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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: invisibility, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. The Genius Factor: How to Capture an Invisible Cat

invisiblecatcover Utterly bonkers and enormously fun for all that, full of wackiness, crazy inventions, tight corners and one seriously big (and invisible) problem to solve, The Genius Factor: How to Capture an Invisible Cat by Paul Tobin (@PaulTobin) with illustrations by Thierry Lafontaine (@ThierryArt) has had me and my eleven year old giggling with delight.

It’s a madcap tale of one bright Nate Bannister, who – rather admirably – makes a conscious effort to keep his life interesting; every Friday the 13th he chooses to do three things which are either a challenge or likely to bring some adventure. This year this includes creating an enormous, invisible cat who does indeed make life rather more exciting… by going on the rampage.

Fortunately Nate has a loyal friend (indeed, his only friend), Delphine, and together they try all sorts of things to stop the crazy cat from destroying their neighbourhood. Inventions galore and smart thinking abound, but it’s not at all straight forward, because the Red Death Tea Society (ominous baddies of the most evil variety, who just happen to have astonishing tea brewing skills) are set on preventing Nate and Delphine from saving the day.

This riotous book, ideal for 9-12s, celebrates being a little bit different and being curious and clever. Brilliantly, it does this with a great dose of silliness and laughter, so it always feels exhilarating and never sanctimonious. Pacey, eccentric, highly imaginative and with characters and a story line likely to appeal to both boys and girls, I’d suggest How to Capture an Invisible Cat to anyone who loves off-the-wall adventure and thinking outside the box.

There’s something very mysterious about the Red Death Tea Society and so we couldn’t resist having a go at making up some tea they might enjoy. We gathered our tea making ingredients; a mixture of warm spices (cinammon, cardomum, cloves, star anise), fresh herbs (rosemary, sage mint), citrus zest (lemon and orange) and sugar lumps, plus small muslin squares to make the teabags (alternatively you could make teabags out of coffee filters using these instructions, or be inspired by this tea bag themed pinterest board).

redeathteasociety6

Deciding on tea flavours was a bit like mixing up magic potions.

redeathteasociety5

Once the flavours were carefully selected, the muslin squares (about 12cm long on each side) were tied up with red thread, and a tea bag label was stapled onto the thread (using a knot to hold it in place).

redeathteasociety4

M designed the logo for the teabags, but if you’d like to use them you can download them here (pdf).

Once all our teabags were ready, we made boxes for them:

redeathteasociety7

(Again, if you’d like to re-use the logo, here it is in a large size, idea for using on boxes.)

We filled some our boxes up (you’d better watch out, in case you find one on your doorstep!)…

redeathteasociety3

But we also had to brew some tea for ourselves:

redeathteasociety1

And of course, a cup of tea without a biscuit is no good, so we made some invisible cat cookies.

redeathteasociety0

Yes, you may be able to see them, but this is only because they contain that magical invisible cat de-cloaking device (spoiler alert): peanut butter. (Here’s the recipe we used.)

Whilst making tea and eating peanut butter cat biscuits we listened to:

  • Scat Cat by Eric Herman and the Invisible Band
  • Peanut Butter by The Liverbirds (do watch this!)
  • Invisible Friends by Dog On Fleas

  • Other activities which might work well alongside reading How to Capture an Invisible Cat include:

  • Making inventions! You could design them using carbon paper to get the look (that old fashioned blue ink), or in 3D with lots of junk salvaged from your recycling bins.
  • Playing around with invisibility. I’ve gathered some crafts and activities which explore invisibility here.
  • Thinking of three things which would make your life more interesting and attempting to achieve one of them! They don’t need to be quite as crazy as Nate’s ideas – you could decide as a family to learn a new language or skill, try a new cafe or just asking your local librarian for a book recommendation. And if you want to know when all the Friday the 13ths are – here’s a handy table.

