Educational Activities: Doll‑E 1.0 by Shanda McCloskey

 

Doll‑E 1.0
Author: Shanda McCloskey
Illustrator: Shanda McCloskey
Little Brown Books for Young Readers
1 May 2018
40 pages

 

 

Shanda McCloskey’s debut picture book, Doll‑E 1.0, is a STEM-​friendly tale about a little girl and the doll that she upgrades to become her new friend. Perfect for readers who enjoyed Ashley Spires’ The Most Magnificent Thing and Andrea Beaty’s Rosie Revere, Engineer.


Need some reviews of Doll‑E 1.0?

Kirkus

Publisher’s Weekly

Good Reads with Ronna


Educational Activities inspired by Shanda McCloskey’s Doll‑E 1.0:

  • Before Reading–Ask students:
    • What type of things do you suspect the little girl in blue on the front cover likes to do?”
    • What does the title mean to you?”
    • Look at the back cover. What do you think this book will be about?”
  • After Reading–Charlotte is able to help her parents with computer problems and TV issues. What type of problems are you able to help others with? What are you really, really good at?
  • Further Reading–In many ways, Doll‑E 1.0 is a book about a robot. Read another book on robots, such as one of those listed below, and then compare the robots in the stories. What do they do differently? Which robot(s) do you like the most? Why? Which would you like to play with? Which robot would you like to read more about?
    (Click on the book cover for more information on any of these titles!)      
  • Crafts–Using crayons (or colored pencils) and paper, draw a plan on how you’d like to upgrade one of your own dolls, action figures, or toys. Share that plan with an adult. Consider enlisting that adult in helping you make the planned upgrades!
  • Writing–This story is told from Charlotte’s point of view. What if the story were told from Doll‑E’s perspective? Write that version yourself.

 

Author Interview: Jane Yolen

This month’s PB author interview is by a writer who has a special relationship with OPB—she helped get it going. I’d been mulling over creating this website for a few years and when I shared the idea with my friend and mentor, Jane Yolen, she told me: “Silly boy. Why aren’t you already doing this?”

So, of course, I did exactly that. And she was eager to volunteer to be one of my first interviewees. The only reason she wasn’t the first one published here? I had many hours of recordings to work through and I’m a slow transcriber. Plus—what to leave out? What to include? It wasn’t easy.

I was lucky enough to be able to bring Jane out to Ringling College of Art and Design in January 2018 for a couple of days of events to support the creative writing program there. So the following interview has been pieced together from just a small bit of the mountain of writing and publishing information she shared in classes, student meetings, lunchtime talks, and public evening discussions. Yes, this is longer than most OPB author interviews but I suspect you’ll forgive me for its length. (And if you still need more from Jane, check out my interview with her in a fall 2018 issue of The Writer, where I cover lots of different things than what’s below.)

Jane really needs no introduction. If you’re here, you love picture books. If you love picture books, you surely have a half-​dozen favorites written by her. I’ll simply end this warm-​up by sharing three of my own favs of hers. If you don’t have these already, maybe grab a copy?

       

RVC: One of your Ten Rules for Writing Success is BIC. Could you share what that is?

JY: Butt in Chair. Or if you wish to be polite here in Florida—Bottom, Buttocks, Behind, Backside, Behunkus in Chair.

In other words, you have to work. Fingers on keys. Or wrapped around a pen. Use a chisel to carve the book on stone. If you aren’t at work writing, you’re not writing the book.

Yes, there are other parts to writing. There’s thinking it through. There’s research. There’s seeing landscape. There’s listening in keyholes. There’s sorting through gossip. There’s smelling the grandbabies. These are all wonderful parts of getting ready to write. They’re what I call “gathering days.”

But in the end, if you never put your B in the C, you are not going to write the damn book.

RVC: Procrastination really isn’t part of your vocabulary, is it? 

JY: You see, too often we sit around thinking about what we hope to, plan to, want to write … and never do. The difference between my 366 books and your not-​quite one, or not-​quite five or not-​quite ten or even your not-​quite 100 books is as simple as that. Write the damn book.

Stop agonizing over whether you’re an undergraduate or a graduate student, a housewife or somebody’s younger brother. Stop worrying about having original ideas or contracts or contacts. Stop telling your boyfriend or girlfriend or spouse or partner that some day soon they’ll see you in print.

