Library-Loving Blogdgett…take a virtual tour.

March 26, 2010 | Uncategorized

Its Library-Loving Week and I’m participating in the LIBRARY-LOVING BLOG CHALLENGE. Thought you might like to learn a little bit more about my library, Fishkill’s Blodgett Memorial Library.

Fishkill’s Blodgett Memorial Library was founded in 1934 and while it has grown and changed to meet the needs of the community, it has managed to maintain a small town, intimate feel. When you walk in the door you are always greeted with a smile.
Julie (the Library Director) and Sandy are just two of the many wonderful employees and volunteers that assist the 10,000 people a month who walk through Blodgett’s doors. They are also really sweet about handing my kids the key to the bathroom ALL THE TIME!
Blodgett has a wonderfully quaint feel to it, but it also provides computer access to anyone who needs it. That’s just the tip of the ice berg though. The library runs a host of other programs that help and support all different components of the community…
AARP provides free tax help at the library.

They also have a large selection of LARGE PRINT Books.

Blodgett’s Battle Bots participate in the Regional Battle of the Books Competition. "Battle of the Books is a nationally recognized literature contest in which young people answer trivia questions based on specific books they have read. It encourages young people to get involved with great literature, work together as a team and then gather with other teens in the spirit of friendly competition to test their knowledge. The goal of this program is to foster a lifelong love of reading and to encourage library use among middle grade students." Woo Hoo!

Some of Blodgett’s additional activities and groups include…

*BOOK BUDDIES (where teens read to kids)
*KNITTERS and TEEN KNITTERS
*FATHER’S RIGHTS
*MYSTERY BOOK CLUB
*FRIENDS GROUP
*CHESS CLUB


There is also a separate Mystery Book section and plenty of Nonfiction to keep a curious reader busy.

Dear to my heart, they have the YA Lounge. Without a doubt some of my donation will be ear marked for teen readers. Can’t wait until I can put one of my books on the self here…

Some of my favorites are right here!

Before you can make it upstairs to the YA section, you have to spend lots of time with Miss Siebert in the Children’s Room. This of course is a pleasure. :o)

Shhhhhhhh I’m working on getting a book or two down here also.

Miss Siebert runs an active Children’s Room with Toddler and Preschool story times and year round events and activities. The highlight of the program is the Summer Reading Program.


Last but not least, when the doors are ready to close for the evening and they must kick you out, you can take your chin-high stack of books and multimedia to the front desk and check out with a smile because you know that you can come back to Blodgett tomorrow. This is a wonderful library filled to the brim with dedicated staff and volunteers. I’m very proud that they are my library.

If you haven’t had a chance to stop by and make a comment on the LIBRARY-LOVING BLOG CHALLENGE, please take a moment to click on the link and leave a quick note. For every individual and unique comment I am donating $1.00 up to $150 to this hardworking Library. I also encourage you to support your local library in any way that you can.

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Library-Loving Blog Challenge 2010

March 22, 2010 | Uncategorized


This is a library-loving blog challenge!

For every commenter on this post or any of this week’s LIBRARY-LOVING BLODGETT post between now and midnight on 3/31/10, I will donate $1.00 to my local library: FISHKILL-BLODGETT MEMORIAL LIBRARY, up to an amount of $150.

How easy could it be? You comment, I cough up the money, the library gets a gift! If you don’t have a favorite library story to share in the comment section, “I love libraries” will do.

Note that my pledge is “per commenter”—so if a single person leaves 50 comments, that still only counts once! But you can do more by spreading the word … please link to this post, tweet about it, and send your friends here so they can comment and raise more money.

If you’re moved to start your own challenge, you are quite welcome, and please leave that information in the comments. Also, if you’re a fan of BLODGETT MEMORIAL LIBRARY you can also add your donation to mine or send it directly to the library.

Blodgett Memorial Library
37 Broad Street
Fishkill, New York 12524
Phone 845.896.9215
Fax 845.896.9243

blodmem@optonline.net

For a complete list of participating bloggers (and to visit other sites where you can help libraries just by leaving a comment!) visit (writerjenn) Jennifer R. Hubbard’s blog at http://writerjenn.livejournal.com/

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The NY SCBWI 2010 Conference-Part 5-Sunday Afternoon

February 10, 2010 |
This is it…the missing blog. I know you’ve been wondering how it all ends. Let me see if I can get you there.

