Nancy I. Sanders's Blog, page 16

March 25, 2019

Photo Research

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My newest book, Jane Austen for Kids, is officially out! And as I’m sharing it with family, friends, and fellow writers, one of the first questions everyone wants to know is:


WHERE DID YOU GET ALL THESE AMAZING IMAGES?!!!


Basically, there are 3 kinds of images in my book.


#1. I paid for about 20 key and very important images I couldn’t find anywhere else but I felt were a MUST for a biography on Jane.


#2. I traveled to England and took lots and lots (and LOTS) of photographs at historic sites, getting written permission to publish these photographs for free.


#3. I found a lot of free images to use that were copyright-free or simply needed a letter of permission to publish.


The good news is that there are actually lots of places you can go to today to find free images to use in your book project. My writing friend and fellow Nonfiction Ninja, Stephanie Bearce, recently wrote a very helpful informational post on how you can find these!


CLICK HERE to read this week’s Nonfiction Ninja blog post.

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Published on March 25, 2019 02:05

March 19, 2019

Walking in the Footsteps of Jane Austen

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One of the unexpected joys I experienced while writing my newest book, Jane Austen for Kids, was to be able to travel to England and walk in the footsteps of our beloved Jane.


One of the most memorable days I spent was when our JASNA (Jane Austen Society of North America) tour bus took us to visit Chawton Cottage, the home Jane lived in as an adult, St. Nicholas, the church she attended with her family while living there, and Chawton House, the mansion she walked to frequently to visit her wealthy brother and favorite niece, Fanny Knight.


Would you like to see photographs I took as I walked the Jane Austen trail that day? Then hop on over to the delightful and informative blog that’s hosted by Vermont’s chapter of JASNA. CLICK HERE to visit the wonderful site, Jane Austen in Vermont.

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Published on March 19, 2019 01:02

March 18, 2019

Author Interview: Evelyne Holingue

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Meet Author Evelyne Holingue

Website:
Evelyne Holingue


Bio:

I was born and brought up in France and moved as an adult to the USA with my husband and our first child, only a baby. As I searched for a way to improve my limited English I took a writing class through the Institute of Children’s Literature. I was hooked and soon was writing fiction, mostly short stories. Some appeared in children’s magazines and placed in contests. I love Picture Books as much as I love YA and MG . Last January one of my PB manuscripts captured an agent’s interest. Since February 2019 I have been represented by Laurel Sydmonds from the Bent Agency.


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Featured Book:

All the Mountains We Can Climb

by Evelyne Holingue


Interview:

Q: Tell me about your latest book.


A: All the Mountains We Can Climb is a YA novel set in the California foothills near Yosemite National Park.


The novel in a nutshell:

Noelle survived the car crash that killed her father and sister. Since then, she hasn’t told anyone what happened in the car seconds before the accident. Although she feels terribly guilty she’s too ashamed to talk to her mother and two best friends. A year later, as guilty and ashamed, Noelle still adheres to her mother’s rules, established after the tragedy. Until she secretly applies to an East Coast college that she toured with her father and breaks her promise to study in California.


Now graduating from high school Noelle must tell her mother. As if she needed more challenges her French uncle’s sons arrive unexpectedly from Paris.

Charismatic Quentin witnessed one of the Paris’s terror attacks. Not without consequences. Quiet Manu cooks like a chef and reads Noelle so well, perhaps because he knows something about grief and guilt too. Noelle’s last summer before college seems to be her chance to move on. Will she take it?


Q: What inspired you to write this story?

A:
Sadly, car accidents planted the seeds for the novel.

For years I drove my kids to their high school, following a gorgeous road that cuts through Central California’s foothills and takes visitors to the three most visited National Parks in California: Kings Canyon and Sequoia southbound and Yosemite northbound.


This road was unfortunately as spectacular as it was deathly. We spotted too many crosses, flowers and wreaths, makeshift memorials in honor of a loved one. It saddened me that so many people could die in such beautiful surroundings. Even sadder was the fact that many were young men and women, too often teenagers. This heartbreaking reality planted the early seeds for All the Mountains We Can Climb.


In addition, since I love Yosemite National Park I had always wanted to showcase a tiny area of the park and the foothills that stretch at its foot in one of my stories. Although the town where Noelle lives is entirely fictional it is based on several towns I know well. I also make Noelle climb to the top of Half Dome under the moonlight, something I’ve also done.


Q: How similar/different is it to your other books?

