What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Posts

(tagged with 'feathers')

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: feathers, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 8 of 8
1. Feathers Not Just for Flying – Perfect Picture Book Friday.

Title: Feathers Not Just for Flying Written by Melissa Stewart Illustrated by Sarah S. Brannen Published by Charlesbridge, 2014 Ages: 6 through adult Themes: feathers, birds, First lines: Birds and feathers go together, like trees and leaves, like stars and the sky. All … Continue reading

Add a Comment
2. something like a phoenix


Filed under: children's illustration, flying, poetry, songs

4 Comments on something like a phoenix, last added: 9/10/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
3. Crane Wife at Modern Eden Gallery


Hello all! I wanted to let you know about my latest work hanging at the very wonderful Moden Eden gallery in San Francisco, CA! I was lucky enough to be part of their latest group show, "Myth," and returned to a subject I find myself coming back to time and time again; the Japanese folktale The Crane Wife.

More info "behind the work" and purchase info here!
I didn't get to post about the opening reception back on July 14th, but luckily, there is a closing reception in conjunction with North Beach First Fridays on Friday, August 3, 2012.   The closing reception will be held at 403 Francisco Street from 6-9pm.

Facebook event invite here!
http://www.facebook.com/events/449331605088376/

Thanks everyone! : D <3
www.daisychurch.com

0 Comments on Crane Wife at Modern Eden Gallery as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
4. Thankful Thursday: Bend Over....






...let me see you shake a tail feather!!! Remember that song?

I got the sweetest note from Debra Kay last week (with some tail feathers from Oliver) and I think it arrived the same day Oliver got his ATC from me. I love karmic synchronicity!
Debra Kay said that Oliver wanted to send me a piece of his heart but his ass mails better!! Oh, they kill me. What a pair!

Thanks you two. You're a sunny spot in my day too ;)






I also got these beautiful roses from Mimi a few days ago. She has the most beautiful garden. She'll scatter some of Casey's ashes there among the rose bushes and lavender. Thank you Mimi. My cat Bliss and I love them!

15 Comments on Thankful Thursday: Bend Over...., last added: 5/22/2009
Display Comments Add a Comment
5. Freaky Feather Art

feather art

Not illustration, but this demands to be blogged. Some freaky feather sculptures from Kate McWire.

Some more info at the great art blog, INSIDE THE FROZEN MAMMOTH.

via @nealemvf on Twitter

2 Comments on Freaky Feather Art, last added: 5/7/2009
Display Comments Add a Comment
6. Jacqueline Woodson: A Voice for Hope


Last night while some of us were refreshing our pedicures-- er, I mean reading Crime and Punishment once again, the lovely and prolific Jacqueline Woodson was being honored by the American Library Association  with a Newberry Honor Book Award for her newest middle grade release entitled Feathers. It is a story of hope, and a mysterious new white boy that comes to the narrator's predominantly black school, causing some speculation that he might be Jesus.  Her main character's best friend, Samantha, says, "If there was a world for Jesus to need to walk back into, wouldn't this one be it?"  


This is her second Newberry Honor Book, in fact-- Show Way (2006) also garnered her this award.  Robin and I had the rich and unforgettable pleasure of hearing her read this at a recent SCBWI National Conference.  


Jacqueline will be looking for additional storage space sometime soon for the wealth of hardware she has earned for her eight picture books, six middle grade books, and eleven young adult novels.   (Wow. And, if you'll note the photo above, she's still standing!)


Locomotion was a National Book Award Finalist and won a Coretta Scott King Honor.  Miracle's Boys also won the Coretta Scott King Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize.  It was then made into a mini-series directed by a number of people including Spike Lee.  


Jacqueline received the Margaret A. Edwards Award from the American Library Associations's (ALA) Young Adult Library Services Association in 2006 for her books I Hadn’t Meant to Tell You This, Lena, From the Notebook Melanin Sun, If You Come Softly, and Miracle’s Boys. For her book Coming on Home Soon, she won the Caldecott Honor, ALA Notable, Booklist Editor's Choice and Child Magazine Best of 2004.