  • If you liked this post you might like these other posts by me:

  • Picture books about tea parties
  • A rather less ominous cat/tea party (how to make a cat cafe)
  • A selection of family friendly books about tinkering – great for inspiring inventions!
  • If you’d like to receive all my posts from this blog please sign up by popping your email address in the box below:

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    Disclosure: I was sent a free review copy of this book by the publisher and this post is the final part of a blog tour that’s been travelling around the world:

    Monday, March 21 — Daddy Mojo (US)

    Tuesday, March 22 — Nerdy Book Club (US)

    Wednesday, March 23 — Jenuine Cupcakes (US)

    Thursday, March 24 — This Kid Reviews Books (US)

    Friday, March 25 — Fiction Fascination (UK)

    Monday, March 28 — Gobblefunked (ANZ)

    Tuesday, March 29 — MumtoFive.com (ANZ)

    Wednesday, March 30 — Playing by the Book (UK)

    InvisibleCat_TourBanner (00000002)

    4 Comments on The Genius Factor: How to Capture an Invisible Cat, last added: 3/30/2016
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    2. Unimaginary Friends

    First came Biggy and Buggy, who were ants. Then came Fuzzypants the tiger. Now there is Robot Doggy and Pirate Puppy.

    pirate puppy

    Pirate Puppy is an invisible dog. And he likes to eat cake and strawberries and today is his birthday.

    When we were opening invisible presents Pirate Puppy jumped out of one and he had a pirate hat so I knew he was a pirate puppy.

    We don’t know where he lives. His job is fighting off bad guys. His job is fighting off pirates. He’s a pirate too but he is a good guy.

    With his menagerie of invisible pals, I wondered how Byron would respond this year’s Caldecott Medal winner, Dan Santat’s The Adventures of Beekle The Unimaginary Friend (aka Beekle). The premise and execution are more visual than a description would do justice, but in a nutshell, Beekle is an imaginary friend waiting, and then searching, for his child.

    beekleCute, I thought, but I wondered if Byron would be confused or upset by the use of the word “imaginary.” His invisible friends are real (just ask him) and he gets upset if you use that word.

    He sat riveted and delighted through all of Beekle, loving the illustrations and giving it good reviews (“That was funny. Read it again.”), but he did want to discuss it. Why were these friends called imaginary? Why were they visible?

    I finally solved this problem by saying Beekle and the other invisible friends were shown as visible in the picture book so it wouldn’t be a bunch of blank pages. Artists can do whatever they want, I said. They can make invisible things visible. They show how things would look if we could see them. And I told him “imaginary” was not always the opposite of “real.”

    harveyByron’s invisible friends are more than make-believe companions. They allow him to improvise stories, to express his moral leanings, to negotiate reality with others. I don’t think they’re inspired, essentially, by being lonely. They’re more complicated than that and multifaceted, involving Byron’s sense of self and the world.

    I think the whole thing is pretty fascinating and wish I had an invisible friend of my own.

     


    Filed under: Miscellaneous Tagged: beekle, imaginary friends, invisibility, parenting, santat

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    3. The Wonder and The Imaginary; 2 very special books indeed

    I believe any book can fuel the imagination when it arrives in the right hands at the right time, but there are also some which explicitly explore how we nurture creativity and create space for inspiration and following our dreams. The Wonder by Faye Hanson and The Imaginary by A.F. Harrold and Emily Gravett are two such books which I’ve read recently and which have left me brimming with delight, hope and happiness and which have sparked hours of inspired play in my children.

    wonderfrontcoverThe Wonder by Faye Hanson is a sumptuous début picture book about a young boy whose head if full of daydreams which transform the humdrum world around him. Time and again adults tell him to get his head out of the clouds and come back to reality, but this is barely possible for a child who finds wonder, curiosity and delight wherever he looks. Finally in art class he’s able to let loose his imagination onto a blank sheet of paper delighting his teacher and filling his parents with pride.

    The child in this story sees ordinary objects but has the imagination to turn them into astonishing stories, breathtaking ideas, and worlds full of adventures waiting to happen. I know I want to foster this ability in my own children (and in myself!); the world becomes more beautiful, richer, and simply more enjoyable when we are able to imagine more than the grey, wet and humdrum daily life that all too often catches us up. This utterly delightful book is an enthusiastic encouragement to let more imagination in to our lives.

