My grandfather, Philip Anthony Sadler, passed away on December 25. He served for nearly thirty years as a professor of children's literature at the University of Central Missouri, where he founded and for all those years ran their Children's Literature Festival, which remains one of the largest such events in the United States. He had been sick in various ways -- a stroke, lymphoma, heart trouble -- for years, but none of the illnesses ever dampened his mind or his spirit, and we were fortunate to be able to see him right before Christmas, when he died in peace. He is survived by my mother, his daughter, Becky Klein, and her husband Alan; his daughter-in-law, Leslie Hart, and her husband Jon; my sister, Melissa Jackson, and her husband Joe; my cousins Diana Sadler and Bruce Sadler; many dear friends, especially Floyd and Susan Pentlin, Naomi Williamson, and many authors; three brothers, Graham, Milton, and Paul Sadler, and their wives; and my boyfriend James, and me. He was eighty years old.
Those are the facts; and we are left with the feelings that accompany them, the simultaneous lack and multiplicity of connection that signify death. The lack is in the absence, the knowledge that he is no longer there, at the other end of a phone line or e-mail, loving oysters, Jessica Fletcher, and good books; wearing his grandpa sweaters; complaining about modern-dress productions at the Kansas City Lyric Opera -- for me specifically, that he will not be at ALA Midwinter in Boston in three weeks, moving determinedly through the exhibition halls on his cane. And then the multiplicity is in the connections that we try (or I try) to fill that absence with: that a piece of pecan pie at Marie Callender's can stop me for a moment, make me think how much he loved it; that a side remark in a conversation can touch off the story he told often and all his grandchildren can recite by heart, climaxing with "Mizz Sadler, your boys are talkin' nasty!" in a full Southern accent. Those memories, our knowledge of how well he died, saying goodbye, all of that, cannot compensate for the the hole in our worlds right now; and I imagine there might always be a Papa-shaped space in my life, as I can still feel out the edges of a Grandma-shaped space some days. But we go on around those edges, living the lives we've made by being the people they made of us.
This is especially true for me, because I owe my entire present life as a children's book editor in New York to my grandfather. He gave me his review copies of children's books for years and years, so I never stopped reading them, even when I had long supposedly outgrown them. He introduced me to the world of book people through the Festival -- that there were authors who made these books, that they were consciously grown and shaped. He unconsciously taught me to associate the literary life with culture and travel and cosmopolitanism, so that when I was ten or twelve years old, my great goal in life was to be a children's literature professor just like him. He knew how appreciative I was of these gifts, I'm glad to say, and knew also the one way I could think of to repay him: My book, when it appears next year, will be dedicated to him and my grandmother. For now, I'm still so grateful for my life, the family he helped create and bring together, his presence with us for so many years, the books, always; and the best I can do is to do well by them.
Goodbye, Papa, and love, and thank you.
Sunday, December 27, 2009
A Goodbye
Posted by Cheryl at 9:43 AM 42 comments
Labels: Family, Reflections
Friday, December 18, 2009
The Brooklyn Arden 2009 Holiday Gift Guide
AKA, all my 2009 books and a few other favorite things. To wit:
Absolutely Maybe by Lisa Yee. Coedited by Arthur and me. CYBIL nominee.
Perfect for: YA readers; fans of hair dye or tacos; anyone who has ever worked a fast-food job; anyone with a crazy mother or charming best friend; people who like a mix of the funny and the bittersweet (that is, if you like laughing or crying); residents of Los Angeles, California.
Bobby vs. Girls (Accidentally) by Lisa Yee, illustrated by Dan Santat. Coedited by Arthur and me. Starred review in The Horn Book. New York Public Library 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing.
Perfect for: Boys; girls; particularly the seven- to nine-year-old members of both genders; anyone who has ever felt puzzled by the behavior of a person of the other gender; people who like donuts.
The Circle of Gold (The Book of Time III), by Guillaume Prevost, translated by William Rodarmor.
Perfect for: Fans of time travel novels, literature in translation, or the first two books in the series.
Heartsinger by Karlijn Stoffels, translated by Laura Watkinson. Two starred reviews.
Perfect for: People who like fairy-tale flavoring in their stories; people who are thoughtful about love; people interested in unconventional novel structures; fans of translated literature, character profiles, magic realism, and the Dutch.
Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco X. Stork. Five starred reviews; Booklist Editors' Choice; Kirkus Best Book for YA; Horn Book Fanfare List; School Library Journal Best Book of the Year; Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year; New York Times Notable Book for Children; Washington Post Notable Book.
Perfect for: People interested in Asperger's syndrome, lawyers, how religion can affect everyday life, moral dilemmas, wonderful characters.
Moribito II; Guardian of the Darkness, by Nahoko Uehashi, translated by Cathy Hirano. Starred review in Publishers Weekly; USBBY Outstanding International Book.
Perfect for: Fans of fantasy, awesome female characters, martial arts movies, Japan, fascinating settings, literature in translation, or the first book, which was equally terrific and won the Mildred L. Batchelder Award for Translation.
