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    May 12, 2012: The Kids Have Voted

    Votes have been tallied for the 2012 Children’s Choice Book Awards. Winner in the 5th/6th grade category was Okay for Now, Gary Schmidt’s companion novel to his Newbery Honor-winning The Wednesday Wars. Illustrator of the year went to Brian Selznick for Wonderstruck, and author of the year went to Jeff Kinney for Cabin Fever, the latest installment in his Wimpy Kid series.

    For a complete list of the winners…

     

    May 10, 2012: Happy Children’s Book Week!

    In honor of National Children’s Book Week, award-winning author-illustrator Matt Phelan posted this delightful review of Polly Horvath’s new book on his blog… 

    For more about Children's Book Week…

     

    May 5, 2012: Oh Me, Oh May

    Check out all the new books releasing in May...

     

    May 5, 2012: Be a Fourth-Grade Somebody

    One lucky fourth-grade classroom will win a Skype visit from author Judy Blume this month. To participate, all you have to do is have your students write a sentence or two on why they like fourth grade. The contest, which ends May 15, is sponsored by School Library Journal.

    For details…

     

    May 5, 2012: Sturm und Drang for Kids

    Guardian columnist Julia Eccleshare tackles the question “Why are so many highly praised children's books gloomy?” in this April 30 article…

                            




    May 1, 2012: It’s No Mystery

    The Edgar Award for the best juvenile mystery of the year was presented this past weekend to Matthew Kirby for Icefall (Scholastic, 2011). Publishers Weekly said of Kirby's Viking suspense novel, “Readers may be drawn in by the promise of action, which Kirby certainly fulfills, but they’ll be left contemplating the power of the pen versus the sword—or rather the story versus the war hammer.” 

    For more on the award…

    To read a Mixed-up Files interview with Kirby... 

     

    May 1, 2012: Crystal Clear

    Winners of the 2012 Crystal Kite Awards, the only peer-given awards in children’s publishing, were announced this week. The awards are voted on by members of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. Middle-grade winners include The Friendship Doll by Kirby Larson and The Absolute Value of Mike by Kathryn Erskine.

    For a complete list of winners...

     

    April 30, 2012: Does a Pineapple Have Sleeves?

    What happens when a Daniel Pinkwater story is adapted for use in a statewide standardized test? The New York Times reports on the kerfuffle here...

     

    April 30, 2012: More than One Path to Publication

    The lines between traditional and self-publishing continue to blur as more and more traditionally published authors find ways to utilize the flexibility and freedom that self publishing offers. Author Kate Milford recently announced in Publishers Weekly that her new fantasy, The Broken Lands, which will be published by Clarion in September, will be accompanied by the release of a self-published novella, The Kairos Mechanism.

    Says Milford, "I want to experiment with self-publishing as a way to promote and enhance traditional releases by providing extra content to readers in the form of complete, related tales. I also want to use resources that support independent bookstores." As an added bonus Milford is planning a special digital edition of her self-published work that will include illustrations by 10 teen readers. 

    For more…

     

    April 14, 2012: It’s Raining, It’s Pouring!

    Check out all the new books releasing in April...

     

    April 12, 2012: The Greatest Girls 

    Jen Doll, columnist for The Atlantic Wire, talks about “The Greatest Girl Characters of Young Adult Literature” in this April 5 article, the first in a series called “Y.A. for Grownups.” Among the characters Doll mentions are a number of middle-grade favorites, including Meg Murray from A Wrinkle in Time and Claudia Kincaid of From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler.

    For more… 

     

    April 12, 2012: Moss Aims to Pick Up Where Tricycle Left Off

    Berkeley-based children’s author and illustrator Marissa Moss, best-known for her Amelia’s Notebook series, is starting a new West Coast publishing venture called Creston Books. Says Moss, “The idea’s been percolating for years. It came to a head after Random House bought Ten Speed and threw Tricycle away.” Moss got her start with the quirky, risk-taking Tricycle Press, which published Amelia’s Notebook at a time when traditional publishers were unsure what to do with the illustrated diary format.  “New York publishing is about: what’s the next Harry Potter, what’s the next Twilight?” says Moss. “When I’ve approached people, I’ve asked, ‘What is the book you’ve been dying to do, but New York won’t do?’ I want the books that they think won’t sell—because I think they will.”

    Creston’s first books are due to release Fall 2013. In the meantime, Moss is seeking kickstarter funds to help back the project. For more…

     

    April 10, 2012: After Chrestomanci

    An online celebration of the life of British author Diana Wynne Jones (1934-2011) will kick off April 12 with a two-week blog tour. In conjunction with the tour a special blog has been set up where fans can share their favorite books, quotes, stories, characters, covers, and memories of Diana with fellow fans around the world.