    Click to view a larger version of this interior spread from The Wonder by Faye Hanson

    Click to view a larger version (it’s really worth it!) of this interior spread from The Wonder by Faye Hanson

    Hanson’s illustrations are dense, saturated, and rich. Careful use of colour lights up the boy’s dreams in his otherwise sepia coloured life. Limited palettes add to the intensity of these pictures; it’s interesting that their vitality doesn’t come from a rainbow range of paints, but rather from focussing on layer of layer of just a few colours, packed with exquisite detail. There’s a luminosity about the illustrations; some look like they’ve got gold foil or a built-in glow and yet there are no novelty printing techniques here.

    All in all, an exquisite book that will tell anyone you share it with that you value their dreams and want to nurture their ingenuity, inventiveness and individuality.

    imaginarycoverNow let me play devil’s advocate: Is there sometimes a line to be walked between feeding a child’s imagination and yet enabling them to recognise the difference between real life and day dreams? In The Wonder, there are plenty of adults pointing out the apparent problems/risks of day dreaming a great deal. On the other hand, in The Imaginary, a mother fully enters into her daughter’s imaginary world, not only acknowledging an imaginary best friend, but actively supporting this belief by setting places at meal times, packing extra bags, even accepting accidents must be the result of this friend and not the child herself.

    Amanda believes that only she can see her imaginary friend Rudger. But all this changes one day when a mysterious Mr Bunting appears on the doorstep, apparently doing innocent door-to-door market research. But all is not as it seems for it turns out that Mr Bunting has no imagination of his own and can only survive by eating other people’s imaginary friends. He’s sniffed Rudger out and now he’s going to get him, whatever it takes.

    Click to see larger illustration by Emily Gravett , from The Imaginary by A. F. Harrold

    Click to see larger illustration by Emily Gravett, from The Imaginary by A. F. Harrold

    If you’ve ever wondered where imaginary friends come from, and what happens to them when their children grow up and stop day-dreaming this is a book for you. If you love a good villain, adventures which include libraries and narrow escapes you’ll enjoy this too. If you’re a fan of elegant and attractive books you’ll want to feel this between your hands. The illustrations by Emily Gravett are terrific (in every sense) and incredibly atmospheric, magically adding beauty and tension to a story which I thought couldn’t be bettered.

    Intelligent, clever, thoughtful, and packed with seeds of love and inspiration The Imaginary is perhaps my favourite middle grade/young fiction book of the year. If you want a fuller flavour of this gem before hurrying to get it into your hands, head and heart, there’s a full teacher’s guide to The Imaginary available on the Bloomsbury website and you can watch a video of Emily Gravett working on her illustrations here.

    *************

    One of the ways my girls have been inspired in their playing since sharing these books became clear when they told me they wanted to make a star-making machine to go with the one features in The Wonder (see the illustration above).

    M first wrote out some recipes for stars:

    bluegiantrecipe

    redgiantrecipe

    I provided a little food for thought…

    foodforengineers

    …and a selection of machine parts.

    machinepartsJPG

    Several hours later the star machine was coming together

    starmachine1

    buildingmachine

    Next up a selection of star ingredients were sourced:

    staringredients

    The machine was fed…

    feedingmachine

    Can you see the pulses of one star in the making?!

    starinmaking

    And out popped these stars (here’s a tutorial) at the end of the star making process:

    starsfrommachine

    Here’s one just for you:

    endresult

    Whilst making our machine we listened to:

  • Invisible Friends by Dog on Fleas
  • Imaginary Friend by Secret Agent 23 Skidoo
  • ‘Pure Imagination’ from the original Charlie and the Chocolate Factory film
  • Land of Make Believe by Bucks Fizz (Groan!)