Operation Yes, by Sara Lewis Holmes. Starred review in Booklist.
Perfect for: military families; rambunctious kids who get in trouble; kids interested in art or theater; precise kids who like to plan; teachers; people who take improv; people who love innovative, risk-taking children's literature,
The Snow Day by Komako Sakai. Four starred reviews; New York Times Best Illustrated Book; USBBY Outstanding International Book.
Perfect for: Fans of literature in translation; children with parents who travel a lot; anyone who longs for the peace and joy of a snowy day.
Wishworks, Inc. by Stephanie S. Tolan, illustrated by Amy June Bates. New York Public Library 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing.
Perfect for: People who like dogs; people who want a dog; fans of quality and charming chapter books.
+++++
And things I had nothing to do with creating but I loved in 2009 and recommend highly:
Adult books: Zeitoun by Dave Eggers; The Beautiful Struggle by Ta-Nehisi Coates; Agnes and the Hitman by Jennifer Crusie and Bob Mayer; The Learners by Chip Kidd; The Kid: What Happened After My Boyfriend and I Decided to Get Pregnant by Dan Savage.
YA novels: How to Say Goodbye in Robot by Natalie Standiford, an underappreciated gem about a girl and a boy who don't fall in love; Destroy All Cars by Blake Nelson, an even less appreciated gem about a girl and a boy who were once in love, with each other and with the environment, and have to figure out the complications of each fading away; The Spectacular Now by Tim Tharp, the most spectacular feat of voice I read this year.
Middle-grade novels: Emma-Jean Lazarus Fell Out of a Tree by Lauren Tarshis; Alec Flint: The Ransom Note Blues by Jill Santopolo; When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead.
Movies: Up in the Air; District 9; Star Trek; Bright Star; (500) Days of Summer
Things: A DVR; a wireless mouse; and my Good Grips vegetable peeler, the single best household investment I have made in many a moon.
Happy holidays!
Posted by Cheryl at 12:18 AM 13 comments
Labels: Books I Edit, Lists, Movies, Roundups
Monday, December 14, 2009
More Flap Copy Shenanigans
So I was browsing books to give for Christmas presents today (at my local independent bookstore, and I hope you all are shopping at yours), and I saw the quite-lovely cover of Little Bee, an adult novel by Chris Cleave. And look at this flap copy!:
We don't want to tell you WHAT HAPPENS in this book.So I'm curious about this now: Does anyone who objected to my copy below like this better? If you do like this better, then I would guess that it's mostly a matter of style -- that mine was signed "The Editors," which was, perhaps, a little obsequious; and that mine wasn't that polished. Also, this is not demanding five minutes of your time to read the first chapter. But if you don't, then I'd guess it's the whole principle of the thing. . . .
It is a truly SPECIAL STORY and we don't want to spoil it.
NEVERTHELESS, you need to know enough to buy it, so we will just say this:
THIS IS THE STORY OF TWO WOMEN. Their lives collide one fateful day, and one of them has to make a terrible choice, the kind of choice we hope you never have to face. Two years later, they meet again--the story starts there . . .
Once you have read it, you'll want to tell your friends about it. When you do, please don't tell them what happens. The magic is in how the story unfolds.
I dislike this copy, actually -- the slight condescension of the "kind of choice we hope you never have to make" undercuts the supposed terribleness of whatever that terrible choice is, and "one fateful day" and "magic" make it sound twee. The cover is really gorgeous, and the pages have deckled edges, but I wanted to read this book less after I read the copy. . . . (And sure, perhaps I'd dislike my own copy if I had distance from it.) It would be interesting to talk to the editor about it, and will be interesting to see what they do with the paperback.
And anyone read the book? Is it any good?
Posted by Cheryl at 1:20 AM 23 comments
Labels: Editing
Thursday, December 10, 2009
A Little Flap Copy Reader-Response Question
Just out of curiosity, how would you all, as readers, respond if you opened up a book and read this flap copy? My curiosity is sincere, though the chance that we'll actually use this copy is small.
Dear Reader,What would you do? (It really is an astonishing first chapter.)
This is an amazing novel about a boy who works miracles and his older sister, who tries to stop him. (It is also about the existence of God.) However, we have decided we don’t want to waste your valuable time with more flap copy. Instead, we encourage you to flip to page 1 and read the first chapter—yes, the whole thing. It is also amazing. You will not regret it. Thank you for your time.
Sincerely,
The Editors
Posted by Cheryl at 7:07 PM 46 comments
Labels: Editing
Next Kidlit Drink Night!
Because the ALA awards will be a scant five days away, we'll have a Newbery/Caldecott/Printz prediction contest with FABULOUS PRIZES -- to be determined, but we promise they'll be worthy of the all-caps. And we'll be collecting kids' and YA books for Project Cicero, "an annual non-profit book drive designed to create -- or supplement -- school and classroom libraries for children in under-resourced New York City public schools." So gather your guesses and your extra books and join us on Wednesday the 13th!
