a gazillion times. That totally took me by surprise. Now I know that every book is different!

That's so true! Speaking of other books-imagine you have an offer from your dream press to publish your dream book, no matter how insane or unmarketable it might be (though of course it might *not* be). What story do you want to write next/someday and why?

I actually have two dream stories. One is the one I am working on, a paranormal set in Las Vegas. The characters are so alive in this one, I can’t seem to stop thinking about them. This is pretty unusual because I never thought I would write a paranormal. Even though this is a pretty light paranormal, it still has that element.

The other dream book is partly autobiographical which is probably why I keep putting it off. It’s a coming of age story set in Alfalfa, Oregon where I was raised. It’s going to be called Surviving Alfalfa. Great name, huh? I’m pretty much afraid of getting sued, though!



Clearly Teri's survived Alfalfa and then some! Come back tomorrow to find out just how similar Teri and her skater chick main character Serena really are!

4 Comments on Day 2: The Inside Scoop on Teri Brown, last added: 6/4/2008
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8. Shameless Saturday

Give us a week and SHAZAM good news bursts forth. It's literary lava and we are HOT!


RAVE REVIEWS

Nina Nelson’s Bringing the Boy Home received a glowing review from Kirkus. “"Told in two distinctive voices, this imaginative and beautifully realized novel, set in the Amazon, tells the story of two boys from the fictional Takunami tribe…their stories connect in a surprising yet totally believable way, giving psychological depth to this richly hued novel about the winding turns of destiny and the bonds between father and son, tribe and family.”

The Story Siren said Regina Scott’s “La Petite Four has a little bit of everything; mystery, suspense, romance and of course really beautiful dresses! The plot is interesting and captivating.” They also refer to Regina as an “awesome writer.”

BIZ BUZZ

M.P. Barker got an excellent write up in The Republican and was a featured author on Red Room.

Jennifer Bradbury’s Shift will be published in Dutch!

Teri Brown’s book trailer for Read My Lips is featured on CBS’s You Tube.

Laura Bowers is known for her amusing author interviews. Check out her latest 1-on-1 in which Daphne Grab confesses to singing to her cat.

Not only has Marissa Doyle been a featured author on the Fantasy Debut blogspot, her Bewitching Season was named in the editor's ten best summer reads for older readers in Scholastic’s Instructor, a magazine for teachers.

Sarah Prineas talks about killing your darlings aka revising as a guest blogger on Darcy Patterson’s Revision Notes. Even better, Czech and Slovak rights to The Magic Thief trilogy were sold to publisher Fortuna. That's a total of 12 languages, plus the UK/Australia!

Who knew Lisa Schroeder was an expert juggler?!? But she says as much in this great interview with Cynthia Leitich Smith. And I Heart You, You Haunt Me is going to be published in Polish. It’s official…2k8 is international!

Pittsburgh’s Lux did an awesome interview with Brooke Taylor (her first!). Check it out!

Sarah Beth Durst (Into the Wild) recently interviewed our Zu Vincent about her essay in the Teen Libris anthology, Through the Wardrobe: Your Favorite Authors on C. S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia.

Annie Wedekind’s new website is a must see in addition to her post about the love affair between girls and horses on the Feiwel and Friends blog.

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9. Hurry Up & Wait!

Ask any writer what the worst thing about this industry is and you'll most likely hear...waiting. It seems like an endless loop of hurry-up-and-wait. We hurry to turn things in and then we wait and wait and waaaait some more. Just ask Teri Brown, author of Read My Lips.


My first sale took forever, but I’ll make the first sale story much, much shorter. My first book didn’t sell, much to my agent’s disappointment, (and mine!) but we had high hopes for the second one. In September of 06, we sent it out to a ton of editors. The first rejections were fairly quick, like in the first couple of weeks. Then the waiting began. Over the next eight months, we waited, following up from time to time. A rejection would trickle in here and there until our large list of editors had dwindled. I was working on my next book, but losing heart. Then we got news. A new editor at Simon Pulse, who had recently taken over for the editor we had submitted to back in September, happened to come across my manuscript. She was conversing with my agent on a different book and asked if mine were still available because she was really “enjoying the read.”