    Wynne Jones was the author of dozens of popular titles, including the Chrestomanci series and Howl’s Moving Castle, which was made into an animated film by Hayao Miyazaki in 2004.

    For details…

     

    April 6, 2012: Game Over!

    The Battle of the Books has ended. And the winner is…

    I’m not telling! You’ll just have to click on over to the School Library Journal site and read Jonathan Stroud’s incredible analysis of the three finalists—Life: An Exploded Diagram by Mal Peet; Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys; and Okay for Now by Gary Schmidt.


    March 31, 2012: Hiaasen Says There’s No Fooling Kids

    Newbery-honor winning author Carl Hiaasen talks about writing for kids versus writing for adults in this March 6 School Library Journal interview. Says Hiaasen, “The idea that you're fooling kids is crazy. That's the way I've been able to connect to and go between adult and young adult books. Kids love sarcasm and the idea of bursting a grown-up's bubble. It's a question of calibrating the story to the young adult market. Once I did that with Hoot and it worked, it opened up a new and rewarding way of writing for me.”

    Hiassen’s new middle-grade book, Chomp, was released this week.

     For more…

     

    March 29, 2012: What’s the Buzz in Middle-grade Fiction?

    A panel of editors will share their predictions for this fall’s breakout titles when BookExpo America convenes June 5-7 at the Javits Center in New York City.  You don’t have to wait until June to catch the buzz, though. According to the BookExpo on-line news, titles to watch are:

    Malcolm at Midnight by W. H. Beck (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

    The Peculiar by Stefan Bachmann (HarperCollins)

    • Starry River of the Sky by Grace Lin (Little Brown)

    Tales from Lovecraft Middle School #1: Professor Gargoyle by Charles Gilman (Quirk)

    With Love From Paris: Mira's Sketchbook by Marissa Moss (Sourcebooks)

    For more…


    March 26, 2012: Lindgren Winner Announced

    Dutch author Guus Kuijer has won the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award given by the Swedish Arts Council to honor an author whose body of work is in the spirit of Pippi Longstocking author Astrid Lindgren. The winner receives 5 million Swedish crowns (more than $700K), making it the richest prize in the world for children’s literature. Past winners include Katherine Paterson, Sonya Hartnett, Maurice Sendak, and Shaun Tan.

    Kuijer was selected by an international jury of experts who praised his "razor-sharp realism,” “subtle humor,” and “visionary flights of fancy.” Kuijer is author of more than 30 titles, most of them for young teens. Sadly, only one of his books has appeared in English—The Book of Everything, a slim but haunting novel published by Arthur Levine Books in 2006.

     For more…

     

    March 20, 2012: No Grownups Allowed

    It’s time for kids to vote for their favorite books of the year in this year’s Children’s Choice Awards. Winners will be announced during Children’s Book Week, May 7-13, 2012. The awards are sponsored by the Children’s Book Council, which celebrates the transformative power of literacy. Kids can vote individually or librarians, teachers, and booksellers can log on to record their students’ votes.

    Finalists for the 3rd-4th grade Book of the Year are:

    Bad Kitty Meets the Baby by Nick Bruel

    A Funeral in the Bathroom and other School Bathroom Poems by Kalli Dakos

    The Monstrous Book of Monsters by Libby Hamilton

    Sidekicks by Dan Santat

    Squish #1: Super Amoeba by Jennifer and Matthew Holm

    Finalists for 5th-6th Grade Book of the Year are:

    Bad Island by Doug TenNapel

    How to Survive Anything by Rachel Buchholz

    Lost & Found by Shaun Tan

    Okay for Now by Gary Schmidt

    Racing in the Rain: My Life as a Dog by Garth Stein

    For more about Children’s Book Week…

    To vote …

     



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The Healing Spell—Launch Day and Giveaway!

Giveaways, New Releases

Welcome! We’re excited to celebrate the book release of one of our very own members—Kimberley Griffiths Little’s The Healing Spell published by Scholastic Press launches TODAY!

July 1 is the perfect pub date for The Healing Spell because the final chapters in the story take place during the 4th of July weekend. Those last scenes include a shotgun, a wedding, a death, a confession, a storm and a very cute boy. But not in that order.

We caught up with Kimberley for an interview and a bonus—a giveaway of a signed hardcover of The Healing Spell! Leave a comment to be entered! The winner will be announced Saturday, July 3rd.

