Monday, July 07, 2008

Interesting npr show about kid's books





A few days I ago I heard this really interesting interview on npr with Seth Lerer, the author of "Children's Literature: A Reader's History from Aesop to Harry Potter." Sort of a review of the history of children's books... click here to listen.

Interesting point about how Darwin's theories and colonialism influenced children's literature...

my blog is back

That's right, after a long vacation, Fireside Chat is back. I don't know what will be in it. It's not like it's going to be new or improved or anything. Oh well. It's back none the less.

www.meghan-mccarthy.com/firesidechat_new.html

Sunday, July 06, 2008

Question of the Week: What's on your desk?


So, what is on your desk this week?

Anna: Today, I have nothing on my desk! I handed in the art for Abigail Spells on Tuesday, then came home and did some cleansing. It is very therapeutic to clean your desk after finishing a project, sort of like closure. Isn't it nice and sparkly?



Grace: Working on chapter headers for my novel. Only 27 more left to go! sigh.





Elaine: Meghan's new book, Astronaut Handbook, is on my desk. (Note: The Fascinating Facts page in the back matter is full of interesting tidbits of information.) You can also see a red notebook and yellow folder. They contain drafts of poems I've been writing for my most recent collection, which now has about thirteen poems. The thick book on top of the notebook is my rhyming dictionary (The Complete Rhyming Dictionary and Poet's Craft Book, edited by Clement Wood). It's a great resource! There are also lots of nonfiction books that I've been browsing through.

Saturday, July 05, 2008

New approach

I write most easily when I don't have anything else to do -- when I can focus completely on a novel or story. So for the last several years I've tried to divide my time into chunks, with big blocks of time when I can focus on writing.

This has meant leading a really reclusive life, and not getting THAT much writing done, either,at least not as much as I'd hoped,  because (even when I'm being reclusive), there always ARE other things to do -- like projects that pay.

I've finally realized that if I wait until I have an uniterrupted week (or whatever) to write, I'll wait a long time....and by the time I get back to the novel it will have turned into a different book, too.  Plus I'll be fairly miserable, always trying to choose between my writing and -- well, everything else.

So last week and the week before, even though I was in NY for a good chunk of time, I worked on my novel before I left, and on the train, and when I came back, too....not a LOT, but (I hope) enough so that when the current projects are done, my novel will still be with me and still be the same book.

And in the meantime, I'm living a real life -- celebrating my mother's birthday with her and my sister, seeing friends (including the Blue Rose Girls -- in fact, one day began with putting Anna on the train to Boston here  and ended with being driven to Penn Station by Meghan!), visiting the Irish Hunger Memorial




--- (believe it or not, this is in New York, in Battery Park)

and the 4 Waterfalls (only one in this picture, but from this spot you can see all four).

--Libby
Words in plan: 2231
Words in draft: 5237

Friday, July 04, 2008

POETRY FRIDAY: High Desert July


On Monday, my husband and I returned from a trip to New Mexico. We flew out to the Southwest for the wedding of a relative. My husband and I spent several days at the Hyatt Regency Tamaya in the Santa Ana Pueblo…not far from Albuquerque. The resort was a beautiful and restful place to spend several days. We drove to Santa Fe and Old Town in Albuquerque to do some sightseeing and shopping and to visit museums. My husband and I went for a ride in a hot air balloon ride last Friday morning. What a thrill! It was our second time viewing the land below from a basket in the sky. I loved New Mexico and hope to return some day.

(You can see some pictures of the resort where we stayed and our balloon adventure here.)

For Poetry Friday on the Fourth of July, I selected High Desert July, which was written by a New Mexican poet named Cynthia Gray.


From High Desert July
By Cynthia Gray

Wind
dancing through
garden chimes
brings the fresh-smelling
herald
of the summer rains
to these Sangre de Cristo Mountains
and the mesa
with the Spanish saint’s name
hovering protectively
over my home

Thunder and chimes
sing a symphony
with
tin-roof percussion
counterpoint


You can read the rest of this poem here.

********************

At Wild Rose Reader, I have a poem for Independence Day entitled Fourth of July Parade.

The Poetry Friday Roundup is at In Search of Giants.
***************

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

MAKE YOUR OWN ROCKET

.

Oy. I've been working for two days on this one. Yesterday I watched lots of TV and made the rocket. Today I've been putting the webpage together. Check it out here -

www.meghan-mccarthy.com/astro_makerocket.html

...............................................................................

finished



So, many weeks behind schedule, my bathroom is finished. During the entire process, I began to understand how editors feel when illustrators delay and ask for more time...