  • Other activities which could work well alongside reading The Wonder and The Imaginary include:

  • Creating a wonder wall on which to write all those curious questions you and the kids want to find answers to. There’s a lovely tutorial for creating your own Wonder Wall over on Nurture Store.
  • Going on a Wonder Walk. I’ve been thinking about places which spark the imagination or create a sense of awe and thinking about how I can take the kids to visit these places and see what ideas the experience sparks. In general the sorts of places I think have the potential to ignite wonder include high-up places with views to the horizon, hidden places, for example underground, enormous spaces whether man-made or natural, and dark places lit only by candles or fire. I think these locations could all work as seeds for the imagination, and so during the coming holiday I’m going to try to take the girls to a place that fits each of these descriptions.
  • Spirals feature a great deal in The Wonder‘s artwork. Here are various art projects which might inspire your own spiral creations: spiral mobiles, spiral suncatchers, spiral wall art made from scrap paper and even human spirograph art (you need huge pieces of paper but this looks great fun).

  • How do you foster your kids’ imagination? And your own?

    Disclosure: I was sent free review copies of both books in today’s post.

    3 Comments on The Wonder and The Imaginary; 2 very special books indeed, last added: 12/15/2014
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    4. 2013 NYC Teen Author Festival

    A few days before I left for a research trip to Florence, Italy, I spent this Friday evening at Children's Book World with David Levithan. Of course he is a legend. Of course I'd read many of his books. Of course I'd seen him charm and challenge at a Publishing Perspectives conference. But I hadn't met him in person until that evening, hadn't seen his fabled generosity at work until, at this group session with my friend Jennifer Hubbard, Ellen Hopkins, and Eliot Schrefer, I watched as he put others on his stage.

    Because, in addition to writing bestselling, critically acclaimed books alone and with others, in addition to finding, editing, and believing in some of the most popular young adult books of our time, in addition to being a spokesperson for the possible in literature, David Levithan time and again puts others on his stage. Inviting rising young adult authors to appear with him when he is launching his own books. Serving as a moderator while established young adult authors speak. And spending who knows how many hours putting together what has become a phenomenon: the NYC Teen Author Festival.

    He might have written an entirely new book, I imagine. But he spent time doing this. Over ninety authors from over a dozen publishers, over seven days, to quote David. And we're all hoping that you will both attend and help spread word.

    I'll be whisking away from my Penn teaching/corporate world for the "mega signing" at Books of Wonder on March 24, when I'll remember what it is to be an author again. I've got my fingers crossed that you'll be there.

    And while you are waiting for this fab event, pre-order David's upcoming book, coauthored with Andrea Creamer and edited by my friend Jill Santopolo for that wonderful house, Philomel. It's a really, truly excellent book. How excellent? Read here.

    2013 NYC Teen Author Festival

    http://www.facebook.com/NYCTeenAuthorFestival
    <http://www.facebook.com/NYCTeenAuthorFestival>

    Monday, March 18  (Mulberry Street Branch of the NYPL, 10 Jersey Street b/w Mulberry and Lafayette, 6-8):   

    I’ll Take You There:  A Change of Scenery, A Change of Self

    Description:  In their recent books, each of these authors have plunged their teen characters into new places as a way of revealing their true selves.  We’ll talk about this YA journey narrative – where it comes from, and what it can lead to.

    Gayle Forman
    Kristen-Paige Madonia
    Bennett Madison
    Jennifer E. Smith
    Melissa Walker

    moderator: David Levithan


    Tuesday, March 19  (WORD Bookstore,  7-8:30, 126 Franklin St, Greenpoint):

    The Only Way Out is Through:  Engaging Truth through YA

    Description:  Pain. Confusion. Loss. Mistakes. Revelation. More mistakes. Recovery.  One of the things that makes YA work is its desire to engage the messy truths of both adolescence and life in general.  Here we talk about what it’s like to engage this messy truth, and how to craft it into a story with some kind of form. 

