Keir Graff's Blog, page 2
December 2, 2011
Publishers Weekly Reports Strong Sales of The Other Felix
In yesterday's "Children's Booksellers Report on Black Friday Weekend," Judith Rosen included item:
“I’ve sold a little bit of everything. I’ve been looking for that one book, and it hasn’t declared itself in my store yet,” says Suzy Takacs, owner of The Book Cellar in Chicago. In addition to bestselling series titles for older readers, she was surprised to see Nick Bruel’s A Bad Kitty Christmas (Roaring Brook) really take off over the weekend. She’s also done well with local author Kier Graff’s The Other Felix (Roaring Brook). At Gibson’s, Herrmann notes that two books from local authors, Tomie dePaola’s Strega Nona’s Gift (Penguin/Nancy Paulsen) and Adam Gamble’s Good Night New Hampshire (Our World of Books), have done especially well. Even in New York City, Bank Street Books buyer/manager Beth Puffer finds that anything local, like Melissa Sweet’s Balloons Over Broadway (Houghton Mifflin), sells briskly.
Welcome news, even if they did spell my name wrong!
September 28, 2011
People Who Helped Along the Way
Once I was finally done writing, revising, and editing The Other Felix and the book was on its way to production, I started putting my list of acknowledgments together. Now, I had not written an acknowledgments page for any of my four novels for adults. For those, I don't do research, I don't share my drafts with other readers, and the books generally go straight to the publisher.
But The Other Felix seemed different. A number of people had definitely helped it on its way. And, frankly, I was feeling so great about everything that I just wanted to spread the love.
My first list was long. I believe I may have included Mayor Daley and I wasn't even that much of a fan. So I did another draft in which I whittled it down to essentials. It was still pretty long, butI decided that was OK and sent it on to my editor, Kate Jacobs.
Kate told me it was a nice list but encouraged me to think about it in context, as it would appear in a book for kids. I looked at it again with new eyes and decided that, as usual, she was right: my list was really written for grownups, not kids. And while I hope a lot of adults read my book, too, a lengthy acknowledgments page makes a weird coda for a kid who has just read the last scene in a novel. If the kid is immersed in the story, the experience could be like stepping off a ride at Disneyland and then having having a guy in a suit make you read the names of the people who built it.
So I didn't put my acknowledgments in the book. But I still want to thank people for their roles, direct and indirect, in the creation and publication of this book. So I'm going to share it in some grownup contexts—such as, for instance, here.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank my beautiful wife, Marya, for her unsung labors as the silent partner in my writing career, and for giving me two sons who have made my life complete. Felix and Cosmo, you make me happy every single day and I love you both more than you can possible imagine. Thank you for being patient when I’m busy writing. Felix, your dream started it all—and, Cosmo, the next book is for you!
I owe a special debt to my friend and colleague, Ilene Cooper, for giving me astute, helpful notes on several drafts. Her advice, encouragement, and generosity were invaluable on the road to publication. Nancy McCulloch, my mother, and Ian Chipman, another friend and colleague, also read early versions and shared helpful feedback.
Lauren Wohl, thank you for falling in love with the book and championing it. Kate Jacobs, thank you for editing it with such care and clear thinking. And Ken Wright, thank you for being honest about my ideas, good AND bad.
While busy parents work, other people help them raise their children. I would like to publicly acknowledge the warmth and dedication of the caregivers and teachers at Corporate Childcare Consultants, Park View Montessori, and Walt Disney Magnet School in Chicago. Though you may have been a part of our lives for only a brief while, your influence will last a lifetime.
Finally, a shout-out and a slice of pizza to super babysitters Sadie, Mandii, Kathia, Camilla, Andrea—and others we're just getting to know.
September 20, 2011
Strong early reviews for The Other Felix
The official release date of my first book for kids, The Other Felix, is October 11. But the early reviews are already trickling in . . . and they're pretty good!
Kirkus calls it "An allegorical tale about friendship, fear, happiness and hope." The anonymous reviewer sums up by saying, "This thoughtful, whimsical story promises rewards for those patient readers who stick with Felix till the end."
And Publishers Weekly's anonymous reviewer writes, "[Graff's] skill at capturing the small, everyday details and dramas that loom large in children’s minds, as well as his avoidance of a too-neat ending, ought to linger with readers . . . "
Fingers crossed for more good reviews. The reviews I care about most, of course, will be the ones I get from the kids!
August 20, 2011
Free E-book: The Price of Liberty
The Price of Liberty is finally available as an e-book. As my way of saying thanks for your patience, I'm going to give it away FREE until August 31. (Smashwords only; Kindle will only let me price it at 99 cents.) Please download, read, and enjoy.
If you do download the free e-book and you like what you read, spread the word! Write a review on your favorite book-sharing site and be sure to tell your friends they can read it for free, too.