Do you want to know how many times I read that sentence? I lost track after like, 100. My agent sent her a quick note telling her it was still available. A few days later the editor wrote back saying she loved it and hoped to have an offer by the next week. It was positive enough that I began doing the happy dance, though part of me couldn’t believe it until the actual offer came in. And there it was. Read My Lips had sold. All it took was eight months, an editor leaving, and a new editor discovering the manuscript. So one thing I’ve learned in this business… never give up!

No doubt about it, sticktoitveness is key! Tomorrow Terri Clark will share her story of dogged determination.

2 Comments on Hurry Up & Wait!, last added: 5/9/2008
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10. A Bouncing Baby Book

In keeping with yesterday's baby theme, we introduce you to the first book baby of Lisa Schroeder, author of the current YA sensation I HEART YOU, YOU HAUNT ME.

My first book sale was in the spring of 2004. I had been seriously writing and submitting stories since 2001, and was about to surpass the 100 mark for total number of rejections. (Now that's persistence!)

I remember I was at work, trying not to fall asleep, because I had been up with a very sick child all night. My husband stayed home with that very sick child while I trudged into work.

Around 2:00, my husband called me and said, "an editor just called you! You're supposed to call her back!"

I grabbed my cell phone and ran outside, wondering if I was going to miss her since I was the West coast and she was on the East coast. When she answered, I said something like, "This is Lisa Schroeder, and I'm so glad you haven't left for the day." She said, "And miss telling you the exciting news? No way!"


She was calling to tell me that Sterling Publishing was interested in publishing my picture book story, BABY CAN'T SLEEP. It was one of my favorite picture book stories that I wrote, so of course I was thrilled.

Today, BABY CAN'T SLEEP is still available, in hard cover as well as a board book format, which makes me happy, since it's my first "baby" and all.

Awww. Don't we just love babies and happy endings? Tomorrow we're going to hear another story about persistence from Teri Brown.

4 Comments on A Bouncing Baby Book, last added: 5/7/2008
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11. When Vacations Stink

We are continuing this week’s vacation stories with a camping story by Teri Brown, author of, Read My Lips. This story isn’t fishy, but it does smell…

My family went camping quite a bit when I was a kid. When we lived in Arizona, our favorite place was White Horse Lake where my parents could fish and I could play in the woods near the lake. One evening we were standing around our campfire roasting marshmallows when a foul scent permeated our campsite. We began sniffing in puzzlement when my Mom screamed from the doorway of our trailer, “Skunk!”

Turns out skunks can’t resist the scent of marshmallows either and had come to investigate. I’d never had a run in with our aroma challenged friends before and froze with my mallow still in the fire. My dad leapt onto the picnic table and told me to run to the camper. I did run, roasting stick and all. By the time I got inside, my marshmallow was flaming and Mom and I tried to blow on it while I waved it around in my excitement. It wasn’t just one skunk, however, but a whole family of them and we watched helplessly why they polished off our bag of marshmallows.

The skunk family visited the campground every evening in search of marshmallows, but that’s okay. I learned to eat them on the run.

Now Jody Feldman, author of The Gollywhopper Games, gives us a little glimpse into what vacations were like in her family!

Imagine three kids sharing a backseat on a cross-country trip. We’re talking 8-hour driving days, my two younger brothers and me. And we’re back there getting tired and needing to stretch out. But with only 18 inches or so per bottom – because, did I mention there were three of us, sharing that backseat? – stretching out was impossible. So what’s a big sister to do? It’s up to the big sister to suggest that the little brother would be oh-so-comfortable, stretched out, all by himself on the floor, transmission hump and all. I suppose I must have been pretty convincing back then.

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12. Playful Little Penguins by Tony Mitton

Long-time readers of this blog know that I adore the work of British poet, Tony Mitton. You may recall me mentioning this book during my interview with Tony Mitton last summer. Originally released in the UK with title Perky Little Penguins, it was brought to the US market with the altered title Playful Little Penguins. While I bemoaned the change as not exactly necessary (as did the folks at Kirkus), I can assure you that the rhymes in this book are tight and, for want of a better word, playful, and that the bright illustrations by Guy Parker-Rees are happy-happy-happy.

