By J.G. Annino
It
was a sunny and warm day when my husband and I drove
past fields of
cotton fluffs in North Florida and then crossed the line into South
Alabama. We enjoyed comparing the commercial plants to the tiny cotton patch
that shows little white bunny tails here in the yard. We sight-seers arrived in the
afternoon at our North Alabama locale - leafy, hilly, greater Birmingham.
afternoon at our North Alabama locale - leafy, hilly, greater Birmingham.
My
SCBWI workshops weren’t until the next day. We had time to
eat (local Bar-B-Cue) and to tour the Civil Rights Institute. We saw the impressive
sculpture of civil rights leader Fred Shuttlesworth. Current
renovations closed the
building to us, otherwise.
A
National Historic Site
So
we were able to concentrate all our time on the beautiful
and historic 16th Street Baptist Church.
The
church congregation keeps a proud history that stretches back to the
first one, a different building, in 1873 . The impressive
double-towered building
is a National Historic site. More important, it is an
enduring memorial to the four
girls who lost their lives in what should have been the
sanctuary of the church,
in one of this
nation’s most heinous acts of domestic terrorism. It remains
a very active church. It is also exceptionally welcoming to
strangers.
What
struck me as I walked around the basement (this is the level of the
church the girls were in, for Sunday School, just before
their murders), what
stays me now were expressions of love on the walls.
These
framed and displayed items were created by children and adults all
over the world. And then carefully wrapped and mailed.
Needlepoint and
other crafts, original poems, works of art were sent and are
still sent to the
congregation, more than 50 years after the bomb blast by hatred-filled men.
One amazing work of art, a gift from the people of Wales, is on an upstairs
balcony wall. My husband and I had time for silent meditation, prayer and
reflection, near this stain-glass black Jesus, after one touring couple
left the balcony.
balcony wall. My husband and I had time for silent meditation, prayer and
reflection, near this stain-glass black Jesus, after one touring couple
left the balcony.
SEEDS
OF FREEDOM
So
it was quite in keeping with my reflective mood, that Saturday’s
event featured both the artist and author of a new picture
book about a
little-known corner of segregation history but also, integration history, in the
U.
S.
Quietly
and without much outside attention at the time, a group of white
children integrated a black school in the far northeast
corner of Alabama, at
Huntsville. But not without the help of many black children and the parents of both groups.
The everyday details of segregation and the unique details of peaceful integration
in the 1960s are told with breath-taking water color paintings and lyrical writing.
The
story is SEEDS OF FREEDOM, the Successful Integration of
Huntsville, Alabama. This picture book is already honored with multiple well-deserved
awards for author Hester Bass and artist E.B. Lewis.
Huntsville, Alabama. This picture book is already honored with multiple well-deserved
awards for author Hester Bass and artist E.B. Lewis.
They
previously teamed up for THE SECRET WORLD of WALTER
ANDERSON, one of my
favorite illustrated biographries for young readers. The new
book is just as stunning and sends a beautiful message out to the world of
peace-wanting people, about how this historic group made peace happen.
book is just as stunning and sends a beautiful message out to the world of
peace-wanting people, about how this historic group made peace happen.
Hester
is an energetic actress-turned-author who lives in Santa Fe, New
Mexico, with her artist husband. (She lived in Huntsville for 10 years and also,
elsewhere in the south.) I attended only one of her
several events at the Writing and
Publishing for Kids 2015 conference.
Our
group loved shaking shoulders, rolling heads and practicing Hester's
techniques to wake up our bodies before
writing.
Then
we thought about the many ways to borrow actor techniques - to
observe people and listen to language, which can add sensory
details to our characters.
SEEDS OF FREEDOM author Hester Bass (left) , J. G. Annino
#wik15 #scbwi #southernbreeze
MORE
WORKSHOPS
Middle
grade novelist-funny girl author Kami Kinard was the second author
I felt fortunate to study with that day. She also conducted more than one
workshop.
Ours involved techniques and tips about layering a novel
with elements other than
everyday normal text.
And of course this applies to picture books, too.
