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Featuring author Dawn Prochovnic Zoom interview by John Repplinger, May 8th, 2024 Dawn Babb Prochovnic is a dandelion lover, potty humorist, ASL, literacy, and library enthusiast, and award-winning author. She is an early literacy consultant and the founder of SmallTalk Learning, devoting her life’s work to initiatives that support literacy and the literary arts including early literacy enrichment programs, school/library author visits, creative writing workshops, manuscript critiques, professional development consultations, conference appearances, and her educational blog. Dawn received the 2023 Walt Morey Award in recognition of significant contributions that have enriched Oregon’s young readers and was named an Oregon Library Supporter of the Year in 2015 for her work advocating for strong school libraries. Her publication credits include 19 picture books (e.g. Lucy's Blooms, Where Does a Pirate Go Potty?, Where Does a Cowgirl Go Potty?, the Story Time With Signs & Rhymes series), and a contribution to the award-winning anthology, Oregon Reads Aloud. Dawn travels regularly and makes her home in both Portland and Sunriver, Oregon. Dawn, thanks so much for taking the time to do this interview and for letting us get to know you. Before we delve into the interview, I have a fun icebreaker question. You may have answered some would-you-rather questions–they’re always fun! Would you rather have a contagious smile like the Cheshire Cat or have a contagious laugh like a hyena? And why? Although it’s a close call, I’d have to go with the contagious laugh. Experiencing laughter is one of my favorite things in the world. A few years ago, I even wrote a blog post about setting intentions for bringing more laughter into my life. I don’t relish the idea of being compared to a hyena, but it’s fairly mild in consideration of the range of feedback one can receive over two decades in the book publishing industry! I think I can take it. As I was doing research for this interview, I discovered that you have a long history with ASL. Nine of your twenty books include sign language such as The Big Blue Bowl: Sign Language for Food and the Story Time with Signs & Rhymes series. How did you first get involved with sign language, and how did your experiences translate to books? (Pardon the pun.) Bring it on, I love puns! And, this long history brings long answers to your questions. I learned my first words in American Sign Language from Linda Bove, watching Sesame Street as a young child. In elementary school, I volunteered to assist students in what was then referred to as the “special needs classroom,” and many of those students used sign language to communicate. Many years later, I taught my daughter, now in her twenties, how to use sign language handshapes to communicate before she could talk. Early communication with my daughter brought wonder, joy, and relief from frustration; I wanted to share our positive experience with others. My Master’s degree is in Organizational Communication, and I was a corporate trainer before I was a parent. I shifted my attention from teaching grown-ups how to communicate around the boardroom table to teaching parents and caregivers how to communicate with their preverbal infants and toddlers, founding my training and consulting company, SmallTalk Learning, in the year 2000. One of the most effective ways I’ve found to help people learn and remember particular signs is to teach them catchy songs they can sing and sign while they interact with their babies. I wrote all kinds of ditties for this purpose, modeled after familiar children’s songs and rhymes, such as “Old MacDonald” and “If You’re Happy and You Know It.” I observed that preschoolers and elementary school children were also interested in learning sign language, and I wanted to expand my reach beyond that which I could manage in my own classes. I decided the best way to do that would be to publish a handful of my songs in the form of picture book stories. Thus began the long and winding road for revising (and revising and revising) my stories and searching (and searching and searching) for a publisher that was interested in bringing my vision to fruition. I collaborated with ABDO Publishing Group on 16 books in the Story Time with Signs & Rhymes series, published from 2009 to 2012. You are involved with SmallTalk Learning, an organization that encourages the use of sign language to communicate with children before they begin to talk. Can you tell us a bit about SmallTalk Learning? How does the mission of SmallTalk Learning intersect with your interest in early literacy? Over the years, I gradually shifted much of my instructional outreach from working directly with parents to providing professional development programs to youth librarians, early childhood educators, and professional caregivers, teaching others about the early literacy and behavior management benefits and practical techniques for incorporating sign language into story time offerings and group learning environments. As those who have participated in my programs will attest, I’m very passionate about the meaningful and lasting impact of early literacy. We met at the Oregon Library Association’s Authors Fair in Salem Oregon a few weeks ago. Can you describe what that experience was like for you as an author? What other professional festivals, conferences, or meetings have you participated in, and how might they compare? Yes, it was great to meet you! I had a fantastic