(And if you'd like to be on our e-mail list for future events, shoot us a message at nyckidlitdrinks at gmail dot com.)
Posted by Cheryl at 12:57 AM 4 comments
Labels: Diary
Sunday, December 06, 2009
The Quote File: God
It is the final proof of God's omnipotence that he need not exist in order to save us. - Peter De Vries
God is of no importance unless He is of utmost importance. - Abraham Joshua Heschel
Those who believe that they believe in God, but without passion in their hearts, without anguish in mind, without uncertainty, without doubt, without an element of despair even in their consolation, believe in the God idea, not God himself. - Miguel de Unamuno
Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God? - Epicurus
Imagine a world in which generations of human beings come to believe that certain films were made by God or that specific software was coded by him. Imagine a future in which millions of our descendants murder each other over rival interpretations of Star Wars or Windows 98. Could anything -- anything -- be more ridiculous? And yet, this would be no more ridiculous than the world we are living in. - Sam Harris
If I were not an atheist, I would believe in a God who would choose to save people on the basis of the totality of their lives and not the pattern of their words. I think he would prefer an honest and righteous atheist to a TV preacher whose every word is God, God, God, and whose every deed is foul, foul, foul. - Isaac Asimov
I cannot imagine a God who rewards and punishes the objects of his creation, whose purposes are modeled after our own -- a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human frailty. - Albert Einstein
It does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods or no God. - Thomas Jefferson
Power always thinks it has a great soul and vast views beyond the comprehension of the weak; and that it is doing God's service when it is violating all his laws. - John Adams
I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it always coincides with their own desires. - Susan B Anthony
It has always seemed absurd to suppose that a god would choose for his companions, during all eternity, the dear souls whose highest and only ambition is to obey. - Robert Green Ingersoll
Your mind works very simply: you are either trying to find out what are God's laws in order to follow them; or you are trying to outsmart Him. - Martin H. Fischer
A religious man is a person who holds God and man in one thought at one time, at all times, who suffers no harm done to others, whose greatest passion is compassion, whose greatest strength is love and defiance of despair. - Abraham Joshua Heschel
Someday, after we have mastered the wind, the waves, tides and gravity, we will harness for God the energies of love; and then, for the second time in the history of the world, man will have discovered fire. - Teilhard de Chardin
God is conscience. He is even the atheism of the atheist. - Mohandas K. Gandhi
God made man because He loves stories. - Elie Wiesel
God writes the Gospel not in the Bible alone, but also on trees, and in the flowers and clouds and stars. – Martin Luther
But I always think that the best way to know God is to love many things. - Vincent van Gogh
We need God, not in order to understand the why, but in order to feel and sustain the ultimate wherefore, to give a meaning to the universe. - Miguel de Unamuno
God is not what you imagine or what you think you understand. If you understand you have failed. - Saint Augustine
Life is God's novel. Let him write it. - Isaac Bashevis Singer
_____________________
More -- and several of these quotations taken from -- here.
Posted by Cheryl at 3:01 PM 11 comments
Labels: Quotations, Religion
Friday, December 04, 2009
Decisions, Decisions
Contrary to appearances, I have been plugging away at my book -- indeed, that's partly why the blog has been quiet lately, that my writing brain is going into revising those talks (lightly). I'm now at a point where I need to decide which of the two versions of my 2006 plot talk will go into the text . . . if either, as there's also a 2008 plot talk that will definitely be in the book. And unavoidably for me, it makes many of the same points, albeit from a different angle and with rather different emphases.
So I thought I would ask you, dear readers, as you know best what's most useful and fun for you: Would you rather have Aristotle, Austen, Plot, and Pleasure: What a Dead Greek Philosopher and A Classic English Novelist Can Teach Us About Writing for Children? Or its slimmer, sleeker, less personal but rather more user-friendly cousin, The Essentials of Plot? (They're really far too much alike to justify including both.) Or do you think one plot talk is enough for a writing book? Let me know:
This poll will close next Thursday, December 12, at midnight; any further thoughts are welcome in the comments. The book should now hopefully be available -- knock wood and my work and designer's schedules -- by the end of February 2010. Thank you for your patience, and your feedback!
ETA: Please note this poll is not in reference to the TITLE of my book, as some commenters seem to believe; that's pretty well fixed in my head as SECOND SIGHT, with a charming cover with eyeglasses and everything. This poll is in reference to which of two very similar talks should appear WITHIN the book. Apologies for the lack of clarity.