From the jacket flap: Twelve-year-old Livie is living with a secret and it’s crushing her. She knows she is responsible for her mother’s coma, but she can’t tell anyone. It’s up to her to find a way to wake her momma up.

Stuck in the middle of three sisters, hiding a forbidden pet alligator, and afraid to disappoint her daddy, whom she loves more than anyone else, Livie struggles to find her place within her own family as she learns about the powers of faith and redemption.

Livie’s powerful, emotional, and sometimes humorous story will stay with readers long after the last line is read.

Welcome to From the Mixed-Up Files, Kimberley!

We’re curious how a writer who grew up in San Francisco, lived a couple of stints in Oklahoma and Utah, and now makes her home on the banks of the Rio Grande happened to write such a convincing story about a girl growing up in the swamps of Louisiana.

I can answer that question in four words: A Family Road Trip.

About twelve years ago, my family and I drove the corridor of Highway 10, stopping in Louisiana and New Orleans for several days to explore. We met with a Cajun tour guide whose enthusiasm and knowledge and fascinating stories immediately captivated me. We also took a boat into the bayous and swamps with another guide who showed us where he lived along the banks and hunted and fished and took us out to his crawfish traps.

Four more words: I fell in love. Hard. I couldn’t stop thinking about my experiences in Louisiana and the magic I felt there and the people of the bayous. I started reading dozens of books, everything I could get my hands on—from native Louisiana writers, memoirs, professors writing about the history—to fisherman and wildlife photographers.

I returned again and again, staying in a cabin on the bayou, eating crawfish, dancing to live Cajun bands, visiting all the museums, watching documentaries. Last year I did a two week road trip with a friend from the South and we met with seven different traiteurs in their homes to hear about their experiences as a traiteur – a religious folk healer tradition that goes back three hundred years in the Cajun culture when they first arrived in the Louisiana swamps.

Unusual settings have always been a springboard for my work.

How many times did you revise the book, and did you end up taking out anything you loved?

When the story and my characters were bursting in my mind and I knew I was ready to begin writing, I wrote the first draft in a little more than three weeks during the summer when it was hot and muggy—the same season as the book. I felt like I was *living* Livie’s story right along with her. It was a bit surreal.

I spent 3-5 years revising—which included breaks to write and revise other manuscripts–but I kept going back to The Healing Spell because I loved it so much and the characters were so alive in my mind. I had a lot of interest from various editors, but the story was finally ready when an editor at Scholastic stayed up all night to finish reading the manuscript. The next morning she made an offer to my agent, as well as offering on two other manuscripts for a three-book deal.

I didn’t take out anything that I loved during the writing—or the editorial process. I actually got to add more depth to many scenes, especially the ones with T-Jacques Landry, a boy Livie knows down the bayou, as well as a whole new chapter. (Chapter Twelve, in case you’re curious!)

Did you base any of your characters on real people?

No one in particular, but many of the Cajun people and their stories in Greg Guirard’s book, Cajun Families of the Atchafalaya were incredibly inspiring to me. Then I had the most unusual experience last April of 2009 when I was introduced to a man who fit the character of Livie Mouton’s daddy—so perfectly it was like destiny to meet him and his wife.

Mr. Elward Stephens is an older version of J.B. Mouton, Livie’s daddy, in The Healing Spell.

He lives in a house that he built himself on Bayou Long, fishing out the back door, making his own cypress pirogue (small canoe-like boat), growing up barefoot in the woods and swimming in the bayou as a kid—and speaking French and listening to French music while we danced in his living room! He and his wife are two of my favorite people in Louisiana.

What are you working on now?

I’m currently writing a companion book to The Healing Spell, which is already under contract with Scholastic, but the publication date is not firm yet.  Miz Mirage Allemond, the folk healer traiteur who lives in the swamp that Livie meets, is such an intriguing character that I wanted to know more about her. The new project is from the viewpoint of Shelby Jayne, Miz Mirage’s eleven-year-old daughter. Plus it has a ghost! And secrets! The title is still To Be Decided.

Thank you, Kimberley, and Happy Book Release Day!

Readers, we hope you enjoyed the interview!

If you’d like to a chance to win a hardcover of Kimberley’s new book, make sure you post in the comments section. Tweets and Facebook and Blog posts earn you more entries. The winner will be announced Saturday!

Kimberley is celebrating ALL DAY today so leave questions; she’ll answer, and let’s have a good time! Laissez les bon temps rouler!

There’s a HUGE party happening at Kimberley’s blog, too. If you want a chance to win her Awesome Prize Package, go here to visit, eat a beignet, and leave a comment!