    Crissa Chappell
    Tim Decker
    Ellen Hopkins
    Amy McNamara
    Jessica Verdi

    moderator: David Levithan


    Wednesday. March 20 (42nd St NYPL, South Court room, 6-8): 

    Imagination: A Conversation

    Description:  It’s a given that authors’ minds are very strange, wonderful, twisted, illogical, inventive places.  Here we talk to five rather imaginative authors about how they conjure the worlds in their books and the stories that they tell, along with glimpses of the strange and wonderful worlds they are creating at the present.

    Holly Black
    Lev Grossman
    Michelle Hodkin
    Alaya Johnson
    Robin Wasserman

    moderators:  David Levithan and Chris Shoemaker
                           

    Thursday, March 21:
    SOHO Teen night, 6-9pm (Books of Wonder, 18 W18th St)

    Celebrate the launch of SOHO Teen, featuring readings by Jacquelyn Mitchard, Joy Preble, Margaux Froley, Elizabeth Kiem, Heather Terrell & Ricardo Cortés, and Lisa & Laura Roecker.

                           

    Friday March 22, Symposium (42nd Street NYPL, Berger Forum, 2nd floor, 2-6)

    2:00 – Introduction

    2:10-3:00: He Said, She Said

    Description:  Not to be too mysterious, but I will email these authors separately about what I’m thinking for this.

    He:
    Ted Goeglein
    Gordon Korman
    Lucas Klauss
    Michael Northrop

    She:
    Susane Colasanti
    E. Lockhart
    Carolyn Mackler
    Sarah Mlynowski
    Leila Sales

    moderator:  David Levithan


    3:00-4:00:  Taking a Turn: YA Characters Dealing with Bad and Unexpected Choices

    Description:  In each of these authors’ novels, the main character’s life takes an unexpected twist.  Sometimes this is because of a bad choice.  Sometimes this is because of a secret revealed.  And sometimes it doesn’t feel like a choice at all, but rather a reaction.  We’ll talk about following these characters as they make these choices – both good and bad. Will include brief readings illuminating these choices.

    Caela Carter
    Eireann Corrigan
    Alissa Grosso
    Terra Elan McVoy
    Jacquelyn Mitchard
    Elizabeth Scott
    K. M. Walton

    moderator:  Aaron Hartzler


    4:00-4:10:  Break

    4:10-4:40:  That’s So Nineteenth Century

    Description:  A Conversation About Playing with 19th Century Archetypes in the 21st Century

    Sharon Cameron
    Leanna Renee Hieber
    Stephanie Strohm
    Suzanne Weyn

    Moderator:  Sarah Beth Durst


    4:40-5:30:  Alternate World vs. Imaginary World

    Description:  Of these authors, some have written stories involving alternate or parallel versions of our world, some have made up imaginary worlds for their characters, and still others have written books that do each.  We’ll discuss the decision to either connect the world of a book to our world, or to take it out of the historical context of our world.  How do each strategies help in telling story and developing character?  Is one easier than the other? Is the stepping off point always reality, or can it sometimes be another fictional world?

    Sarah Beth Durst
    Jeff Hirsch
    Emmy Laybourne
    Lauren Miller
    E. C. Myers
    Diana Peterfreund
    Mary Thompson

    Moderator:  Chris Shoemaker


    Friday March 22, Barnes & Noble Reader’s Theater/Signing (Union Square B&N, 33 E 17th St, 7-8:30)

    Eireann Corrigan
    Elizabeth Eulberg
    Jeff Hirsch
    David Levithan
    Rainbow Rowell
    Nova Ren Suma

    Saturday March 23, Symposium (42nd Street NYPL,  Bergen Forum, 2nd Floor, 1-5)

    1:00 – Introduction

    1:10-2:10 – Defying Description:  Tackling the Many Facets of Identity in YA

    Description:  As YA literature evolves, there is more of an acknowledgment of the many facets that go into a teenager’s identity, and even categories that once seemed absolute now have more nuance.  Focusing particularly, but not exclusively, on LGBTQ characters and their depiction, we’ll discuss the complexities about writing about such a complex experience.