Here are a few from her long list of eyedears: a quiz the character
takes/gives; fortune cookie fortunes; & notes on a bulletin board. My own notes
were scrawled after that because it hit me for the first time
ever, that my main
character in my MG novel has never had Chinese food, living
as she does, in a tiny
coastal town in the 1970s. And then I was off &
scribbling with dialog, etc. This
aspect may not appear in the story, but such fun to catch a wave of writing flow,
unexpectedly. And to discover new parts of her back story,
which I need to know.
Like Hester, Kami is another author you will want to hear speak, if you have the chance.
EDITORS
Every
SCBWI workshop features editors and agents. I listened to
freelance editor Harold Underdown (above) discuss the future of
children’s
publishing. (It’s great! Picture books are soaring! ) And I also attended packed
breakout sessions with talented house editors who look at manuscripts for children,
from poetry through novels. Each of them generously offered such minutiae, such
specifics related to them, that those two sessions were worth the low price of
Southern Breeze admission.
breakout sessions with talented house editors who look at manuscripts for children,
from poetry through novels. Each of them generously offered such minutiae, such
specifics related to them, that those two sessions were worth the low price of
Southern Breeze admission.
I
returned home with a buncha titles I promptly
thought our local library system should have, especially
the new historical fiction novel, that tore my gut up before
it put it back again.
thought our local library system should have, especially
the new historical fiction novel, that tore my gut up before
it put it back again.
This YA novel is HALLEY, by the much-appreciated
Faye Gibbons. I am so titlted in its favor, with the evocative
rural terms (my Dad grew up on a tenant farm) and language
used in this Depression-era story. They are similar and
Faye Gibbons. I am so titlted in its favor, with the evocative
rural terms (my Dad grew up on a tenant farm) and language
used in this Depression-era story. They are similar and
even exactly the same words & sayings I haven't heard since my
dear Dad passed on. He was a great storyteller, about incidents in his daily life,
that are similar to experiences of the Oweby Family of this rugged story. I love
the character, never-give-up, yet flawed, Halley. Faye welcomes visitors to her
blog which is blog.fayegibbons.com. You may also enjoy her website, which is
separate- Faye Gibbons. It is a real treat to meet her.
that are similar to experiences of the Oweby Family of this rugged story. I love
the character, never-give-up, yet flawed, Halley. Faye welcomes visitors to her
blog which is blog.fayegibbons.com. You may also enjoy her website, which is
separate- Faye Gibbons. It is a real treat to meet her.
I also tipped off our youth librarian about the teen memoir
TAKING FLIGHT, by Michaela DePrince. Michaela went from living bleakly
as a Sierra Leon war-orphan, neglected, hit & bullied, to soaring joyfully in glittery
costumes, as a principal ballerina with a European company today. MGM has bought
movie rights to her story. She wasn't able to attend, but I so much appreciated a chat
with her mother. And this was cold, not knowing what the book was about when I
picked it up from the table. She and her husband began the fairy tale dream come true,
via adoption, when Michaela was only four. And without spoiling the story, that
was unexpected. Read it to see what I mean. This enormously hard-working & talented
dancer became a professional ballerina at age 19. A story from love's heart. I cried.
Fortunately, I was able to smile, too. If I share more details, they are spoilers. But I
was thunderstruck how ballet reached out to Michaela across the Atlantic Ocean, at age
four, while suffering emotional & physical neglect in an impoverished setting.
A true goose-bumpy story.
TAKING FLIGHT, by Michaela DePrince. Michaela went from living bleakly
as a Sierra Leon war-orphan, neglected, hit & bullied, to soaring joyfully in glittery
costumes, as a principal ballerina with a European company today. MGM has bought
movie rights to her story. She wasn't able to attend, but I so much appreciated a chat
with her mother. And this was cold, not knowing what the book was about when I
picked it up from the table. She and her husband began the fairy tale dream come true,
via adoption, when Michaela was only four. And without spoiling the story, that
was unexpected. Read it to see what I mean. This enormously hard-working & talented
dancer became a professional ballerina at age 19. A story from love's heart. I cried.