And for those who want to see more, here’s the very cool book trailer.  Enjoy!

Don’t forget to check out The Healing Spell on Amazon or your favorite bookstore.

Enjoy Kimberley’s new Southern-styled website and don’t forget to download the Teacher’s Guide and the brand new Mother/Daughter Book Club Guide- discussion questions, activities for moms and girls and a fun Louisiana dessert!

18 Comments

18 Comments

  1. Andrea  •  Jul 1, 2010 @5:12 am

    Thanks for sharing some interesting tidbits about your writing process, Kimberley, as well as where the story came from. It sounds like a great book! You can enter me in your contest, because I’d love to read it. I’m already dying to know if she manages to wake up her mother or how she comes to accept it.

  2. Robyn Gioia  •  Jul 1, 2010 @7:56 am

    It’s always interesting to learn of an authors journey in writing. You know it’s a good book when the characters live inside the author’s head. Thank you for a good interview.

  3. Wendy  •  Jul 1, 2010 @8:12 am

    Very cool trailer. I can’t wait to see the one that’s being made for my upcoming book. Isn’t it so exciting to see someone else’s envisioning of your book?

    Now you have to work on the next book! Avoid the swamp monsters on the journey! :D

  4. Jemi Fraser  •  Jul 1, 2010 @8:36 am

    Sounds like a really enjoyable book Kimberley! Livie sounds like a very real character with an interesting story! :)

  5. Amie Borst  •  Jul 1, 2010 @8:45 am

    I can’t wait to read this! My children watched the book trailor in awe. So I think I’ll be reading it with them! :)

  6. colleen kosinski  •  Jul 1, 2010 @9:06 am

    Love the trailer.

  7. Dianne White  •  Jul 1, 2010 @10:55 am

    Loved the trailer! The book sounds fascinating. Can’t wait to read it!

  8. Patricia Cruzan  •  Jul 1, 2010 @12:09 pm

    Your book looks interesting, and I like the title. The comments, written on the blog, grab the reader’s attention. I would love to win the book. I taught school in Louisiana for a period of time, so I enjoyed seeing your picture of the bayou.

  9. R. L.  •  Jul 1, 2010 @12:34 pm

    Congratulations, Kimberly! THE HEALING SPELL sounds aMaZinG!!

  10. Karen Schwartz  •  Jul 1, 2010 @1:41 pm

    Your book trailer is awesome! I just won your book in a blog contest, and I can’t wait to read it!

  11. Wendy S  •  Jul 1, 2010 @7:34 pm

    Terrific interview! I always love hearing the story behind the story – and what an incredible setting and premise. Can’t wait to read it.

  12. Mindy Alyse Weiss  •  Jul 1, 2010 @8:28 pm

    Great interview, Kimberley. Your novel sounds amazing. I LOVE the trailer, and can’t wait to read The Healing Spell. :)

  13. Cathe Olson  •  Jul 1, 2010 @8:47 pm

    This book sounds great. I’ll want to get it for my library in the fall and will download the teachers guide for the staff. Would also love to win a copy for my daughters and I.

  14. Laurie Beth Schneider  •  Jul 1, 2010 @10:34 pm

    What a great trailer, Kimberly. Who did the voiceover?

    Cant’ wait to read your book.

  15. Mike Jung  •  Jul 1, 2010 @10:47 pm

    Wonderful interview, Kimberly! It’s very compelling to read about the powerful impact a place can have on a writer, and of course I always like hearing about the revision process. It sounds like you really persevered with THE HEALING SPELL, congrats on your launch!

  16. Kimberley Griffiths Little  •  Jul 2, 2010 @7:27 am

    Thank you so much everyone for all the lovely wishes and congrats!

    Laurie – the girl who did the voice-over is a gal named Lisa in Phoenix who used to live in Louisiana and wants to get into acting. She’s got a beautiful speaking voice, doesn’t she – and it’s mesmerizing, too. I didn’t actually hire her, my producers, Nua Music, did, so I don’t even know her last name. I wrote the script, and they got the recording done in two sessions. I do know that for a week before recording she spent hours talking to her friends in the bayou country of Louisiana to get the accent just right.

    I hope the audio book gets picked up and she gets to do the voice for it!!

  17. Laurie Beth Schneider  •  Jul 2, 2010 @2:35 pm

    Thanks, Kimberly. I loved Lisa’s voice. Maybe you could do a post about book trailers….

  18. Melina  •  Jul 2, 2010 @3:59 pm

    What a cool trailer and a great interview. I would love to read and review this book.