Monday, April 26, 2010

Award winning story of THE SPILLING INK CONTEST

A Short Note about this contest: All through my school years, I never remember anyone teaching us anything about writing stories. We had to write spelling words in sentences and do book reports and essays. The essays always seemed to be connected to major tests or final exams. However, I did write poetry in high school, and because of that, I think, I received the Creative Writing Award at graduation. I never forgot. I still have the envelope that says Clara Gillow was the recipient. Over the years when the writing days were very hard and publication seemed out of my reach, I'd take out the envelope and read those words again. 

I know how hard it is to be a writer and I also know how great it feels to hold a published book in your hands that has your very own name on it. One of the reasons I persisted through years of rejection came from the generosity of that giver who made a creative writing award possible.  My hope is that this writing contest will do the same for all  the talented young writers who shared their stories with Anne Mazer, Ellen Potter and me. Congratulations to all of you.

Without further ado, please welcome and applaud the Grand Prize Winner of the Spilling Ink Writing Contest, Marissa Simpson.



AUTHOR BIO:
I'm Marissa Simpson. I'm in 6th grade. I live in Iowa. I enjoy playing softball and basketball. My favorite book is The Clique Series by Lisi Harisson. My favorite subject in school is social studies and math.


The Dress
      It was family picture day. I had to wear brand new dress. It was brown with blue and green polka dots.
      Pictures weren’t until after lunch and all my friends were going to the park. I asked my mom if I could go. My Mom said, “No, I don’t want you to get dirty before pictures.”
      “But, Mom, I won’t,” I begged.
      “Oh, alright. You have to be home by lunch time and be clean,” said Mom.
       I went to the park on my bike. There were puddles everywhere and the grass was all muddy. I decided to take a shortcut through a grassy trail. I saw there was a hole. As I went around it, I slipped and fell off my bike. Plop! Into the hole full of mud!
      I looked down at my dress and it was ruined! There was mud all over it! Instead of being a new polka dotted dress, it looked like a mud dotted dress!
      I bawled the whole way home. My mom would be furious. I stayed outside and found a washcloth by the faucet. I took the washcloth and rubbed it on my dress. It started to smear! I started to cry more!
      I heard a noise and then a lady popped out of the bushes. She handed me a box. It said “Please Don’t Ruin.” I opened it and saw my dress! It looked brand new! I turned around to say thank you and the lady was gone…

Thanks so much, Marissa. I think we were all captured by your brand new brown dress with blue and green polka dots that got mud all over it. I know it is an experience many of us have had! Please leave a comment for Marissa to let her know what you liked about her story.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Announcing the Winners of the Writing Contest and Comment Contest

And the lucky winners for the Comment Contest are:

 Kristin Gray is the winner of Ellen Potter's new middle grade novel, SLOB.  The lucky winner of SPILLING INK is Aching Hope. Please e-mail your name and address to me: claragillowclark@gmail.com Thank you everyone who took the time to leave a comment for these two amazing authors!



It was great to receive entries from so many talented writers! After careful deliberation, Anne Mazer and Ellen Potter (co-authors of Spilling Ink) chose the following entries:

First prize: Marissa Simpson/Oelwein Middle School

Second Prize: Margaret Bruetsch/Sullivan West H.S.

Honorable Mention:  Sam Murphy/Oelwein Middle School


Congratulations Marissa, Margaret, and Sam! Please get in touch with me via e-mail with your name and address and your choice of one of my books: Annie's Choice; Nellie Bishop; Willie and the Rattlesnake King; Hill Hawk Hattie; Hattie on Her Way; or  Secrets of Greymoor. If you would like to learn more about these titles before deciding, you can visit my web-site: www.claragillowclark.net

Marissa, Margaret, and Sam will also be featured author guests with their entries published on my blog.

Marissa and Margaret, in addition, you will receive a $25/$15 gift certificate to the bookstore of your choice. (e.g. Borders, Amazon.com, Barnes&Noble.) If it is a bookstore in your area, please send a phone number or web address so I can contact them.

A special thank you to Mrs. Duff for her wonderful dedication to her class! Hope to hear from all of you soon.

                                                                                                                                                                      

Monday, April 5, 2010

Ellen Potter interviews Anne Mazer (co-authors of SPILLING INK!)






Ellen Potter (L) http://www.ellenpotter.com/ interviews Anne Mazer (R) www.annemazerbooks.com
Don't miss the wonderful web pages of SPILLING INKhttp://spillinginkthebook.com  You'll want to share these links with all your writing friends! Be sure to ask your librarian or favorite bookseller for Ellen's Olivia Kidney series and Anne's Sister Magic series.