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

phone recordings - a new project for moi?

Perhaps I have too much time on my hands, I don't know. I really don't have time on my hands, but I've felt compelled.

The first lovely is a recording of part of a phone conversation with my little sister about her birth certificate and the fact that she was called "baby."

www.meghan-mccarthy.com/phone_kaila.html

The second is a week or so worth of phone messages that I forgot to erase. No joke, they are almost all doctor messages... with a few stupid sister voice mails thrown in for a good crack up. I don't know what to make of it but here it is--

www.meghan-mccarthy.com/phone_messages.html

Monday, June 30, 2008

street art

Ah yes, I have another project in the making. I've been documenting street art. There's some really cool stuff out there! Stay tuned for a section of my website to be devoted to cool street art finds.

Here's one for you to chew on. I think it's great:




Okay, I've got the first part up - the stuff from brooklyn. I'm going to do the other boroughs too.

www.meghan-mccarthy.com/streetart.html

I took the above photo tonight on the way home from dinner

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Question of the week: WHATS ON YOUR BOOK SHELF?


Tell us about something you've read; a novel you've picked up, a picture book from your childhood, or any other writing that sticks in your mind at the moment (magazines, articles, street signs)...

Meghan: I'm "reading" WACKY PACKAGES - plus interview with Art Spiegleman. It's a pile of cool stickers from the late 70s that mock packaging design. Think Garbage Pail Kids. Think Awesome. Yeah.

Anna: I've been reading To Kill A Mockingbird for a month or two. I'm in a painting frenzy so I don't have much time for reading, so I pick it up a little bit at a time. I love re-reading books I read when I was a kid, coming across passages that had completely different meaning the first time I read them.

Alvina: I just finished reading an advanced reading copy of HUNGER GAMES by Suzanne Collins. It's been getting a TON of buzz, and we chose it for one of my book groups. I found it to be incredibly gripping, and certain elements reminded me of THE GIVER. Sadly, this is actually the only "published" book (it's coming out in September) I've read all year. Well, not counting picture books. I've managed to have time to read some of those! But before this one, the last novel-length book I finished (not counting submissions, of course, that's all I'm ever reading these days) was Joan Didion's THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING. At any rate, I'll stop rambling now.

Elaine: Recently, I read Sherman Alexie's The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian and loved it. It's tragic and funny--and Alexie writes with great voice in this semi-autobiographical novel. The book has gotten me interested in Alexie's poetry. I hope to order some of his poetry books when I return home from my vacation in New Mexico. At the moment, I'm reading Candyfreak: A Journey through the Chocolate Underbelly of America, a nonfiction book by Steve Almond. This is a good book for anyone who has a serious sweet tooth. Parts of it are really funny.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

new paintings

I've added my new paintings to my new paintings page. They look a lot better than the versions I posted here, which were kind of off color-wise.

www.meghan-mccarthy.com/newpaintings.html

I'm about ready to work on a bigger painting, maybe all in pink or B&W with James Dean in it.

meghan

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

hoping for happily ever after

So instead of working diligently on the illustrations for my new novel, I am in Upstate NY making pink princess cupcakes:
for my niece's birthday party:
I had slight twinges of guilt leaving my studio as I do NEED to get this book done but my niece only turns five once and, honestly, I couldn't take the bathroom renovation anymore. There is only so long I can stand stand the dust, loud noises, and looking at this:


But before I fled, I did do this:
The gold paint is not reproducing well in the photo, but I think the cover might be done. I'm not sure, I'm letting it sit and when I come back I'll decide if it's finished. If I'm lucky, when I get back the bathroom will decide it's finished as well.

Monday, June 23, 2008

STORY TIME - stupid people with bad attitudes

I work at Barnes & Noble as a cashier. A few weeks ago a new cashier started—he promptly walked up to me and said “So I hear you do children’s books.” I nodded. He asked lots of questions. I answered them. I wondered why he was asking so many questions but didn’t bother to ask.

This weekend I heard him mention to another cashier that he was going to art school to illustrate children’s books.

I said “Oh, wow, I didn’t know that’s what you wanted to do!”

He turned to me with an ugly face and said “I didn’t know I was REQUIRED to tell you.”

Shocked and puzzled, I said “Uh, you’re not. Never mind.”

Yes, this was strange. Rude. Whatever label you’d like to put on it. Of course I was stuck working within two feet of this guy ALL DAY. So I attempted again to make conversation. I asked “So, what kind of style do you do?”

He didn’t answer for a while. Then, he did. “I don’t have a style,” he barked. “I’m only 19.”

“Oh, okay,” I responded.