Just write the damn book.

Now I’ve just said “damn” three times. Oops—make that four times. If that seems unseemly for a children’s book writer, I apologize. But choosing and using the right word has been my passion for over 50 years now. (Longer if you add in my writing in high school and elementary school, though some of it was pretty lame, I admit.) And damn is the right word. Though one famous children’s book writer friend of mine calls it something stronger, from earlier on in the alphabet, which I won’t use here in polite company.

I know that urging—no insisting—that you write the damn book may seem simplistic. But until you get the book down, what have you to show?

I was an editor for fifteen years, and editors know that finishing a book is one of the hardest parts of writing. Most would-​be writers want to have written. But for true writers, it’s the process of writing that they find fulfilling, not necessarily publication.

For years over my desk, I had posted: “Love the process, not the product” and while I have long since lost that piece of paper, I no longer need it. That motto is imprinted on my heart.

Yes, I know. Easy for me to say with my 365th and 366th book just out this past March, but honestly, that number could’ve been a terrible burden if I didn’t love writing. The writing—even when it is difficult, even when it’s horrible, even when it’s going badly—is the reason for doing what we do.

So that’s why my very first rule has to be: Write the damn book!

RVC: For some years now, you’ve run small writing workshops—called Picture Book Boot Camps—that are described as “A weekend Master Class for published picture book authors with Jane Yolen, held at her farm in western Massachusetts.” Where did the idea for these retreats come from?

JY: For years, I taught workshops at writer’s conferences and weekend retreats, and I loved the teaching, but when someone else is throwing the party, they get to keep all the change. So to do a 2- or 3- or 10-​day conference? Putting what I’m writing on hold for that many days for nearly any amount of money became non-doable.

When we put together a conference of our own, Heidi [Jane’s daughter Heidi EY Stemple, who is an accomplished PB writer too] and I make enough money to make it worthwhile and we plan it exactly the way we want to. I’m still able to do some of my own work during the Boot Camps, too.

We’ve had some absolutely stunning authors participate and their work was extraordinary at times. We’re working with people who are already published and that was a very conscious choice. We wanted people who already understood what revision meant, people who understood what listening to critique—without pride or arguing—meant, people who listened when you talked about problems and went on to solve them in their own way.

I get a lot of people asking: “When are you going to do a picture book boot camp for newbies”? And my answer is never. There are lots of places that will do that, like an SCBWI conference where people can have their first manuscript read by a professional in the field. That’s not what I’m going to do here.

Can’t you do a boot camp for novelists?” people also ask. For nine years, I edited novels. But to really be able to provide a good and solid critique of a novel, reading one chapter isn’t enough. You really need to read the whole thing.

How could I possibly read 10 whole novels like that? I’d have to put my entire life on hold to sit down and write the kind of critiques I’d like to provide as an editor.

RVC: One of the things you told my Writing Picture Book students is to cultivate patience. I’ve been thinking about that myself a good bit these days.

JY: There are two kinds of patience needed when working on any kind of writing.

The first is with yourself. Give yourself the time you need to settle into your story, to find your characters who—like recalcitrant teenagers—sometimes want to be anywhere but where you are. Or your poem, with its fish-​sliding words that are difficult to catch. Or your essay or memoir or anything.

And more, you need to be patient with the publishing process should you wish to go that far. It may help to know that even those of us with books in the double and triple figures have to learn to wait.

Editors aren’t slow because they like to be mean. They’re slow because the process itself doesn’t encourage hustle. If they’re in the book business, they’re already working on lists that are two and three and four years into the future. Magazines and journals—probably three to six months ahead.

Editors are being forced to attend endless meetings, few of which have any immediate meaning for you and your work. They have their own host of complaining authors. Or they move to another publisher or magazine just when you were working on something together. Or they turn down everything you send them, almost always without comment.