Posted by Cheryl at 12:49 AM 17 comments
Labels: Projects
Tuesday, December 01, 2009
Twitter Chat with Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich
In a wide-ranging chat earlier today ("today" actually being January 22nd, 2010; this post has been backdated because of space issues), Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich and I discussed writing, editing, character-building, and race in publishing with a group of thoughtful Twitterers. Le transcript:
January 22, 2010 | ||
---|---|---|
2:23 am | olugbemisola: | RT @srjohannes: RT @chavelaque: @olugbemisola and cheryl will Twitter-chat Friday from 12-1 EST, hashtag #8GS0. Details: http://shar.es/aTaV5 |
2:28 pm | chavelaque: | Last reminder: @olugbemisola and I Twitter-chat TODAY from 12-1, hashtag #8GS0. Transcript will be posted afterward. |
2:30 pm | SaraKase: | RT @chavelaque: Last reminder: @olugbemisola and I Twitter-chat TODAY from 12-1, hashtag #8GS0. Transcript will be posted afterward. |
2:30 pm | TaraLazar: | EIGHTH-GRADE SUPERZERO! RT @chavelaque: @olugbemisola & I Twitter-chat TODAY from 12-1, hashtag #8GS0. Transcript posted afterward. #kidlit |
2:31 pm | JacquiRobbins: | RT @chavelaque Last reminder: @olugbemisola and I Twitter-chat TODAY from 12-1, hashtag #8GS0. Transcript will be posted afterward. |
2:33 pm | victoriajcoe: | RT @chavelaque Reminder: @olugbemisola and I Twitter-chat TODAY from 12-1, hashtag #8GS0. Transcript will be posted afterward. #kidlit |
2:42 pm | AALBooks: | TODAY twitterchat with @olugbemisola and @chavelaque 12 pm EST SHARP use hashtag #8GS0. Be there or be a SUPERZERO! |
3:20 pm | inkyelbows: | Twitterchat: @olugbemisola & @chavelaque TODAY 12-1p EST, hashtag #8GS0. Details: http://shar.es/aTaV5 (via @srjohannes) |
3:22 pm | hashtager: | # Twitterchat: @olugbemisola & @chavelaque TODAY 12-1p EST, hashtag #8GS0. Details: http://shar.es/aTaV5 (via @srjohannes) |
5:00 pm | chavelaque: | <> Hello, anyone? #8GS0 |
5:01 pm | olugbemisola: | I'm here! (I think) #8GS0 #8GS0 |
5:01 pm | HeleneBoudreau: | RT @chavelaque: <> Hello, anyone? #8GS0 |
5:01 pm | StephanieDBrown: | Hello! Thanks for doing this. :) #8GS0 |
5:02 pm | victoriajcoe: | Congrats on the book! Crazy in love with the characters! #8GS0 |
5:02 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | |
5:02 pm | chavelaque: | Oh, good! Welcome, everyone, & good to see you as always, @olugbemisola. :-) #8GS0 |
5:03 pm | lauram68: | @chavelaque hey chica! #8gs0 |
5:03 pm | olugbemisola: | thanks! this will be fun. #8GS0 |
5:03 pm | StephanieDBrown: | I ordered #8GS0 yesterday and I can't wait for my copy to arrive in the mail! I keep hearing how wonderful the characters are. |
5:04 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown thank u! character is my favourite part of the writing process #8GS0 |
5:04 pm | chavelaque: | Just to dive right in, Gbemi - I've heard you say SUPERZERO started with an image. What was it, & how did you develop it from there? #8GS0 |
5:04 pm | thebrainlair: | i just started reading. I'm at the part when Reggie goes to the homeless shelter with the youth group. Is it okay to join? #8gs0 |
5:05 pm | olugbemisola: | a boy in his bed in the middle of the night with the cover pulled over his head because there were bugs loose in his room #8GS0 |
5:05 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque & he was terrified that one would crawl into his mouth. & it was secretly being filmed 4 a school TV show. #8GS0 |
5:05 pm | chavelaque: | @thebrainlair Absolutely! The convo will be more general/writing/etc. than book-plot focused. #8GS0 |
5:05 pm | olugbemisola: | @thebrainlair please do! #8GS0 |
5:05 pm | thebrainlair: | RT @chavelaque: dive right in, Gbemi - Ive heard U say SUPERZERO started w/ an image. Wht was it, & how did U develop it from there? #8GS0 |
5:06 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque all of that changed, including his age, but his personality remained the same #8GS0 |
5:07 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Yup! And it really did start w/ ideas of embarrassment at school, fear, how that's connected to home . . . #8GS0 |
5:07 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola so it seems that photo of a boy's fears spoke to you? #8GS0 |
5:07 pm | thebrainlair: | Join the chat with @olugbemisola and @chavelaque about writing and 8th grade superzero #8gs0 |
5:07 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i did not at all expect to develop that image into a book #8GS0 |
5:08 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown definitely. that time during the teen years... #8GS0 |
5:08 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola You had to write three pages for a class or writing group, right? #8GS0 |
5:08 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown that acute self-consciousness... #8GS0 |
5:09 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | Are YOU afraid of bugs? Or TV shows? Or did you draw on other fears? #8gs0 |
5:09 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque yes, it was the night b4 the application was due 4 a wkshp w. Paula Danziger #8GS0 |
5:09 pm | olugbemisola: | @SaraLewisHolmes i am afraid of bugs now, i'm sorry to say. didn't used to be! i used to make 'ant hospitals' when i was a kid! #8GS0 |
5:10 pm | olugbemisola: | @SaraLewisHolmes i try to hide my current fear from my bug-enthusiast daughter. #8GS0 |
5:10 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola So where did you take it from there? #8GS0 |
5:11 pm | chavelaque: | Also what strikes me about it is that so often, as an editor, I'm trying to push through the story/action to get to the prime emotion #8GS0 |