The poem is structured in a sort of verse and chorus style. Hence, one "verse" reads: "Playful little penguins/coming out today/looking for their furry friends/ . . . Here they are— hooray!" The verses describe the actions that the penguins take: Throughout the book, the penguins slide and scoot and try to cheer up a baby seal who has been separated from her mother. But the "choruses" are where the emotional payoffs are, in my opinion. They not only sum up, but they state or imply emotion as well. Here's the first "chorus" in the book: "Playful little penguins/in the wintry weather—/that's how penguins like to move,/waddling 'round together." (Togetherness is a big thing for these penguins, and playfulness implies happiness as well, to my thinking.) And here is the very last "chorus" in the book, after the penguins have entertained the seal cub and accomplished their task of distracting her and making her happy until her mother turns up:

Sleepy little penguins
in a happy huddle—
that's how penguins like to rest,
in a cozy cuddle!


Happy sigh. The penguins are drowsy and happy and cozied up together. I expect that most children, upon hitting that last page, with its images of penguins huddled in pairs and groups, will smile broadly, and then say "AGAIN!" And well they should.

Fans of rhyme will love this one for its metric beat, which is based on accented beats per line as opposed to syllable counts: two stressed beats per line, the same formula in "verses" and "choruses". And yet, the what I'm calling the "choruses" has a slightly different feel to it somehow. Perhaps it's that the "choruses" are usually presented together on one page, while the verses are spread across pages, but I think there's something about the "chorus"-feeling parts that requires a slighly slower reading pace when reading it aloud. And this book cries out to be read aloud.

I'd advise folks with young children to get their hands on Tony Mitton's penguins. Whether you choose the Playful or Perky version is up to you.

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13. Under the Radar Tour: Plum and Tony Mitton



Today’s Under the Radar Book suggestion is the sumptuously lovely Plum by the extraordinary Tony Mitton, illustrated by Mary Grand Pré.

Why do I love this book? Is it the feel of the book in my hand? The glorious illustrations by Mary Grand Pré? The wonderful use of language in the poems and the stories they tell, stories that draw you into another place, so that when you reach the end and look up, you’re startled to find that you’re still in your own home, and not actually in the place you’ve been inhabiting in your mind? Of course it’s all three, but that last bit in particular.



I stand by what I said when I first mentioned this book on my blog back in November of 2005 as part of a post about poetry picture book collections:

Plum is a rich, luscious book of poems by British author Tony Mitton. It's a collection of 20 poems, which is not constrained by any single theme. Some of the poems, such as "Mrs. Bhattacharya's Chapati Zap Machine" and "Elegant Elephant Delicatessan", are quite long story poems spread over a number of pages with many illustrations. Others, like "Shore Music" or "Freak Cat-Flea" are short.

This is one of my very favorite poetry picture books ever. The poems are varied, rich, and complex, but readily grasped by children. Mitton uses a variety of poetic forms and vivid imagery to convey his ideas, whether the whimsical single-sentence poem "Flightpath", the sly temptation of "The Snake and the Apple," or the brooding hidden menace of "Green Man Lane." The wonderful illustrations by Mary Grand Pré, known widely for her cover art and illustrations in the United States' editions of the Harry Potter series, make this book a feast for the eyes.


When I mentioned this book back in April, I quoted a bit from the title poem, "Plum." It begins "Don’t be so glum/plum./Don’t feel beaten./You were made/to be eaten." And it ends with a discussion of the plum’s skin, flesh, and life-bearing pit. The illustration that accompanies it is exquisite, rendered in shades of plum (naturally), gold and green, showing a noble bird (an eagle, perhaps) holding a plum aloft with the tips of its wing-feathers, a nest full of plums beneath its talons, whilst off in the distance, seemingly afloat in a lake, is a plum tree in a circle of light that echoes that around the feather-borne plum. Spectacular. (And, as I thought, a complete hit with children, who also enjoyed the William Carlos Williams plum poem, "This is Just to Say".)

This book has won an award – in 2003, it won a Cuffies Award from Publisher’s Weekly for
Best Book of Poetry. But I truly think more folks out there who are interested in poetry collections need to give this one a look-see.

Here’s the last poem in the American version of Plum, one that I used in many of the classrooms I visited back in April as part of National Poetry Week for Children.

