Nancy E. Shaw's Blog, page 5
October 25, 2013
A Woolly Weekend

Knitters, spinners, sheep owners, and book people all got together for the really, really large New York State Sheep & Wool Festival last weekend. What a pleasure to meet fellow authors! And a shout-out to the Meyer family and staff from the Merritt Bookstore, who all worked together to make the book sale happen.
I met Susanna Leonard Hill and her daughter Katie, there with Can't Sleep Without Sheep (and a puppet friend). Her blog for October 21 gives the flavor of the festival and shows her at storytime--a new festival feature.

Iza Trapani, who wrote and illustrated Baa Baa Black Sheep and numerous other tales, was fun to talk to--and check out her blog for her descriptions of sheep voices, talking to Susanna and me, and her drawing contest, won by Caty.


Published on October 25, 2013 17:48
October 23, 2013
What's Cooking?
Some of my favorite writings are recipes, and there are some great ones by children's-book creators, like those in
Writers in the Kitchen
, or the Michigan Reading Association's
Recipes for Readers
.
Since my books have a lot of ingredients, I've included recipes on a new Web page, put together by author-illustrator Deb Pilutti--and she's made printable recipe cards.
If you feel like cooking along with a story, there are four recipes--Elena's staple food, tortillas; oatmeal cookies the sheep could make with their Halloween treats; a savory custard on the menu at the Tiddley Wink Teashop; and maple porridge sought by marauding raccoons. Of course, if you're an oatmeal aficionado, you can use the tastier and slower-cooking rolled or steel-cut oats. I like to tinker in the kitchen--please tinker along.
The sheep get apples, oats, sugar, and eggs as Halloween treats--they go into trick-or-treat cookies.
Since my books have a lot of ingredients, I've included recipes on a new Web page, put together by author-illustrator Deb Pilutti--and she's made printable recipe cards.
If you feel like cooking along with a story, there are four recipes--Elena's staple food, tortillas; oatmeal cookies the sheep could make with their Halloween treats; a savory custard on the menu at the Tiddley Wink Teashop; and maple porridge sought by marauding raccoons. Of course, if you're an oatmeal aficionado, you can use the tastier and slower-cooking rolled or steel-cut oats. I like to tinker in the kitchen--please tinker along.

Published on October 23, 2013 07:39
October 11, 2013
Telling Yarns at the New York State Sheep & Wool Festival

And this year, we're going to have a prize drawing, with a couple of special-edition sheep books. Stop by!
Published on October 11, 2013 12:48
September 17, 2013
Upcoming Appearances