time at the recent OLA event, and I was so grateful for the opportunity to be included. I’m a vocal advocate for school and public libraries and librarians; they play such an extremely important role in our communities. I felt enriched and energized after engaging with Oregon librarians, and I also enjoyed catching up with many of my Oregon author pals. I have been to dozens (probably hundreds) of professional festivals, conferences, and meetings over the past 20 years. Career highlights include signing my books for a line of librarians that snaked around the exhibition hall from my publisher’s booth at ALA in Seattle, and meeting a young reader who confessed that he hid my books in his school library so he could always have access to them, since no other readers could find them. Every author has their own way of drafting ideas and developing them into the final book. Can you talk a little about your writing process? My writing process is different for every book. My most recently completed manuscript started by brainstorming a robust wordbank of nouns, verbs and adjectives pertaining to cats. My next scheduled book, Mama’s Home!, Familius, (2026), initially came to me while I was watching my son, now a senior in college, engage in imaginative play at our local children’s museum. I wrote the first draft of that story on a scrap of paper in my pocket. It went through many subsequent revisions before finding a publishing home. The initial seed for Lucy’s Blooms came from memories that surfaced when I gazed at a little glass bird that sits on my desk, a gift from my beloved Gram. My son’s imaginative play also inspired Where Does a Pirate Go Potty? One day, he raced around the house with a pirate patch on his eye and a diaper on his bum, repeatedly asking, “Where does a pirate go potty?” I worked on that story off and on for over a decade; it was finally published when he was in high school. The companion book, Where Does a Cowgirl Go Potty? came from a self-assigned creative writing exercise that eventually landed me a two-book contract with a publisher that had a knack for publishing western-themed books. For those interested in a deeper dive into this topic, I have a series on my blog called, The Writing Life, where I share a variety of creative practices that contribute to my writing process. Your “potty books,” Where Does a Pirate Go Potty and Where Does a Cowgirl Go Potty, published by West Margin Press uses humorous fiction that touches on important issues such as water sanitation. As you were developing these books, did you intentionally incorporate these issues or did it come naturally with the storyline? I can be pretty obsessive about research for my books, and these two titles are no exception. I dug into a myriad of adjacent topics while I was writing these stories, (e.g. the history of toileting practices; the backstory behind “talk like a pirate day”; coastal and western habitats; facts about animal excrement; and yes, research on more serious topics, such as water sanitation). Much of my research typically winds up resurfacing in the enrichment materials I develop for each of my books, easily accessed via the resources tab on my website. These resources include reader’s theater scripts; cowgirl and pirate name generators; detailed story time lesson plans; curriculum-aligned educators’ guides; Pinterest boards filled with themed collections of music, craft activities, and novelty items; and carefully curated YouTube playlists on fascinating topics such as “Animal Poop Science” and “Potty Habits” of the animals featured in the books–well worth a watch! (https://www.youtube.com/@dprochovnic) As the main characters looked for proper places to “drop their loads,” you had to come up with different expressions that are in line with the characters. How did you come up with these lines? Did you bounce ideas off of friends and family? What kind of research did you do on pirate and cowgirl phrases? I spent many an hour searching the internet and sifting through resources in my nearby public library on a quest for Pirate and Cowgirl “lingo.” My favorite online resources are now included in some of the Pinterest boards I mentioned. I read all of my manuscripts out loud during the writing and revision process. For these two stories, I also had young readers, friends of my young children at the time, read my stories aloud so I could listen. One of my favorite aspects of these two titles is randomly receiving audio or video recordings from the parents of young readers, “in character,” saying one or more of the phrases in the books out loud. I find that absolutely hilarious, and very rewarding. Most writers have a few ideas that don’t flesh out for various reasons such as the storyline not quite working the way you wanted, or your enthusiasm shifted, a great idea got overshadowed by other projects, or a lack of interest by publishers. Can you give an example of a book idea that didn’t work out for you? Do you have any advice for writers that might be struggling with similar obstacles? I have MANY works-in-progress that I’ve set aside for some reason or another. Some of these ideas are not much more than titles or themes that I’ve jotted down in a journal. Others are projects that I’ve started and lost steam somewhere along the way and/or haven’t quite figured out how to resolve areas that aren’t working. Several are fully developed stories that I’m still committed to and love, but just haven’t found the right publishing home yet. My best advice to writers is