5:11 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque Paula really encouraged me to continue on, and I didn't listen to her for a long time, but #8GS0 |
5:11 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque the character stayed with me #8GS0 |
5:12 pm | chavelaque: | + that the scene needs to convey, so we can better build action to do that - sounds like you started with emotion & built from there #8GS0 |
5:12 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque and after deciding to change Reggie's age from 10 to 13, there were themes that i really wanted to explore #8GS0 |
5:13 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque definitely. character and emotion are my favourite parts of the process. #8GS0 |
5:13 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Did you develop Reggie consciously? Profiles, taste charts, etc.? Or more through just writing? #8GS0 |
5:14 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i spend a *lot* of time thinking & writing notes, #8GS0 |
5:14 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque I do a lot of "think" writing, & imagine my characters in different situations, at different points during the day... #8GS0 |
5:15 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque when i'm riding the train or walking, i might imagine "what would x do in this situation, or in this conversation, #8GS0 |
5:15 pm | olugbemisola: | or if she had to confront that person" etc. a lot happens in the course of revision too. & sometimes a scene will come to mind, #8GS0 |
5:15 pm | victoriajcoe: | @olugbemisola, How did you decide how much personal context to give each 2ndary character (eg, Vicki, Donovan)? #8GS0 |
5:16 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque sometimes i see people who remind me of some aspect of a character, and observe them for a while. #8GS0 |
5:16 pm | olugbemisola: | @victoriajcoe Vicky is NOTHING like any Vickys I know! :) #8GS0 |
5:17 pm | victoriajcoe: | @olugbemisola I'm serious! #8gs0 |
5:17 pm | olugbemisola: | @victoriajcoe I was very interested in an 'ensemble piece', and i think that #8GS0 |
5:17 pm | olugbemisola: | @victoriajcoe well-developed 2ndary characters really move the story along and go along way toward the MC's growth #8GS0 |
5:18 pm | olugbemisola: | @victoriajcoe and the 'mean' characters are a lot of fun! #8GS0 |
5:19 pm | victoriajcoe: | @olugbemisola I loved what you said: Everyone has a story, and everyone's story matters #8gs0 |
5:19 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola @victoriajcoe There's one scene w/ Vicky in the cafeteria we played and played with to get right -- #8GS0 |
5:19 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | I agree. Outstanding secondary characters are necessary for me to fall into the world of a book. Can't just be the MC. #8gs0 |
5:19 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i don't do much character journaling, but i did 4 reggie because i struggled quite a bit with making him sympathetic #8GS0 |
5:20 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque without making him seem too whiny. #8GS0 |
5:20 pm | chavelaque: | + I think it came out of the MS once, then went back in - b/c it did show that Vicky had feelings, & a story, when she comes off hard. #8GS0 |
5:20 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola how long did you work on it before you started working with @chavelaque? #8GS0 |
5:21 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque that was important to me, and in a way it was equally important to me to leave out a lot of Donovan's backstory #8GS0 |
5:22 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown well...i started those first three pages in 2002, then i didn't do anything with it until the summer of 2006 when i #8GS0 |
5:22 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown queried @chavelaque #8GS0 |
5:22 pm | victoriajcoe: | @olugbemisola @chevaleque Yes, the 2ndary characters' stories seem to matter and it's all very satisfying #8gs0 |
5:23 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown i shouldn't say i didn't do anything...i think my subconscious worked on it a lot, and oh! #8GS0 |
5:23 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Wait, you hadn't written the book when you queried me? #8GS0 |
5:24 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown i did a fantastic workshop with author kate morgenroth and worked out some of the chapters & themes then #8GS0 |
5:24 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque um. #8GS0 |
5:24 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque how would you define 'written'? #8GS0 |
5:24 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola I did not know this. Normally I disapprove, b/c I think writers shld be committed w/o editor's interest. #8GS0 |
5:25 pm | olugbemisola: | @victoriajcoe thank you! #8GS0 |
5:25 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i was stuck for a long time, and my master plan #8GS0 |
5:25 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola But I will forgive you. :-) - Sry, just saw yrs. "written" = "completed draft." #8GS0 |
5:25 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque was that querying you would get me over the finish line #8GS0 |
5:26 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola It sounds like you did a lot of writing in those yrs btw 02-06; and I know every writer's process is different. #8GS0 |
5:26 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque thank you! (but, don't try this at home, kids.) #8GS0 |
5:27 pm | KarenMusings: | @olugbemisola Were you involved in any critique groups when you were writing the book? If so, were they helpful? #8GS0 |
