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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Steven Kroll, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Free Fall Friday – Pen Awards

amesmallIMG_20110605_083124Have to give a shout out to my friend Ame Dykman who made the 2014 Pen Literary Awards short list. Best of Luck!

2014 PEN LITERARY AWARDS

PEN/Steven Kroll Award for Picture Book Writing ($5,000): To a writer for an exceptional story illustrated in a picture book published in 2013.

Judges: Mac Barnett, Ted Lewin, and Elizabeth Winthrop

Shortlist:

Train (Orchard Books), Elisha Cooper
Tea Party Rules (Viking), Ame Dyckman
The King of Little Things (Peachtree Publishers), Bil Lepp
Crabtree (McSweeney’s McMullens), Jon & Tucker Nichols

- See more at: http://www.pen.org/press-release/2014/06/17/shortlists-announced-2014-pen-literary-awards#sthash.07UYoF42.dpuf

CHECK BACK NEXT FRIDAY FOR JUNE’S FIRST PAGE CRITIQUES BY SARAH LAPOLLA AGENT AT BRADFORD LITERARY.

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


Filed under: Agent, awards, Kudos, Picture Book, Publishing Industry Tagged: Ame Dyckman, Pen Literary Awards, Steven Kroll, Tea Party Rules

6 Comments on Free Fall Friday – Pen Awards, last added: 6/20/2014
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2. Children’s Book Industry Mourns

The Death of a Children’s Book Author by David Caruba 

On Wednesday last week I read with sadness that author Steven Kroll had passed away.  Judging from his output, over 90 published picture books, MG and YAs, you would think he lived to 143.  In actually, he was 69.  And he was funny.  But let’s get to that in a minute.

By all accounts, Steven was a highly successful author, A-tier for at least three decades, maybe more.  He was well liked, sought after by publishers, and respected by other writers.  Yet you’d be hard pressed to find any mention, outside of a single sentence Publisher’s Lunch, of his passing (beyond the obvious—his website is down, or at least it is as I type this).

So to put his death in perspective, to my mind Steven Kroll was a great picture book writer, and a genuinely nice person.  I didn’t know him well personally—only met him once—but did like his work.  And he was funny.  So let’s get into that now.

Long ago, in PTT (pre-Temean Times…I know..perish the thought), the New Jersey chapter was small and based in the Madison area.  Don Hinkle was regional advisor, and we used to host an amazing annual conference of maybe forty members at the Madison Public Library.  Things were more genteel then (writers actually cared about each other and helped each other to succeed), and Don could be counted on to attract a huge number of industry professionals.

Huge being three, maybe four, and they consisted of one or two editors and one or two authors/illustrators.  One of these one year was Steven Kroll.

If memory serves, he was living in New York then, and came armed not PowerPoint slides or elaborate graphics, but with a handful of his picture books.  One featured pigs.  Pigs were funny.  And rather than deliver a Pulitzer speech on tickling young funny bones, Steven read from his stories.  And we all laughed.  During one of the breaks, he hung out.  We swapped jokes (we being members, I was kind of shy back then).  We laughed some more.

I associate him, his picture books, the conference and the laughter, with everything that I liked about being a young writer and trying to break into this industry.  Though I didn’t know Steve Kroll well, I’ll miss him.  I’m sure I’m not the only one who will do so, or who has fond memories of him.  Next time I receive a rejection, I intend to revisit some of his work.  He was funny then, and I have no doubt he’ll bring a smile to me even today.

Thank you David for writing this.  Steven was known to a lot of New Jersey members.  He will be missed.

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


Filed under: Author, children writing, News, picture books Tagged: Children's Book Author, Passed away, Steven Kroll 2 Comments on Children’s Book Industry Mourns, last added: 3/15/2011
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3. Obituary: Steven Kroll

Oh.  I heard with great sorrow that children’s author Steven Kroll passed away earlier this week.  I don’t know how many of you ever had the chance to meet Steven.  He was a big part of PEN here in New York City, which is where I’d usually run into him.  Over the years I got to know his books better, and was able to incorporate a lot of them into my library.  His Pooch on the Loose: A Christmas Adventure gets a lot of play in my library branch, thanks to the cover art.  Stuff!: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle comes in very handy every Earth Day.  I suspect that mine is not the only library lending out Mary McLean and the St. Patrick’s Day Parade at this time of the year.  And I always regretted not reviewing Kroll’s fantastic Dutton title Barbarians.  We’ve more Viking books than you can shake a stick at, but how many books are out there about the Goths, the Huns, and the Mongols as well?  That book was filling a need.

Steven always remembered my name and was always exceedingly nice to me. He left behind more than 90 books for kids, many of which will be remembered far and away into the future.  And I, for one, will miss him very much.

4 Comments on Obituary: Steven Kroll, last added: 3/10/2011
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