to get yourself a writing buddy and exchange creative writing goals and goal reports with your buddy on a regular basis. My longtime critique partner, Sara T. Behrman, whose picture book debut came out in April and whom you recently interviewed, and I have been exchanging creative writing goals with each other for nearly 20 years. I credit our shared discipline with that practice for helping keep me on track when I’m feeling unmotivated, frustrated, or otherwise experiencing a creative struggle. I rarely complete all of my weekly goals, but having them in front of me, knowing that I will be reporting my progress to someone week after week, helps me stay on track. I love your book trailers on your website (Lucy’s Blooms is my favorite). You wrote the lyrics, provided scripts to reenact the books (book guides), plus designed and produced the videos. Prior to making these videos, what experience did you have with writing songs and making videos? Thank you so much! I really love how the book trailers turned out, too! Other than making up the silly songs for my classes that I referenced previously, my first foray into songwriting was creating the lyrics for a love song, a gift to my husband for our 30th wedding anniversary. I commissioned a local musician (Moses Barrett of the Junebugs) to put my lyrics to music and record the song. If you are curious, you can give it a listen: https://www.dawnprochovnic.com/2018/08/the-song-writing-part-of-writing-life.html. I love the companion songs for all three of my latest books, but I agree, the song for Lucy’s Blooms is particularly special. Maiah Wynne, the musician who helped me refine the lyrics and composed and recorded the music, is incredibly talented and wonderful to work with. Another amazing musician, Annie Lynn, worked with me on my Pirate song. She writes and records commissioned songs for children’s book authors and publishers, as well as for schools and other educational organizations. In fact, I just learned that Children’s Book Week now has an official song, composed and performed by none other than Annie Lynn! Writing song lyrics feels like a natural extension of my creative writing practice. I played the drums when I was in middle school, and I often think in drum beats when I’m writing and refining my stories, particularly my rhythmic and lyrical picture books. I would love to learn more about song-writing, and I plan to participate in some creative experiences geared for songwriters in the future. As for the video-side of things, illustrator Jacob Souva handled all of the visual elements for the book trailers for Pirate and Cowgirl. For Lucy’s Blooms, I incorporated the book illustrations by Alice Brereton into my very rudimentary animated video, using tools such as Canva, Keynote, and iMovie. For authors who might want to create a book trailer themselves, could you explain how you produced your videos? Do you have any tips? And do you ever feel concerned about providing too much of your story online so that people won’t buy your books? I had intended to create a detailed blog post describing the steps I took, resources I used, and lessons I learned making the book trailer for Lucy’s Blooms, but alas, I moved onto other creative endeavors before that got accomplished, and the details are pretty fuzzy by now. Check back after my next book comes out– I aim to be more disciplined documenting the details on the next go-round! As for potential concerns about providing too much of my story content online, in my experience, providing meaningful and accessible online content is one of the best ways for potential readers to find out about my work. I think most readers understand that the best way to support the people who create the books they love is to buy, borrow, and tell others about those books. And keep us supplied in chocolate. Are you working on any projects or books that you would like to mention? I have quite a few projects in the works right now. The books in my Story Time with Signs & Rhymes series have recently gone out of print, and my agent and I will soon be shopping for a new publisher who would like to introduce some or all of the titles in a refreshed board book/novelty format, ideally illustrated by a book creator who is Deaf; I have a really fun companion story to Where Does a Pirate and Where Does a Cowgirl Go Potty? that I’m hoping will find its way to publication; I have a very tender and heartfelt story that’s out on submission, and I’m doing major revisions and fine-tunes on several different works-in-progress so that they can be ready to go on submission as well. Soon I’ll be giving some of my attention to my forthcoming book, Mama’s Home! as it goes through the process of being edited, illustrated, and launched into the world. Readers can follow my work via my blog, www.dawnprochovnic.com and on social media channels such as Instagram, @DawnProchovnic. Thank you so much for taking an interest in my work and for asking such great questions! I really enjoyed this interview. Featuring author Sara Behrman