Whatever the reasons for the interminable slowness, the snail-​like nature of the business, it’s rarely just the author’s fault. All the editors I know read manuscripts on the subways, the trains, the ferries, the buses on their way to and from work. They take manuscripts with them on planes across the country and back again. They carry manuscript with them on vacations, to weddings, funerals, and family birthday parties. They read at night in bed, at conventions, and skip breakfast to read some more. And those are the manuscripts they have already bought! You can imagine how long it takes for them to get to the manuscripts in the piles of as-​yet-​unbought, even from top agents.

And then there’s the slush pile. Slush—or unsolicited manuscripts—are what’s sent out by new writers who have no agent, no contacts, no big name to drop into the letter of introduction.

But cultivating patience should never mean that you stop working. No rest between stories. And while those manuscripts are out making their rounds, getting occasional nudges from you, you are writing the next and even better piece.

I’m still learning how to write every single day.

RVC: What’s the best bit of writing advice you’ve ever received?

JY: Two things.

The first came early on in my career from an amazing editor name Francis Keene. I did about four or five books with her. She said to me: “You have great facility. Don’t be beguiled by it.” In other words, don’t just take the first thing that comes out. You’re good enough to go with the first thing that comes to mind and run with it. But just don’t leave it there.

And the second one came from Linda Zuckerman, another amazing editor. I’d written a novel for her about the Shakers entitled The Gift of Sarah Barker. Set in the 1850s, everything that happened in this novel all happened in three days.

I first showed it to my husband who read it and said, “It’s too fast.”

Then I showed it to my agent who agreed—“Three days is too fast.”

Then when Linda bought the book, she asked, “Tell me why everything happens in three days?” She asked me the question instead of telling me I was wrong. And as I was trying to explain it to her, I realized that I had imposed a fairy-​tale number on a historical story. It didn’t work.

Linda then told me: “Trust your reader.” And that became the second mantra after “Don’t be beguiled by your own writing.”

RVC: Tell me about SCBWI. You got involved early. What did it mean to you? What’s its relevance today?

I am now, outside of Steve Mooser and Lin Oliver who began SCBW (the “I” came in later—at the start, it was mostly just Writers, not Illustrators), the person who’s been in the organization the longest. The person who got there before me was Sue Alexander. It wasn’t even an organization when Sue joined, just Steve and Lin saying “Hey, let’s put on a show.” They were both young, working for the same company that had hired them to put out a series of textbooks for kids. They were good writers, but neither one had ever written for children.

They looked for an organization where they could join and learn, but there was no such thing. So they started one. They put an ad in the paper, and Sue Alexander, who lived in CA (where Steve and Lin worked), was the first one to sign up. Right after that, Sue came to Colorado for a workshop Uri Shulevitz and I were doing, and she quickly became a friend of mine.

She told me about this organization, I said “How do I sign up?” I had about 6 or 7 books out at that point, so I too wanted to be in an organization with other children’s book writers.

The “group” asked me to come to California where they were going to have their first-​ever event—not a conference so much as a dinner. They needed dinner speakers, so they asked Sid Fleischman and me, as we were the only two well-​published children’s book authors they knew.

While I was there, they were telling me that had plans to have an actual conference. I said, “I’ll come and speak at it. But I’m in the Northeast, can I make an SCBW outpost there and have people join?” They said that I could be the first regional advisor. They hadn’t even considered having regions for the group before.

So that’s what I did. First I spoke at their dinner and then I organized the New England Region of a barely-​started SCBW.

RVC: What’s the value of SCBWI today for young writers?

JY: The value is that it’s still a place that’ll tell you everything that you need to know about getting started in the children’s book field. SCBWI’s board, which I’m a part of, is full of industry insiders—writers, illustrators, art directors, editors, agents, movers and shakers. We meet twice a year, once in NY and once in LA. And we’re a working board. We’re not just an in-​name-​only board. We discuss everything that has to do with children’s books and publishing—from this publisher is not paying its people, this bad boy of publishing has been abusing women, or this agent ran off with money to work with larger issues as well, such as how do we help get more minorities into publishing, a yearly list of publishers’ wants, what is trending, what are the addresses for those publishers, and how do people who don’t have agents get access, those sorts of things.

It’s very much the only organization that’s hands-​on in terms of helping early-​career writers. And it continues to serve the writers through their apprenticeships and well into the fullness of their careers.

RVC: Any final words of wisdom for those of us who, like you, are still learning to write every single day?