A:
All the Mountains We Can Climb is my second YA novel. Unlike Trapped in Paris that was fast paced and plot-driven All the Mountains We Can Climb is character-driven and quieter, more similar to my Middle Grade historical novel Chronicles From Château Moines, which has also a large set of characters, family and friends.


Through my writing I like to show my affection for my native and adoptive countries. This is why readers will always find a mix of French and American characters and French cultural elements in my novels.


Q: Do you have a website or a blog?

A:
I have both and blog from my website, most often in English but sometimes in French, too, about writing, books, and also about my life spent between two cultures and languages.


Q: Where can we find your books?

A: My books are available on Amazon. Signed copies of my recent novel All the Mountains We Can Climb can be ordered from my website and a free e-book available early 2019 will be sent to anyone who purchased from my website. CLICK HERE to order your signed copy.


LINKS TO AMAZON:


Trapped in Paris


Chronicles From Château Moines


All the Mountains We Can Climb


Thank you so much, Nancy for inviting me on your website. It’s an honor to be featured among great authors.

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Published on March 18, 2019 01:05

Author Interview: Evelyne Holinge

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Meet Author Evelyne Holingue

Website:
Evelyne Holingue


Bio:

I was born and brought up in France and moved as an adult to the USA with my husband and our first child, only a baby. As I searched for a way to improve my limited English I took a writing class through the Institute of Children’s Literature. I was hooked and soon was writing fiction, mostly short stories. Some appeared in children’s magazines and placed in contests. I love Picture Books as much as I love YA and MG and keep my fingers crossed for one of them, currently under consideration with a publisher. Since February 2019 I have been represented by Laurel Sydmonds from the Bent Agency.


[image error]


Featured Book:

All the Mountains We Can Climb

by Evelyne Holingue


Interview:

Q: Tell me about your latest book.


A: All the Mountains We Can Climb is a YA novel set in the California foothills near Yosemite National Park.


The novel in a nutshell:

Noelle survived the car crash that killed her father and sister. Since then, she hasn’t told anyone what happened in the car seconds before the accident. Although she feels terribly guilty she’s too ashamed to talk to her mother and two best friends. A year later, as guilty and ashamed, Noelle still adheres to her mother’s rules, established after the tragedy. Until she secretly applies to an East Coast college that she toured with her father and breaks her promise to study in California.


Now graduating from high school Noelle must tell her mother. As if she needed more challenges her French uncle’s sons arrive unexpectedly from Paris.

Charismatic Quentin witnessed one of the Paris’s terror attacks. Not without consequences. Quiet Manu cooks like a chef and reads Noelle so well, perhaps because he knows something about grief and guilt too. Noelle’s last summer before college seems to be her chance to move on. Will she take it?


Q: What inspired you to write this story?

A:
Sadly, car accidents planted the seeds for the novel.

For years I drove my kids to their high school, following a gorgeous road that cuts through Central California’s foothills and takes visitors to the three most visited National Parks in California: Kings Canyon and Sequoia southbound and Yosemite northbound.


This road was unfortunately as spectacular as it was deathly. We spotted too many crosses, flowers and wreaths, makeshift memorials in honor of a loved one. It saddened me that so many people could die in such beautiful surroundings. Even sadder was the fact that many were young men and women, too often teenagers. This heartbreaking reality planted the early seeds for All the Mountains We Can Climb.


In addition, since I love Yosemite National Park I had always wanted to showcase a tiny area of the park and the foothills that stretch at its foot in one of my stories. Although the town where Noelle lives is entirely fictional it is based on several towns I know well. I also make Noelle climb to the top of Half Dome under the moonlight, something I’ve also done.


Q: How similar/different is it to your other books?

A:
All the Mountains We Can Climb is my second YA novel. Unlike Trapped in Paris that was fast paced and plot-driven All the Mountains We Can Climb is character-driven and quieter, more similar to my Middle Grade historical novel Chronicles From Château Moines, which has also a large set of characters, family and friends.


Through my writing I like to show my affection for my native and adoptive countries. This is why readers will always find a mix of French and American characters and French cultural elements in my novels.


Q: Do you have a website or a blog?

A:
I have both and blog from my website, most often in English but sometimes in French, too, about writing, books, and also about my life spent between two cultures and languages.


Q: Where can we find your books?

A: My books are available on Amazon. Signed copies of my recent novel All the Mountains We Can Climb can be ordered from my website and a free e-book available early 2019 will be sent to anyone who purchased from my website. CLICK HERE to order your signed copy.