Email interview by John Repplinger, April 9th, 2024 Sara Behrman (pronounced BEARman) is a former librarian, a freelance writer, frequent visitor to classrooms, well-received book-talker, and a popular workshop leader at the Oregon Writing Festival. She has published 40 feature articles and creative pieces in regional and national publications (e.g. Oregon Humanities, American Libraries, School Library Journal). Until January 2024, when not writing children’s stories, she wrote grant proposals for clients who did wonderful things for our world. She lives in Portland, Oregon with her “special sweetie, F.X.” Sara, thanks so much for this interview, and today is a special day for you. Your debut picture book, The Sea Hides a Seahorse, is released today. Congratulations! Hopefully you get to celebrate. While reading through your “10 Things to Know About Me,” you mention that you have a collection of finger puppets. How many do you have? I have about 50 finger puppets, and I have my sea marine animals with me today. Sometimes when I need to get in the mood, I'll get out my finger puppets and have them talk to each other. They have been really useful when I'm working on a story and need characters to interact with each other. You also speak several languages, and have visited forty countries. If you could pick a country you haven’t visited, which would it be and why? I actually have two: Thailand and Costa Rica. I would love to visit Thailand for the culture and to experience culinary aspects. Costa Rica has an amazing natural world with plants, animals, and geology that I haven't seen yet and is so different from the Pacific Northwest. Tell us a bit about The Sea Hides a Seahorse. What inspired you to write about seahorses? I grew up on an island in the Atlantic called New York City. When I was a kid, we had something called sea monkey aquariums. You would go to the toy store and buy a small package that would hatch into these tiny little things that looked like sea monkeys. They were actually brine shrimp. So I had always thought that seahorses were not real--they were fictional like mermaids and unicorns and sea monkeys. When we were traveling in Australia, we visited the Sydney Aquarium; that was the first time I saw a real living seahorse. I realized they were real, living animals, and I got really interested in them. When I saw them again at the World Expo in Lisbon, I started doing research and wanted to share what I learned with kids. I tried different ways of writing a story that included seahorses and seahorse facts, and then finally found my way through with The Sea Hides a Seahorse. You include a number of sea creatures throughout the story–eels, flounder, parrotfish, an octopus, sea turtle. How did you decide which animals to include? So once I figured out the format of the story, had done my research, and decided what I wanted to share, I focused on the predators and the prey of seahorses. When you think about a seahorse, the reason they have the ability to change color and camouflage is to mostly hide from predators and blend in with their surroundings. So the predator is actually causing the seahorse to change color, and blend into their natural surroundings. That is why they were where they were on each page. You get to see what a seahorse habitat is like, their behavior, predators, and their response. A fair amount of knowledge about seahorses went into this book. You even include a few pages in the back with more information about seahorses. Did you know a lot of facts about seahorses before you wrote the book or did you research to verify the facts? And how did you go about researching? I am a professional librarian by trade, and my first job was as a special librarian at the Iowa Office of State Archaeologist. Later, when I worked at The New York Public Library, I started as a reference librarian and I loved researching. I love answering questions, especially hard to find answers to our public's questions. Research has always been a part of who I am and what I do. For my book, I began researching much like I did with any other research--I started with children's books! If you want to know something really fast, you go to a kids non-fiction book, especially a picture book. I also used the Web, but information on the Internet may not be all that accurate, so I had to collect a lot of information from different sources and check the facts. In terms of organizing the research, that's when my library experience comes in handy. I have well organized files, have made notes about what I liked about seahorses, and what kids might like. It made the process of adding specific aspects into the story much easier. When the manuscript was going through its editorial review, I also reached out to two marine biologists, one at Oregon Coast Aquarium and one at Seattle Aquarium. They reviewed the manuscript for accuracy and offered a few pointers. During this process, I learned that starfish are actually called sea stars, and jellyfish are now called jellies. Also, even though the illustrator chose to include a couple of sea dragons which are technically not seahorses, I said that it would be okay because they were cousins. I do mention that distinction in the book. I have charts and color codes that match predators with prey, correct habitats to species, and the time of day they are active. We can't have nocturnal animals hunting during the day, for example. Have you considered writing a follow up story or sequel to The Sea Hides a Seahorse? My agent suggested writing a companion to The Sea Hides a Seahorse which I have written. I have another book about sea stars which my agent is about to shop around. That book was much faster to write because I didn't need to know how to organize the story since it would closely mirror my first book. I just followed the same pattern and used the facts I already had. I also have another book about nudibranchs called The Sea Hides a Sea Slug. Your writing is very poetic. Do you write poetry as well? I