JY: Don’t believe anyone’s rules. Not even mine.

Write what you want, how you want, when you want. The only rule that counts is number one: Write the damn book.

Write it because you must. Because it whispers incessantly in your ear. Because it is your passion, your desire, your constant companion. Write it because you have to.

Write it because I want to read it.

RVC: Thanks so much, Jane!

Picture Book Review: Mixed: A World of Colour

 

Mixed: A World of Colour
Author: Arree Chung
Illustrator: Arree Chung
Henry Holt and Co.
3 July 2018
40 pages

 

This month’s PB review is by Ryan G. Van Cleave (Top Tamale at Only Picture Books) and Florida-​based author/​illustrator Fred Koehler.

–Ryan’s Review of the Writing–

Arree Chung’s new picture book, Mixed, feels tailor-​made for the discordant world of today. Three colors–Blues, Reds, and Yellows–all live together in relative peace and harmony, until one day, Reds quite suddenly declare that they’re the best. The Yellows respond: “No! We’re the BEST because we’re the brightest!” (The Blues? They’re “too cool” to even point out what is obvious to them–Blues are best!)

As a result, the colors segregate themselves to color-​specific parts of the city. Then one day, a Yellow befriends a Blue. Before long, a new color emerges (Spoiler: Yellow + Blue = Green) and the world is full of new, exciting possibilities that create a sense of togetherness and belonging.

This sweet tale teaches readers about basic colors and how they mix to create new colors. But it also shares a non-​didactic message of  tolerance, understanding, and valuing differences that young people–and adults–can’t hear enough.

The simple, declarative sentences are potent and appropriate. Equally valuable, they’re of a level that most kids will be able to say aloud as the story is read and re-​read. That participatory element is an important part of internalizing this powerful message.

This book is so charming and spot on that I’ll even overlook the bonus “u” in the title word “colors,” which I acknowledge is the standard spelling in pretty much every English-​speaking country EXCEPT America. (If you have an issue with that, blame Noah Webster! I do!)

4.75 out of 5 pencils

–Fred’s Review of the Illustration–

Picture book artists often feel like we need to fill our pages with loads of detail to successfully tell a story. Just look at any book I’ve illustrated! 😂

The real magic happens when an artist becomes so good at their craft that they can tell MORE story with LESS detail. Some contemporary geniuses at this include folks like Greg Pizzoli, Debbie Ohi, Hervé Tullet, Oliver Jeffers, and, may I submit, Arree Chung.

Mixed isn’t just a hope-​filled parable about the beauty of inter-​chroma coupling. It’s an absolute masterclass in visual storytelling. I mean, how many variations can you have on a simple, colored dot anthropomorphized to have human(ish) qualities? Apparently dozens and dozens. The beauty of Chung’s work is in the consistent, fun, unexpected details that give life and personality to each of his characters.

As the story builds, so do the visual details, matching pace with the tension in the words. Then, unexpected things happen. And as you reach the penultimate scenes, you’ll be crying multicolored prisms of joy.

Aside from the visuals, my other favorite part is that by using colored dots as stand-​ins for people, Chung has given us room to discuss important issues of race without the need to get defensive or point fingers. I recommend this book for all collections.

5 out of 5 crayons


Fred Koehler is an artist and storyteller whose real-​life misadventures include sunken boats, covert border crossings, and fighting off robbers in the dead of night. Whether free diving in the Gulf of Mexico or backpacking across Africa, Fred’s sense of adventure and awe of nature overflow into his characters’ stories.

Between book projects, Fred also runs a highly-​sought after design studio, helping brands across the US learn to tell their own stories.

Fred is passionate about encouraging young artists, promoting social justice, and conserving our environment. He lives in Florida with his wife, kids, and a rescue dog named Cheerio Mutt-​Face McChubbybutt.

Picture Book List: Six Terrific Picture Books about Vehicles and Travel

Here’s a bonus list to fill out the final week of May 2018. We’re a car-​trip family (I’m even publishing this post while planning a multi-​city, in-​state trip for us and our minivan!), so it probably comes as no surprise that we’ve bought more than a few picture books about vehicles, road trips, and traveling in general.

So here’s a list of PBs on those very topics.

