Kate Messner's Blog, page 5

March 11, 2013

Join me at the War of 1812 Museum this weekend!

I’ve had a busy year of travel, so it’s with a big smile that I’m sharing the news about my speaking event for this weekend…right here at home!


If you live near Plattsburgh, I hope you’ll join me for “An Afternoon of History & Mystery” from 1-3pm this Saturday, March 16th, at the Battle of Plattsburgh Association’s War of 1812 Museum at 31 Washington Road on the former Plattsburgh Air Force Base.

I’ll be sharing some fun behind-the-scenes stories about my children’s mystery novel, CAPTURE THE FLAG and helping young writers do a little mystery brainstorming of their own. Here’s what CAPTURE THE FLAG is all about…



Anna, José, and Henry are complete strangers with more in common than they realize. Snowed in together at a chaotic Washington DC airport, they encounter a mysterious tattooed man, a flamboyant politician, and a rambunctious poodle named for an ancient king. Even stranger…news stations everywhere have announced that the famous flag that inspired “The Star-Spangled Banner” has been stolen! Anna, certain that the culprits must be snowed in, too, recruits Henry and José to help catch the thieves and bring them to justice.


But when accusations start flying, the kids soon realize there’s more than a national treasure at stake. And with unexpected enemies lurking at every corner, do Anna, José, and Henry have what it takes to solve the heist?


And if you’d like, you can read the first two chapters of CAPTURE THE FLAG here. This was an amazingly fun book to research and write, and its sequels, HIDE AND SEEK (coming out this spring!) and MANHUNT (coming in 2014) have been a gift to work on, too.


This Saturday’s talk is open to all ages but is especially suited to families and anyone who loves history and mysteries.  I’ll also be talking about my Adirondack picture books and figure skating novel, SUGAR AND ICE. After the event, I’ll be signing books and hanging around to visit and answer any questions.  And…I’ve decided to bring one of my early author copies of HIDE AND SEEK to give away in a drawing.



Hope to see some of you this weekend!


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Published on March 11, 2013 18:18

February 14, 2013

On Valentines and Dads

I posted a version of this story on Father’s Day a while back, but today is both my mom and dad’s birthday – and I wanted to share it again…


My dad was the school superintendent in the village where we grew up.  His office was in the junior high school, which was both convenient and mortifying for me, in turns.  Convenient because he’d carry my baritone saxophone into school on the mornings I had jazz band.  Mortifying because if I got in trouble for talking in study hall, he knew before lunchtime.  But something else happened in those junior high years, too — something I didn’t figure out until I had grown into a less gawky, slightly less nerdy high school girl.  My dad was my secret admirer.

The student council at my junior high school had renamed Valentine’s Day “Carnation Day.”  In the weeks leading up to it, you could pay a dollar to send a carnation to the person of your choice, and it would be left on his or her desk before homeroom that morning.  The result was a very colorful and extraordinarily visible display of relative popularity.  There were some kids who walked in and sat down at empty desks every Valentine’s Day morning.  It’s a wonder they kept showing up.  There were other kids whose desks were so laden with flowers there was no room for a pencil.

It was a great source of angst.  I worried.  But I didn’t have to.  In my three years of junior high school, my desk was never without a carnation on Valentine’s Day.  Some years, there was more than one.  But always, there was one.

The card was either signed “from a secret admirer” or not signed at all.  My friends thought it made me seem exotic and mysterious.  I think it was freshman  year when I figured it out.  Every year, he heard the student council’s morning announcement and made the long walk from district offices at one end of the building to the cafeteria at the other end to order my flower. 




Happy Birthday, Mom & Dad!  And Dad… thanks for the carnations when I needed them most.


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Published on February 14, 2013 05:00

February 10, 2013

Thank you, Wisconsin State Reading Association!

Living on the East Coast, winter travel can be tricky, so I don’t do too many speaking events in January and February. But when the Wisconsin State Reading Association asked if I’d speak at their annual convention and Authors Festival this week, I couldn’t pass up the opportunity. The weather, thankfully, held off just long enough for me to arrive in Milwaukee on Thursday.  We had to circle the airport a few times while they plowed the runway, and here’s what it looked like when we landed.