REMINDER: Don't forget that you still have time to leave a comment for a chance to win a copy of Spilling Ink or Ellen Potter's new book, SLOB!  Please feel free to leave a comment for Anne or Ellen even if you commented on one of the earlier posts. It's okay just to say, "Thank you!"  or "Pick me!"  You are important to us, and we want to hear from you.

Don't forget the Writing Contest!  If you missed that post, I'll be happy to send you the details or you can search my March blog posts. Simply e-mail me: claragillowclark@gmail.com  with your entry using one of the writing prompts I posted from SPILLING INK.  Thanks everyone who has sent me an entry for the contest! Anne, Ellen and I are eager to hear from all of you out there who are still thinking about it! Don't be shy. You have until midnight April 9th to enter.


THE INTERVIEW


Ellen: What was it like growing up in a writing family?

Anne: Growing up in a family of writers, you might say I spooned up the writing atmosphere with my breakfast cereal. It all began when I was five years old and my parents decided to become writers. It had taken them a lifetime to arrive at this decision, but for me, life changed overnight. Suddenly my family—which up until then had included me, my brother, and newborn baby sister—turned into a nonstop, 24/7 writers’ boot camp. Every morning I awoke to the clicking, ringing sound of two massive electric typewriters. Half asleep, still dreaming a little, my head on the pillow, I knew that all was well in the world when I heard the keys of my parents’ typewriters clattering loudly. That was the opening music to my day. Later, there was another, less enjoyable writing ritual to be endured. When my baby sister took her nap, my mother locked my brother and me out of the house so we could “get some fresh air.” Bored and cold, we banged on the door and whined to be let in. My mother was adamant; we needed fresh air to be healthy. Translation: She needed writing time.
          There were riches here for a future writer. We had a house filled with books, there were constant discussions about writing, and I had the riveting example of my parents making their writing dream come true. My courage to be a writer came from watching them when I was young. I saw how hard they worked, the time it took, and the discipline they needed. All of this was tremendously helpful to me later in my life.


Ellen: How do you know when a book is done?

Anne: When I can’t go any further. When it “feels” done.
When I stick a knife into it and when no crumbs cling to the blade.
When I refuse to write another word.
When the story lies down and refuses to budge another inch.
P.S. I don’t always know when it’s done.But usually I figure it out, sooner or later.


Ellen: Did you always want to be a writer?

Anne: Here are all the things I wanted to do when I grew up:

Artist. I really wanted to be an artist. I went to art school, and then I dropped out after a year. My younger sister, Maia, whowas talented in all the arts, including writing and music, was the one who became a serious painter.

Children’s book illustrator. I adored children’s books and their illustrations. I was always drawing—and writing, although I didn’t pay much attention to that.

Nuclear physicist. Seriously. When I was in seventh and eighth grade, I attended a program at Syracuse University called Science for Young Scientists. Your teacher had to nominate you for attendance, so it was a real honor. Each Saturday morning, S.U. science professors would give lectures on subjects like “how we would write a universal language to communicate with other life forms in the universe,” or “how do light waves work?” or “the structure of an atom.” The professors were incredibly creative and interesting in the way they presented their topics, and they sparked a desire in me to delve into science. Unfortunately, I didn’t get any encouragement outside of the Saturday morning lectures, and I soon lost interest. But I always think of those lectures as one of the best educational experiences of my life.

Ballerina. Ha! I was not what you call terribly coordinated. I didn’t even like ballet. I just liked the thought of myself as a beautiful, graceful, gliding ballerina. Seriously, I was one of the gawkiest preteens around.

I didn’t want to be a writer. Not until my teens. And then it was just a whisper in my mind. I “forgot” about it, mostly, for another ten years. I did a lot of other things, like go to school and work as a bank teller, an au pair, a housecleaner, a factory worker, a secretary, a receptionist, an administrative assistant . . .It was while I was an administrative assistant that I had my “aha!” moment. My boss had asked me to research air conditioners and to write up a report comparing different models. As I summed up the information, I found myself rewriting and polishing each sentence. Then I had an epiphany. No one in this office cares whether
the writing flows, except me, I realized. My boss wants hard facts. I want good writing. In spite of this realization, I couldn’t stop myself from tinkering with the words. I suddenly understood that this was what I
most cared about. From then on, I knew I was a writer at heart.


Ellen: Give us some advice for young writers.