LINKS TO AMAZON:


Trapped in Paris


Chronicles From Château Moines


All the Mountains We Can Climb


Thank you so much, Nancy for inviting me on your website. It’s an honor to be featured among great authors.

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Published on March 18, 2019 01:05

March 11, 2019

Free Book Giveaway! Jane Austen for Kids!!

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I took a class to watch a demonstration of this old fashioned printing press to see the process of how books were published in days gone by.


My newest book, JANE AUSTEN FOR KIDS, is hot of the press!!!!


Would you like the chance to win a free copy?


Then hop on over to a fun blog and post a comment to get your name in the hat. CLICK HERE to visit the amazing site, AUSTENESQUE REVIEWS, that is featuring my book today as a spotlight and giveaway. The giveaway lasts from today through March 18.


And thanks to Meredith, the host at Austenesque Reviews, for keeping us Janeites updated on all the great literature that’s inspired by our beloved Jane.

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Published on March 11, 2019 09:14

March 6, 2019

Attention Writers! 2 Research Hacks You Can’t Live Without!

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As you can imagine, and as you know yourself, research can soon turn into mountains of documents, files, and e-mails. Working two years to research and write my newest book, JANE AUSTEN FOR KIDS, nearly produced enough research piling up to compete with Mount Everest! (Some research is more fun than others as you can see by this photo where I took a class to learn how to make a turban–Jane Austen style!)


How did I manage all this research so I didn’t get caught under an avalanche of information? Among other things, I discovered these two simple things that helped me organize my research-related e-mails.


Why e-mails, of all things, you may ask? Here’s a true story to remember as you’re conducting your own research.


EMAIL AN EXPERT.


On a different writing project, I was in the running with several other authors to see who would be picked to help write a multiple book series. Among other tasks the publisher assigned us, we were asked to answer this question:


Were there oak trees in ancient Ireland in the days of St. Patrick?


How did I solve that question? For starters, it was tricky. Online research (my first go-to resource) was conflicting. Some said yes, some said no. After about 20 minutes of looking around on the internet and getting different answers in different places, I simply googled tree experts in Ireland, found a name of a guy who specialized in the history of trees in Ireland, and e-mailed him the question. In about another 20 minutes, I had my answer, (Yes! There were oak trees in ancient Ireland) which I sent off to the publisher, along with the expert’s contact info.


Needless to say, I got the job to help write the book series. Among other reasons, the publisher shared that the other writers only came back with conflicting online research and said I was the only one who contacted an expert.


I contact experts all the time. Historical sites. Museums. Specialists in the topic I’m writing about. People to vet my manuscripts (make sure everything I state is correct and accurate). I even ended up e-mailing the gal who taught the turban class to answer a question I had. And I keep all these e-mails in one handy dandy place.


So what are my two hacks that will help you organize your research e-mails?


RESEARCH HACK #1

Create a separate e-mail account that you only use for this purpose. I use a free account at google mail. It may sound like too much work, but it only takes ten minutes of your time. Yet it saves you oodles of time as you’re working on your project because all your research e-mails are in one place and not drowning in the middle of all your junk and personal e-mails. I gave mine a cool name too: NSandersResearch at gmail dot com. (This makes me sound professional, too, to the experts I contact.)


RESEARCH HACK #2

Add a confidentiality notice in the signature that is automatically tacked to the bottom of each of your e-mails in your separate account you use for research. If you work with editors, chances are you see that most their e-mails contain this confidentiality notice in some form. When you’re working on a project, you don’t want to give away too many details as you keep it under wraps so another writer won’t steal your ideas. Adding this confidentiality notice to your e-mails gives you a little bit of protection.


Here’s the notice I add to the bottom of each research e-mail, underneath my contact information. Feel free to copy it if you like:


CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail is intended only for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed. It may contain confidential information. Please do not share this information with anyone.


If you don’t know how to set up a signature to appear automatically in your e-mails, just dig around in your preferences or settings until you find the term “signature” and type something in there and then send an e-mail to yourself to test how it looks.


Just a word of precautionary tale, however…te he he…watch that auto-correct in your e-mail posts! When I started e-mailing experts about my Jane Austen questions, I started my e-mails with “Hello so-and-so.” To my horror after several e-mails went out, I discovered my auto-correct dropped the “o” from the end of my Hello! Yikes! Now I start each e-mail with “Hi” or “Dear.” And even more recently in correspondence about my Jane Austen book, I ended my e-mail with “Thanks so much.” What did auto-correct do (which I didn’t discover until the person e-mailed me back and I saw the email of mine that they received)? It changed “Thanks so much” to “Thanks smooch.” Sigh. Lol. You just gotta laugh at technology.