On Friday, I spoke to Wisconsin teachers and librarians in two separate sessions — “Letting Kids Lead,” focused on transcending the one-answer sort of thinking that standardized tests promote and helping kids develop problem-solving and divergent thinking skills through authentic literacy activities, and then “Real Revision,” focused on writing that goes beyond those single-draft test questions. The lead learners in both of my sessions were absolutely fantastic – rolling up their sleeves to write and revise and try out world-building and mystery crafting activities they might share with their students later on.


Friday night, we had a wonderful dinner with the WSRA organizers and Authors Festival Committee. There was lots and lots of laughter coming from our room at the restaurant!



On Saturday morning, the festival authors got to spend time with young writers from area schools, which was such a wonderful way to end the conference. Jack Gantos had us all laughing during the morning breakfast.



I worked with two different groups, sharing some stories from my own research and writing adventures, and then we did some brainstorming and mystery crafting together.




I’m so thankful to have had this opportunity, in addition to working with the teachers and librarians on Friday. The young writers in my sessions were amazingly enthusiastic and talented, and I have no doubt I’ll be reading some of their books one day.


Thanks so much, Wisconsin Reading Association! I loved spending time with your teachers and young writers, and I can’t imagine a warmer welcome on a snowy weekend.


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Published on February 10, 2013 05:18

February 6, 2013

HIDE AND SEEK impatient reader giveaway!

I’ve been getting lots of emails and tweets and general pokes about when HIDE AND SEEK, the sequel to CAPTURE THE FLAG, will be available. The answer to that question is April 1st – less than two months away!



The book is available for pre-order now, through your favorite bookseller, and Scholastic just sent me a few more advance reader copies, so I thought it would be fun to give some away for CAPTURE THE FLAG fans who aren’t feeling all that patient.


To enter the drawing, just leave a comment on this blog post with your name & a way to reach you if you win. I’ll draw a winner on Friday, February 15th – so let’s say that the deadline to enter is 11pm EST on Valentine’s Day.


If you’d like extra chances to win, you can do any or all of these things:



Blog about CAPTURE THE FLAG
“Like” my author page on Facebook.
“Like” CAPTURE THE FLAG on Facebook.
Write a mini-review of CAPTURE THE FLAG as your Facebook Status Update
Share a cover image of CAPTURE THE FLAG or HIDE AND SEEK on Facebook. (You can swipe the cover from above.)
Tweet a mini-review of CAPTURE THE FLAG.
Share your review of CAPTURE THE FLAG on GoodReads, Amazon, & Barnes and Noble.
Share your review of CAPTURE THE FLAG at Powells (and if you’re 1st to review it,  Powells will also enter you for their gift card giveaway!)
Ask your school or library to pre-order HIDE AND SEEK
Tweet or Facebook this update: HIDE AND SEEK, @katemessner’s sequel to CAPTURE THE FLAG, comes out April 1st! http://bit.ly/YEgLPg
Have the cover of HIDE AND SEEK or CAPTURE THE FLAG  tattooed on your left bicep. (Not really… I just put that in to see if anyone was still  paying attention.)
Do some other creative, great thing to spread the word about CAPTURE THE FLAG and HIDE AND SEEK.

Whatever you do for extra chances to win, please just leave a comment here  letting me know. Total honor system here. If you think it’ll help more mystery lovers discover the Silver Jaguar Society series, then go for it, and I’ll toss your name in the hat an extra time or two. Or ten.


And finally,  if you’re a teacher or librarian who does something cool with your whole class, let me know and I’ll enter you for  for a separate, special teacher/librarian giveaway.


Giveaway rules: Books can only be shipped to US addresses. If you’re under 13, please have an adult enter for you. Deadline to enter is 11pm EST February 14th.  Winners will be announced here on my blog on Friday, February 15th.


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Published on February 06, 2013 14:19

January 28, 2013

Skype with an Author on World Read Aloud Day!