5:27 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola I was surprised you queried me, honestly, b/c it seems often Black writers submit mostly to Black editors-understandably #8GS0 |
5:27 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown i did. i have journals and notebooks full of scenes, notes, random thoughts, etc. that all #8GS0 |
5:27 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown contributed to the final story #8GS0 |
5:28 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque well, for one thing, there weren't very many 2 submit to, which is a problem #8GS0 |
5:28 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola Picking up from @chavelaque comment, what made you query her? #8GS0 |
5:29 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque & i had spent a lot of time reading your blog and going over books you'd edited, and thought that you would connect #8GS0 |
5:29 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque with some of the themes in the story #8GS0 |
5:30 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola Got my answer. :) #8GS0 |
5:30 pm | olugbemisola: | @KarenMusings i was in one with kate morgenroth that was very helpful, especially in highlighting Reggie's positive qualities #8GS0 |
5:30 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Which I did! And I was honored/excited to work on it. #8GS0 |
5:30 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown ok, cool! :) #8GS0 |
5:31 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque thank you! right back at you. you were so helpful in the revision process #8GS0 |
5:31 pm | editorgurl: | Listening in on the great conversation with editor @chavelaque and @olugbemisola right now. Follow with hashtag: #8GS0 |
5:32 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque esp. because you care about structure and story and look for ways to construct a story #8GS0 |
5:32 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola I admit I sometimes also felt like Stupid White Editor, not quite getting something outside my experience. #8GS0 |
5:32 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque without sacrificing its emotional heart #8GS0 |
5:33 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola I was inspired by your author video. You'd make a great speaker @ libraries, bk stores & schools. Any dates set yet? #8GS0 |
5:33 pm | chavelaque: | + But I felt that way with @saralewisholmes's OPERATION YES too, where I was Stupid Civilian Editor, not getting something military... #8GS0 |
5:33 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque the important thing was that you were willing to engage, and didn't dismiss it as alien simply because of the race of #8GS0 |
5:33 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque the characters. #8GS0 |
5:33 pm | KarenMusings: | @chavelaque Do you think that writers of color are sometimes put into a box of the type of topics that they can write? #8GS0 |
5:33 pm | gregpincus: | Me, too! RT @editorgurl: Listening in on the great conversation w/ editor @chavelaque and @olugbemisola right now.Follow with hashtag: #8GS0 |
5:34 pm | chavelaque: | + A big part of being an editor: being humble & getting educated by yr authors, & helping share their story clearly w/ all readers. #8GS0 |
5:34 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i do appreciate editors, readers, etc. of other races, ethnicities, & cultures who are willing to cross borders, #8GS0 |
5:34 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @KarenMusings Great question! #8GS0 |
5:35 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque engage, educate themselves... in the end, that willingness 2keep trying to get it right, on all sides, is vital #8GS0 |
5:36 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Me too! "the willingness to keep trying to get it right," even when miscommunications or misunderstandings happen -- #8GS0 |
5:36 pm | thaliachaltas: | RT @gregpincus: @editorgurl: Listening in on the great conversation w/ editor @chavelaque and @olugbemisola right now.Follow hashtag #8GS0 |
5:36 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown thank you! that was hard. and yes, i am doing one next week! #8GS0 |
5:36 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Crucially important. & everyone getting their egos out of the way for the good of characters, story & book. #8GS0 |
5:37 pm | olugbemisola: | @KarenMusings absolutely. #8GS0 |
5:37 pm | olugbemisola: | @KarenMusings it's offensive, and silly, really... #8GS0 |
5:37 pm | bonnieadamson: | Also lurkimg . . .RT @gregpincus @editorgurl: Listening in on great conversation w/ editor @chavelaque and @olugbemisola right now. #8GS0 |
5:37 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | @chavelaque You were NEVER Stupid Civilian Editor. Always curious, kind editor. #8gs0 |
5:38 pm | olugbemisola: | @KarenMusings just like anyone else, our stories are about more than the colour of our skin, though they are very much impacted #8GS0 |
5:38 pm | olugbemisola: | @KarenMusings by that, and very much enriched by that as well. #8GS0 |
5:38 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola It didn't look hard. It seems u spoke from the heart in that video. I knew then that your book would read the same way. #8GS0 |
5:39 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque that was why i was stuck 4 such a long time... #8GS0 |
5:39 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i was thinking more about me the author than the characters and their stories #8GS0 |
5:39 pm | 2nickels: | @olugbemisola Sounds like you started with characters (not surprising! such good characters!) - how did the plot come into place? #8gs0 |