As Jane Yolen would say, it all starts with BIC (Butt in Chair). What is everyone waiting for? The Agent Panel Discussion of course.
ASK THE AGENTS: 3 AGENTS ANALYZE THE MARKET
LO-Lin Oliver (Moderator)
GN-George Nicholson, Sterling and Lord Literistic
RS-Rosemary Stimola, Stimola Literary Studio
TW-Tina Wexler, ICM
The session started with everyone telling a little bit about themselves, their agency etc…
Due to unfortunate technical difficulties, George Nicholson was very difficult to hear for his opening remarks.
RS-You should have come to the conclusion that an agent is an important thing to have.
-Things in publishing are moving at lightening speed.
-The area of sub-rights is changing drastically.
-Stimola Literary Agency is a boutique agency (home office/flexible hours/virtual staff)
-Publishers are in a "land grab" because no one knows what is coming down the road.
TW-Agreed with the earlier comments, but added a reminder…All of us are here because we love books. We (agents) don’t have a job without all of you.
LO-How would you characterize the current climate?
RS-Its challenging, but that is what makes it exciting.
-Write a kick ass story and then let the professionals help with the rest of the process.
GN-Mediocre and ordinary simply will not sell
-Remember that this business is subject to personal taste.
TW-Be mindful of the market but understand that what you see now was bought 1+ years ago.
-Be passionate and smart.
-Know who your competition is.
LO-Do you believe in trends?
RS-I SET TRENDS!!!!!! (She reps Suzanne Collins author of the HUNGER GAMES. This gives her HUGE bragging rights LOL!)
-After the Hunger Games, all the Dystopian/Futuristic subs she is receiving seem familiar.
GN-Suggests reading adult books also, to know what is going on in children’s fiction.
TW-The manuscripts that she’s sold in the current market had one thing in common, the authors all had interests in other areas. It informs their writing. Your outside passions make your writing better.
LO-Are you willing to look at writers who have not yet been published?
TW-75% of my clients were unpublished when I took them on.
RS-Nothing more exciting that finding a new fabulous voice out there.
-Everyone you bring in is deserving of a portion of my time. So I have to ask myself…."Can I do this?" That is why I am selective.
-Publishers are being selective too, but that may not be a bad thing.
My thoughts? That last line is both frustrating and reassuring at the same time. I can live with the idea that the best get published and it motivates me to keep working harder to be one of the best. I know its not an easy venture but won’t it feel sweeter when you’ve had to work that hard? We can always use some extra guidance and the next speaker has rolled out the yellow brick road for us.
Now its our job to have enough brains, courage and heart to make the journey.
Yes, yes, yes! It is none other than Jane Yolen with a keynote speech titled I STILL LOVE BOOKS.
*Too many of us want to be famous millionaires instead of being writers (whole room hangs head in shame). Trying to win the big prize is like looking for fairy dust. All YOU can count on is the joy of discovery, the process.
*Why do authors network?
-To avoid a lot of mistakes.
-To keep current of the who, what, when, and where in children’s publishing.
-You will make good friends on your own level and above.
Look around you right now…you may be sitting to the next award winner or best seller, if you’re not one yourself.
Remember, when you do make it…we can’t pay back what we’ve gotten, but we can pay it forward.