We feel so honored to have this inspired voice with us today at Shrinking Violets.  


* * * * * * * * *

If the difference between introversion and extraversion is where one goes to gather energy—within, or in the company of others, where do you fall on the continuum?


I think it depends on the time of day -- if it's during my writing time, I'm very introverted and am fed by my work. If it's in the afternoon, when my writing day is done, I need my people -- my family, my friends and lots of talk and laughter around me.


What is your favorite book promotion/marketing activity?


I like a nice party with people I know and don't know so well.  I like it in a nice space with good food and wine and nice lighting.  If it's a book, I'm particularly in love with, I might enjoy reading from it.  But mostly, I like to just hang. If it could turn into a dance party with kicking seventies and eighties disco playing, then I'm way happy.  And if there are enough black folks to get the Electric Slide going or enough young people to do the Soldier Boy Crank, then it's truly a party.  (With a publishing bent of course.)


What marketing activity ranks right up there with--oh, I dunno, a colonoscopy?


Once a publicist had the bright idea to ask writers to describe what is in our pocketbooks, knapsacks, etc.  I thought that was pretty absurd (and didn't do it) but i think anything that messes with the privacy of a writer is off limits.  My friends even call me by a different name than the people I know in the writing world and this is pretty much all about keeping my private life/world separate from my writing life.  When I hear someone call me by my writing name, I automatically know -- they know me via writing and we're most likely not that close.  As you go through the writing life, you meet SO many people and it's hard to keep track and to keep private. I have no interest in opening up my bag or my private life in that way.  I think with the internet and reality tv and all of that stuff, the borders of privacy are shifting and for anybody who is halfway introverted, it can get tricky.  


I have an amazing community of people who keep me sane and whole and who I come 'home' to and let few others into that world. My writing is very open and sometimes painful and sometimes people mistake my writing (both the experiences of the characters and the energy behind it) for Me.  And although there is some part of me on the pages, most of me I keep protected so that I can continue to write.  When a marketing person wants me to bare some private part of myself for public consumption, I am very clear about saying No Way.


Has an editor or publicist ever asked (or expected) you to do something to promote your book that was hard for you?  What was it and how did you handle it?


I can't remember. If it was something I didn't want to do, I'm sure I just said No.


If your publicist had $5,000 budgeted to promote your book, how would you like that money spent?


My ideal is getting books in the hands of people who couldn't otherwise afford them.  So if my publisher said "Here's $5,000 to do with it as you will," I'd buy a whole bunch of my own books in paperback and give them out at underserved schools and community centers, etc.  And while there, I'd do an author visit (also for free). I think through this act, we don't see the immediate sales of books but it does impact our efforts to make lifetime readers out of young people.



As often as you speak in public, do you still get nervous/vaporous/catatonic?


Just when a lot of my friends and my family are there.


 What do you do to recharge your batteries when you’ve blown your wad?


Get myself around the people I love.


Introvert you’d most like to have dinner with?  (Living or deceased, but presumed living during your date.)


James Baldwin. If he's booked, then Carson McCullers.


* * * * * * * * *

Robin and I love (a lot) what Jacqueline would do with $5,000.00 marketing dollars. Which we're pretty sure no Professional Marketing Consultant would support this because it is off the radar screen and doesn't generate buzz or dough.   That's why we like it so much.  We think giving away books to kids that are underserved is a radical act that has a force beyond anything we can see or understand. So, we'd like Jacqueline to be our new BFF. It would help a lot if she would move to California so we could take her with us to CPK.  We have it on good authority that pizza is her fave food.  


In honor of Jacqueline's visit to SVP, we'd like to give a copy of Feathers to your someone's public library. To the first person that can tell us what item Jacqueline would probably would NOT want on her pizza. Good luck!  