5:39 pm | KarenMusings: | RT @StephanieDBrown: @olugbemisola It seems u spoke from the heart in that video. <--Yes, totally agree. Loved it. #8GS0 |
5:39 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown thank you! it really helped that it was done with family -- a filmmaker who is a very dear friend, my husband, #8GS0 |
5:40 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown my sister, and my daughter (who was an exceptional crew member!) i wouldn't have done it otherwise. #8GS0 |
5:41 pm | olugbemisola: | @2nickels i did early on have an idea of the school election...and of my MC having thrown up on the first day of school #8GS0 |
5:41 pm | bonnieadamson: | @olugbemisola Adding my congratulations on a beautiful trailer. #8GS0, a |
5:41 pm | olugbemisola: | @2nickels & needing 2 get past that. a lot of the work that i did with children & teens in the meantime really informed the story #8GS0 |
5:41 pm | chavelaque: | @saralewisholmes Well, thx! But I *felt* like Stupid Civilian Editor. & it's hard, when I'm used to being Editor w/ (some) Answers - #8GS0 |
5:42 pm | olugbemisola: | @bonnieadamson thank you! #8GS0 |
5:42 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque you are The Editrix! #8GS0 |
5:42 pm | chavelaque: | + to let go & admit what feels like stupidity. #8GS0 |
5:42 pm | olugbemisola: | @victoriajcoe you should have seen me in high school! :) #8GS0 |
5:43 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Process Q's: What's yr usual writing schedule? Morning, midday, or night? Pen & paper or computer? Best writing place? #8GS0 |
5:43 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i think it was katherine paterson who wrote that a stupid person is someone who doesn't know today #8GS0 |
5:44 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque what u found out yesterday. also, accepting ignorance and moving forward from there is not stupidity! #8GS0 |
5:44 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i think i am at my best in the morning, after prayer. #8GS0 |
5:45 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola. V. true, thanks. But did not intend this to turn into Reassure-Editor Chat! Just admitting humility. ;-) #8GS0 |
5:45 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque But i?ve had to learn to use whatever time i have; sometimes i don?t get the ideal ?writerly? time every day #8GS0 |
5:47 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i most always use pen & paper first. nice & portable. i no longer have a laptop! don't think i have a best place to write. #8GS0 |
5:47 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | @olugbemisola If this is too personal, forgive me. Do you pray about your writing? (as one who does herself) #8gs0 |
5:47 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque wish that i was someone who could write at cafes-i used to fantasize about that as a kid, but most times that i try #8GS0 |
5:47 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i feel extremely pretentious. i like working at home, in public libraries...school library is great too. #8GS0 |
5:48 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola Pen & paper gets the ideas flowing, for sure. #8GS0 |
5:48 pm | olugbemisola: | @SaraLewisHolmes yes and yes! i pray a lot about the 'getting out of the way' that we talked about earlier. #8GS0 |
5:48 pm | KarenMusings: | RT @olugbemisola: i most always use pen & paper first. nice & portable. <-- Starting to realize this now too. Laptops distract me. #8GS0 |
5:49 pm | olugbemisola: | @SaraLewisHolmes for 'eyes that see' and 'ears that hear'. #8GS0 |
5:49 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola how do you know when your book ends? #8GS0 |
5:49 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Are any of yr favorite places in Brooklyn mentioned in the book? (Love our borough! = another thing I connected with.) #8GS0 |
5:49 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola Who're some of the writers who've inspired you? #8GS0 |
5:49 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown i really believe that, then by the time i get to the computer, i've done some revising and thinking already #8GS0 |
5:50 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown for SUPERZERO, and for my WIP, I had the end in mind very early on #8GS0 |
5:51 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque Brooklyn Bridge!i love seeing the sun rise up there. i love seeing people of all sizes, shapes, colours, ages, #8GS0 |
5:51 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque physical abilities, traveling back & 4th on foot, on bicycles, in wheelchairs -- everything. #8GS0 |
5:51 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola @StephanieDBrown 2 go back 2 something earlier-1 of my fave writing quotes is "A writer does not know what a book is" #8GS0 |
5:51 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i love that i've been seeing & chatting with some of the same people on the bridge 4 years; #8GS0 |
5:51 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque sometimes if you haven't been around 4 a while, they ask after you! very cool. i get story ideas up there a lot. #8GS0 |
5:52 pm | chavelaque: | + "till he gets to the end of it, & rest must be revised to fit that" - Maxwell Perkins. & that's why I worry when writers submit #8GS0 |
5:52 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown maya angelou, zora neale hurston, madeleine l'engle, paula danziger, chinua achebe... #8GS0 |
5:52 pm | AudryT: | :::taking a look to see what #8GS0 is::::::: |
5:52 pm | olugbemisola: | c.s. lewis. eloise greenfield, camille yarbrough #8GS0 |