Since we all pretty much know a few obvious ones—Richard Scarry’s Cars and Trucks and Things that Go, Dr. Seuss’ Oh, the Places You’ll Go! and Kate and Jim McMullan’s I Stink!, to name just three Biggies—the goal of this list is to offer up some quality but perhaps less familiar choices.


The Adventures of Taxi Dog by Debra and Sal Barracca (illustrated by Mark Buehner)

The funny rhyming story of Maxi, a stray dog, who’s found in a park by Jim the taxi driver. Why does Jim start receiving such big tips once Maxi starts riding along? A review by two young children (ages 8 and 9) at Spaghetti Book Club says: “We recommend this book because it is funny and the illustrations are colorful and full of detail. When the dog puts on his shows, the pictures make us feel like we are the passengers, with Maxi putting on the show for us.”

 

When Daddy’s Truck Picks Me Up by Jana Novotny Hunter (illustrated by Carol Thompson)

The rhyming story about a young boy who imagines the moment his father is going to arrive at school—from very far away—to pick him up in a tanker truck. A Kirkus review says: “The day crawls by even though he enjoys himself playing games and painting pictures. Eagerly anticipating his father’s arrival, the boy imagines Daddy driving toward him, traveling the tunnels, hurrying down a hill, carefully crossing a bridge and maneuvering through traffic.”

 

Everything I Know about Cars: A Collection of Made-​Up Facts, Educated Guesses, and Silly Pictures about Cars, Trucks, and Other Zoomy Things by Tom Lichtenheld

This book shares a host of information that’s “100% fact-​free,” but a lot of fun nevertheless. The wacky illustrations are matched by ever wackier info, such as “Some people aren’t satisfied while sitting on their butts; they want to go really fast while sitting on their butts. These people drive hot rods and race cars, which are stinkier and faster than regular cars.”

Booklist review says “With an eye-​catching jacket and a terrific section on how to draw a car, this large-​format book has something for everyone (except maybe someone who actually wants to know about cars.)”

 

Journey by Aaron Becker

An homage to Harold and his purple crayon, Becker’s 2014 Caldecott Honor Book, Journey, tells the wordless story of a lonely girl whose afternoon becomes magical when she draws a door on the wall with red chalk … and walks into a new world. A Common Sense Media review shares: “Bravery, and a little help from the loyal bird, lead her to further adventures a bit closer to home, where she finds she’s not the only one with a magic crayon and an imagination.”

 

Bug on a Bike by Chris Monroe

A rhyming, read-​aloud treat, this book follows Bug on his journey to who knows where? Along the way, he picks up pals like Lizard Mike, Randy the Toad, and more. A Kirkus review states: “As entertaining as the text is, however, it is the illustrations that steal the show. Singularly absurd in their renditions (the lizard wears madras shorts, the snake dons a tubular blouse), the menagerie all nonetheless manage to look determined and earnest as they follow the bug on a bike—who himself has the endearing focused look of a toddler just learning to ride a two-wheeler.”

A non-​spoiler: Finding out Bug’s final destination is worth the wait.

 

Down, Down, Down: A Journey to the Bottom of the Sea by Steve Jenkins

This book—with its wonderful cut-​paper illustrations—takes readers on a journey from the surface of the ocean into the deepest sea canyon, showing more than fifty creatures who call the deep waters their home. A Kirkus review states: “Along the way he introduces such oddities as a three-​foot comb jelly called a Venus’s girdle, a glowing siphonophore colony and a hairy angler with her parasitic mate. Browsers will be delighted by the variety of species, shown in their appropriate colors although not to scale.”


 

Editor Interview: Alexis Orgera and Chad Reynolds (Penny Candy Books)

This month’s Industry Insider interview has double the goodness and double the fun, thanks to the generosity of Alexis Orgera and Chad Reynolds, the co-​founders of Penny Candy Books.

Alexis describes herself as a partner, friend, daughter, sister, animal lover, road-​tripper, homebody, poet, essayist, children’s book publisher, and an editor/​editorial consultant. She also spends a great deal of time “thinking about justice, imagination, and how to use what we have in our hearts and heads to make the world a little bit better.”

