Meeting an author or illustrator can be magical for both kids and adults. The Society of Authors recently released their intensive survey of the impact of author visits. As a Library Media Specialist for the past five years, I've had the good fortune of welcoming some of the best into our school. This post is meant to encourage teachers/librarians/parents to explore the multitude of opportunities to connect with authors and illustrators. We'll look at the difference between a "Free" vs. a "Fee" visit and the benefits/challenges to each.
Caldecott winning author/illustrator Jon Klassen visited my school in 2013; the year he won for I Want My Hat Back.
First of all, in my opinion, there is no better way to encourage children to read than to meet an author. Books still evoke a sense of magic in children. Meeting the person behind the pictures and/or words is like seeing the magician doing his tricks in slow motion. It encourages and challenges students to strive to create their own stories/images.
Marc Brown: author/illustrator of the Arthur Series.
Whenever an author/illustrator is scheduled to come to our school, it provides a chance to meaningfully explore their work. We read everything the author/illustrator has done and develop questions we hope to be able to ask at the visit.
David Shannon, author/illustrator of the David books.
The very best way to get 'connected' and find out about author/illustrator visits is to form a positive relationship with your local independent book store. In Winnetka, we have a phenomenal book store named: The Book Stall.
Jon Muth, author/illustrator of Zen Shorts and many more titles has visited Winnetka several times over the past three years.
I interviewed Robert McDonald, the Children's Specialist at the store, to get some insight into arranging and facilitating author visits. All of the author/illustrator visits we have had through The Book Stall have been free. I wanted some insight on how these are arranged and funded.
Jon Muth and I last year when he visited to promote his newest book, Hi, Koo!
1.
What is the process you and The Book Stall go through to connect with
authors and find out that they are coming to your area?
Publishers
send us a "grid" or list of what authors they are sending out on book
tour. We place our requests based on who is coming and if we feel that
we have several good area options for schools to place those authors.
We don't always get every author we request, so we don't know for sure
which authors we will be able to work with in a given season until 1-3
months before the event. Generally we get no say in what day or date we
have an author. This varies a bit from the usual way a
paid school visit would work, where the school and the author would
reach an agreements about timing. Of course the advantage for the school
in working with a bookstore is access to nationally recognized authors
and illustrators with no honorarium involved.
We
do also foster relationships with local authors, and at their request
will place them for free into schools when they have new books coming
out.
Wendy McClure visited last year to promote her new book, Wanderville.
2. What two or three points would you say make for a successful author/illustrator visit to a school?
I've been to hundreds of school visits now, and here's what I think really helps make a visit work well:
A.
The kids and teachers have been aware of the event well in advance, and
are all familiar in some ways with the visiting author's work. This
may include reading the first few chapters of a book aloud, reading
several of the picture books to younger grades, and/or showing the book
trailer to the classes. Any way that the staff can figure out ways to
work the author's art and writing into curriculum, and emphasize to the
students that this visit is a lucky event helps pave the way for the
author to have that much more of an impact. When an author arrives to
see welcome signs made by kids, and maybe have artwork based on their
book, it's going to make for a happier, more engaged author.
Author/illustrator Steve Barnes visited our school in 2013
Be
aware that these free author visits are free because the publisher
wants to get more buzz and attention for an author's work. They also
want to sell copies. The bookstore will want the school to promote book
sales prior to the visit, so that the author has a good stack of books
to sign for kids the day of the event. In general, there's no set number
of books that MUST be sold, but in the long-term a bookstore won't be
eager to work with you if author visits do not generate any sales.
B.
Kids model what they see, so if I ruled the world I'd insist that staff
attending an author presentation be fully engaged, and NOT using the
time to grade papers or catch up on email. If the educator is paying
attention, she has that much more insight and material she can use to
reinforce and expand on lessons learned. And the kids will take the
visit more seriously.
Arun Gandhi, the grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, visited last spring to promote his book called, Grandfather Gandhi.
3. What advice would you give a teacher/librarian who would
like to begin working with an independent book store to arrange author
visits?
Look
and see what authors are visiting a local bookstore. If a store in
your area is having in-store children's author events, they are almost
certainly placing authors in schools for free. Call and ask to speak
with the children's specialist. Be willing to be flexible--an author
out on book tour might not be able to stay at your school all day and
see every student in the school, but if you are willing to work with
independent bookstores (or Barnes and Noble for that matter--many of
them do arrange free author visits in
schools) you may be able to host multiple authors in a school year, a
picture book author for K-1 one time, something for the 4th-5th grades
another. I have a lot of schools now that are able to host 2-3 authors a
year.
If your local bookstore does not yet arrange free author visits, reach out to them and suggest they start!
Invite
a bookstore to help you with a visit you are already arranging and
paying for--if you sell books through a bookstore, you'll make your
visiting author happy (They love to see book sales at the schools they
visit) and you'll be establishing a relationship with a store--they will
think of you the next time they have a big-name author in town.
Not all of our author/illustrator visits are free. Usually, about once a year we reach out to an author/illustrator to arrange a Fee based visit. We do this usually because we are hoping to expand on the traditional author/illustrator visit. Last year we arranged an author visit with Steve Cotler, the author of the Cheesie Mac series.
Because this was a sponsored visit, we were
able to arrange several more presentations with him as well as some
specific work with our older students on developing 'writer's voice' and
writing dialogue.
This year, our school is sponsoring an author visit from Kristy Dempsey. She is the author of several children's picture books, an educator and a Library Media Specialist who currently lives and works in Brazil. I was curious as to her take on the difference between a Free vs. Fee author/illustrator visit. Coming from the dual perspective of both author and librarian, I knew that her insight would prove very valuable.
Kristy Dempsey (photo courtesy of the author's website)
How do you feel about free vs. fee author/illustrator visits?

When free visits are possible, I absolutely believe in them. I think there are a couple of kinds. There are visits that the author is willing
to do completely for free. I have done some of these visits at Title 1
schools that have no PTA and few resources. ( I have also done paid
visits at Title 1 schools that have received grants for visits.) I know
other authors who sometimes donate their time like this and when it's
possible, I think it's great. Because of travel and schedules and such,
it's often not possible, or perhaps it's cost-prohibitive for the
author. Mid-list authors don't make a ton of money from royalties, so
they would be paying out of their own pockets for this. Or often, the school (or in
conjunction with a bookstore) will use the profit from doing book sales
to pay for an author visit, which seems to me a way to do a "free" visit
that still supports the author.
I
do have concerns, as well, about free visits. I don't view author
visits as just entertainment or even simply cheerleading about reading
and writing. And my fear is that unestablished authors (self-published
or otherwise) that do free visits, without truly understanding how to
make the visit valuable for teachers (connecting to standards, etc) as
well as inspiring students, are misleading schools about how valuable a
school author visit can be. (Whew. Be careful if you quote me on that. I
don't want to bash anyone. In fact, some self-published and
unestablished authors are VERY good at this.)
So
ultimately I believe that the difference is that a paid visit
(especially with established authors and illustrators) is held to a
higher quality control. Authors and illustrators who are making part of
their living off of school visits are literally in the same business as
teachers. They are designing their instruction to benefit student
learning. And if they're not, they won't be invited back (or "keep"
their jobs!)
There are many other ways to bring authors/illustrators to schools as well. With technology, many author/illustrators are willing to do Skype visits, or Google Hangouts.
I hope that this post has been helpful in helping you think about the power of author/illustrator visits. You never know the impact of one of these visits on the young minds of writers. Someday they may be in the position to be a visiting author/illustrator themselves!