Anne: 1. READ, READ, READ.
2. Be a sponge. Soak up everything you can. Learn about the world. Learn about yourself.
3. Stay alert. Keep your eyes open, your mind sharp, and watch what your senses tell you.
4. Keep an open mind.
5. Try to understand other people’s point of view. (I admit this isn’t always easy or simple. But it’s very powerful.)
6. Listen to others, to your own secret voice, to nothing at all.
7. Write regularly.
8. Do lots of things other than writing.
9. Do things that you wouldn’t ordinarily do, that might even scare you a little. Stand on your head. Sing in front of an audience. Learn to play chess. You get the idea.
10. Have fun. Be playful.

Ellen: What was your biggest obstacle when you began writing?

Anne: Mood swings. One day I thought I was brilliant; the next day I was a complete, utter idiot. My mood swings almost immobilized me. I felt terrified to write. What saved me was the determination to keep on going, no matter what. By sheer willpower, I managed to complete one book, then another. And then I wrote another and another. In the course of writing these first books, I discovered that sometimes I felt like an idiot and wrote well. Sometimes I felt like a genius and wrote trash. Or the opposite might be true. When I realized that my moods had nothing to do with my writing, I started to pay less attention to them. Now mood swings no longer rule me. Sure, I have good and bad days like everyone else. But they don’t throw me off course anymore. I know they are part of every writer’s inner landscape.

Ellen: Where are your favorite place(s) to write?

Anne: I can write almost anywhere. And I have! But I like sitting at a desk with a view out the window. If possible, I also like lots of light, water, and trees. I prefer an orderly, spacious room with lots of books on the
shelves and paintings on the walls. Right now, however, my office is covered with papers, piles of old manuscripts, and bills to pay. But I’m writing, anyway. And I hope to clean it up soon!

Ellen: Do you ever feel like giving it up altogether? If yes, what keeps you going?

Anne: Yes, sometimes I get really discouraged. But I can never think of any other job that I would enjoy as much, or that would give me as much satisfaction and pride, or as much control over my daily life. I can never think of any other job where I can “talk” to millions of kids, or where I can shape the raw material of my life into imaginative stories.

Ellen: Favorite books as a kid?

Anne: You are opening a Pandora’s box (of books) here.

Earliest Book Experience:

Mother Goose—my first book, ever. My mother read it to me as a baby. When I was older, my mother, who would never deface a book, made a point of ripping out a page with racist words. She made a very powerful point that I’ve never forgotten.

Most Haunting Fairy Tale:
"The Snow Queen" by Hans Christian Anderson

Best Book that I Inexplicably Dislike:
Charlotte’s Web by E. B. White

Weirdest Childhood Memory Involving a Book:
My mother had ordered me to sit at the table until I finished a bowl of her homemade pea soup. Since I hated pea soup, I sat there for hours reading The Hound of the Baskervilles, while the soup grew colder and colder, congealing in green, slimy gobbets. I don’t remember if I ever actually ate that soup, or if I disposed of it secretly; but to this day, I’m not sure which was more terrifying: The Hound of the Baskervilles with his great slavering jaws or my mother’s cold congealed pea soup.

Book That I Wish Was Real:
The Snarkout Boys and the Avocado of Death by Daniel Pinkwater (I read this one as an adult.)

A List of Books that I Wish I Could Have Read When I Was a Kid:
Aaargh! I want to talk about all the books I love, but there are so many that this list always spirals out of control in, like, two minutes.

One Book I’d Recommend to Everyone:
Stories for Children by Isaac Bashevis Singer

I Can’t Believe I Haven’t Read . . .
The Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling

Most Memorable Library, Ever:
It was a second-floor room in what seemed to be a deserted old house in the Adirondacks. I climbed the stairs to find a dusty jumble of books lying all over the floor. There was no librarian, no shelves, no checkout, and certainly no due dates. It looked as if no one had been there in years. I picked out several musty old paperbacks to read lying on a cot in our tent back at the campsite. When I was done, I brought them back, and added a few of our books to the pile.

Best Book Binge:
In the summer time, our public library allowed us to check out ten books at a time, instead of three. I carried them home, lay down on my bedroom floor, and set to reading them, one after another. By dinnertime, I had finished the entire stack. I staggered to my feet, dazed from so much reading, and felt as if I was returning from a long journey that I’d never be able to describe to anyone.

Only Dr. Seuss Book I Really Liked:
Bartholomew and the Ooblek

Long-Forgotten by the World, but Loved (by Me) Comic Strip:
Barnaby by Crockett Johnson

Best Comic Books:
Superman; Archie and Veronica

Best Nonfiction Reading:
The encyclopedia. It was better than a trip around the world. Flip a page and you didn’t know what you were going to find.