Hi there! If you’re new to this blog, I’m Kate Messner, and I write books like these:


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I also read lots and lots of books, and reading aloud is one of my favorite things in the world. When I was a kid, I was the one forever waving my hand to volunteer to read to the class, and still, I’ll pretty much read to anyone who will listen.


For the past couple years, I’ve helped out with LitWorld’s World Read Aloud Day by pulling together a list of author volunteers who would like to spend part of the day Skyping with classrooms around the world to share the joy of reading aloud. World Read Aloud Day 2013 is March 6th.


Some of you have already sent me notes asking if I’m available to Skype on that day, and I’m so sorry to tell you that I’m not this year – but for the very good reason that I’ll be reading to some kids in person at a school author visit in Vermont on that day. Instead, I’ll offer a sneak-preview video read aloud of two upcoming titles — HIDE AND SEEK (which is the sequel to my mystery CAPTURE THE FLAG and comes out April 1st) and MARTY MCGUIRE HAS TOO MANY PETS (which doesn’t come out until 2014, so I’ll be reading to you from the not-yet-edited draft. Cool, huh?)  So if you’d like to share those with your students, just bookmark this page and stop back on March 6th, and the videos will be posted right here.


So now…on to the World Read Aloud Day Skype list! The authors listed below have  volunteered their time to read aloud to classrooms and libraries all over the world. These aren’t long, fancy presentations; a typical one might go like this:



1-2 minutes: Author introduces himself or herself and talks a little about his or her books.
3-5 minutes: Author reads aloud a short picture book, or a short excerpt from a chapter book/novel
5-10 minutes: Author answers some questions from students about reading/writing
1-2 minutes: Author book-talks a couple books he or she loves (but didn’t write!) as recommendations for the kids

If you’d like to have an author visit your classroom or library for World Read Aloud Day, here’s how to do it:



Check out the list of volunteering authors below and visit their websites to see which ones might be a good fit for your students.
Contact the author directly by clicking on the link to his or her website and finding a contact form or email.  Please be sure to provide the following information in your request:


Your name and what grade(s) you work with
Your city and time zone (this is important for scheduling!)
Possible times to Skype on March 6th. Please note authors’ availability and time zones. Adjust accordingly if yours is different!
Your Skype username and a phone number where you can be reached on that day


Please understand that authors are people, too, and have schedules and families just like you, so not all authors will be available at all times. It may take a few tries before you find someone whose books and schedule fit with yours. If I learn that someone’s schedule for the day is full, I’ll put a line through his or her name.  (Authors, please let me know that if you can!)

World Read Aloud Day – Skyping Author Volunteers for March 6, 2013

Authors are listed along with publishers, available times, and the age groups for which they write.  (PB=picture books, MG=middle grades, YA=young adult, etc.)