    Marissa Calin
    Emily Danforth
    Aaron Hartzler
    A.S. King
    Jacqueline Woodson

    moderator:  David Levithan


    2:10-2:40 -- New Voices Spotlight

    Description:  Each debut author will share a five-minute reading from her or his work

    J. J. Howard
    Kimberly Sabatini
    Tiffany Schmidt
    Greg Takoudes


    2:40-3:30 – Under Many Influences: Shaping Identity When You’re a Teen Girl

    Description: Being a teen girl is to be under many influences – friends, parents, siblings, teachers, favorite bands, favorite boys, favorite web sites.  These authors will talk about the influences that each of their main characters tap into – and then talk about what influences them as writers when they shape these characters.

    Jen Calonita
    Deborah Heiligman
    Hilary Weisman Graham
    Kody Keplinger
    Amy Spalding
    Katie Sise
    Kathryn Williams

    moderator:  Terra Elan McVoy

    3:30-3:40 – Break

    3:40-4:20 – Born This Way: Nature, Nurture, and Paranormalcy

    Description:  Paranormal and supernatural fiction for teens constantly wrestles with issues of identity and the origin of identity.  Whether their characters are born “different” or come into their powers over time, each of these authors uses the supernatural as a way to explore the nature of self.  

    Jessica Brody
    Gina Damico
    Maya Gold
    Alexandra Monir
    Lindsay Ribar
    Jeri Smith-Ready
    Jessica Spotswood

    moderator:  Adrienne Maria Vrettos


    4:20-5:00 – The Next Big Thing

    Description:  Again, not to be too mysterious, but I will email these authors separately about what I’m thinking for this.

    Jocelyn Davies
    Leanna Renee Hieber
    Barry Lyga
    Maryrose Wood


    Saturday March 23:  Mutual Admiration Society reading at McNally Jackson (McNally Jackson, Prince Street, 7-8:30): 

    Sharon Cameron
    A.S. King
    Michael Northrop
    Diana Peterfreund
    Victoria Schwab
    Nova Ren Suma

    hosted by David Levithan


    Sunday March 24:  Our No-Foolin’ Mega-Signing at Books of Wonder (Books of Wonder, 1-4): 

    1-1:45:
    Jessica Brody  (Unremembered, Macmillan)                         
    Marisa Calin  (Between You and Me, Bloomsbury)             
    Jen Calonita  (The Grass is Always Greener, LB)                 
    Sharon Cameron  (The Dark Unwinding, Scholastic)                       
    Caela Carter  (Me, Him, Them, and It, Bloomsbury)            
    Crissa Chappell  (Narc, Flux)             
    Susane Colasanti  (Keep Holding On, Penguin)                                
    Zoraida Cordova  (The Vicious Deep, Sourcebooks)                        
    Gina Damico   (Scorch, HMH)                                  
    Jocelyn Davies  (A Fractured Light, HC)                  
    Sarah Beth Durst  (Vessel, S&S)                               
    Gayle Forman  (Just One Day, Penguin)
    Elizabeth Scott  (Miracle, S&S)         


    1:45-2:30                   
    T. M. Goeglein (Cold Fury, Penguin)                                    
    Hilary Weisman Graham (Reunited, S&S)                                                                            
    Alissa Grosso  (Ferocity Summer, Flux)                                
    Aaron Hartzler  (Rapture Practice, LB)         
    Deborah Heiligman  (Intentions, RH)                       
    Leanna Renee Hieber  (The Twisted Tragedy of Miss Natalie Stewart, Sourcebooks)         
    Jeff Hirsch  (Magisterium, Scholastic)                       
    J. J. Howard  (That Time I Joined the Circus, Scholastic)                 
    Alaya Johnson   (The Summer Prince, Scholastic)     
    Beth Kephart (Small Damages, Penguin)                              
    Kody Keplinger  (A Midsummer’s Nightmare, LB)

