Showing posts with label little bee books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label little bee books. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Giveaway and Interview with Picture Book Writer Kirsti Call ~ by Christy Mihaly

A big GROG welcome to picture book author Kirsti Call. Kirsti is offering a signed ARC (advance copy) of her forthcoming picture book, Mootilda's Bad Mood ... just comment and/or tweet to be entered in our giveaway (details below)! 

   GROG:  Welcome, Kirsti! I know that in addition to writing, you co-host the new Picture Book Look podcast, and you're a Cybils judge and co-coordinator of Reading for Research Month (ReFoReMo). 
    Before we talk about your books, please tell us a little about ReFoReMo. What does it involve, and why should GROG readers participate?

    Kirsti: ReFoReMo was originally Carrie Charley Brown’s idea, and when she asked me to join in on the fun, I was thrilled. We had both judged for the Cybils awards, which helped us understand how reading great books helps us write great books. Paying attention to what I love about a story, and attempting to add those elements into my own stories, is one of my favorite ways to improve my writing. We wanted to share that with others.

Well, thanks to you and ReFoReMo for sharing all those mentor text insights. What more should our readers know about ReFoReMo?
    Kirsti: ReFoReMo is not only for writers, but for librarians, teachers, and kids. Though we post every Tuesday all year long, March is our challenge month. That's when authors, educators, librarians, agents and editors share insights and favorite mentor texts that we can read and learn from. 

ReFoReMo is a great resource for anyone who loves picture books. Now, what can you tell us about judging the Cybils?

A: For the last six years, I’ve read all 300-ish nominated picture books for the Cybils award over a two-month period. This picture book overload totally helps me understand the market, what editors love, and what I love about picture books.

Read, read, read, right? Kirsti, you're also a marriage and family therapist. Does that work give you story ideas or otherwise inform your children's books?

Kirsti: I love using bibliotherapy in my work as a therapist. Reading and discussing books in therapy helps people process and heal. This work definitely influences my stories and what I write. In fact, if you read my forthcoming picture book, Mootilda’s Bad Mood (Sept. 1, 2020, Little Bee), you'll notice a very obvious connection between the story and my work as a therapist. 

Spread from Mootilda: "We're in a bad mooooooood!"
Mootilda's Bad Mood is co-written with Corey Rosen Schwartz and illustrated by Claudia Ranucci. It's about a cow in a bad mood. Where did this fun idea come from?
cover

   Kirsti: Corey and I joke about her being in a bad mood and me being in a good mood all the time.  We thought it would be fun to take that dynamic and explore how a cow in a bad mood would approach life ... and overcome all the cow-tastrophes that make her feel worse and worse. 


Uh-oh, cow-pun alert!! Kirsti, how does the co-writing process work differently from solo writing?

MOOTILDA swag!
   Kirsti: Corey and I have written many manuscripts together. In fact, we have another book coming out in the fall of 2021 with Little Brown. It’s called "Cold Turkey!" Writing together involves lots of texts and messaging in google docs and talking on the phone. It’s a much more social than writing solo.

  Big congratulations on Mootilda, Kirsti (and Corey and Claudia). I'm sorry, though, about the timing.
How have you been promoting your new book in the midst of the covid-19 closures and cancellations?
Book Launch in the Time of Covid (Sept.5)

Kirsti: Little Bee is planning a virtual book tour that we’re excited to participate in. We have a couple of virtual events coming up on Sept. 5 at The Writing Barn, and Sept. 8 at An Unlikely Story. We’re also considering a socially distanced book launch at a farm featuring cows and ice-cream. We’ve created some digital assets that we’ll be offering with pre-sales. In fact ...

** ALERT! GROG Bonus! **  


... if any GROG readers pre-order Mootilda, they can DM me on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram to receive a signed bookplate, sticker, and mood-o-meter coloring page. 

We’re trying to be creative in these uncertain times. But one thing I am certain of, "Mootilda's Bad Mood" is something that will resonate with many people given the pandemic.

    These days it takes extra imagination and energy to get our books into readers' hands. Good luck with your launch! What else would you like GROG readers to know about you and your books?

    Kirsti: I’m super excited about another book that’s coming out with HMH in March—Cow Says Meow. I’m not certain why all of my upcoming books feature farm animals, but I do have a pair of cow shoes I can wear for each release date! 
    