Fortunately, I was able to smile, too. If I share more details, they are spoilers. But I
was thunderstruck how ballet reached out to Michaela across the Atlantic Ocean, at age
four, while suffering emotional & physical neglect in an impoverished setting.
A true goose-bumpy story.
MORE ON AUTHORS
Group Bloggers know I have already recommended
Lisa Lewis Tyre’s
LAST IN A LONG LINE OF REBELS. It was fun to meet high-energy Lisa. I wish
I could have attended her talk. And all the presentations. There are a girnormous
I could have attended her talk. And all the presentations. There are a girnormous
amount of them every October at this much-anticipated Southern Breeze event.
SCBWI RA-Emeritus Joan Broerman, who is a legend in her own time.
At far left is Wanda Vaughn. Your blogger is holding HALLEY. If you
are in Homewood, Alabama, a Birmingham suburb, you will enjoy visiting
this site - Little Professor. It is two floors of wonderfulness! Cafe, included.
STILL, MORE!
On
top of all this goodness, WIK 2015 featured an arty party, snazzy
handouts, huddletime/noshtime with friends new and old, & the book event
in a fabulous independent bookstore cafe (above.) I also came across folks who
know Group Bloggers & this Blog. Plus, the on-the-spot p.b. colleagues' critiques
& the professional critique sent me back to the keyboard & to the paper notepad,
ready to work harder. While smiling.
handouts, huddletime/noshtime with friends new and old, & the book event
in a fabulous independent bookstore cafe (above.) I also came across folks who
know Group Bloggers & this Blog. Plus, the on-the-spot p.b. colleagues' critiques
& the professional critique sent me back to the keyboard & to the paper notepad,
ready to work harder. While smiling.
FOLOUP
The
conference is a gift that keeps on
giving. I returned revved up + writing.
As I type this Nov. 2, the high-voltage energy
of the weekend carries on.
I think it’s why I signed up +
completed the Scrivener tutorial, which I
delayed for too long, while I bumbled my way
around with my MG novel not organized spiffy,
in Word (on my mac.) The Wik15 bump is
also why I’m onboard this very, now
underway, NaNoWriMo 2015.
Appreciations to #Southern Breeze.
giving. I returned revved up + writing.
As I type this Nov. 2, the high-voltage energy
of the weekend carries on.
I think it’s why I signed up +
completed the Scrivener tutorial, which I
delayed for too long, while I bumbled my way
around with my MG novel not organized spiffy,
in Word (on my mac.) The Wik15 bump is
also why I’m onboard this very, now
underway, NaNoWriMo 2015.
Appreciations to #Southern Breeze.
Wow, Jan sounds like so much goodness. Glad you got to attend the conference as well as get in some wonderful sight seeing.
ReplyDeleteGlad to be a guide to it, vicariously, Leslie. Appreciations for your kind words.
DeleteI have been going to Southern Breeze events for many, many years. Didn't make this one, but each one has been stellar. Great overview of the weekend. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteAww... We would have finally met, Sherri.
Delete'Nother time!
Appreciations for your kinds words.
Did you see any peeps in the photos?
I loved the part about touring the church and seeing the artwork. Beautiful! (and the related pb)
ReplyDeleteAppreciations, Tina. I hope your library can get a copy of SEEDS OF FREEDOM. Visiting the artist & author websites is also like a mini-visit to the book.
ReplyDeleteIf you can visit
the church some day, I feel you will be very moved.
my best to you!
S9 much goodness. I was great getting to meet you!
ReplyDeleteAnd scooby do to Sweet Potato Festival you, too, Tracey M. Cox.
DeleteCan't believe we share a bit of geography & didn't know it.
My hubby & I were in SW GA just this weekend....
Hope to see you round bookish events, again!
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteYour goodness got on the page 2x Tracey, so that explains the blip.
DeleteAppreciations for your visit here to Group Blog. Hope you can return
again.
Sounds like a great workshop. Looking forward to hearing more about it.
ReplyDeleteCraft was my focus, but I met writers who got a lot from the publishing/marketing
Deleteevents, also. It was good to meet new folks + see pals from before.
Thanks for stopping by Group Blog, Debra!