Instructions for Growing Poetry

Shut your eyes.
&emsp Open your mind.
&emsp &emsp Look inside.
&emsp &emsp &emsp What do you find?

Something funny?
&emsp Something sad?
&emsp &emsp Something beautiful,
&emsp &emsp &emsp mysterious, mad?

Open your ears.
&emsp Listen well.
&emsp &emsp A word or phrase
&emsp &emsp &emsp begins to swell?

Catch its rhythm.
&emsp Hold its sound.
&emsp &emsp Gently, slowly
&emsp &emsp &emsp roll it round.

Does it please you?
&emsp Does it tease you?
&emsp &emsp Does it ask
&emsp &emsp &emsp to grow and spread?

Now those little
&emsp words are sprouting
&emsp &emsp poetry
&emsp &emsp &emsp inside your head.


But this review isn’t all, duckies. Not by a long shot. Today, I have a particularly special treat, which will make you lust after this book even more, because you are virtually guaranteed to fall in love with its author, the remarkable – and remarkably talented – Tony Mitton.

Tony Mitton has been writing poetry since he was a teen, but only began focusing on writing for children within the past 20 years, give or take. In a profile written for Jubilee Books UK, Tony said "What I probably most like doing is writing poems and verse. I love tinkering with the words until I've got them just right. I've always loved reading poems and stories, and I usually have several books on the go. I have a great interest in folk and fairy tales and legends."

1. I read that PLUM was your first published collection of poems. Can you talk a bit about whether creating a collection of poems is different from writing a picture book or a story in verse? If so, how?

I need to point out that the original UK Plum was different to the US Plum. The US Plum is a picture book illustrated by Mary Grand-Pré and published by Arthur A. Levine Books NY. The UK Plum was published by Scholastic UK and illustrated by Peter Bailey. The UK version was a solo poetry collection with some monochrome illustrations. It contained 49 poems. For his picture book US version, Arthur Levine chose 20 poems from the UK edition and designed his picture book version for an American audience. So when I answer your questions I’ll refer to the original UK version unless I specify otherwise.

For me, creating a collection of poems is very different from writing a picture book or a story in verse. My original collection Plum was selected from a body of perhaps 150 poems written across a period of about 7 years. My editor David Fickling helped me to choose 50 of those poems to form the collection. At his suggestion, I tweaked one or two pieces and dropped one piece altogether. This gave us a collection of 49 poems which created a fairly generous volume. The collection was also varied in that it contained longer, shorter, lyric, narrative, humorous, serious, traditional, contemporary, free verse, and formal verse poems. It was meant to be a miscellany, a collection of heterogeneous poems. That’s my idea of a true poetry collection. Each poem being a thing in itself, as arrived at by the author simply having evolved each individual poem in its own right, as seemed fitting. Allowing form, content, tone, mood etc to find their own relations with each other.

I have at times played different games with poetry books. Fluff was a book in which every poem was about something one might find in a child’s pocket. So that was a book composed thematically. I even made lists of things to write poems about. So the whole creation was more contrived from the outset. Whereas my UK Plum was chosen out of poems I’d simply felt I wanted to write, as a poet, across a number of years.

Writing a picture book text or a verse story is for me a much more singular exercise. If it’s an original plot line, then I allow form and content to evolve together, and accommodate along the way a fair amount of editorial suggestion (a bit like a scriptwriter collecting and responding to input from a team). If I’m retelling in verse a pre-existing tale or legend, then again it’s really a matter of trying to find a form which does justice to the story, finding a way to get the story effectively told in a verse form. But the work is immediately much more focused and directed than with an individual, gratuitous poem, where a phrase or line may just hover around for a while, suggesting ways forward . . . to where?

For me, the work which seems to have the most integrity (in the sense of being free from outside intervention) is the poem which is written simply because it evolves in the mind of the poet. The poem which asks to be written initially for its own sake. The poem free of any outside interest.