Finalist for the Society of Midland Authors Fiction Prize
July 7, 2011
Conversations Both Live and Recorded
So I'll be at Centuries & Sleuths (7419 W. Madison St., Forest Park, IL) tomorrow night with two good guys, Bill Rapp and Allan Ansorge. Not sure exactly where the conversation will take us, but there will be wine, and cheese, and Allan has promised to wear "an unusually striking derby"—show up for that if nothing else!
If you can't make it but don't want to spend a weekend without hearing writers talk, and drink, and talk about writing and drinking, WBEZ has a quality recording of my May conversation with Bryan Gruley at the Newberry Library ("Serious Thrills: Keir Graff and Bryan Gruley Talk about Writing"). Frankly, I can't stand to listen to recordings of myself but hopefully you won't share my aversion. And Gruley is always entertaining.
May 4, 2011
The Price of Liberty a Runner-Up for Society of Midland Authors Fiction Prize
Just (officially) announced: The Price of Liberty is a runner-up for the Society of Midland Authors fiction prize. I'm honored! And amazed! They don't usually select so-called genre fiction. I'm in damn good company, too, as you'll see. I'd like to thank my agent...my stunt double...and all the animators who ruined their eyesight so the children of America could see their cartoons in true 3-D....
Whoops. Wrong speech.
Society of Midland Authors
2011 Awards for Books Published in 2010
ADULT FICTION
Winner:
Benjamin Percy - The Wilding: A Novel - Graywolf Press
Finalists:
Keir Graff - The Price of Liberty - Severn House Publishers
Billy Lombardo - The Man with Two Arms: A Novel - The Overlook Press
ADULT NONFICTION
Winner:
Deborah Blum - The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York - Penguin Press
Finalists:
Harry Castleman and Walter J. Podrazik - Watching TV: Six Decades of American Television, 2nd expanded ed. - Syracuse University Press
Kevin Stein - Poetry's Afterlife: Verse in the Digital Age - The University of Michigan Press and The University of Michigan Library
BIOGRAPHY
Winner:
Bill Barnhart and Gene Schlickman - John Paul Stevens: An Independent Life - Northern Illinois University Press
Finalist:
Bruce L. Mouser - For Labor, Race, and Liberty: George Edwin Taylor, His Historic Run for the White House, and the Making of Independent Black Politics - The University of Wisconsin Press
CHILDREN'S FICTION
Winner:
Rebecca Barnhouse - The Coming of the Dragon - Random House Books for Young Readers
Finalists:
Stephanie Hemphill - Wicked Girls: A Novel of the Salem Witch Trials - Balzer and Bray
Clare Vanderpool - Moon Over Manifest - Delacorte Books for Young Readers
CHILDREN'S NONFICTION
Winner:
Mitchell, Don - Driven: A Photobiography of Henry Ford - National Geographic Children's Books
POETRY
Winner:
Jehanne Dubrow - Stateside - TriQuarterly
Finalist:
Marc J. Sheehan - Vengeful Hymns - Ashland Poetry Press
JAMES FRIEND MEMORIAL AWARD FOR LITERARY AND DRAMATIC CRITICISM
Winner:
John Barron, publisher, Chicago Sun-Times, for his love of books and his many fine book reviews
February 14, 2011
Mistakes, I've Made a Few
I'll be at the Frankfort Public Library tomorrow night (Illinois, not Kentucky or Germany), doing my program, "How I Kept My Day Job and Became a Published Author—and You Can, Too!" Joe Vince of FrankfortPatch asked me to share "Five Mistakes Writers Make Getting Published" and I said, "Only five?!"
Just kidding. Five is more than enough to worry about when you're just starting out. And none of us make the same mistakes in quite the same way, either.
December 22, 2010
My Fellow Americans and One Nation, Under God Are Now Available on Kindle
My Fellow Americans and One Nation, Under God are now available in Kindle Editions (TM), delivered wirelessly to your Amazon Kindle (TM) e-reader via Amazon Whispernet (TM). Bargain priced at $2.99, these two terrifying tomes are the perfect last-minute holiday gift . . . for yourself!
(If anyone knows how to grab these images from Amazon without the outline, please let me know!)
November 24, 2010
Maybe Titles Are My Problem
I put my titles to the test on the Lulu Titlescorer, with the following results:
The title Cold Lessons has a 69% chance of being a bestselling title!
The title My Fellow Americans has a 26.3% chance of being a bestselling title!
The title One Nation, Under God has a 34.8% chance of being a bestselling title!
The title The Price of Liberty has a 26.3% chance of being a bestselling title!
Hmm...so Cold Lessons still has a chance?
November 18, 2010
Spinetingler Magazine Recommends The Price of Liberty
Spinetingler Magazine reviewed The Price of Liberty yesterday. And while they noted that not all readers revel in tense plots full of pursuit and murder, they said it will be rewarding for those who do. The summary quote:
"it is a fast-reading, exciting novel, and is recommended."
I'll happily take it.
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