Kurtis Scaletta's Blog, page 15
May 15, 2012
All around the blogosphere
I’ve recently done a triple serving of posts for other people’s blogs, and here they are….
1. Writing a stand-alone book with series potential for The Writer’s Dig at Writer’sDigest.com
2. Differences between writing middle-grade books and chapter books for Operation Awesome.
3. Saving the best (I think) for last, an homage to one of my favorite writers and a confession at Nerdy Book Club.
(Actually, I’m not sure I ever linked to this one, either… so make that a fourple serving!)

April 24, 2012
Writer’s Digest Writer’s Website of the Week
writing books writing tutorials
how to get published
writing workshops writing contests
Twenty-two years ago I was an Intern at Writer’s Digest Books and got my first national writing credit for a profile of a small press in the Novelist & Short Story Writer’s Market. I indexed a book for mystery writers, combed through the slush pile for Story magazine, and did other interesting things. And now… I’m on their website. What comes around goes around. Anyway, it’s cool to be featured by the company that gave me my start in publishing.
Since the folks in Cincinnati are driving a lot of traffic here, I wanted to explain why I might have been so honored.
One: I have fun extras for each of my books, particularly for Mudville and Mamba Point. Since I became a dad between books two and three, the subsequent books have suffered. But there is some fun stuff there for teachers using Mudville or Mamba Point in their classrooms and/or kids who enjoyed those books.
Two: I have some hard-learned lessons as a writer on my blog. See Five Ways to Write a Story, Writing and Publishing, and Writing in the Wedges.
Three: I have rarely sank my own money into publicity, but while I use a packaged theme for my website, I did pay an illustrator for unique graphics, and I love them. I think it’s a good way to go for authors who want a unique design but work on a small budget.
Four: I am regularly on Twitter and Facebook and I mix self-promotion with a healthy dose of being myself and interacting with others on both.
Five: I know who my audience is. I scrapped my book reviews blog once I got published, and my “trying to get published” blog, and focused ever since on teachers, librarians, and book club facilitators as my primary audience; friends and fellow writers as my secondary audience. Having facilitated book clubs, I knew the kinds of things facilitators look for when boosting discussion of a book and keeping it front and center. So that’s what I offered, or try to, and it’s the best lesson of all. Keep in mind who your audience is and what you are trying to do with your author’s website.
So, thanks Writer’s Digest and I hope the folks coming from there enjoy their visit.

April 14, 2012
Minnesota Book Awards…
I did not win the Minnesota Book Award in the category for Literature for Young People, which was taken by the deserving Brian Farrey. But I did manage to snare the Readers’ Choice Award, thanks to friends and fans like you who voted. It was a fun night and a pleasure to be a part of! Here are me and Brian with our beautiful granite & glass trophies.

April 1, 2012
Batboy series
Today is April 1, the official release date for the batboy series. As I’ve said, the series concerns the misadventures of a ten-year-old chiropterahumanoid who disguises himself as a normal boy to avoid tabloid newspaper reporters and government agents. Of course he gives himself away sometimes, when he forgets himself and eats his own weight in mosquitoes on camping trips or sleeps hanging from a friend’s bunk bed during a sleepover.
:record scratch: OK, there was a little April foolin’ going on here. And really, that would be awesome, too.
But the new series is about a completely different kind of bat boy. Chad works for a minor league baseball team called the Pine City Porcupines and uses his massive baseball card collection to help the players on the team overcome superstitions and jinxes. The books are full of great pictures by the talented Eric Wight, author of Frankie Pickle. The books are published by Abrams and Topps and the paperbacks feature collectible cards. The whole thing is really cool and fun to be a part of.
(The first illustration is by my buddy Christopher Lincoln.)

March 25, 2012
Reading for the Record Books
Here’s a follow-up story on the event last month in Chaska, Minnesota.

March 17, 2012
Ahem. Is this thing on?
My fellow Americans….
All right, campaign speeches aren’t my thing, but please vote for me in the Minnesota Book Awards Reader’s Choice poll over Facebook way. You can vote once a day until the end of March. And you can tell your friends. And they can tell their friends. I don’t even think they have to be Minnesotans or read books. I’m not saying “stuff the ballot box,” I’m just saying, you know, that there’s no proper screening. No ID, no registration. Just click on in and vote. Easy peasy. Even if I don’t win, maybe I can take a close enough second to demand a recount.

March 6, 2012
Humor writing class for kids, in person!
I’m teaching a youth class for 9-11 year olds at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis this summer. The class is filling up, so if you know a kid who is interested, please sign ‘em up soon!
As a teacher I tend to draw from books other than my own, and this one is no exception.
Your Life is Hilarious: A Writing Class for “Wimpy” Kids*
Jeff Kinney, author and illustrator of the best-selling Wimpy Kid books, shows us how ordinary mishaps at home and school can be hilarious. In this weeklong class, we’ll look at scenes from the Wimpy Kid books (and others) for examples on how to find the funny in the familiar. Writers will practice creating their own comic scenes and leave with enough material for a funny story.
*Non-wimpy kids also welcome.

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