Finally, A Few Favorite Books:
Hans Christian Anderson’s Fairy Tales
The Princess and Curdie and The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald
East of the Sun and West of the Moon (fairy tales), with illustrations by Kay Nielsen
The Shepherd and the Dragon (a fairy-tale collection; are you sensing a theme here?)
The Twilight of Magic by Hugh Lofting
Pippi Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren (shouldn’t Pippiphile be a word?)
The Black Arrow and A Child’s Garden of Verses by Robert Louis Stevenson


Ellen: What characteristics do you think a young writer should try to develop?

Anne: Here is a toolbox of personalities you need as a writer:
1. A kid skipping down the street, happy to be alive
2. A street person muttering to him or herself
3. A ship’s captain setting the course for a voyage
4. A detective sifting through the evidence for the one clue that will suddenly make everything clear
5. A builder raising the walls of a house, brick by brick
6. A monk sitting in silence in a cell
7. A letter writer hoping that his or her message will reach its destination
8. A mother watching a baby grow
9. A spectator at a party


Ellen: I’m always thrilled when I finish writing a book and realize that it’s good. What’s your biggest thrill as a writer?

Anne: For me, finishing a book is usually more relief than thrill. “Made it through another one!” I say to myself, as if lying half dead on the beach after the shipwreck. (And then I hurry to sign on for another sea voyage. . .) I’m exhausted by the time I complete a book, have no idea if I’ve written a good one, and often, can’t wait for the whole thing to be over already so I can get on to the next one. But I do love being published. There’s something about opening a box of books that you’ve written. There they are: bound, printed, illustrated, and real. But the biggest thrill for me comes from knowing that people are reading my book.
          One of my first books, The Salamander Room, sold out its first printing of 10,000 copies in a matter of weeks. I was so excited by the thought of 10,000 people reading my book that, driving my kids home from a play date, I skidded on ice and drove my car into a ditch. That brought me quickly back down to earth! Since then, my readership has expanded into the millions. It seems to me that whoever reads my books becomes part of me, and I become part of them. That’s the real thrill: that so many people carry my thoughts and ideas; just as I carry all the authors I’ve read and loved.

Clara (that's me):  Thanks for the wonderful insights for young and not so young writers, Anne. I love your advice about trying lots of new things. Writers, is there something that you'd love to do that you haven't had the courage to try? Try it anyway. Even if it doesn't work out the way you expect, you'll have a new experience to write about. 

Monday, March 29, 2010

Anne Mazer interviews Ellen Potter

Welcome back! I know you're all anxious to learn about the authors of  http://spillinginkthebook.com which is making its debut this week! A big thank you for taking part in the celebration with us!

Don't forget that you still have time to leave a comment for a chance to win a copy of Spilling Ink or SLOB!  I know the authors would love to get feedback on the interviews. Don't forget the Writing Contest!  If you missed that post, I'll be happy to send you the details. Simply e-mail me: claragillowclark@gmail.com

This week Anne Mazer (Right) INTERVIEWS Ellen Potter (below Left)
Anne asks Ellen: How did you get started?

Ellen: It started with horses. I loved horses. I grew up in New York City, where the only time you ever saw a horse was when it was pulling a carriage, or when a fancy person rode it through Central Park. I was not a fancy person. So instead of riding on them, I wrote about riding on them. It was almost as good as the real thing. Well, maybe it was even better because in my stories I was able to ride my horse through the Sahara and over high fences on the Olympic equestrian team and occasionally I dashed across the English moors on a high-spirited chestnut stallion. Oh, and in real life,  I am allergic to horses.

Anne: When did you first realize that you wanted to become a writer?

Ellen: It was a real ta-da! moment. I was in the school library looking for a book to read.The librarian suggested Harriet the Spy by Louise Fitzhugh. I found it on the shelf, pulled it down, and started reading the first few lines. It was so good that I sat down on the floor, stuck my nose in the book, and was instantly lost in Harriet’s world. I don’t remember what yanked me back into reality (probably the librarian telling me to get up off the floor), but I suddenly realized that the best books in the world were written for eleven-year-olds ... which was great, because I was eleven. On the other hand, my twelfth birthday was right around the corner, and after that I’d be a teenager, and after that . . . holy cannoli, adulthood. Then what on earth would I read? I was horrified by the thought that I would get “adult amnesia” and forget about all the great kids’ books. So I decided then and there that even if I couldn’t always be eleven, I could always write books for people who were eleven.

Anne: How long did it take you to become published?