 Anne Marie PaceDisney-HyperionElementary10-12 ESThttp://www.annemariepace.com  Crissa-Jean Chappell Flux High School 10am-3pm EST  http://crissajeanchappell.com
 JoAnn Early Macken Disney-Hyperion, Candlewick Press, Holiday House Elementary 10 a.m.-2 p.m. CST http://www.joannmacken.com Laurel Snyder
Random House Books for Young Readers
K-5 EST
8 am- 2pm
http://laurelsnyder.com Erica S. Perl Random House/Abrams Elementary/Middle School 9am-12pm EST http://www.ericaperl.com Jody Feldman
HarperCollins/Greenwillow
Elementary/Middle School
8am-5pm CST
http://www.jodyfeldman.com Terry Golson ScholasticK-3 10 to 2 EST http://www.HenCam.com Lynn Plourde Dutton, S&S, Down East Elementary EST 9am-noon EST http://www.lynnplourde.com Alissa Grosso Flux High School & Middle SchoolAll day – ESThttp://alissagrosso.com  Tricia Springstubb HarperCollinsElementary 10-2 EST http://www.triciaspringstubb.com Lori DegmanSimon & Schuster Elementary 1:00 – 6:00 CST http://www.Loridegman.com Karen Day Random House Elementary/Middle School11am-2pm EST http://www.klday.com 
 Donna GephartDelacorte Press/Random HouseElementary/Middle School9am-6pm ESThttp://www.donnagephart.com
 Sarah Albee(Numerous publishers)Elementary/Middle School10am-3pm ESThttp://www.sarahalbeebooks.com DiannaWingetHarcourtElementary/Middle9am-2pmPSThttp://www.diannawinget.com Erin Dealey Atheneum/Sleeping Bear Press Elementary/Middle School 10am-6pm EST  http://www.erindealey.com Sonia Gensler Knopf Middle School/High School 10am-3pm CSThttp://www.soniagensler.com
 Nikki Loftin Penguin Older Elementary (Third Grade & up) 11am-2pm CST http://www.nikkiloftin.com Linda Joy SingletonLlewellyn/FluxMiddle/HS
Flexible times PST
http://www.LindaJoySingleton.com Tiffany Strelitz Haber Philomel/Penguin Elementary Time Zone 10am-4pm EST http://www.itsrhymetime.com  Margo Sorenson Marimba Books/Just Us Books Elementary K-3 6 AM – 8 AM PST http://www.margosorenson.com Irene Latham Penguin & Macmillan Elementary/Middle School9am-1pm CST http://www.irenelatham.com Carol Weis Simon & Schuster Elementary  11am-2pm EST http://www.carolweis.com Hillary Homzie Simon & Schuster Elementary/Middle School9 am- 12 am PST http://www.hillaryhomzie.com Tami Lewis Brown Farrar Straus & Giroux Elementary 8:30- 2:00 ESThttp://tamilewisbrown.com Wendy Kitts Nimbus Publishing Elementary 9 am-7 pm PST http://www.wendykitts.ca Diane ZahlerHarper CollinsElementary/Middle12pm-3pm ESThttp://www.dianezahler.com Monica Carnesi Penguin/Paulsen Elementary10 am – 3 pm EST http://www.monicacarnesi.com Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich Arthur A. Levine/Scholastic 4th-8th grade9:00AM-11:00AM EST http://www.olugbemisolabooks.com
 Greg R. Fishbone Lee & Low Upper Elementary/Middle School Any time http://www.gfishbone.com Natasha Wing Grosset & Dunlap Elementary 9-11 MST http://www.natashawing.com Lizzie K. Foley Dial/Penguin Elementary/Middle School 9:30am-2pm EST http://www.lizziekfoley.com  Tanya Lee StoneCandlewick/Henry Holt/PenguinElementary/Middle School/High School10am-2pm EST http://www.tanyastone.com Amy Guglielmo Sterling Pre-school/Elementary (up to 2nd grade)11am-2pm EST http://www.touchtheart.com Leslie Bulion
Peachtree,Charlesbridge
Elementary/Middle School
2-5pm EST
http://www.lesliebulion.com
 Mark Jeffrey
Harper Collins
Middle School
Anytime – PST
http://markjeffrey.net Dori Hillestad Butler Albert Whitman/Peachtree/Grosset & DunlapElementary or Middle School 1:00pm-3:00pm CST http://www.kidswriter.com Carmela LaVigna Coyle Rising Moon/Taylor Trade Elementary 9am-2pm MST http://www.carmelacoiyle.com Shannon Delany St. Martin’s Press Middle/High School 9am-2pm EST http://www.ShannonDelany.com Ammi-Joan PaquetteWalker/TanglewoodElementary/Middle School10am-2pm ESThttp://www.ajpaquette.com J&P Voelkel Egmont USA Middle School 10am-1pm EST http://www.jaguarstones.com Melissa Wiley Simon & Schuster/Random House Elementary10am-2pm PST http://melissawiley.com Mina Javaherbin Candlewick/Disney Hyperion Elementary 8:30am-2pm PST http://minajavaherbin.com Kristin O’Donnell Tubb Feiwel & Friends/Macmillan Upper elementary and middle 10 am to 2 pm CST http://kristintubb.com W.H. Beck Houghton Mifflin Elementary/Middle School7-7:45, 12:15-12:45, 4:15-5 CST http://www.whbeck.com Joanne Levy Bloomsbury Middle SchoolElementary/Middle School8:30 EST – 10:30 EST http://www.joannelevy.com Jean Reidy
Bloomsbury/Disney Hyperion
Preschool/Elementary School
10 am – 5 pm EST
http://www.jeanreidy.com   Melanie Hope Greenberg Penguin Elementary 9am – 12:00pm EST http://www.melaniehopegreenberg.com
Alison Alison Formento Albert Whitman & Company Elementary  1:00-4:00 pm EST http://www.alisonashleyformento.com Debbie Dadey Simon and Schuster/Scholastic Elementary
9:00-11:00 and 1:00-3:00 ESThttp://www.debbiedadey.com Cynthia Platt Tiger Tales Elementary 10am-1pm ESThttp://scribblingintheattic.com Frané  Lessac Candlewick/Holiday House/Lee and Low Elementary/Middle School Author’s time zone: Australia +8 GMT 10:30- 11:00am EST http://www.franelessac.com 