On November 2, I'll be at the Superior Book Festival in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. It will be a day for all ages of young readers, with authors Carrie Pearson, Johnathan Rand, Janice Repka, Gretchen Preston, and Lizbeth Jenkins-Dale appearing.
Published on September 17, 2013 14:09
September 15, 2013
Kerrytown BookFest 2013
The sun came out, crowds came out, and some post-Notre Dame/U-M game fans were hoarse from the night before as the 11th annual Kerrytown BookFest got underway last Sunday. Ruth McNally Barshaw, Shutta Crum, David Catrow, and I gathered in the Kerrytown Concert House for a session called "Picture Books from Inception to Publication."
Ruth, the moderator, handles both art and text in her Ellie McDoodle series, while David handled the art for Shutta's accolade-winning new book, Dozens of Cousins. So the speakers had a variety of relationships with putting words and pictures together.
Often people assume that a writer picks an illustrator, or tells the illustrator what to do. But in traditional publishing, the publisher typically chooses the illustrator and works separately with that person. There are notable exceptions, and family writer/artist teams. But as the panel said, there is a kind of editor's alchemy in bringing the two separate parts together. One thrill of getting a picture book published is in seeing how the artist has expanded on what you wrote. Growing up with a visual-arts background, I have always been able to see what could be on the page--but then the artist brings a new dimension.
Another thrill is having your work mean something to a reader. An audience member explained that her young foster son had never responded to books until my sheep couldn't get their jeep to go. He got it! What a privilege to learn something like that in a festival program!
Me, David Catrow, Shutta Crum, and moderator Ruth McNally Barshaw
Shutta and David had the privilege of meeting for the first time at a BookFest gathering. Here they are after the panel discussion, with Dozens of Cousins. Ruth went on to give her annual drawing demonstration for kids. I sewed a cover onto a copy of poems by the festival's children's authors, and listened to discussions of "A Mysterious Sense of Place" and "Cherchez la Femme," on a woman's point of view.
Thanks for a great community effort!
Kerrytown BookFest Organizer Robin Agnew of Aunt Agatha's Books, volunteer Lauren Houser, and mystery author Cara Black enjoy the sunshine at the Ann Arbor Farmers Market.
Ruth, the moderator, handles both art and text in her Ellie McDoodle series, while David handled the art for Shutta's accolade-winning new book, Dozens of Cousins. So the speakers had a variety of relationships with putting words and pictures together.
Often people assume that a writer picks an illustrator, or tells the illustrator what to do. But in traditional publishing, the publisher typically chooses the illustrator and works separately with that person. There are notable exceptions, and family writer/artist teams. But as the panel said, there is a kind of editor's alchemy in bringing the two separate parts together. One thrill of getting a picture book published is in seeing how the artist has expanded on what you wrote. Growing up with a visual-arts background, I have always been able to see what could be on the page--but then the artist brings a new dimension.
Another thrill is having your work mean something to a reader. An audience member explained that her young foster son had never responded to books until my sheep couldn't get their jeep to go. He got it! What a privilege to learn something like that in a festival program!

Shutta and David had the privilege of meeting for the first time at a BookFest gathering. Here they are after the panel discussion, with Dozens of Cousins. Ruth went on to give her annual drawing demonstration for kids. I sewed a cover onto a copy of poems by the festival's children's authors, and listened to discussions of "A Mysterious Sense of Place" and "Cherchez la Femme," on a woman's point of view.

Thanks for a great community effort!