Ellen: It took a long time. No, actually it took a looooooong time (my first short story was published in a magazine about five years after I graduated college). But in the end, that wasn’t such a bad thing, because it took a looooooong time for me to become a good writer. While I was getting rejection letters, I was still writing and reading lots of books and figuring out how to create a story that people would want to read. By the way, you might think getting published is the greatest thrill ever. It is pretty great, don’t get me wrong. But in my experience, finishing a book and knowing that it’s good, is much more thrilling than getting published.

Anne: What helped you the most when you began?

Ellen: Weirdly enough, one of the things that helped me the most was a rejection from a teacher. I was in college and I wanted to become a creative writing major. I gave a bunch of my short stories to my writing
teacher to see if she’d let me in the program. She wrote me back saying that I wasn’t good enough yet to be in the program. Instead of getting discouraged, I got angry. “Big mistake, lady!” I said to myself. “I’m going to hang on to your rejection note, and when my first book is published, I’m going to send you a copy of it along with your stupid little note.” It would be the ultimate nah-nah-na-na-nah! I put her note in a manila envelope.
And then I got into the program without her. A different teacher let me in. For the next few years I wrote like mad. After I graduated, I churned out short stories and a novel for grown-ups and finally my first kids’ book, Olivia Kidney. All that time, I kept that hurtful rejection note tucked away in my desk drawer, waiting for my big moment of revenge. Finally my first book was published. I opened the drawer and pulled out the dusty manila envelope with the rejection note. It was then that I realized two things:
(1) That teacher did me a favor by rejecting me. It made me rebellious. It made me want to fight to prove her wrong.
(2) She was probably right not to let me in the program. I think my writing was pretty lousy back then. In the end I did send that teacher a copy of my book, but instead of including the rejection note, I included a Thank-you note.

Anne: What was your biggest obstacle as a beginning writer?

Ellen: I have two brothers who are impossibly smart, and as a kid I always felt like the dumb one in the family. How could I be a writer, I asked myself over and over, if I wasn’t smart? Writers are witty, quick with a comeback sort of people, I thought. I was always slow with getting my words out when I spoke, and the words I did manage to get out were not what you would call clever. But the thing was, every time I had almost convinced myself to forget about becoming a writer, I would read a wonderful book and think, Oooo, I want to write something as great as this! Then I would snatch up my pen and launch into writing a new story. I still struggle with not feeling smart enough. I bet lots of other writers do too. When I’m feeling particularly dumb, I go back and read things that I’ve already written. “There,” I tell myself, “you were able to write that story, weren’t you? And that story was pretty good, which means you can’t be a total dope.” That often helps. And anyway, the only other option is to never write again. And that’s really not an option.


Anne: Tell me about your family.

Ellen: When I grew up, books were a big part of our family life. Our parents read to us a lot when we were little, and even when we were older (I still love being read to!). One of my favorite memories is that whenever I was home sick with a cold, my mother would read Mary Poppins to me. On some Saturdays, our parents took us to a used book shop on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. It was one of those ancient stores with creaky wooden floors and the moldy smell of old paperbacks everywhere. Our parents set us loose, and we rampaged through the place, meeting my parents back at the checkout table with armfuls of books that sold for a dime a piece. I just loved that!
My parents were very supportive of my decision to be a writer. For many years after I graduated college, I waited tables at night and wrote during the day. Even though I hadn’t earned a single penny from my writing, my parents never said, “Oh, come on, Ellen. Why don’t you just give up writing and get a real job.” They insisted that if I kept at it, I’d get published some day. They encouraged me to take the chance on pursuing what I loved to do. Young writers need a couple of cheerleaders at their back. Actually, they need an entire squad.

Anne: Who are your literary heroines and heroes?

Ellen: I love Willy Wonka because he is totally mad and deeply good. I love Luna Lovegood in the Harry Potter books . . . again, totally bonkers but with a heart of gold. Then there’s Claudia in From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler because she really understood that great adventures take guts and plenty of sensible planning. I adore Uncle Vartan from your Sister Magic series because he is a grown-up who never grew up—the best kind of grown-up as far as grown-ups go—and he can do magic to boot.

Anne: What or who inspires you?

Ellen: Books often inspire me more than anything. I’ll read something really great and think, Oh, I want to make other people sink into a book like I just did!

Anne: What were your favorite books when you were a kid?

Ellen: I loved A Wrinkle in Time, Harriet the Spy, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Changeling, From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, Freaky Friday, The Secret Garden, and so many others.

Anne: What do you love/hate the most about writing?