Alexis has also authored two fine poetry collections: How Like Foreign Objects and Dust Jacket, which won the 2013 Elizabeth P. Braddock Prize for Poetry.

Chad is the author of five poetry chapbooks and a co-​founder of Short Order Poems, a poetry collaborative whose mission is to bring poetry to people in unexpected ways and places. He also [apparently] enjoys brief bios. 🙂


RVC: What is the most important thing people should know or understand about Penny Candy Books?

AO: First and foremost, it’s important to know that we focus on diversity. Our mission is to publish children’s literature that reflects the diverse realities of the world we live in, both at home and abroad. This means seeking out books by and about people and subjects that speak to and from a broad range of human experience.

We’re serious about our mission, serious about who’s telling the stories we choose to publish, serious about making books that aren’t exclusionary based on the traditional (old) paradigms. We hope to build a diverse company—authors, illustrators, readers, editors, designers, and more.

RVC: I think that most writers get excited when they hear publishers talking about alternative structures. So much of publishing seems locked into a pre-​1980s mentality, despite the world changing dramatically in many ways.

CR: We’re new to publishing in this capacity, so I think by default we bring our other experiences as teachers, insurance brokers, store clerks, waiters, baristas, etc, with us to this endeavor, and that helps us see things in a fresh way. We’ve had a steep learning curve, and we’ve been keen to flatten it by learning best practices—but we always pause to ask whether a best practice makes sense or if it’s “best” because it’s what’s always been done.

We want to make it as a publisher and part of that involves doing some tried and true things, such as working with royalty contracts and using a traditional distributor. But we want to make it in our own way. Alexis and I both live outside the usual publishing hubs, and this gives us new insights and perspectives. We’re willing to take chances on newer or first-​time authors and illustrators. We have an open submission policy and we don’t limit word or page counts.

RVC: You launched the Penelope Editions imprint in January 2017. In what ways are its books different than other Penny Candy Books titles?

 AO: We launched Penelope to publish books that we loved that didn’t necessarily fit into Penny Candy’s model. We are currently honing Penelope’s mission, but it will have feminist leanings with books that display guts, vision, and humor.

RVC: I can’t help but note that the two of you are poets. Rumor has it that graduate school—and a shared love for poetry—brought you both together professionally. In what way(s) does having a background in poetry prepare you for publishing picture books which, on the surface, seem a good deal different than the work of Billy Collins, Sylvia Plath, W.H. Auden, and Rita Dove.

AO: Poets think a lot about concision of language, the alchemy that imbues words with meaning, and images. We were basically being groomed for kids’ books back in grad school without even realizing it. Going into this business, Chad and I both had strong feelings about the books that shaped us. Those books that really reach in and grab something inside you—they’re essentially poems.

Poetry and kid lit are similar, too, in that they both seek the universal, the experience we can all point to and say, “Hey, I totally get that!”

CR: Poetry and picture books have a lot in common, which maybe explains why poets as diverse as TS Eliot, Gwendolyn Brooks, Randall Jarrell, Naomi Shihab Nye, Ted Hughes, Maya Angelou, Gertrude Stein, Carl Sandburg, Langston Hughes, and many others wrote them.

RVC: Are there any poets of the type one might encounter in graduate school or, say, The Iowa Review, who haven’t yet entered the realm of writing picture books that you think might be well-​suited to do so? 

AO: Oh yes, and we have a few upcoming!

RVC: If they’re anything like A Gift from Greensboro, a poem by Quraysh Ali Lansana that became one of the first Penny Candy Books title, you’re right to be excited. 

Speaking of books that excite readers… prior to starting up Penny Candy Books, what picture books were wowing you? Which ones made you want to get involved in this industry?

CR: When I was a kid, my favorites were Small Pig by Arnold Lobel and A Visit to William Blake’s Inn by Nancy Willard. Pezzettino and Swimmy by the great Italian artist Leo Lionni were favorites of my kids and opened my eyes to narrative and visual possibilities in this genre. Books by Taro Gomi such as Everyone Poops and My Friends made us laugh while inviting us into global conversations. Ruth Krauss’s A Hole Is to Dig and Open House for Butterflies—both with spot illustrations by Maurice Sendak—showed me how well kids can respond to figurative language and leaps of imagination, and how to see the world through a child’s eyes.