I can’t believe I continued trying to be nice to this guy, but I did. I said “Well I was president of an illustration group. They get together bi-monthly and have editors and art directors come and talk and look at portfolios. When you have a style and get a portfolio together let me know and I'll hook you up. Quite a few members have gotten published that way.”

“NO,” he said. And that’s all he said. Nothing else.

“No? Um… huh?”

The kid walked away so I didn’t prod him further. One of my coworkers was standing next to me the whole time and had witnessed this. I turned to her and said “What was that?”

“I don’t know,” she said.

“Well, I just don’t understand. That was SO rude. Plus, why would he pass on an opportunity like that?”

“He’s stupid,” she said.

Then, the kid walked back to us and said “Oh, so now you’re talking about me? I’m standing right here. That’s rude,” he said.

Hmmm. Rude. I think he had things confused.

“So, what. If I want to illustrate children’s books I have to go through you? Is that how things are? YOU are the last word in children’s books?” he barked.

I was stunned.

My coworker said “No, she was just trying to help!”

I nodded. “I was being nice. New people always need some help.”

“Well, what if I don’t WANT your help,” he said.

Sadly, this fun little interaction was interrupted by a tall, thin woman who stood at the desk. “I’m looking for Meghan McCarthy,” she said. She then proceeded to pull out my book City Hawk out of her bag. I’ve been trying to find you. I’d love it if you’d sign this for me…."

Learn or not learn from this little story as you wish. What I took away from this is that there may be some super talented people out there (and I’m not saying that this kid is one of them) but they are undeserving and they’ll never get anywhere in life because of their bad attitudes.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

The sense of self

More things that have been on my mind lately, in addition to preparations for my trip to CA for ALA and a vacation afterwards, are the various amazing stories I've been hearing on Radio Lab.

Radio Lab is my new obsession, an NPR radio show produced by WNYC. It's been recommended by several friends, and is also one of the favorites of This American Life host Ira Glass. And as This American Life is also one of my favorites, I thought I'd check it out.

I've been downloading many of the old podcasts, and one in particular that I found fascinating was the episode "Who Am I?" with discussions about the concept of self. It included a story about how a scientist experimented giving chimps a mirror to see if the chimps would eventually recognize themselves. At first, the chimps thought that their reflection was another chimp, and treated it as such, but after a few minutes, it started to seem that they recognized that it was a reflection of themselves--for example, they would test the reflection with motion, and appeared to be "checking themselves out," etc. But to prove this, the researchers used anesthesia on the chimps, and while they were asleep, painted a red mark on their foreheads. When the chimps woke up and looked at the mirror, seeing their reflection with a red mark on the forehead, they would touch their own foreheads to see what the red mark was, a sure sign that the knew that the reflection was themselves.

I was curious as to when babies are able to recognize themselves in a mirror, and found that it's generally at nine months of age. While doing a little additional research, I also found an article that stated, "Self-recognition has traditionally been considered a sign of superior intelligence, since so far only species such as chimpanzees, dolphins, orangutans and humans have managed to achieve it." To take this a step further, the article is about a robot at Yale that is also able to recognize itself in a mirror.

And here's another article about monkeys who don't seem to know that the monkey in the mirror is a reflection, but also treat the reflection differently than they would treat another monkey.

Anyway, there's so many more incredible stories in that episode and others. The shows on laughter and deception are also fascinating.

And what does this all have to do with children's books? Nothing, I guess. It was just on my mind!

***

For those of you who were curious, last week's Focus meeting went fairly well, I think. And also, I'm still leaning towards a Mac. I'm tempted by the black, but am still drawn to the white. Hmmm...

I may not be able to post for the next few Mondays because of the aforementioned ALA and vacation, but will do my best!

Question of the week: What's on your mind?

We're keeping this one as open-ended as possible. So--what's been on your mind this week?


MEGHAN: 

I finally finished this painting. Now it can move out of my mind. 

Also, boxes... they're on my mind. This one is almost finished, called Box #1: Hot Title
Alvina: I've been saving for a new computer for almost a year, and had decided on a laptop. But then, PC or Mac? I almost bought a MacBook yesterday, and then had to decide--black or white? But I got cold feet. Anyone have an opinion?

Grace: Did I choose the right color for the tiles?Anna: Just found a fab new handmade jewelry shop on Etsy, love the earrings... internet shopping is the only distraction I am allowed until my book is done next week...

Elaine: Shopping and packing for my trip to New Mexico on Tuesday...and a poetry collection that I've been working on diligently and hope to finish in the next few weeks. (Alvina, my husband just got a MacBook Pro and loves it! His computer is white.)