Ellen: Things I love about writing:
-Getting up in the morning and stepping into a world that doesn’t exist.
-Finding out about things I’d never known because I have to research them for a book, like how to do an ollie on a skateboard or how to build a radio telescope or where to find a secret passageway in a Scottish castle.
-Creating interesting characters, then getting to spend the day with them.
-Receiving letters from kids who have read my books and have been changed—just a little—because they did.

Things I hate about writing:
I guess I don’t really hate anything about writing, but there are lots of times when I slam my head down on my desk and moan, “This is hard!”
Then I have a strawberry Twizzler and
feel a little better.

Clara says: That was great, Ellen! I'm inspired. Thanks so much for sharing with such frank honesty about the writing life. Bet you'll be getting lots of Twizzlers from fans! Visit Ellen here:  http://www.ellenpotter.com/

Readers, please leave a comment for Ellen. Even if you commented before or won a book in a previous contest, we still want to hear from you. Yes, we do! You know we need all the encouragement we can get! Be on the look out for Part 2 next week, when Ellen interviews Anne. I've had a sneak peek, and you're going to love it.

Monday, March 22, 2010

The Fabulous Anne Mazer and Ellen Potter Talk to YOU about writing

It's spring and we're jumping right in for a special interview and comment contest with the fabulous dynamic writing team, Anne Mazer and Ellen Potter who co-authored SPILLING INK a funny, inspiring book of advice, questions, and writing prompts for young writers. I'm holding a copy in my hand right now that's been donated by Anne and will be sent to one of you lucky readers who leave a comment even if it's to say, "Pick me!"  But you definitely want to check out the web-site for the book. Here's the link: http://spillinginkthebook.com/  You'll find free downloads for bookmarks, posters, and so much more. I don't want to spoil the fun. Just click and go! By the way, even if you're not a teen or tween, you'll find a lot of good advice in Spilling Ink that will inspire you. Ever have trouble with sub-plots? Need I say more?

That's just the beginning, because Ellen Potter has donated an autographed copy of her new book, SLOB. http://www.amazon.com/Slob-Ellen-Potter/dp/039924705X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1269256681&sr=1-1   

"A sensitive, touching, and sometimes heartbreakingly funny picture of middle school life." --School Library Journal, starred review
Just in case you don't already know these two fabulous authors, here's a little bit about them:


Over to the right is Anne Mazer. She is the author of over forty books for young readers, including the award-winning The Salamander Room, the Sister Magic series, and the bestselling The Amazing Days of Abby Hayes series. Her favorite thing about being a writer is being able to write in the middle of the night in her pajamas. I've known Anne for about twenty years, and she is amazing and lots of fun. She sparkles!

Learn more about Anne here: www.annemazerbooks.com





To your left is the lovely Ellen Potter. She is the author of the award-winning middle-grade Olivia Kidney series, as well as the middle-grade novels Pish Posh and Slob. Ellen's favorite thing about being a writer is that she gets to spend the day with Mongolian yak herders, psychics, and bank-robbing wood sprites without ever leaving her house. I hope to meet Ellen sometime soon!

Learn more about Ellen here: http://www.ellenpotter.com/


To celebrate these authors and the publication of their lively and upbeat book on writing, I'm sponsoring a Writing Contest for grades 6-10. If you know of a young writer or if you are a teacher, librarian or interested parent, please pass this information along.  Thank you!
The contest will run from now until April 9th. The winner will be announced on April 14th, 2010. Anne and Ellen and I will choose the winners.
First prize: $25 gift certificate to the bookstore of the winner's choice, a guest spot on my blog, and his/her choice of any one of my books  
2nd prize: a gift certificate for $15 to the bookstore of the winner's choice, a guest spot on my blog, and a choice of one of my books. 
3rd prize: A guest spot on my blog and choice of one of my books.

All entries must be sent directly to me claragillowclark@gmail.com  If you attend a private/public school,
the entry must include the name of your school and your Librarian or English Teacher or Reading Specialist or Writing Teacher. (They may enter for you if your school computers don't allow access) You may enter more than once, but your entry must be written from a Spilling Ink writing prompt in 250 words or less. Longer entries will be automatically disqualified. Oops! Don't have the book yet? It's not available until March 30th, so here I am to the rescue:

Writing Prompt #1: I DARE YOU Rewrite a scene from your life. Think of something that happened today. Something that wasn't perfect--maybe something that was even downright mortifying--and rewrite it as you would have wanted it to happen. (Tip from me: Remember that scenes have a beginning, middle, and end!)