Published on September 15, 2013 20:05
September 6, 2013
The Craft of Printing
It's not often that I get to be part of a hand-made book--if you don't count the comic books I drew when I was a tween. I'm pleased to be one of the poets featured in a small book that visitors can put together at the Kerrytown BookFest--check out the August 21st entry on their Facebook page to see the cover you can print. The festival emphasizes the craft of the book, and the poetry project is a hands-on way to become part of that craft.
My grandfather was art director of a color printing firm, as well as a watercolorist and printmaker, with a Ben Franklin press in his basement. He helped his grandchildren produce their own prints on it. I printed a portrait etching, and a woodcut of Aesop's fox and grapes. I have some of Grandpa's woodcuts, and I think his "B. Franklin, Printer" proof would be right at home at the festival.
For an overview of the Kerrytown BookFest, here's an article from annarbor.com.
My grandfather was art director of a color printing firm, as well as a watercolorist and printmaker, with a Ben Franklin press in his basement. He helped his grandchildren produce their own prints on it. I printed a portrait etching, and a woodcut of Aesop's fox and grapes. I have some of Grandpa's woodcuts, and I think his "B. Franklin, Printer" proof would be right at home at the festival.
For an overview of the Kerrytown BookFest, here's an article from annarbor.com.
Published on September 06, 2013 20:04
September 5, 2013
So Many Books...
Each year I'm one of many helpers setting out the wares at Ann Arbor's AAUW Used Book Sale, in a vast roomful of tables at Washtenaw Community College. Carton after carton comes out, and we have to practically wedge the books into place, held in by a bookend here, a cut-down cartonful there--well-thumbed paperbacks, pristine hardcovers, specially-priced rare volumes, and books that are not rare at all. Volunteers have been working all summer to sort the thousands of donations. I usually work on the children's-book table, as I did today.
The sight of so many titles, now divorced from their owners, makes me a little melancholy. Not every book stays beloved. And with all these titles clamoring for attention, why try to publish one more? But I believe in recycling, and here's a way to get books into new hands, raising scholarship money on the way. One year, the organizers let me fill a grocery bag with gently-used books to send to SCBWI's efforts for kids who had been displaced by Hurricane Katrina.
Besides, I keep finding things I want, like Janet Schulman's 20th Century Children's Book Treasury. Travel books. A classic story in Spanish translation that I could imagine my character Elena reading. I bought a book of cut-out animal masks one year on impulse, and later used it to play a raccoon in a Raccoon Tune skit.
If that odd title calls out to you, reach for it. You could be its new soulmate.
The sight of so many titles, now divorced from their owners, makes me a little melancholy. Not every book stays beloved. And with all these titles clamoring for attention, why try to publish one more? But I believe in recycling, and here's a way to get books into new hands, raising scholarship money on the way. One year, the organizers let me fill a grocery bag with gently-used books to send to SCBWI's efforts for kids who had been displaced by Hurricane Katrina.
Besides, I keep finding things I want, like Janet Schulman's 20th Century Children's Book Treasury. Travel books. A classic story in Spanish translation that I could imagine my character Elena reading. I bought a book of cut-out animal masks one year on impulse, and later used it to play a raccoon in a Raccoon Tune skit.
If that odd title calls out to you, reach for it. You could be its new soulmate.
Published on September 05, 2013 13:41
August 25, 2013
Book Events Coming Up in Southeast Michigan
The Ann Arbor branch of the American Association of University Women will hold its annual used book sale September 6-8 at Washtenaw Community College. I help set out the books each year, and I'm always amazed at the variety. Used books galore, and the profits go to scholarships.
*********************************************************************************
You're invited to Ann Arbor's Kerrytown BookFest on September 8. I'll be part of the noon panel "Michigan Narratives: Picture Books from Inception to Publication. Writer & illustrator Ruth McNally Barshaw leads a discussion with writers Shutta Crum and Nancy Shaw as well as illustrator David Catrow."
Ruth's Drawing SessionRuth Barshaw will return with her drawing workshop for kids as well. Debbie Diesen will read her picture books. Shanda Trent will present her new book Farmers' Market Day right there in Ann Arbor's Farmers Market, which inspired the tale. The Ann Arbor District Library's Laura Pershin Raynor will be telling animal tales. Bring the kids!
Speakers ranging from auto-industry leader Bob Lutz to mystery writer Erin Hart to novelist Natalie Bakopoulos will appear. Besides bringing authors and illustrators to Kerrytown, the BookFest features the craft of publishing.
And it's Sunday--so you can park with ease!
**********************************************************************************
Jean Alicia ElsterAnother event I'll be sorry to miss is at the same time: Michigan Notable author Jean Alicia Elster will celebrate her new chapter book
The Colored Car
at Detroit's Scarab Club at 2 p.m.
*********************************************************************************
You're invited to Ann Arbor's Kerrytown BookFest on September 8. I'll be part of the noon panel "Michigan Narratives: Picture Books from Inception to Publication. Writer & illustrator Ruth McNally Barshaw leads a discussion with writers Shutta Crum and Nancy Shaw as well as illustrator David Catrow."

Speakers ranging from auto-industry leader Bob Lutz to mystery writer Erin Hart to novelist Natalie Bakopoulos will appear. Besides bringing authors and illustrators to Kerrytown, the BookFest features the craft of publishing.
And it's Sunday--so you can park with ease!
**********************************************************************************

Published on August 25, 2013 07:15
June 15, 2013
A Wild Ride, Supersized

Published on June 15, 2013 14:17
April 16, 2013
Eaton Great Start Family Program This Saturday

Published on April 16, 2013 13:59
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