Libby: My friend Adam (7) is very interested in money, so it was natural to explain royalties to him and that most writers don't make much.He nodded as though that made TOTAL sense, and said with feeling,
"A lot of books are really boring."
I've been unable to get this comment out of my mind.

What's been on your minds?



Saturday, June 21, 2008

When is it ready?

I never used to know (maybe still don't!) when to show drafts to other people. I tend to go through a lot of drafts. As I rewrite, I kind of figure out what I really want to say -- the scenes that aren't important get cut, others get trimmed: sort of like boiling down lots of water and things to make a good soup -- skimming the fat off, reducing the rest to intensify the flavor. There is a certain practicality in showing drafts early -- that way, if they're not marketable, you don't waste your time. But if I show a draft too early, I am too influenced by others. Plus, by the time I DO know what I"m saying, everyone is sick of reading the story!

So, probably for me, the time to show things is when I've taken them as far as I can, when I know what I want to say and have said it as well as I can. At that point, it's vital to know if other people can understand it or not! All comments at that point are helpful. My best friend and I used to just tell each other where we were:
"I'm vulnerable about this, just tell me what you like" (early drafts).
"TELL ME EVERYTHING YOU SEE" (draft almost ready to face the world)

New ideas are like raw eggs -- drop one and it's smashed. But if you drop a boiled egg, nothing much happens, the shell cracks a little, big deal. Though that's not a good analogy because at the end, when I show things, I realize what people aren't getting or what reads oddly and fix it. Can't do that with an egg.

This all came up when I was writing my new novel and rewriting something old to send out in the same week. What about you? When do you show things?

Words in outline: 1638

Words in draft: 3271
(NOTE ON COUNT: I'm doing some rewriting as I go along -- I don't want to end up with a huge mess full of tangents and unusable chapters and even characters like I did last time)

Friday, June 20, 2008

POETRY FRIDAY: The Country of Marriage

My husband and I will be heading to New Mexico next Tuesday for a wedding. We decided to spend several days out there so we could do some sightseeing. We’re even hoping to go hot air ballooning one morning. We’ll be staying at a resort in the Santa Ana Pueblo--where the wedding and reception will be held. New Mexico has been at the top of my list of places to visit since I retired four years ago. I can’t wait to do some exploring out there!

Since I’ll be on vacation next week, I doubt I’ll be posting on Poetry Friday.

Here are the beginning and ending stanzas of a poem by Wendell Berry that I selected in honor of the young couple who will soon be married.


From The Country of Marriage
By Wendell Berry

1.

I dream of you walking at night along the streams
of the country of my birth, warm blooms and the nightsongs,
of birds opening around you as you walk.
You are holding in your body the dark seed of my sleep.


7.

I give you what is unbounded, passing from dark to dark,
containing darkness: a night of rain, an early morning.
I give you the life I have let live for love of you:
a clump of orange-blooming weeds beside the road,
the young orchard waiting in the snow, our own life
that we have planted in this ground, as I
have planted mine in you. I give you my love for all
beautiful and honest women that you gather to yourself
again and again, and satisfy—and this poem,
no more mine than any man’s who has loved a woman.


You can read the rest of the poems here.


********************

At Wild Rose Reader, I have an original acrostic poem about crickets.

The Poetry Friday Roundup is at Semicolon this week.

*******************

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

no excuses

There are more times than I like to admit that I look at my past work with twinges of regret. While flaws due to talent, or rather lack of, are disheartening they are in a way more acceptable than the ones that cause me to shake my head. "If I had only been less distracted, had more time," I think to myself, "that book would've have been so much better."

And those are laments I refuse to have about my next book. At New Year's, one of my resolutions was to make my new novel the best work I've ever done.

So I am doing my best to sway the scale in my desired direction. I'm pulling out all the stops for this book, from the writing to the cover (which I am now working on, photo), I am taking pains as I have never been able to before. If time, focus, passion (and possibly production values--crossing my fingers for some really great features, including color illos on the inside) can do it, my book should be an object of person pride--something that epitomizes the best I could possibly do. Or at least something that doesn’t make me cringe.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Two weeks to go


The art for my book Abigail Spells (see paintings from it here and here) is due two weeks from today, so I am feverishly going back over my paintings and finishing everything up. I don't know why I bother trying to finish paintings in the beginning, I always go back at the end and change things. Towards the end of a project like this I do each painting half way and then finish them all off at once.