Happy reading, everyone!


“World Read Aloud Day is about taking action to show the world that the right to read and write belongs to all people. World Read Aloud Day motivates children, teens, and adults worldwide to celebrate the power of words, especially those words that are shared from one person to another, and creates a community of readers advocating for every child’s right to a safe education and access to books and technology.”              ~from the LitWorld website


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Published on January 28, 2013 18:20

January 24, 2013

Twelve Kinds of Lovely: Frost Flowers on Lake Champlain

It’s probably no surprise that someone who writes books like these…



…is a winter person. I love summer, but winter light and winter quiet feed my soul in a different way. If you’re that kind of person, too, you won’t want to miss this small, lovely book called TWELVE KINDS OF ICE, written by Ellen Bryan Obed and illustrated by Barbara McClintock.



Don’t expect a novel; this is more the kind of story your grandmother told you over hot chocolate — a remembrance of wintry childhood memories that celebrate all that’s good and pure and wildly fun when it comes to being a kid.  It starts with the ice on the sheep pails in the narrator’s barn, “an ice so thin that it broke when we touched it.”  The language in this personal narrative is as crisp and sparkling as the ice itself. But it was the section on Black Ice that resonated with me the most:


We could see the clouds, the blue sky, the tree-edged shoreline, in the mirror of black ice beneath us. We could see ourselves in the glass, our long-winged spirals, our flashing blades, our new mittens.


This is the kind of ice we live for at my house on Lake Champlain. And as I read yesterday, the temperature was plunging for the third night in a row. This morning, it was -16 when I woke up. When I got home from taking the kids to school, I went out back and down the stairs to the lake. My back yard gets a lot bigger this time of year.



I found what I was hoping for — that smooth, perfect, black ice — and an unexpected gift, too.  Delicate, feathery frost flowers…


 





An article I found in New Scientist says this is mostly an Arctic phenomenon. Here’s an excerpt:


Grae Worster and Robert Style of the University of Cambridge found that frost flowers form mostly in still, dry air. The key factor is air that is much colder – by around 20  °C – than the water below the ice, they say.


Under these extreme circumstances ice vaporises into the dry air and then refreezes in the form of a frost flower. The pair confirmed this by recreating such conditions in the laboratory. They grew frost flowers from fresh water at 0  °C by cooling the surrounding air to around -25  °C.


I love it when science makes magic like this. Here’s an NPR feature about the phenomenon.


It wasn’t long this morning before cold hands and warning noises from the not-quite-thick-enough ice sent me scurrying back to the stairs. I’ll be working in my writing room overlooking the frozen lake today, warmed by hot tea and a space heater…and the memory of magical flowers that bloom on the ice.


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Published on January 24, 2013 06:20

January 15, 2013

Writing and Writing (and a short story to read while you wait!)

I must admit… I’ve been a bad blogger lately because all  my words have been going into a few projects I’ve been working on. So now that I’m here, how about if I tell you a little about those?


This one’s all done…



HIDE AND SEEK is my follow up to CAPTURE THE FLAG, and in this second mystery, a sacred Silver Jaguar Society artifact goes missing, and Anna, Henry, and Jose go with their families to the rainforest of Costa Rica to try and track down the priceless Jaguar Cup before it falls into the wrong hands forever.  I love this book (maybe even more than CAPTURE THE FLAG – am I allowed to say that?) and can’t wait for it to come out in April.