Kirsti Call (whose cow shoe [and foot] appears below) is the co-host of the new Picture Book Look podcast and co-coordinator of ReFoReMo. She reads, reviews, revises and critiques every day as an "elf" for the 12x12 Picture Book Challenge, a blogger for Writer's Rumpus, and a critique group member. She's judged the Cybils award for fiction picture books since 2015. Kirsti has a picture book, MOOTILDA'S BAD MOOD (Little Bee) coming in the fall of 2020. COW SAYS MEOW (HMH) and COLD TURKEY (Little Brown) release in 2021. Kirsti is represented by Emma Sector at Prospect Agency.

For the GIVEAWAY: 

Your name will be entered for a chance to win Kirsti's signed ARC if you: 
(1) comment on this post (below) explaining why you'd like to win the ARC.
(2) tweet about this post, mentioning GROG and Kirsti Call, and tag me (@CMwriter4kids). 
Do both to get two chances!

We'll draw the winning name and post it on the GROG post next week. Good luck!

And remember, if you pre-order Mootilda's Bad Mood, contact Kirsti to get your swag. 

Find her here:
@kirsticall (Instagram)
Kirstine Erekson Call (Facebook)
@kirsticall (Twitter)


Thanks for visiting GROG! 
(And don't forget to leave a comment ...) 
Christy Mihaly

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

TRAINBOTS, Miranda Paul's Newest, Arrives June 7 by Kathy Halsey

TRAINBOTS sliding, TRAINBOTS gliding all the the way to Columbus town! The F&G of Miranda Paul's newest rhyming picture book arrived at my stop late February, but GROG readers board the train today. Stops include Kid/Parent Station, Teacher Terminal, and Writers' Railway. 

Spotted in the wilds of Arizona...it's TRAINBOTS


Look at this train's "jeep! (That's train talk for "engine.")  According to Amazon it's dimensions are:

  • Age Range: 4 - 8 years
  • Grade Level: Preschool - 3
  • Hardcover: 32 pages
  • Publisher: little bee books (June 7, 2016)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 149980167X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1499801675
  • Product Dimensions: 11 x 0.4 x 8.5 inches
Kathy's Summary: TRAINBOTS is a rollicking, fun rhyming picture book that children from PreK-5th grade (classroom-tested with 5th graders.) will enjoy. Badbots meet Trainbots in a classic good vs. evil plot. Trainbots do deliver their precious toy cargo, and, in the process, readers learn about trains, the engineering/design process, and lessons on friendship.


Kid/Parent Station
Sketch-Final Art from F&G by Shane McG
This is a "read-it-again, please " picture book for child/parent audiences. The straight-forward plot and engaging bots will have little ones clamoring for more. Repeated exposure to rhyming texts scaffold reading development. As Tim Shanahan, Founding Director of the Center for Literacy, states on his blog,"...the idea of rhyming as a pre-requisite to reading; exposure to this kind of play with words and "word families" gives children another pathway to reading.

Teacher Terminal
Fifth graders in picture book critique groups
School librarians often use the material designator "E" for "easy/ everybody." TRAINBOTS is an "everybody" picture book that teachers and librarians can share with upper elementary students, too. Savvy educators will discover English/Language Arts, science, and maker spaces ideas in TRAINBOTS. Plot arc, engineering, and STEAM/STEM connections are readily apparent. 
Gifted fifth graders studying picture books in a class I co-taught had this to say:
  • "Just from the title, it sounds  interesting." - Cameron
  • "The story is strong...it has rhythm." - Rusty
  • The rhythm is like a train." - Emily
  • "Even though the vocabulary is pretty large, kids can tell what it means by the story's pictures and plot." - Libby

    Writers' Railway
My messy desk
It's no secret, I'm a big Miranda Paul fan. Rhymers can leaner so much from a study of her books. Although she doesn't write to trends, her books fill needed niches in school/library collections. The topics cover a myriad of disciplines. I'm also a student of Miranda's business/PR acumen. Study her web site, note the number of links I found before her book launch. (See below.) Miranda plans ahead; she even took TRAINBOTS on vacation with her family out West. (See first photo in this post!)
 TRAINBOT Review Links

As I review children's literature, I notice, too, the type of information and the method in which publishers reach out to  bloggers. I am impressed with little bee books and their publicity team. I'm adding this imprint to my publishing "wish list" for myself as I travel the writers' railway. Get aboard the TRAINBOTS express now.
Back cover TRAINBOTS F&G