do not write poetry, but I do write songs and songs are poetry set to music. I created a music video based off my book Zombie Rodent: The Musical. It is about a fat squirrel (Fatty becomes Flatty) who steps out into the road during an eclipse and gets hit by a hearse and ends up undead. I recently submitted it to a musical festival, and out of 150 submissions, mine made the top 25! I found my way to The Sea Hides a Seahorse by wrestling with several different types of book types: chapter books, early readers, fiction, and a novel. Then my lady’s book group read Just Us Kids by songwriter Patty Smith, so I tried writing The Sea Hides a Seahorse as a song, and that was where I found my breakthrough. Melanie Mikecz was your illustrator, and she did a fantastic job. I love the use of color, texture, and how it compliments the text. The phrase “And the sea hides a seahorse” appears throughout the story, and seahorses are hidden on those pages for readers to find kind of like Where's Waldo. Did you work with or communicate this concept to Melanie? Was this something that you wanted to include? When the book was originally acquired by West Margin Press, I was assigned an editor. My editor sent me a story development letter before working with me. Mine was only four pages long with suggestions, and one suggestion was to think about my story in terms of page turns. A page turn is how a book transitions from the open pages of a book to the next two pages. Storytellers must think about how a story carries over and transitions from one set of pages to the next set of pages. It was something I hadn't really thought about before. My editor, Michelle McCann, asked me about the layout, and if I wanted to hide the seahorse right before the page turn (right side of the book) or after the page turn (left side of the book). I asked if we could do both and essentially hide seahorses on all of the pages. If you look closely, you'll notice that the seahorse is hidden in the first page (right side), followed by a closeup of the seahorse on the page turn (left side). I knew that I wanted the seahorse hidden but didn't know how it would be hidden. Editors typically act as a go between for authors and illustrators, Melanie Mikecz in my case, and facilitate communication for comments or questions. I did get to review thumbnail images and early drafts of Melanie's artwork. As the author, I did have the ability if needed to request that certain aspects be modified, such as a seahorse facing a certain direction, or the text to match the illustration. Melanie did a fantastic job and her color palette is gorgeous. I also want to give credit to the editorial team for hiding the seahorse until after the page turn and for suggesting I include verbs/actions as page themes: snacking, hiding, playing. My editor also suggested starting the book at day and ending at night because kids often read books at night just before bedtime. My story ends with the baby seahorses sleeping. Do you have any artistic inclinations? No. My husband is an artist, but I can't really draw. I tried to draw a seahorse and it looked like a worm. I'm more of a word picture person but I do appreciate other people's art. You mention that you have written other things such as articles for the Oregon Humanities, School Library Journal, and even grant proposals “for clients who do wonderful things in our world.” You are also a former librarian. How have these influenced your decision and ability to write a children’s picture book? I think that the opposite has happened. I've always wanted to write kid's books, even at a young age and had even written several short books. When I was thinking about careers, I wanted to do something that kept me close to writing. At one point, I had considered teaching literature at the university level, but ended up going to library school instead and became a librarian. That kept me around books. Writing was a natural habit, so when I was a librarian I would publish articles and over time I developed a publications list. This list was important because it led to a literary group (Community of Writers) which was a precursor to Wordstock, a nonprofit literary organization based in Portland, Oregon. This list of publications was actually important because it gave me the opportunity to participate in the Writers in Schools program which brought local authors into schools to talk about writing. That helped build my writing credentials even more. Grant proposals utilize technical writing skills and are not dissimilar to a children's story which is logical, sequential, and they have facts. If I had to read up on a field of study for my grant proposals, I would often turn to children's literature for a quick and easy way to get a grasp of complex concepts or meanings. These books would help me write persuasive grant proposals with more accessible terminology. As with any skill, the more practice you put into writing, the better you get. The main difference I see between my professional writing and children's literature is that writing children's books is way harder than some of the other types of writing. Authors need to really think about how to communicate effectively with a limited vocabulary, page space, and number of pages. It is one thing to use the terminology of professionals but is often completely different when talking in layman's terms. The same goes for talking with younger audiences; it is an important skill to be able to communicate with different age groups when writing children's