(Huzzah!! Poets everywhere are at this moment standing and applauding, I’m sure – I know I found this particularly inspiring and moving. But I digress . . . back to the interview)

2. Were all of the poems in PLUM intended for the collection, or were some of them pre-existing works? (Note: Asked and answered, but I’m letting the question stand because it got this extra tidbit of information)

In a sense I’ve just answered that question. The UK Plum poems were simply written along the way, along with many others. Then 49 poems got chosen for the book, which didn’t even have a title until we’d chosen the poems. It was a very junior designer who came up with the idea of using the poem "Plum" as the title piece. It was much later that Arthur chose his 20 poems for the US picture book. In some sense I was quite removed from the conception and development of that book, which owes its form and shape to Arthur, to Mary (Grandpré) and maybe to a design and art team at Scholastic NY whom I may never have met.

3. Two of the longer poems in PLUM, "Mrs. Bhattacharya's Chapati-Zap Machine" and "The Elegant Elephant Delicatessen", feel almost as if they could have had their own books. Why did you choose to include them as part of the poetry collection instead of sending them out into the world on their own?

I wrote "Mrs Bhattacharya" initially as an intended picture book text, in my early days of trying to break into this medium of work (a hard nut to crack! and just as hard to go on cracking, I find . . .) "Elephant Delicatessen" probably looks that way because of the sumptuous treatment given it by Mary and the design team. But sometimes I’ve found that poems conceived as potential picture book texts have discovered a niche for themselves as narrative poems in poetry collections. As a writer, one only has limited say in what gets published, where and how. One writes, hopes and deals. Some work makes it through, even then, not always in the form originally intended. One’s integrity as a writer is continually compromised by the publishing world, in the hard-nosed business of making a living.

4. According to your bio, you were born in Tripoli, North Africa, and grew up in Africa, Germany, Hong Kong, and England. How have the various locations of your childhood influenced your poetic or storytelling choices?

I’m not sure they have much. I could be wrong about that. But I think my sources are mainly literary, in that they come through reading rather than through travelling. I like the idea of world story, the idea of stories from a range of cultures and locations. For me stories sometimes prompt poetry or verse writing, suggesting either a lyric poem or a verse retelling. I like the kind of cross-cultural fertilisation that then takes place. It’s stimulating and imaginatively encouraging.

5. Several of the poems in PLUM include bits of English and Irish history and/or mythology, including "Green Man Lane," "The Histon Boulder," and "St. Brigid and the Baker."

In The Tale of Tales, out in 2004, animals tell a variety of stories, including an Anansi tale and a retelling of Rip Van Winkle.



It is everywhere compared to "The Canterbury Tales." (Including the favorable review in the NY Times.) Was there any particular reason you were drawn to these particular topics? Did you do much research to write these poems?


Some of such poems have been prompted by places themselves, actual locations visited. Some are the result of encountering them in books (folktale collections, books of local folklore etc). The work has been gathered more by incidental cultural habit and personal literary tastes than by concerted research. Though in setting out on The Tale of Tales I did write down a lot of possible stories to use and characters to tell them. And I wrote a lot of verse retellings that never made it into the final book. Funny, though: The reviewer, Liz Rosenberg, said she found my verse writing clumsy, though she praised my prose (I think . . .). Maybe my verse doesn’t work in American. But verse is what I do. I’m a poet. What DOES she mean? I have an impeccable metric ear. But I work through the stress beats of mainstream British emphasis, not through syllable counting. Maybe she can’t hear that? It’s slightly disconcerting to be told at 56, after a lifetime of reading and writing verse and poetry, that my verse work is creaky . . .. Ah, well. Takes all sorts, I guess . . .. Does she realise my verse deliberately uses standard colloquial stress most of the time? Maybe I'll never know. (Note from KRF: I am certain that writers and poets everywhere have wondered the same thing about reviewers from time immemorial. And that Americans don’t always hear other American accents correctly, let alone proper British English).

6. In 2006, you put out a collection of selected poems called My Hat and All That with Corgi in the U.K. It includes a number of pieces that you've enjoyed performing for and with children. Are there plans for that to be released in the U.S. as well?



I’d like it to be. But though dfb (David Fickling Books) helped me to select the pieces, it’s outletted by Corgi or Random House (their umbrella company). DFB can publish direct into the US, I believe. But I don’t know if Corgi can. And there might be clashes in US with Arthur Levine as some of the pieces in My Hat come from Plum, whose rights in UK have reverted to me (as it’s out of print now) while the US edition is still alive and kicking so I don’t know the protocols on that kind of thing. Publishing and Rights can be so complicated sometimes. And I just want to write things and see them come out looking and sounding good!