5:52 pm | chavelaque: | + before book is done, b/c not all thinking/knowledge of book is there yet, so it isn't really ready to submit. #8GS0 |
5:53 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque great quote. it was, and is a struggle to avoid that force-fitting trap. #8GS0 |
5:54 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @chavelaque Great quote! That's why getting through the 1st draft is so important & revising afterward. #8GS0 |
5:54 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola LOVE the bridge too. In the summer, I walk home across it from work sometimes -- always a great day. #8GS0 |
5:55 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Key thought of the book is that small things can make a big difference - any small things you'd like Twitterers to know? #8GS0 |
5:55 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque actually, i guess the bridge features more in my possible ruthie story (so far) than in 8GS0, but it was a big part of #8GS0 |
5:55 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque the writing process for me #8GS0 |
5:56 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola Great list of inspiring authors! #8GS0 |
5:56 pm | olugbemisola: | @StephanieDBrown i love love love to revise #8GS0 |
5:56 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque a kind word to a family member is just as important as waging a large campaign 4 justice #8GS0 |
5:57 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque it's good to do things that make u uncomfortable sometimes, and then not feel obligated to do them again #8GS0 |
5:57 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | Small things: e.e. cummings: "may my heart always be open to little birds who are the secrets of living... #8gs0 |
5:57 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | + /whatever they sing is better than to know" #8gs0 |
5:57 pm | AuthoressAnon: | @olugbemisola @chavelaque May I just say--I WAS THERE watching it unfold behind the scenes! And squeed a lot. =D #8GS0 |
5:57 pm | chavelaque: | @KarenMusings You asked me the writers of color box question ... I don't know. I'm open to every human story, I hope. #8GS0 |
5:57 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque bananas are an almost perfect snack (that was one of the last things my mom told me b4 she died) #8GS0 |
5:58 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i had a banana on release day #8GS0 |
5:58 pm | chavelaque: | @KarenMusings But the writers themselves can prob. speak better to that question than I. #8GS0 |
5:58 pm | olugbemisola: | @SaraLewisHolmes that's beautiful #8GS0 |
5:59 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque i'm going to have one now #8GS0 |
5:59 pm | KarenMusings: | @chavelaque I agree. Stories are emotional and speak from the heart. And that is universal. #8GS0 |
5:59 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola Oh, that's wonderful! Your mother is right. Portable, tasty, and cheerful, like a smile: :-) #8GS0 |
5:59 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | @olugbemisola So is the fact that you ate a banana on release day. :) #8gs0 |
5:59 pm | AudryT: | Oooh, #8GS0 is all about SUPERZERO, writing, and publishing. Very cool! |
6:00 pm | victoriajcoe: | We should all eat a banana now! #8GS0 |
6:00 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque @saralewisholmes :) #8GS0 |
6:00 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | RT @olugbemisola: @chavelaque its good to do things that make u uncomfortable sometimes, and then not feel obligated to do them again #8gs0 |
6:00 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @chavelaque That's so true! I never thought of it...but a banana curves like a smile! :) #8GS0 |
6:00 pm | olugbemisola: | @victoriajcoe :D #8GS0 |
6:00 pm | chavelaque: | @olugbemisola @victoriajcoe Yay for bananas! And SUPERZERO! #8GS0 |
6:01 pm | olugbemisola: | thanks so much, everyone! #8GS0 |
6:01 pm | victoriajcoe: | @chavelaque @olugbemisola Thanks so much for the chat! #8gs0 |
6:02 pm | chavelaque: | It's 1 p.m. - thanks so much to you all for joining us!! A transcript will be posted at one of our blogs soon. #8GS0 |
6:02 pm | KarenMusings: | Thank you @olugbemisola @chavelaque. Great chat. #8GS0 |
6:02 pm | olugbemisola: | @chavelaque thanks again! and thank you, cheryl! #8GS0 |
6:02 pm | StephanieDBrown: | @olugbemisola @chavelaque Thank you for a wonderful chat! #8GS0 |
6:03 pm | bonnieadamson: | @chavelaque @olugbemisola Thank you both! #8GS0 |
6:03 pm | SaraLewisHolmes: | Hugs to you both. This was lovely. #8gs0 |
6:04 pm | olugbemisola: | you all made this a pleasure. #8GS0 |
6:04 pm | olugbemisola: | have a wonderful day! #8GS0 |
6:07 pm | curiousmartha: | RT @chavelaque: + A big part of being an editor: being humble & getting educated by yr authors, & helping share their story clearly w/ all readers. #8GS0 |
6:09 pm | kristinlgray: | @chavelaque @olugbemisola Thank you both! #8GS0 |
6:13 pm | olugbemisola: | & multicultural & multiethnic literature & literacy came up, the importance of education & engaging... #8GS0 |
6:14 pm | olugbemisola: | wanted to share some resources: @readingincolor @mitaliperkins @CrazyQuilts @CynLeitichSmith @debreese @chasingray #8GS0 |
6:14 pm | olugbemisola: | @coloronline @thebrownbookshelf (28 days later coming soon!) @BronzeWord @nathaliemvondo #8GS0 |
6:14 pm | olugbemisola: | Bowllan's Blog at SLJ: http://tinyurl.com/5sgce5 Doret at http:// |
6:16 pm | olugbemisola: | reading the world challenge @ http://www.papertigers.org global reading challenge@ http://2010globalchallenge. |
Posted by Cheryl at 2:54 PM 1 comments
Labels: Behind the Book, Books I Edit, Interviews, Submissions