    2:30-3:15                   
    A.S. King  (Ask the Passengers, LB)                                    
    Emmy Laybourne  (Monument 14, Macmillan)                                 
    David Levithan  (Every Day, RH)    
    Barry Lyga  (Yesterday Again, Scholastic)                           
    Brian Meehl  (Suck it Up and Die, RH)                                
    Alexandra Monir (Timekeeper, RH)  
    Michael Northrop  (Rotten, Scholastic)                     
    Diana Peterfreund  (For Darkness Shows the Stars, HC)                 
    Lindsay Ribar (The Art of Wishing, Penguin)                      
    Rainbow Rowell  (Eleanor & Park, St. Martin’s)                  
    Kimberly Sabatini  (Touching the Surface, S&S)                  
    Tiffany Schmidt  (Send Me a Sign, Bloomsbury)

    3:15-4:00                   
    Victoria Schwab  (The Archived, Hyperion) 
    Jeri Smith-Ready  (Shine, S&S)
    Amy Spalding  (The Reece Malcolm List, Entangled)                      
    Stephanie Strohm  (Pilgrims Don’t Wear Pink, HMH)                     
    Nova Ren Suma  (17 & Gone, Penguin)                    
    Greg Takoudes  (When We Wuz Famous, Macmillan)         
    Mary Thompson  (Wuftoom, HMH) 
    Jess Verdi  (My Life After Now, Sourcebooks)                                            
    K.M. Walton  (Empty, S&S) 
    Suzanne Weyn  (Dr. Frankenstein’s Daughters, Scholastic)                         
    Kathryn Williams  (Pizza, Love, and Other Stuff That Made Me Famous, Macmillan)                   
     
     



    2 Comments on 2013 NYC Teen Author Festival, last added: 2/8/2013
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    5. Invisibility: Andrea Creamer and David Levithan/Reflections

    This is how it happens:  I write an adult book that Laura Geringer discovers and reads; she gets in touch.  For a year Laura and I talk about how ill-equipped I feel I am to write books for young adults.  A conversation in a Philadelphia restaurant changes everything; I am persuaded to try.  I write what will become several books for Laura, and in the midst of story development, copy editing, cover design, and publicity, I meet Jill Santopolo—utterly adorable, fashion savvy, super smart, wildly well-organized, and Laura's second in command at Laura Geringer Books/HarperTeen, where I will write four books, one of them (The Heart is Not a Size) being Jill's very own.  Then one day Jill calls to say that she is headed to Philomel to join a children's book empire carved out by a man named Michael Green.  I'd really like Michael, Jill says.  She hopes I'll eventually meet him.

    (She is right.  And I do.  Facts made true in reverse order.)

    A few years later, I see Jill again, this time at an ALA event, where she slips me a copy of Between Shades of Gray and whispers two words in my ear:  Tamra Tuller.  Jill and Tamra are, by now, colleagues at Philomel, and Tamra edits the kind of books I like to write.  Jill, looking trademark gorgeous, encourages me to read Ruta Sepetys' international bestseller of a debut novel as proof.  I do.  Again, I am persuaded.  Not long afterwards, I have the great privilege of joining the Philomel family when Tamra reads a book I've been working on for ten years and believes that it has merit. Jill has opened her new home to me, and I am grateful.

    What happens next is that Tamra moves to Chronicle and I, with a book dedicated to her because I do love her that much, move to Chronicle, too.  What happens next is Jill and I remain friends (Jill and I and Michael and Jessica, too (not to mention Laura)).  Which is all a very long way of saying how happy I was to receive two of Jill's newest creations just a few weeks ago.  Last night and early this morning I read the first of them.  It's called Invisibility, it's due out in May, and it is co-authored by Jill's fabulously successful Philomel author, Andrea Cremer (The Nightshade Series) and the big-hearted author/editor/sensation/Lover's Dictionary Guru David Levithan.