After HIDE AND SEEK, Anna, Henry, and Jose will have one more adventure, and I’m working on that book right now. It’s called MANHUNT, and it pits the Silver Jaguar Society against the most nefarious art theft gang in all of Europe in a race to save the most beloved works of art in the world. This book takes place in some of the brightest and darkest places in Boston and Paris and was so much fun to research that I wish I could hop on a plane and do it all over again. But the great thing about writing books is that you get to relive your research trips with every draft.  It may be below freezing and drizzly where I live, but in my writing room this week, it was Paris in August, right down to the breeze on the Seine and the wafting smell of banana-Nutella crepes.


I’ve also been working on a couple proposals for new projects that are too new to be talked about but have been haunting my dreams and my notebooks for a while.


I don’t have a new book coming out until Spring, but I do have a short story to share now.  A while back, Scholastic asked me to write a piece of original fiction for their Storyworks magazine, and I jumped at the chance to try something a little different from what I usually write. It’s science fiction, and it’s called “They Might Be Dangerous.”


TMBD


Scholastic has made much of the February/March issue of Storyworks available online (they’re great that way) so if you’d like to read my story, you can click here to find it.   Scroll down to find “They Might Be Dangerous,” and then you can click on it to download the story as a pdf to read and share.


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Published on January 15, 2013 16:13

Eli the Good by Silas House

Screen Shot 2013-01-15 at 9.58.21 AMSo what’s to say about ELI THE GOOD?  I loved this book, despite a burst of bad attitude last week that made me impatient with its gorgeous descriptions for a day or so.  You can read more about that here, or not.

ELI THE GOOD is one of those stories where setting — place and especially time — takes center stage. The year is 1976 — a year I remember for our town’s bicentennial parade and because I spent most of it angry that I wasn’t allowed to ride my bike to the park alone.  Eli remembers it as the year things fell apart in his family — with a wild-spirited aunt who shows up with a secret, a mouthy, strong-willed sister who comes to blows with their mother, and a father who is trapped in his memories of Vietnam. It’s a beautiful, poignant book, full of the kinds of details that made me want to go back and reread passages.  There were many that I loved, but maybe this one most of all:

“Whole scenes of your life slip away forever if you don’t put them down in ink.”  ~Eli Book

I loved this book, though I haven’t had a chance to share it with students yet, and there’s one thing that makes me most curious as to how it will be received.  Even though Eli is ten years old the summer of 1976, he’s a grown man, narrating from years in the future as he narrates the book. In that sense, it feels more like an adult book sometimes than a title aimed at kids.  I’m curious to see how much students will connect with that older, wiser voice. Has anyone shared this title with tweens & teens yet?  I’d love to hear your thoughts!


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Published on January 15, 2013 07:58

January 8, 2013

Authors Wanted: A call for World Read Aloud Day 2013

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Confession: Reading aloud is one of my favorite things in the world. When I was a kid, I was the one forever waving my hand to volunteer to read to the class, and still, I’ll pretty much read to anyone who will listen.


For the past couple years, I’ve helped out with LitWorld’s World Read Aloud Day by pulling together a list of author volunteers who would like to spend part of the day Skyping with classrooms around the world to share the joy of reading aloud. World Read Aloud Day 2013 is March 6th, and I’d love to do this again, to help interested authors, teachers, and librarians connect.


A suggested World Read Aloud Day Skype visit goes like this…



1-2 minutes: Author introduces himself or herself and talks a little about his or her books.
3-5 minutes: Author reads aloud a short picture book, or a short excerpt from a chapter book/novel
5-10 minutes: Author answers some questions from students about reading/writing
1-2 minutes: Author book-talks a couple books he or she loves (but didn’t write!) as recommendations for the kids

Sound like fun? If  you’re the author of a traditionally published* book and you’d like to volunteer to do some 10-15 minute Skype visits with classes on March 6, 2013, please send me an email via the contact form on my website (you can get there by clicking on the little envelope on the right side of the screen).  Deadline: February 1st, please, so people can plan.