Grace and peace,

Mary Hershey

8 Comments on Jacqueline Woodson: A Voice for Hope, last added: 7/22/2008
Display Comments Add a Comment
7. Lesson Learned from the Little Guys

Handsome Boy plays T-Ball. So, two (and sometimes three) days a week, we load the trunk with folding Penn State chairs, water bottles, a Steelers bat, a pint-sized ball glove, and set off for the t-ball fields. We sit. We watch. We cheer. We swat bugs. Each game is pretty much like the one before. 


Until last night. 

Last night, somewhere amid the sitting and the bug-swatting and the game-watching and the cheering, I unexpectedly learned something from these small-type ball players... 

After dropping off the Boy at his dugout, Lovely Girl and I set up our chairs and settled in to watch my little man do his stuff. I squinted through the bright sun at Handsome Boy out in the field as he examined dirt, made grass angels in the outfield, watched several batted balls roll right past him, yukked it up with his cap pulled completely over his face, and played pretend-catch with another outfielder. I cringed as he played tag and climbed the fence in the dugout. In fact, I spent the whole first inning trying to get his attention from the sidelines, sending desperate hand-signals to get him to get in the game before he got a t-ball upside the head (like last game). 

Then, somewhere in the middle of my worries about Handsome Boy receiving his next bonk on the head, I stopped obsessing about my youngest child and took a look around at his teammates. Several little guys preferred to have a seat in the dirt as they waited for the batter to connect with the ball. A few ran in little circles in their assigned spots. Still others deposited unknown treasures from the ground into their pockets.  There were some wrestlers in the outfield. A couple teammates intently searched the outfield grass for interesting critters to scrutinize. And they all played tag and climbed the fence in the dugout.

Then I started to just relax and watch the game. When the other team hit a grounder to center field, our center fielder's frustrated dad pleaded with his daughter to put down the lovely butterfly she'd just found, and go get the ball. In the next inning, while our batter was still swinging, their first baseman ran gleefully to the sidelines, clutching something thin and gray in his little fist. "Mommy! I found a feather for you!" A while later, Butterfly Girl waved her newest find at her dad as he once again begged her to put down the pretty butterfly and pick up the ball that had just rolled past her.

In between, there were some great plays: a couple of awesome hits to the outfield, a few pop-flies, some great plays at first base, and some exciting chase scenes as our right-fielder barreled toward home plate to tag a runner out.

But the best moment of all was right near the end of the game. Our team was fielding. The other team smacked a sky-high pop-fly right toward center field. But this time, Butterfly Girl was ready. She caught that ball in the air, then looked with amazement first at her glove, then at her coach - who ran over to give her a double high-five, then over at her dad. Then her grin stretched a mile wide as she took in the whistles, claps and cheers from both sides - coaches and parents alike - all for her fantastic catch.

At the end of the game, there were giant smiles on every kid's face. Nobody noticed how many outs there were, or how many runs were scored. Nobody argued about who collected pebbles in the infield, and who paid attention the whole time. Everybody thought their team had won, and every kid out there had a great time.

A few grass angels left in the outfield, and a few butterflies caught, and a few birds missing a feather or two is all part of the fun, I realized...

...and I'm so glad I didn't miss it.




0 Comments on Lesson Learned from the Little Guys as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
8. Supreme Esteem: Getting to Know Ruben Plotnick

Author: Roz Rosenbluth Illustrator: Maurie J. Manning Published: 2005 Flashlight Press ISBN: 0972922555 Chapters.ca Amazon.com Told from the perspective of a caring school boy and brought to life by breezy, evocative illustrations, this uplifting story propels us from feelings of adoration and honour, through dread and embarrassment and, finally, to understanding and appreciation. Who says nice guys finish last? Tags:childrens book, Getting to Know Ruben Plotnick, Maurie J. Manning, Podcast, Roz Rosenbluthchildrens book, Getting to Know Ruben Plotnick, Maurie J. Manning, Podcast, Roz Rosenbluth

4 Comments on Supreme Esteem: Getting to Know Ruben Plotnick, last added: 4/24/2007
Display Comments Add a Comment