    I hear David Levithan—his soulfulness, his tenderness, his yearning, his love—when I read this book. I hear Andrea Cremer—her careful and credible world building, her necessary specificity, her other-worldly imagination.  It's a potent combination in a story about a Manhattan boy whom no one in the world can see.  No one, that is, except for the girl who has moved in down the hall—a girl who has escaped Minnesota with a brother she deeply loves and a mother who cares for them both, but must work long hours to keep her transplanted family afloat.  Cremer and Levithan's Manhattan is tactile, navigable, stewing with smells and scenes.  Their fantasy world—spellcraft, curses, witches, magic—is equally cinematic and engaging.  The love between the invisible boy and the seeing (and, as it turns out, magically gifted) girl feels enduring, and then there's that other kind of love—between Elizabeth and her brother—that gives this story even greater depth and meaning.  The parents aren't nearly bad either (not at all).

    What it is to be invisible.  What it is to see and be seen.  What it is to know there is evil in the world and that any strike against it will scar and (indeed) age those who take a stand.  Invisibility is a fantasy story, but it is more than that, too.  It's a growing-up story in which courage, truth-telling, sacrifice, and vulnerability figure large, and in which love of every kind makes a difference. 


    1 Comments on Invisibility: Andrea Creamer and David Levithan/Reflections, last added: 12/26/2012
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    6. Award winning invisible magic

    My blogging goals this year are twofold (1) to play a more active part in the online, book-celebrating community I so value and (2) to work on a more creative diet when it comes to playing and exploring with my kids. To help me with my first goal, I’m taking part in Gathering Books’ Award Winning Book Challenge throughout the course of 2012 (it’s not too late for you to join!), and today I bring you my first offering – a review of Invisible by Katja Kamm – Winner of the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis for best picture book in 2003.

    Invisible is a wordless book about an afternoon spent in a seaside town full of interesting characters. Not only will you smile at the Kamm’s observations about the rich panoply of life, from nuns to peeing dogs, you’ll enjoy the tricks the pictures play on your eye; on each spread something appears invisible because it blends in with the background colour. Only the negative shape left behind gives a clue as to what has become invisible, and so it becomes a game to see if you can work out what that is before you turn the page.

    The illusions are clever and witty, and the bright, bold, saturated colours give this book a fresh feel. The game is fun even (or perhaps especially) once you know what’s going on – there’s something delightful about being tricked, about falling for the illusion (in this way it reminded me a little of Tullet’s much acclaimed Press Here).

    Image copyright: Katja Kamm

    This spunky book might not appeal to everyone. There’s nudity (well, invisible nudity…), buxom punks, as well as an anatomically correct male dog doing what dogs like best to do on the pavement, and I do feel uncomfortable about the scene where the nuns are frightened by something in the (black) night – it turns out to be a black man. But it’s nevertheless a fun, original read that I’d definitely recommend to anyone interested in illustration or design: I thought Invisible was a breath of fresh air and am delighted to have discovered it thanks to Gathering Books’ Award Winning Book Challenge.

    Of course the girls (and I) wanted to play at being invisible after reading this super book. Making an entire child (or mum) invisible is a little tricky, but I did show the girls how they could make a stamp or a sticker (appear to be) invisible.

    I

    3 Comments on Award winning invisible magic, last added: 1/23/2012
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    7. The Invisible Man

    The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells was just one of those classics I felt I had to read. And I'm glad I did. It had me laughing the whole way! I'm not sure if this was Wells' intention, but that's surely what happened. I just couldn't stop imagining this man running around naked because he'd be seen if he were wearing clothes! I can't imagine how frustrating that must have been for Griffin, the invisible man. He thought up this great idea of how to turn himself invisible, but he can't be invisible completely unless it's a sunny day or pitch dark night....and he's naked.

    Aside from the fact you have to live life naked, if you do put clothes on, your face is still not really visible and that's a problem for the average person. So, you're a person stuck between two worlds: never able to fully belong to either (at least not comfortably or without freaking people out).

    And if that wasn't enough, he starts to go mad because of this inability to live his life. The rawness of this character opens insight into the psyche of humans. What would any of us have done in the same situation? Unable to show ourselves as we truly are and unable to live a life of secrecy. Running from the world that wants to destroy you because you created something no one else can even imagine. The readers are swept up into a whirlwind of emotions from the side of the invisible man himself and the people affected by his actions. A true tale of what could happen if too much power is put into anyone's hands.

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