7. In an article by Roger Stevens, you indicated that you have quite a number of poems amassed which could be put together to form a collection similar to PLUM. Is any such collection in the works?

Well, yes. (From KRF: YAY!) David Fickling of dfb has asked me to put together another Plum (i.e., another solo collection of a heterogeneous kind) but there is also a follow-up coming to The Tale of Tales first. Again, it’s a set of narrative verse retellings woven together in a prose setting with pics by the same illustrator. That’s pretty much written now. But I’m keen to get back to working on a real solo collection. I feel my credibility as a poet rather depends on doing that. Solo collections are a bit of an issue in bookworld at present as they tend to attract such modest sales, even if their reputation is strong and/or they manage to scoop a prize or honour.



8. In February of this year, your book Perky Little Penguins became available in the U.K. The book is going to be available in the U.S. this November with the title Playful Little Penguins. Is it typical for U.S. publishers to ask you to change words? Not to psychoanalyze you, but how do you feel about that?

I never like it. But I acknowledge that US publishers may have strong marketing issues around certain things. I always battle to be told what the problem is so I can rewrite myself and offer alternatives of my own devising. That’s my way round it. My verse texts are very tightly written in the original so I want to be closely involved with any changes deemed necessary for the US market or audience. That way I keep the texts as close as possible to my own style as I can. I do realise that there are certain realities like the fact that some rhymes I use don’t rhyme in certain parts of America, due to accent. Or that certain turns of phrase are commonplace in UK but not used in US . Or that certain words have different values in the two places. And so on. But in the end I don’t believe in changing text to accommodate a specific market. I like the idea of texts carrying their idiosyncracies with them where they go, and maybe influencing the language communities they land in. I’m an English writer, with an English voice. I’d like individual books to keep their own cultural identities and be what they are. I love the Americanness of American texts, prose or verse. There are many American writings with distinctive American texture and tone. Ditto English. Leave them alone, let them travel, and let the readers read them and learn the interesting differences and varieties of the language. English is so rich and varied and has travelled and adapted so fascinatingly. From Boston to Bombay and back to Bradford or Brighton.

9. What's next?

The follow-up to The Tale of Tales. A yet unnamed new Plum (I hope).
Giant’s Boots -- a book of action rhymes for the very young.
Party Animals -- maybe not released in the states (a picture book)
Farmer Joe and the Music Show -- from the home of Down by the Cool of the Pool (not out till 2008, I think)


I’m working on a new series for Ant Parker/Kingfisher to follow the series called Amazing Machines (Dazzling Diggers, Flashing Fire Engines, etc.) The new series will focus on animals rather than machines. I hope.



Also out from Tony Mitton in the U.S. as of May this year, All Afloat on Noah’s Boat, a retelling of the Noah’s Ark story in verse.




10. Speed round:

Cheese or chocolate?
Both (but not together)
Coffee or tea? Tea, the British way. Strong, with milk, no sugar.
Cats or dogs? Both, so long as they’re not mine.
Favorite color? Rainbow (as it’s so hard to choose) but maybe green?
Favorite snack food? Bananas, cake, chocolate.
Favorite ice cream? Chocolate fudge brownie.
Water or soda? Water (still) (Note for US. readers unfamiliar with the term – he means still water, as opposed to carbonated water)
What's in your CD player/on iTunes right now? Michael McGoldrick / Fused (Celtic pipe music / Irish)
What's the last movie you memorized lines from? The latest Harry Potter movie.... (seriously underrated, those books . . .)

If, like me, you’ve now developed a massive crush on Mr. Mitton, here are some other places you can read him (or read about him) on the web:

Check out Tony’s Author Profile at Scholastic’s Literary Times.

And Poetry International has an article about Tony by Roger Stevens, with links to five of Tony’s poems. "My Hat" is one of the poems in Plum, and is also the title poem for My Hat and All That.

Starting Up a Poem, at Jubilee Books UK.

Tony also participated in a Roundtable of Children’s Poets in 2004.

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