But that’s it for the 2 hacks you simply can’t live without if you’re serious about writing and about research! Not too hard, but really helps for any writing project, fiction or nonfiction. And now that my book, JANE AUSTEN FOR KIDS, is finally out, I’m going to open up that e-mail and contact all the experts I worked with to let them know the book is out and thank them once again for their help. It will be easy because all those e-mails are in one handy spot.


And some fun news is that I’ll be embarking on a blog tour starting this month to help get the word out about my new book. But as I’m getting those posts ready, I thought it would be fun to share with you some news from several of my online writing friends. Stay tuned for some exciting author interviews coming up here on my blog!

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Published on March 06, 2019 09:00

February 22, 2019

Research, and More Research!

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Just for fun I thought I’d stack up most of the research books I used to write my new book, Jane Austen for Kids, to see how tall the stack was.


As you can see, the books were just taller than I am!!!!


Of course, there’s no way all that research can be packed into a 136 page book for kids. In fact, quite a few large chunks of text and images were removed from my manuscript near the end to reach my word count.


But nothing is wasted!


Extra research is never a waste.


I’m using those big chunks I had to take out of my manuscript to build the book’s website and also an educator’s guide for teachers to use my book in their classroom. (You can view the website in progress if you CLICK HERE.)


Plus, I plan on writing supplemental material to go with the book that I can sell in my store at Teachers Pay Teachers.


And to read an awesome post by my writing group, the Nonfiction Ninjas, on how to reuse research for different purposes, CLICK HERE.

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Published on February 22, 2019 09:43

February 20, 2019

Happy New Year!

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After a lo-o-ong break, I’m finally back! What have I been doing in this brand new year?


It all started with a move to a different city to be closer to our kids and grandkids. We moved December 28. Then 3 days later we took off on a research trip we’d scheduled a year earlier to visit the Monarch butterflies overwintering sites high up in the mountains of central Mexico…11,000 feet high to be exact.


The move was exciting…the trip was once-in-a-lifetime…and now I’m focusing on the release of my brand new book, Jane Austen for Kids before I get back to my research on the Monarch butterfly for another book project I’m working on.


We haven’t had internet since Christmas (and won’t have it until the new city gives permission for the internet company to dig up our street to lay a cable to our house) and I can’t find ANYTHING in the mountains of boxes in our garage, lol. Since our printers are wireless, my mouse is wireless, and my keyboard is wireless, it has been a challenge getting some of those necessities set up with a personal hotspot or just a plain ole plug. (Of course you can’t just plug in a wireless devise…you have to take half a day to uninstall the wireless system and install the plug/USB program.)


However, I did open boxes yesterday that uncovered all my research journals and research books for Jane Austen, so I’m feeling a little more prepared for my upcoming blog tour in March.


And last night around 11:00, my husband Jeff and I heard a hoot owl whooooo-whoooo-whoooooing and another answering it right outside our bedroom window! For a country girl living in the Los Angeles suburbs who just moved next to a river and a canyon, this was exciting indeed!!!!


Welcome to my world. Welcome to my new year. What exciting adventures are you embarking on since the new year rang in at your corner of the world?

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Published on February 20, 2019 10:58

November 20, 2018

The 12 Days of Children’s Books Gala Giveaway! Day 12

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WELCOME!

Welcome to Day 12 of our 12 Days of Children’s Books Gala Giveaway. I’m part of an amazing group of writer friends who specialize in writing engaging nonfiction for kids. We’re the Nonfiction Ninjas! CLICK HERE to visit our website!


I want to personally thank each one of you for sharing in our first ever big event! We want to thank you as a group for your enthusiasm for our group, our books, and especially nonfiction for kids!


Today is the last day of our event and it’s the day we announce the winners of the 11 awesome books that have been featured each day here on my blog.


Drum roll, please!