Being part of SCBWI gives you knowledge to help protect you from being disenfranchised and screwed…or at least it helps you understand why you were.
JANE’S 20 WRITING POINTS
1. Eschew the exclamation point. Use your words to paint the emotion instead.
2. Go easy on adverbs.
3. Don’t let your characters float on the page…anchor them with action.
4. Have fun writing.
5. BIC-Butt in Chair
HOP-Heart on the Page
P no F- Passion not Fashion
6. Don’t write what you are allergic to.
7. No one expects everything to have a happy ending. Don’t be afraid of a different ending, of hard choices.
8. Fall through the words into the story. Sometimes simply simple is the best.
9. Not everything should be simple.
10. You need to find the right word. One word is the difference between the lightning bug and the lightening.
11. Call me Ishmal. Its not the opening line itself, but how it carries the DNA for the whole book.
12. Exercise the writing muscle. Work on your craft every day.
13. Every writer/artist is either nurtured or a nurturer…few claim to be both.
14. You NEED an editor. Our words are like wayward children-they need tough love. Learn to love the revision process.
15. Money flows towards the author, not away from the author.
16. Too many writers ignore landscape to their peril. Learn to see, then hear.
17. Read what you’ve written aloud-it gives you an unusual perspective.
18. Writer’s Block…its all in your mind. Turn to a different writing project.
19. There are actually projects you will never complete.
20. Write small while waiting to prepare for a larger project.
After hearing Jane, everyone wanted to crawl into a quiet corner with their over-excited thoughts and begin writing. We might have if there weren’t so many wonderful author’s signing books.
Lin Oliver signs some HANK ZIPZER and DANIEL FUNK books for the boys and the Fishkill Elementary PARP Program.
Does Jim Benton remind you a little of Happy Bunny?
Me and *SQUEE* Libba Bray, the 2010 Michael Printz award winner and fantabulous author of GOING BOVINE!
The amazing and inspirational Jacqueline Woodson. All I can say is that if she’s written it, we should be reading it.
Francesco Sedita and Paul Zelinsky autograph some books for some very special readers of the Fishkill Elementary PARP Program.
Linda, Jodi and I hanging out with Jane Yolen. WOW! (Sorry Jane…had to use that exclamation point.)
Last but not least, Peter Sis and I had a good laugh together. I spent some time telling him how (while living Germany) I went to visit Poland and The Czech Republic. In fact, I was the first person in my immediate family to visit either place. Unfortunately, on the trip I encountered a mean stomach virus and made a spectacle of myself in numerous public places. (By spectacle I mean that I suddenly lost all control over the contents of my stomach) Peter’s response was…"That was you?"
As we both had a good laugh, he happened to glance at my name tag and see that I was from Fishkill. I wasn’t sure why he was laughing so hard, but it turns out that he once stopped in Fishkill so that his daughter "could make a spectacle of herself." Who knew? We decided to call a truce. :o)
Kim and John on the St. Charles Bridge in Prague-May 1995 (A spectacle free moment LOL)
Its time to close the book on another wonderful NY SCBWI Conference. I’ll be attending the Eastern PA Poconos Conference in April so until then…its back to our regularly scheduled programing.
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The NY SCBWI 2010 Conference-Part 4-Sunday Morning