books. You have led popular workshops at the Oregon Writing Festival. For those who have not attended the Oregon Writing Festival, what is it like? You also offer workshops for libraries and schools. What kind of things do you cover in your workshops? The workshops I teach at the Oregon Writing Festival are designed for kids, K-12. It is run through the Oregon Council Teachers of English every spring. The best young writers vie for the best spots at the festival to spend a day writing with their peers and meeting Oregon Authors. I have been a workshop leader for maybe a dozen festivals, and typically I work with 4th and 5th graders in two 45-minute workshop sessions. I usually provide a prompt and explain how I write. In the Twisting a Tale workshops I have led, I bring books from the library such as Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Jack and the Beanstalk, Little Red Riding Hood. The children take a well-known fairytale and add a twist. They are able to use the framework of a familiar story to jumpstart ideas and write their own versions. It can be hard for kids to figure out plot and character, so using a well-known framework like a fairytale provides enough structure for them to write a rough draft within a 45-minute time slot. For me, inspiring kids to read and write is very important. I am really passionate about having children hit those literacy markers. I will be heading down to Berkely for a workshop in the future, and I will offer workshops for libraries with my new book too. Those workshops will feature the book, a craft, song, and signing. Currently, I have two planned activities for the Sea Hides a Seahorse: a coloring sheet for the younger kids and a seahorse stick puppet. I also wrote some seahorse lyrics to traditional songs. The Wheels on the Bus song is now The Animals in the Sea. The Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly is now The Old Mermaid Who Swallowed a Bubble. The song a Sailor Went to Sea, Sea, Sea to See What He Could See, See, See includes animals from my book. You’ve hinted that you have written other stories. Are there any that you are currently working on that you would like to mention? Besides The Sea Hides a Seahorse, The Sea Hides a Sea Slug, and Zombie Rodent the Musical (which came out of three books: Zombie Rodent, Zombie Rodent Falls Apart, and Zombie Rodent Restored), I have a Moishe Pupik collection that is a series of Yiddish-themed stories based around Yiddish culture and food. The first book in the series is called Goldilox and the Three Schmears which explains about the origins of lox [brined salmon] and bagels. I have several other tales, so we'll see how well this first book does before I ask my agent to submit the rest of the stories. Thanks again Sara for taking time to do this interview. Good luck with all of your upcoming events and book launch! For more information about Sara Behrman or her work, please visit Saratbehrman.com or Amazon. Visit Sara's Instagram account at Instagram.com/sara.behrman Announcement!!!The Oregon Library Association in Salem, Oregon, will be hosting an author's fair on April 24th, 2024, at 1:30-4:30pm as part of the annual Oregon Library Association conference.
Conference attendees will be able to meet Oregon authors who write for children, teens, and adults! Authors and illustrators from across the state will be featured in this open house, author-fair style program that will give attendees a chance to talk directly with authors and learn more about what is happening locally. Discover authors from your own backyard and their new and forthcoming publications. Two of the 2024 Oregon Book Award winners, Waka T. Brown and Nora Ericson, will be at the Author Fair. The Author Fair will be held at the Salem Conference Center in the Willamette Ballrooms A & D. While you're there, swing by our table to say hi to our representatives or find out how you can get involved with this great project. Greta Bergquist, State Library of Oregon, Youth Services Consultant is coordinating the event. Featuring author Leslie Barnard Booth Email interview by John Repplinger, April 10th, 2024 Leslie Barnard Booth writes lyrical picture books about science and nature. She is the author of One Day This Tree Will Fall (Simon & Schuster/McElderry) and A Stone Is a Story (Simon & Schuster/McElderry), a Kids' Indie Next pick, Blueberry Honor Book, and NSTA Outstanding Science Trade Book. She has taught at preschool, elementary, and college levels and holds an MFA in creative writing and an MS in education from the University of Oregon. Leslie lives in Portland, Oregon. She is a mom to two daughters, and her children often inspire her creative work. She learns a lot from watching how they approach nature—the way they pause, crouch, and look closely at even the littlest, humblest creatures. Thanks to them, she's relearned what children seem to know intuitively: that every snail, stone, and clump of moss is full of wonder, if only we take the time to look. Leslie, thanks so much for taking the time for this interview. To kick things off, I have a fun ice breaker question: If you could hike anywhere in the world, where would you go and why? I’d love to go hiking in the Amazon rainforest. I’ve spent so much time exploring the temperate rainforests of the Pacific Northwest; it would be incredible to experience a new kind of rainforest—one I’ve read a lot about but never had the chance to see (or hear or smell or touch!). You describe yourself as an author of “lyrical picture books.” For