Winner of Michelle Medlock Adam’s DINOSAUR DEVOTIONS is:

Dianne E. Butts


Winner of Stephanie Bearce’s INSANE INVENTORS is:

Evelyn Christensen


Winner of Linda Skeers’ WOMEN WHO DARED is:

Elia Ben-Ari


Winner of Nancy I. Sanders’ FREDERICK DOUGLASS FOR KIDS is:

Jane Allen


Winner of Nancy Churnin’s THE QUEEN AND THE FIRST CHRISTMAS TREE

Sara A. (from NYU)


Winner of Pat Miller’s THE HOLE STORY OF THE DOUGHNUT is:

Trine Grillo


Winner of Susan Holt Kralovansky’s THE BOOK THAT JAKE BORROWED is:

Tracy Hora


Winner of Peggy Thomas’s THOMAS JEFFERSON GROWS A NATION is:

Julie Pepper


Winner of Wendy Hinote Lanier’s TRANSPORTATION TECHNOLOGY (INSPIRED BY NATURE) is:

Sheila Renfro


Winner of Christine Liu-Perkins’ AT HOME IN HER TOMB is:

Sherri Jones Rivers


Winner of Lisa J. Amstutz’s FINDING A DOVE FOR GRAMPS is:

Susan Pepino


If you’re a winner, you should be hearing soon from the author of the book you won. Look for their note in your e-mail!


And again, thank you for joining in on the fun. And thank you for your love of books for children. We appreciate each one of you!

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Published on November 20, 2018 01:05

November 19, 2018

The 12 Days of Children’s Books Gala Giveaway! Day 11

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WELCOME!

Welcome to Day 11 of our 12 Days of Children’s Books Gala Giveaway. I’m part of an amazing group of writer friends who specialize in writing engaging nonfiction for kids. We’re the Nonfiction Ninjas!


Each day for for 11 days we are offering you the chance to win a free children’s book. Great for your little ones, for the classroom, for homeschooling families, and for libraries everywhere, these books are AWESOME! And they’re written by these talented gals I’m fortunate to know as my writing buddies.


During the giveaway, you’ll get to learn more of the story behind the story of each of these books. Plus you get to meet each member of the Nonfiction Ninjas! How great is that?!


Then, on the last day, Day 12, I’ll announce here on my blog the list of winners for each one of the books featured in this giveaway. So join in the fun. Every day for these 12 days! Here on my blog!!


(This giveaway is for folks in the continental US only. No overseas entries, please.)


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Finding a Dove for Gramps

by Lisa J. Amstutz

Hip hip hooray for today’s featured book in our 12 Days of Children’s Books Gala Giveaway! One of you will be our winner for today and will be receiving a free copy of this brand new heart-warming picture book in your mailbox.


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MEET LISA!

Lisa, thanks so much for visiting my blog today and offering readers the chance to win a copy of your brand new beautiful children’s book.


Lisa, can you share with us what your book is about?

Finding a Dove for Gramps is a story about a boy and his mom who take part in the Christmas Bird Count (the CBC), an annual citizen science project sponsored by the Audubon Society. The child wants to find a dove for Gramps, who wasn’t able to come along this year. Back matter includes information about the CBC and a checklist of birds, many of which are pictured in the book.


What inspired you to write this book?

I’ve always loved watching birds and learning their names. My entomologist father often took my brothers and me along on hikes to look for bugs, snakes, birds, etc. I remember tagging along with him on a bird count, and it made a big impression on me. I still enjoy bird hikes and other nature-related events, and love sharing them with my own children.



What do you hope children take away from your book?


I hope the story will introduce young readers to birding and encourage them to get involved in citizen science projects like the Christmas Bird Count, the Great Backyard Bird Count, and others. You don’t have to be a scientist to participate, and the data collected is very valuable to scientists in tracking bird populations over time as well as the effects of climate change and other environmental issues.


Thanks, Lisa, for visiting my blog today. It was great to hear more of the “story behind the story”!


————————————————————————————————-


ENTER THE GALA GIVEAWAY

Hey everyone. Hop on board and join the fun!!!! You can enter your name once today for a chance to win a free copy of today’s featured book by one of our members of the Nonfiction Ninjas! All it takes is 2 easy steps.


Step One

Post a comment here on my blog. We’d love to hear about a family tradition you share at this time of year with your little ones. Or even better–if you’ve ever participated in a Christmas Bird Count, share with us what that experience was like!


Step Two

Go to Rafflecopter and enter to win!

CLICK HERE to go to Rafflecopter and enter your name in the contest.


That’s it!


Be sure to stop back here on my blog tomorrow for Day 12, the final day of our Gala Giveaway. We’ll announce the winners of all 11 picture books, here on my blog. I hope you’ll be one of them!


But hey…why wait until the giveaway is over to get your hands on this children’s book? It’s great for holiday or birthday giving and perfect for your family to read together. CLICK HERE to buy it today on Amazon or at your favorite online bookstores!

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Published on November 19, 2018 01:05

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