In the June 12, 2024 post in the Toot Your Horn section of the Kite Tales blog, is the announcement of my new memoir, SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL: Growing Up in the 1950s at North East Neighborhood House, Minneapolis, Minnesota, along with new books by seven other SCBWI members. Hurray! I have been a member of SCBWI since 1977. Kite Tales is the newsletter and blog of the Los Angeles, Southern California, and Central California branches. I'm proud to share the news of my book
Showing posts with label Kite Tales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kite Tales. Show all posts
Saturday, July 20, 2024
TOOT YOUR HORN! for SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL in SCBWI's Kite Tales
In the June 12, 2024 post in the Toot Your Horn section of the Kite Tales blog, is the announcement of my new memoir, SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL: Growing Up in the 1950s at North East Neighborhood House, Minneapolis, Minnesota, along with new books by seven other SCBWI members. Hurray! I have been a member of SCBWI since 1977. Kite Tales is the newsletter and blog of the Los Angeles, Southern California, and Central California branches. I'm proud to share the news of my book
Wednesday, January 9, 2019
THE PUZZLE OF BOOKS: How Writing a Book is Like Solving a Crossword Puzzle
Crossword puzzle creators are people who constantly play with words, assembling them into lists of potential theme clues, e.g. common phrases whose meaning changes with the addition or subtraction of a letter; famous names that can be turned into puns; switched word orders, and so on. When one of these lists gets long enough, they start making a puzzle.
In the same way, I collect piles of information as I research a book. Some of that information never gets used. It may be off topic, for another age group, or it just may not fit. Some of it may get saved for another book. But when I think I have enough for my project, I take what I have and sort it into its various topics or chapters. My next step is always an outline. I plan my book page spread by page spread. This provides me with the overall structure of my book, but nothing is ever set in stone. As I work, the details of the plan may change, and I may rearrange parts if it makes sense to do so.
One thing I like about crossword puzzles is the symmetry of the grids. The puzzle has to have a balanced overall pattern made by the black and white squares. Typically, one half of the puzzle is a mirror image of the other. One of the challenges in creating theme answers must be finding pairs that have an equal number of letters so that they can be placed opposite one another on the grid. In the same way, the structure of a book has to be balanced. It doesn’t have to be exactly symmetrical, but it needs to feel as if each part has relatively equal weight. And just as there are many grids for the puzzle creator to choose from depending on the requirements of the theme answers, the structure of a book can take many forms as well.
In solving crossword puzzles, everyone has their own technique. I start in the upper left and work my way to the lower right. One of my friends answers all the theme clues first and then fills in the other squares. I would like to do this, but generally I need a few hints, so I wait until I’ve filled in enough squares with the regular clues to figure out the key to the week’s theme. The puzzle title sometimes helps, usually involving another level of word play.
When I write my books, I work like my friend, and start with the main themes and gradually add the smaller details. Just like solving a puzzle, the completion of the manuscript goes bit by bit, with periods when I surge forward, and other periods when I sit stumped, until I suddenly I see how a missing piece pulls everything together.
I am sometimes asked when I do author visits at schools, “What is your favorite part of the writing process?” My answer is always the same. My favorite part of the writing process is when I am finished. Just as I breathe that sigh of satisfaction as I fill in the last square of a crossword puzzle, I have that same sense of accomplishment when the last word is written in the manuscript. Then I know that everything is in its proper place and, hopefully, will cause my readers to say “Aha! I’ve learned something new.”
This article was originally published in the Summer 2008 issue of the SCBWI/LA Kite Tales magazine.
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Hatching Chicks and Living Fossils at Kite Tales Blog
See my books this week at Kite Tales, the blog published for the SCBWI Tri-Regions of Southern California. The publication of Hatching Chicks in Room 6 is in the Toot Your Horn! section and Living Fossils, Clues to the Past is in the Great News section.
Thanks SCBWI!
Thanks SCBWI!
Monday, March 14, 2011
How Do We Get Ideas?

How do we get ideas? On occasion, they come full blown in a sudden flash of insight. More often, though, they evolve a little bit at a time. My recent book, Global Warming and the Dinosaurs: Fossil Discoveries at the Poles, was a project that developed slowly. At first, all I had were random bits of information. These facts, fascinating though they were, did not make a book. I did not have enough and I still needed an organizing principle. But by keeping all those interesting bits floating around in my mind, over time, an idea for a book on polar dinosaurs began to gel.
This is the opening paragraph of my article Evolution of a Book Idea: From Percolation to Publication published in the Spring 2011 issue of Kite Tales, the newsletter of SCBWI-Los Angeles. In the article I discuss how the book grew out of my natural interests in fossils and dinosaurs, how conversations with librarians gave me valuable new material, how other book research added to what I already knew, how experts in the field helped answer questions, and finally, how a chance encounter propelled me to start writing and finishing the book. Click here to read the full article on page 31.
Global Warming and the Dinosaurs is illustrated with beautiful watercolor paintings by Laurie Caple. Laurie has illustrated five other books of mine about prehistoric animals and has done a fantastic job on all of them. Her naturalistic style is perfect for these books. She does as much research as I do to make sure that everything she draws is as scientifically accurate as possible. This is a challenge when most of what she draws has been extinct for millions of years. By creating whole environments for the animals, she truly brings them to life.
I am often asked, why don’t I illustrate all my own books? After all, I’m trained as an artist. The truth is that I don’t want to illustrate all my books. My style does not necessarily always suit the subject matter I write about. I am delighted that artists like Laurie Caple can illustrate my books. It takes just as much time to illustrate a book as it does to write it. If I did all my own illustrations, I wouldn’t have as much time to write. I enjoy illustrating my own books, but only when the concept of the writing and the art work together for me.
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