those who are unfamiliar with this phrase, how would you describe this in layman’s terms? Lyrical in this sense means poetic. My books are essentially poems—poems that explore and explain an aspect of nature. When I was growing up, much of the nonfiction available for children was written in a very straightforward style, like a Wikipedia entry. Basically, here are the facts. But lyrical nonfiction uses a poet’s toolkit to excavate emotional meaning from scientific phenomena. I love this style of nonfiction because it invites readers to connect with nature both intellectually and emotionally. How does poetry influence your work? Each of my picture books is essentially a single poem, illustrated and spread across about 30 pages. I’m also working on a children’s poetry collection right now. So poetry is at the center of what I do. I didn’t initially understand that picture books were poems. But as I became more interested in writing picture books, I began to type up published picture books I liked, in manuscript form. Doing this, it became clear to me that these books were actually poems. No wonder I liked them! Poetry has been a big part of my life since childhood. My dad has many poems memorized and would often recite poetry to me at bedtime or when we were fishing together in the rain and in dire need of entertainment. Poetry lends itself well to picture books because both are oral art forms, meant to be performed aloud. Both are concerned with the musicality of language. Sound design is a primary focus for me when I write and revise a picture book. I want the words I set down on the page to sing when shared between caregiver and child. Both of your books have science themes. Your first book, A Stone is a Story, follows the journey of a stone from creation and formation over time. Your second book, One Day This Tree Will Fall, follows the life of a tree. How did you get interested in writing about nature and science, and when did you decide to get serious about writing on these topics? Nature is a refuge for me—it connects me with something greater than myself and pulls me out of day to day concerns. It enables reflection and gratitude and the slowing of time. It also connects me to my children in a uniquely powerful way. Being outdoors with my daughters, I witness the primal connection between these young human animals and the beautiful, wild, endlessly complex natural world. It’s so fulfilling to see the joy and creativity and incredible attentiveness that emerges when we hike together. So there’s that emotional element—the transcendence nature brings. The other piece that compels me to write about these topics is that, for me, the factual truth of our dynamic planet—its history and its systems—is as astounding as any work of fiction. As to the second part of your question, I’ve been writing poetry about nature since childhood, but I didn’t get serious about writing for children until I had children of my own. When they were very young, our days consisted of a lot of nature and a lot of picture books, so that was when I saw that there was a home out there for this kind of writing. What kind of research do you do before and while you write? Often I read a few books on the topic I’m interested in, then I write a first draft. As I see how the manuscript is shaping up and where it’s headed, I read more books and journal articles, highlighting, jotting notes, and rereading as I go. Once I’m getting close—I’ve researched the manuscript thoroughly and a publisher is interested—I reach out to scientists, and in some cases historians and other scholars, to vet the manuscript. I always have my manuscripts fully vetted by at least one expert in the field. My husband is a scientist, and all too often he finds errors in newspaper articles or books in which a non-scientist misunderstands something important and inadvertently spreads those misunderstandings. So, it’s really important to me to always reach out to scientists and make sure everything I’m sharing with children is 100% accurate. Oregon has experienced many wildfires and ice storms of late. Did these events influence your second book, One Day This Tree Will Fall? I’ve always been interested in fire scars on trees. As a child, I appreciated that I could read a bit of a tree’s story in these marks. I could see that it had been through something difficult, even disastrous, and survived. The wildfires, ice storms, and drought Oregon has experienced lately all show up in One Day This Tree Will Fall. And they were all going on in the background as I wrote it. I’m not sure which came first, my conception of this tree’s story or the real-life events happening all around us, but what I do know is that in writing this book, I developed a much deeper empathy for the trees themselves. Their struggle in the face of these hardships became more real than ever to me. According to your website, you visit schools, libraries, and nature centers to teach writing and talk about science topics. Could you describe what these visits are like and what things children might experience? I’m a former teacher and I really enjoy interacting with students. Igniting and supporting their interest in writing and science is incredibly rewarding. I have a lot of different offerings, but I’ll share some examples. For visits focusing on One Day This Tree Will Fall, one of my offerings is a Puppet-Tree presentation. I bring along my portable tree-shaped puppet theater (it’s as awesome as it sounds) and my troupe of tree-dwelling animal