Writing Prompt #2:  I DARE YOU Think of two people you admire. Now think of the thing you admire most about each of them. Combine those two qualities into one person and write about that person in the following situation: She or he is walking down the street and a strange man hands your character a small sealed carton and says, "Don't let anything happen to this!" Then the man sprints away. What does your character do next?  
STOP! Don't go anywhere, because you don't want to miss the interviews with the authors. How fun for me that I didn't have to do anything, because they interviewed each other:

WAIT! What's that? We're out of space today. Boo! Hiss! I was really looking forward to their friendly chat. You'll have to come back later this week for the next exciting installment of Ellen and Anne and Spilling Ink

Leave a comment here and now to win Spilling Ink or Slob.  Enter the writing contest to win a gift certificate to your favorite bookstore by e-mailing me: claragillowclark@gmail.com  Good luck writers! I look forward to hearing from you soon. Remember the deadline is April 9th!


Sunday, February 28, 2010

The Winner of Princess Peepers is. . .

Sunday, February 28, 2010

I know you're all anxious to find out who won this month's comment contest, but first, a few news items:

MEMBER NEWS

You can check out blog member, Susan Couture's (Library Media Specialist) on-line article for Library Sparks at http://www.highsmith.com/librarysparks/.

Congratulations, Susan!

I am so pleased to announce that my guest author for the end of March is Anne Mazer, the author of the bestselling The Amazing Days of Abby Hayes series. Anne has co-authored a book on the writing craft SPILLING INK:A YOUNG WRITER'S HANDBOOK with Ellen Potter, the author of the award-winning middle-grade Olivia Kidney series.

Anne has donated an autographed copy of the ARC (Advanced Reader's Copy),which will be given away to one lucky reader who leaves a comment on the upcoming interview that will be posted later in March.

Finally, the WINNER of PRINCESS PEEPERS is. . . Karen (Blogger of Novels at Naptime) a great blog to follow if you don't already!

Karen, please send me your mailing address: claragillowclark@gmail.com
and your book will be on its way asap!

Thanks everyone who took the time to write in! And thank you, Pam for a wonderful interview!

Monday, February 22, 2010

Meet picture book author, Pam Calvert




Pam Calvert's Bio:

Growing up, Pam always loved books and reading. She'd read most of the classics by the age of ten as she participated in Great Books. This love came naturally as her mother, Carol Culp, a sci fi bibliophile, had an amazing collection of books that kept her satiated with Isaac Asimov, Zenna Henderson, Stephen King, and H. G. Wells. Not only was the love of books an undercurrent in her upbringing but the drive for success and an inherent quest for learning was always shown to her by her parents. Her father, Norman Culp, was an electronic engineer and a Mensa member. He was the inventor of the electronic phone bell--previously, all phones used to have real bells clanging inside them. One day in 1974, Pam remembers her father coming home with a black box that could electronically ring in all sorts of different sounds and ranges. He also helped develop anti-lock brakes, Poloroid cameras, and a microchip that displaces electricity across phone lines so that no longer would lightning strikes ever make phone lines go down again. This creativity of her father's was ever present to her growing up and the desire to make a difference--to be an influence in the world.

Because her family cared so much about science and scientific innovation, she shelved the idea of pursuing literary vocations and decided to become a molecular biologist--a scientist who could make a difference in medicine. She helped in the research of how to prevent cystic fibrosis. But she knew all of this lab work would distract her from becoming the mother she wanted to be and so, she decided to use her scientific talents as a science teacher. She taught physics and chemistry to high school kids. It wasn't until she started writing for running magazines in 1993 that she realized her true calling--that of a writer.

She began writing for children in 1998. She wrote for science magazines initially because of her scientific background and then moved on to fiction as she wrote for Highlights for Children and Guideposts for Kids. Because she grew up in a home that always cracked jokes, humor came easily to her. She used this influence to write picture books. All of her picture books are humorous as are most of her books and stories. Some of her books include Multiplying Menace: The Revenge of Rumpelstiltskin, Clue School: Mystery at the Ballpark, and Princess Peepers.

Her newest title is coming this Fall. It's entitled, Multiplying Menace Divides! It's about Rumpelstiltskin taking over the kingdom again and he's got a sassy new accomplice--a diva witch! Together they want to divide and conquer. It's up to ten year old Peter to understand division concepts to outwit the two and save the kingdom. This book shows division at the fractional level. She has another book that will be out in 2011 entitled Princess Peepers Picks a Pet.

Pam now lives in California with her husband and four children.

INTERVIEW

Thanks, Pam, for sharing such interesting background information about your childhood, parents, and subsequent career in science as an adult. Since you were a great reader, did you also write stories when you were growing up?