Anyways, my world is kind of small right now, so not a lot to post about. I am obsessed with color and pattern. Yesterday I went to the bakery next to my apartment to get some bread and the lady behind the counter was dressed just like Abigail! She had a red handkerchief on her head and a blue polka dot shirt (Abigail's favorite pattern). So went home and changed Abigail's shirt once again to look like the bakery lady's... I just can't make up my mind!

Here are some other patterns/color combos I've been using for inspiration:





I just love the color combination in this picture, I try to incorporate it into paintings wherever it seems like it could work:

Monday, June 16, 2008

Focus meeting and Sneak Peak

Our Focus meeting for our Spring 2009 list is this afternoon. I've touched briefly on this before, but I thought I'd take this opportunity to procrastinate from preparing for the meeting by talking a little bit more about what Focus means.

This is how I defined it in an earlier post on Bloomabilities:
For those of you who don't know what Focus is, it's sometimes called Launch, sometimes called Presales. Basically, it's the first formal meeting that we have to introduce our books on a certain list to the sales force. Generally, we have a Focus meeting, then a Presales meeting, and finally the formal Sales meeting.
And so, to set the stage: our Focus meeting is held in the largest of our conference rooms. There is a large table on one end of the room, and additional seating set up as rows of chairs on the other end. I'd say that there are usually about 50 or so people in attendance--generally just the in-house sales and marketing people, which would include Trade Sales, International Sales, Special Sales, Subrights, etc. Occasionally, some of the regional sales reps will attend as well.

In preparation for the meeting, editorial has updated the Title Fact Sheets (these are called Tip Sheets at other publishers, and probably have still more names elsewhere) which are distributed to attendees. Basically, these are what they sound like--they give all the facts for our titles: price, trim size, page count, age group, pub date, etc., a "handle" or tag line, a longer description that will include plot information, selling handles (for example, "Great for Valentine's Day promotions" or "Book has a fun seek-and-find element that lends itself to multiple readings"), reviews and awards for previous books if applicable, and sales from previous books and comparable titles.

Our Marketing department puts together a Power Point slide show, coordinating with Design and Editorial to get the appropriate cover images and interior images.

Our publisher and associate publisher start the meeting with a quick wrap-up of the last season, talking about numbers, successes, books that we shouldn't forget about, and then we go into the new season. Generally, the presentation is ordered according to genre/age group--we do picture books first, then novelty, then middle grade, then young adult. Each editor presents the titles they've edited; we have just 1-2 minutes per title, so we have to be pithy. In addition to quickly introducing the project, touching on the plot, we try to bring in a memorable anecdote that will help get the Sales group interested and excited, remember the book, and then be able to pitch the book themselves to our accounts.

In addition to introducing the books to our Sales group, Focus meeting is also an opportunity for us to get feedback from the larger Sales group on everything from format, covers, prices, and more. Sometimes the feedback is welcome and useful, but sometimes it can be frustrating if we get negative feedback on something that may be too late or too difficult to change. And of course the reaction we're always hoping for is that at the end of the meeting everyone applauds and says, "What a strong list!" and seems excited to start selling.

Let's hope that's the reaction we get this afternoon.

And now, to give you a sneak peak, here are the books I'll be presenting (with their tag lines!):

Picture Books:

The Curious Garden by Peter Brown
In this beautifully illustrated environmental story by Peter Brown, a young boy tends to a meager garden which blossoms and spreads across the city.

When the Moon Forgot by Jimmy Liao
An evocative, gorgeously-illustrated story about an unusual friendship between a boy and the moon, who has forgotten to return to the sky, by world-renowned illustrator Jimmy Liao.

Sergio Saves the Game by Edel Rodriguez
Sergio, the adorable penguin who won our hearts in Sergio Makes a Splash, returns with a story about soccer, determination, and discovering one's true talents.

Middle Grade:

Confetti Girl by Diana Lopez
A heartwarming debut middle grade novel about a young Latina girl navigating growing pains in her South Texan city.

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon by Grace Lin (YAY!)
A new middle grade novel that crosses fantasy with Chinese folklore in a wondrous story of adventure, devotion, and friendship, from the creator of the beloved Year of the Dog.

Young Adult:

Geektastic edited by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci
Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci have united in geekdom to edit a collection of short stories from some of the greatest names (and geeks) in YA literature. Get your geek on!

Fade to Blue by Sean Beaudoin
An intriguing, smart, and satisfying YA mystery in the tradition of M.T. Anderson's Feed and Ned Vizzini's Be More Chill. This is Donnie Darko meets Ghost World.

Paperback:

The Postcard by Tony Abbott
The Devouring by Simon Holt (the hardcover is pubbing this Fall)


And now, back to working on my presentations!