February 6, 2010 |
It was a tough morning. My roommate Linda Hanlon and I were very happy in our cozy little beds when the alarm went off. Ugh…time to check out, store the luggage, haul the giant cache of books to be signed, hunt down a muffin and make it in time for the first speaker of the morning. Illustrators…I tried my best. I didn’t mean to miss you. I love you, but I love coffee too. Please forgive me…you all ROCK!

We started off the morning with Susan Raab and WHAT’S SELLING, WHAT’S NOT? Let me give you a run down…
*Middle readers are very popular right now.
*Vampires (although the duration of this trend is in question).
*Mystery and Ghost Stories are growing. Shout out to my very own GHOST GIRL.
*Dystopian…kicked off by the HUNGER GAMES.
*Picture Books are sticking close to the classics or to books that feel classic like LIBRARY LION.
*Books with staying power.
*Girl books, particularly series that have a quick turn over rate ex.-GOSSIP GIRLS.
*Inspirational/Spiritual/Hopeful…but not religious. (Very encouraging news for TOUCHING THE SURFACE and THE OPPOSITE OF GRAVITY) :o)
*Interesting nonfiction (not institutional) story based.
Things you can do…
*School visits
*1 to 1 relationships are critical
*Know Booksellers
*Network and build attachments
*Social Media
*Web Site
*Help generate traffic at store visits
*Be a strong community member-be actively involved.
*Try to look strategically and at the whole picture.
*Use your strengths
*Focus on a particular aspect of the market and make it work for you.
*Give people an idea of what your voice is in the industry.
*It may take time for things to grow and establish.
And some final tidbits…
*Publishers are streamlining the number of books published and the number of books printed.
*Cost IS a factor.
*Multimedia approaches to books plays a roll.
*Things are changing so quickly. Don’t freeze and get stuck. Push forward knowing that the answers are unclear for everyone.
*Write from the heart
*Be persistent.
Next up is Sheldon Fogelman…talking about SHAPING A CAREER IN CHILDREN’S BOOKS.
First off, I wanted to hug Sheldon Fogelman of of the Sheldon Fogelman Agency. He’s that adorable. Then you realize how savvy he is and you want him for an agent. He represents children’s authors and illustrators, not books. See, you’re falling in love already. His mantra is to support authors and illustrators for as long as he can, in good times and bad. Where do I sign up?
So let me give you a few of the nuggets that he shared…
*If you are going to be an author-keep writing.
*You have to be professional and remember your job-your job is to write.
*Once you submit your work, you are in the "business" of writing.
*The best way to get published is to have a good agent.
*You can’t really work effectively if you are burdened with unreasonable financial pressure.
*Understand the pulse of the market.
*Be willing to expand to new areas.
*Work with at critique group.
*In order to proceed you will have to have a plan.
*Read as many books as you possibly can.
*Be open to editorial input.
*Self promotion depends on how much time you have.
Sheldon spoke highly of Jerry Pinkney. He told the story of how Jerry’s ability (with the guidance of Sheldon) to rethink his plan and branch out in other directions, led him to multiple awards and recognitions with the most recent being the 2010 Caldecott Award for THE LION AND THE MOUSE.
Sheldon left us with a few key ideas…
*Learn as much about the business as you can.
*Be open to criticism-LOOK FOR IT!
*Don’t be distracted, this is hard work in a hard business. It is a serious business even though it is a fun one.
*When submitting, the work speaks for itself. Don’t tell me how to use it. Don’t tell me what your kids think.
Now, fasten your seatbelt….things are about to get seriously funny. There is the possibility of an injury from laughing. Our next speaker is funny man, Jim Benton, THE COMPULSIVE CREATOR.
Jim was kind enough to agree to let me post some of the work he shared with us, so don’t forget to stop by and give him a big thank you on Facebook.
Jim started off by admitting that he had a "problem"…he’s a compulsive creator. By the end of his talk the whole audience wanted to snag a just a small piece of his creativity. He’s that good folks. He started taking us through his process…
His specialty is licensing and he loves it because he can draw something once and sell it over and over again. He also wanted us to know that he’s never done just one thing. He’s always got a pan on the fire somewhere. In fact he even spent 12 years illustrating articles for Writer’s Digest. Because he had to read all the articles in order to illustrate them, he’s quite the expert on everything you need to know to be a successful writer.
Jim encouraged everyone to follow the creative impulse even if it doesn’t take you anywhere in the end…some times you just have to go down that road LOL!
Jim openly admits that he has boxes of orphan art all over the place, but sometimes there is that one piece that nobody wants but just keeps hanging around.
Although no bunny loved happy bunny in the beginning, he’s was eventually picked up by Hot Topic and became go-to wardrobe item for teens who wanted to tick off their parents, (but not get their shirt taken away.)
By the way…if you are interested in licensing, remember the community is small, so keep your nose clean and don’t tick anyone off…
Jim also passed along a couple other nuggets from working on his books DEAR DUMB DIARY and FRANNY K STEIN
*Your editor will make you better if you listen to them. They are rooting for you!
*If you are a writer you should write everyday for fun.
*As tough as this business is, it beats the hell out of REAL WORK! In fact his message to kids is that when the lawyers and the scientists go home at night, they put on music, look at art, read books…It is the artists who feed the workers.
Before he let us go we had a little creative fun. Throwing out random ideas so we could see how the creative process worked…
A platypus and a blender. Who knew you could do that? LOL!
I’m going to leave you with one more Jim Benton masterpiece…this is for all the dad’s (spouses) who stayed home with the kids for "DADDY PARTY WEEKEND" so that we could attend the SCBWI Conference…
The final blog installment coming soon…
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