puppets, which includes a pileated woodpecker, a chickadee, and a grizzly bear, among others. After storytime, I put on an interactive ecology puppet show that expands on the content in the book, showing children, in a very fun, immediate way, how a tree changes physically as it ages, and what these changes mean for wildlife. For presentations centered on A Stone Is a Story, I bring my Traveling Rock Museum—a really fantastic collection of rocks that includes trilobite, ammonite, and crinoid fossils. (I’m a big crinoid fan.) I read the book, emphasizing one of the book’s central points—that a rock’s physical features can reveal its story. Then I lead a game in which the audience listens to the true story of a mystery rock (hidden in a paper bag) and tries to guess what the rock might look like, based on how it formed. Kids really enjoy pulling out the mystery rocks and seeing how well they can predict each rock’s appearance. It gives children a window into how geologists analyze rocks and allows them to see that they can do this kind of analysis too. This is followed by a rock-themed craft and hands-on exploration of the Traveling Rock Museum. Your website also lists resources for educators for your books. Can you tell us a bit about those? Yes! My website is full of educator resources. Most are for preschool through elementary. Some I created; others I found. They mainly focus on life science, Earth science, and literacy, and range from detailed lesson plans to printables and coloring sheets. One of my favorite resources on my site is a Mason Jar Stratigraphy project I created that blends art and science to teach about stratigraphy and sedimentary layers. In creating a model of sedimentary layers embedded with fossils, students also create a work of art! Your publisher, Simon & Schuster/McElderry, teamed you up with two different illustrators for your books (Marc Martin & Stephanie Fizer Coleman). How much communication did you have with the illustrators? And what was that process like? I feel so honored to have been paired with these incredible illustrators. I didn’t talk to them directly during the illustration process. All my communication about the art went through my editor, who then relayed it to the art director and illustrator. Many people find it surprising that the author and illustrator often don’t communicate directly, but I understand the reasoning behind this approach. An artist really has to connect with a text on their own terms, and it’s important to give the illustrator the space to explore their vision for the book. For both A Stone Is a Story and One Day This Tree Will Fall, the illustrator brought new layers of meaning to the book, building on the text in ways I couldn’t have imagined. You have a new book coming in fall 2025 called I Am We: A Story of Survival, and it is about crows. Could you tell us a little about it? Do you have other projects down the line that you would like to mention? (Could I suggest one? Mosses) During lockdown my daughters and I started paying more attention to our neighborhood crows. We began to really enjoy their daily rhythms. We noticed that huge flight lines of crows would stream west over our area at about the same time each evening. This spurred my interest in crows’ roosting behavior. I learned that in winter crows gather together by the thousands to sleep. After lockdown I was in downtown Portland one night, and I finally got to see for myself where they were all gathering. It was an unbelievable, heart-thundering spectacle of thousands of chattering birds. I Am We: A Story of Survival explores this phenomenon--the communal roosting behavior of the clever, ubiquitous crow. In this atmospheric picture book, readers see how crows come together—often in urban areas--to cope with winter nights full of hidden dangers. So it’s a book about crows, and urban nature, and also a book about the power of we. As far as future projects, I can’t share much, but in addition to the poetry collection I mentioned, I will say that at the moment I am indeed working on a manuscript about moss! How could I not? Moss is glorious. Thanks Leslie so much for this interview. Learn more about Leslie Barnard Booth and her books at Lesliebarnardbooth.com Literary Arts is thrilled to announce this year’s Oregon Book Award winners! Thirty-seven Oregonians across seven genre categories were chosen as finalists by panels of out-of-state judges, from a total of 190 submitted titles. Winners were announced live at the 2024 Oregon Book Awards Ceremony, hosted by Kwame Alexander, at Portland Center Stage at The Armory on Monday, April 8, 2024. Congratulations to the winners! KEN KESEY AWARD FOR FICTION Patrick deWitt of Portland, The Librarianist STAFFORD/HALL AWARD FOR POETRY Daniela Naomi Molnar of Portland, CHORUS AWARD FOR GRAPHIC LITERATURE Kerilynn Wilson of Oregon City, The Faint of Heart FRANCES FULLER VICTOR AWARD FOR GENERAL NONFICTION Josephine Woolington of Portland, Where We Call Home: Lands, Seas, and Skies of the Pacific Northwest SARAH WINNEMUCCA AWARD FOR CREATIVE NONFICTION Erica Berry of Portland, Wolfish: Wolf, Self, and the Stories We Tell About Fear LESLIE BRADSHAW AWARD FOR YOUNG ADULT & MIDDLE GRADE LITERATURE Waka T. Brown of West Linn, The Very Unfortunate Wish of Melony Yoshimura ELOISE JARVIS MCGRAW AWARD FOR CHILDREN’S LITERATURE Nora Ericson of Portland, Too Early THE STEWART H. HOLBROOK LITERARY LEGACY AWARD Ellen Waterston of Bend Source: Literary-arts.org |
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