Put WORLD READ ALOUD DAY VOLUNTEER in the subject line
Include the following information in the body of your email:

Your name
Your publisher
What ages your books fit best (Elementary, Middle School, or High School)
What time zone you live in (EST, CST, etc. This is important for scheduling!)
Hours you’ll be available for Skype visits on March 6, 2013 (10am-2pm EST, for example)
Your website (and email if your website doesn’t have contact information)



So a sample email from an author volunteer will look like this:


Kate MessnerScholasticElementary/Middle SchoolEST11am-2pm ESTwww.katemessner.com 

Please use this exact format; it will make it easy for me to copy & paste your entry to the blog post, and then I will love you forever.


I’ll pull all the author volunteer information together in a blog post for early February and share with teachers & librarians who want to Skype with read-aloud authors on March 6th.  Teachers & librarians will contact authors directly to request visits.  If you’re on the list for a while and then realize your schedule for the day is full, it will be helpful if you email me to let me know that so that I can cross you off and you don’t keep getting requests.


*Yes…I’m limiting this volunteer round-up to traditionally published authors who write children’s and YA books. That’s not because I have anything against self-publishing or ebooks — it’s simply to limit the scope of the project so it doesn’t overwhelm me. If someone else would like to create a similar list of self-published and/or ebook author volunteers, I’ll happily link to it here.  Thanks for understanding!


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Published on January 08, 2013 14:27

January 7, 2013

Why writing a book about concussions can be hazardous to your health…

WAKE UP MISSING, my Fall 2013 MG novel with Walker/Bloomsbury is just about put to bed. I spent much of the holiday break reviewing copy edits, and I have to admit, as excited as I am for this book to be out in the world, I was a little sad to let it go because it’s been so much fun, so interesting to work on.  The cover design team has done a spectacular job, and I can’t wait to show you what they’ve created.  But for now, I’ll share a little about the book.


Meet Quentin, a middle school football star from Chicago…


Sarah, an Upstate New York girls’ hockey team stand-out…


Ben, a horse lover from the Pacific Northwest…


And Cat, an artistic bird watcher from California.


The four have nothing in common except for the head injuries that land them in an elite brain-science center in the Florida Everglades. It’s known as the best in the world, but as days pass, the kids begin to suspect that they are subjects in an experiment that goes far beyond treating concussions….and threatens their very identities. They’ll have to overcome their injuries – and their differences –  to escape, or risk losing themselves forever.


 Researching this book meant lots of reading and multiple trips to the Florida Everglades to soak up the setting and details, so I’d have a better sense for what it might be like to attempt an escape through that unforgiving landscape.


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My daughter and I went kayaking with alligators — twice — once in the early morning hours and once in the dark of night, when their eyes glowed red in our head lamps.


I went hiking in the Fakahatchee Strand with snakes like this one…


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…and made it through all those experiences with nary a scratch.


But sometimes, while you’re working on a book, the heaps of laundry really pile up in your bedroom. And so sometimes, when you finish copy edits, you resolve to clean that room as soon as the manuscript is back in the mail. And if you’re not careful, you might bend over really fast to pick up a stray sock from your floor and forget all about that very solid oak bedpost that’s been living in that corner of your room for your entire married life. And it might connect with your head and cause you to see stars and sit down for a little while thinking, “Wow, that hurt!”  And two days later, when you develop a sudden and intense headache on that side of your head, you’ll probably need to go to the hospital for a CT Scan to make sure your brain isn’t bleeding. And you’ll learn that you are just fine, but you do have your first-ever concussion.


On a positive note…I got to see pictures of my brain, which is pretty cool.


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My friend Irene thinks this should be the author photo for WAKE UP MISSING.


My post-concussion headache has abated now, but for a few days, it allowed me to empathize with my poor novel characters in a way I’d never planned.  I’m calling it accidental research. And also…validation. For years growing up, I told my mom that I was sure cleaning my room was somehow hazardous to my health.  Now I know, I was right all along.


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Published on January 07, 2013 07:35