PAM: Actually, I tried writing several awful stories and even wrote many comic strips (which I thought were funny). In fifth grade, I wrote a science fiction piece about Martian Mice invading the earth. Yeah, I know. The teacher thought it was dumb, too. I got a C.

Your idea about Martian Mice sounds cute to me. Can you remember the first encouraging comment you received about your writing?


PAM: Yes! I was so excited that I saved it in a file entitled, "acceptances and encouragements". Previously, I'd had articles accepted, but the editors just accepted and paid me. No compliments. The first encouragement happened in 1999 and was from an editor at an international travel e-zine. She said, "You write with vivid and flowing prose." Prose? Me? That sounded so literary.

How long were you seriously submitting stories and articles before you received your first acceptance?

PAM: When I first started writing articles for running magazines, my first submission was accepted (and I got paid) and that's how I knew I could write. For children's writing it took nine months. My first acceptance was by Nature's Friend magazine while I was taking a writing course at ICL (Institute of Children's Literature). For children's books, it took SIX years of submitting.

Thank you for sharing that you took a writing course with ICL. Many of my readers have either taken that course or have taught the course. What kept you going during the times when you were constantly getting rejections?

PAM: While I was waiting for that elusive book contract, magazine acceptances kept me going. But what really kept me going was prayer. I would get frustrated and tell God, "Hey, if you still want me to be doing this, I'm going to need more encouragement here or I'm going to give up!" And I meant it. Usually, in three days, I'd get an acceptance or some encouragement to keep me going. That's why I always tell new writers to submit to magazines first if the frustration of book publishing is overwhelming. A small acceptance can really boost you mentally and keep you writing.

Amen to that! Can you share any advice about what helped you succeed in the children's book field?

PAM: I read tons of books in the genres that I write. I read no less than 300 "Highlights for Children" stories when I wanted to write for that children's magazine. I read no less than 200 picture books before I sold one. I analyzed what elements I liked and what made those stories brilliant and tried to incorporate that into my books. I took classes to improve my writing. I studied humor, which helped me sell almost all of my books. Humor is something people don't often do or do well. In fact, I had one editor tell me in a rejection letter that I didn't do humor well. Ouch! I set out to prove him wrong. There wasn't anything wrong with his opinion--I didn't do it well at the time, but I found funny books and analyzed how they made people laugh. So, I believe writers should find their strengths and determine to be a master, always improving, and, eventually, they'll meet with success as long as they don't give up!


All great tips about mastering the craft, Pam! Can you tell us how you got the idea for Princess Peepers?


PAM: The idea came from a combination of things. A lady asked me if I could write a book about a princess with glasses or if I knew of a book like that because her little girl wouldn't wear glasses since princesses don't. I found that odd, so I did some research and found out that it was indeed true! Princesses don't wear glasses. Immediately, I set out to correct that situation and along the way, help the self esteem of little girls. I knew the hardships of being different--I wore glasses as a child and suffered a lot of teasing.

Kirkus Review of Princess Peepers

Calvert's tale of a bespectacled princess's rocky road to self-acceptance is rollicking good fun. Readers are bound to relish the interplay between what the text describes and the reality of the illustrations as Princess Peepers stumbles about sans specs. The ironic denouement is bound to please princess fans and their practical parents alike.

A sequel, Princess Peepers Picks a Pet will be out in 2011. Princess Peepers needs a pet for a pet show, but she doesn't have one like all the other princesses. Through her blind determination, she ultimately finds the perfect pet. The sketches so far are amazing for this book. SO CUTE! I know little girls are going to love it! Princesses and pets? They go together like hugs and kisses!


I know you do a number of school appearances, Pam. What do you most want students to get out of your visits?

PAM: I want them to be inspired to achieve their dreams. That's the theme of every school visit I do. I also show that math is very fun and interesting when presenting my math adventures.

Pam's web-site and her blog are both amazing--fun and writer friendly! Whether you are a writer or teacher or book lover, you'll definitely want to check them out. She posted a piece on her blog last week that all picture book writers will not want to miss. Pam is very generous with her knowledge of the writing craft.
Please check out Pam's blog:

http://wwwpamcalvert.blogspot.com
Look for the February 13th post on writing picture books

In addition to learning more about Pam and her books, she has workshop pages for writers on her web-site: www.pamcalvert.com

And be sure to check out all of Pam's books at your favorite bookstore and ask for them at your local library!

In addition, Pam has generously donated a copy of Princess Peepers to one of the lucky readers who writes in and leaves a comment by Friday, February 26th!

Thank you, Pam, for sharing your time and writing journey with us! Now,I'm headed over to look at your fabulous web-site again!