But for all the great books we admired before starting Penny Candy Books, we also recognized that American kids’ books could at times feel one-​sided, stagnant, Puritanical, pedantic. A lot of stories that needed to be told, weren’t being told.

AO: Of all the books I loved as a kid, I don’t think any featured characters of color, except one that I now recognize to have been very racist and colonialist. I had a real love affair growing up with a series of tiny books by Jenny Partridge about the adventures of animals in Oakapple Wood. To name just a few, more recently, Toni & Slade Morrison’s The Big Box really made an impact on me and reminded me what a picture book can do in its exploration of concepts like freedom. Jacqueline Woodson’s This is the Rope, among many of her books, is another that I loved for its treatment of family history through the lens of the Great Migration. The poet Ted Kooser and Jon Klassen collaborated on House Held Up by Trees, which was a very lovely book.

Finally, as we were planning what our books would look and feel like, we pored over books from all over the world to get a feel for the physicality of design. We were inspired by several French books, particularly.

RVC: I keep finding your press listed high up on the Dealmakers list of Publisher’s Marketplace. How many books do you plan to publish per year? And seeing that your authors include writers from Palestine, Australia, and France, some might wonder—is there a conscious ratio in mind of American vs. non-​American authors? 

CR: We are working up to publishing around 20 new titles per year, and we hope to hit that number within 4 or 5 years.

AO: Not a conscious ratio, no, but certainly an eye toward bringing work from other countries into the US kids’ book market. As a culture, particularly right now, we can’t afford to be isolationist in our reading habits. If kids are reading the works of authors from around the world, they’ll grow up with a broader perspective of what the world actually is. It’s not just our slice of it. 

RVC: Now that you’ve been at it for a few years, what are some of the PB world trends you’re noticing?

AO: Diversity is a very important and necessary development. Hopefully it’s not a trend but a reality that’s here to stay. The “Own voices” movement is a critical aspect of diversity, and publishers are finally recognizing that who is telling the story is just as important as the story being told.

RVC: Describe the ideal Penny Candy Books author.

CR: The only ideals we have are that stories ring true and that authors use language in a way that makes these stories sing.

RVC: Last thoughts?

AO: Here’s to big conversations!

CR: Thanks for your interest, Ryan.

RVC: Thanks so much, Alexis and Chad!

Educational Activities: Write On, Irving Berlin! by Leslie Kimmelman and David C. Gardner

 

Write On, Irving Berlin!
Author: Leslie Kimmelman
Illustrator: David C. Gardner
Sleeping Bear Press
15 May 2018
32 pages

 

 

From the author of Hot Dog! Eleanor Roosevelt Throws a Picnic and the illustrator of The Harvey Milk Story comes this vivid picture-​book biography that examines the life of Irving Berlin, the distinguished composer whose songs, including “God Bless America” and “White Christmas,”  continue to be popular today.


Need some reviews of Write On, Irving Berlin?

Kirkus

Publisher’s Weekly

Jewish Book Council


Educational Activities inspired by Leslie Kimmelman’s Write On, Irving Berlin! 

  • Before Reading–Ask students:
    • From looking at the cover, what do you think Berlin is writing about?”
    • What are some of your favorite songs?”
    • What traits make a good student?”
  • After Reading–Listen to three of Berlin’s most popular songs: “Alexander’s Ragtime Band,” “White Christmas,” and “God Bless America.” Discuss which you like most.
  • After Reading–The Berlin family fled Russia in the 1890s because they were persecuted for being Jewish. Have you ever heard of someone being treated poorly because of their religious beliefs? Or the color of their skin? Or for how they dress or act? How does that make you feel?
  • Music–Using a song you know well–perhaps one of Berlin’s or maybe a song like “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” or “Row Row Row Your Boat”–write your own lyrics. Feel free to be serious or silly.
  • Crafts–Using crayons (or colored pencils) and paper, draw what you think of when you hear the phrase “God Bless America.” What are you thankful for? Listen to the song for inspiration.
  • Writing–Berlin wrote “God Bless America” to honor American soldiers. Write your own letter to American soldiers that thanks them for their service. Consider working with an organization like A Million Thanks to send the letters.