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Posts Tagged ‘Anne Mazer’

I have talked about some of the elements of book promotion: social media, book signings, school visits, and blogs. These are all effective ways to get the word out about your book. Another thing to consider is a separate website for your book.

Authors Anne Mazer and Ellen Potter have a great site that coordinates with their book “Spilling Ink” (Flashpoint, 2010). This site is filled with all of the things a successful book site needs:

  • About the author’s section
  • Teacher’s kit
  • Creativity blog
  • links and tips
  • Writer’s Club for young writers
  • Information about contests
  • Contact information
  • Reviews
  • Free stuff

Fellow author and friend Andrea Zimmerman created a great site for her new book “Eliza’s Cherry Trees” (Pelican, 2011). This site is filled with information about Eliza Scidmore the driving force behind the cherry trees in Washington D.C. and just in time to help celebrate the centennial anniversary in 2012.

Andrea was just recently interviewed for “Here and Now” on NPR about her book and the life of Eliza Scidmore, they were able to locate her from the book website. Click here if you would like to hear a little of Andrea’s interview. Andrea shared that her book website has been a great asset in the promotion of her book and her regret was that she wished she had released it sooner.

So does your book need a website? Yes, if you have some great information are willing to put it all together a website I think would be a great asset to your book.

Happy Writing,

Suzanne Santillan

Writing on the Sidewalk

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I was recently asked by Anne Mazer and Ellen Potter to do a guest blog post on their Spilling Ink Blog, boy was I honored. Not only do I really respect Anne and Ellen, they have asked some truly talented people to be guests on their blog, so with some trepidation I accepted.

The topic was to write about creativity a topic that is near and dear to my heart. With two highly creative children and a creative husband, my house is always filled with parts of broken machines, bits of wood, metal and material. I thought it would be a piece of cake…it wasn’t. My mind suddenly went blank, my fingers lay still on the keyboard, no ideas would come forward. I decided to fall back on my list of things that I do when my creativity starts to falter and that’s when it hit me, I would share my creativity list.

So if you get a chance stop by Spilling Ink and check out how I use watermelon bubble bath and a dog leash to spark my creativity.

Thanks again Anne and Ellen for a chance to visit with your readers.

Suzanne Santillan

Writing on the Sidewalk

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I am thrilled to announce that our new spotlight is on the talented author Anne Mazer.

Here is Anne’s bio:

Anne Mazer grew up in a family of writers in upstate New York. Intending to be an artist, she studied at the School of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University. She then went to Paris for three years where she studied French and French literature and where she began to write.

She is the author of forty-four books, including the picture books, “The Salamander Room”, a Reading Rainbow Feature selection and a 1993 ABC Children’s Choice book, “The Yellow Button”, and most recently, “The No-Nothings and Their Baby.” She has also written seven novels, including “Moose Street”, a Booklist Editor’s Choice for Best Book of 1992, and “The Oxboy”, an ALA Notable Book and a Notable 1993 Children’s Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies. Her short stories have been anthologized in a number of collections, and she has published a collection of her own short stories, “A Sliver of Glass.” She is also the editor of four anthologies: “America Street,” a New York Public Library Best Book for Teens; “Going Where I’m Coming From,” a New York Public Library Best Book for Teens; ”Working Days,” a 1998 ALA Best Book for Teens and a New York Public Library Best Book for Teens; and “A Walk in My World,” which are widely used in elementary through college classrooms.

Anne is the author of the best selling “The Amazing Days of Abby Hayes” series, which has extended over eleven years and twenty-two books. She has also written the “Sister Magic” series for young readers.

Her latest work is “Spilling Ink: A Handbook for Young Writers,” co-authored with Ellen Potter.

What was your road to publication?

Anne:  It took me seven years to get published. (Also known as “the seven-year rip.”) I started by writing a young adult novel, which received a number of  rejection letters that still lurk in my file cabinet. Then I just floundered around, giving my wastebasket a heavy workout. I was just about ready to give up writing completely when I had a dream. My dream advised me to try something different than young adult novels. Since I was reading dozens of picture books to my then two year old son, I thought that would be a good place to start. Within six months I sold three picturebooks to Knopf, including The Salamander Room.

Can you tell me a bit about your writing process? Do you plot or not?

Anne: The word plot sends shivers up my spine (not the good kind). I prefer to think about people and what they might do and what might happen to a particular person in a particular situation. I scrawl some notes, think up a few ideas, try to start in a strong place, and then go to it. The first few chapters are often very difficult. So are the next few. And the next. And…. yes. It all involves a lot of hard thinking, and three-or four -dimensional visualizing. And the slightest whisper can change a story.

Are you working on any new projects that you can tell us about?

Anne: Sorry, mum’s the word. I’m working on a book for Feiwel and Friends, but I don’t like to talk about my works in progress.

Describe your studio or usual work space for us.

Anne: A mess. Bills stacked on the desk, ideas scrawled on old envelopes and bits of paper. Notebooks everywhere, sweaters and purses covering the bed. Books stacked haphazardly; paintings leaning against the wall… and a tiny clear space around the computer. I am debating whether to pretend that my husband’s extremely neat and orderly office is actually mine when I do a Skype visit.

What profession other than your own would you like to attempt?

Anne: I’d like to be a lazy person for a few years and see what it feels like to do very little.

What’s one thing that most people don’t know about you?

Anne: That I like British humor, that my tags often stick out of my shirts, that I used to splatter toothpaste over myself as a teenager (not on purpose), and that my favorite holiday is Halloween – but only if I get to wear a costume.

Were you inspired by your family to become a writer?

Anne: All I did as a kid was read, but I fought off being a writer for a long time. My experience as the daughter of two writers did not lead me automatically to writing.  Eventually, however, I had to give in and admit that I wanted to write… okay, that I loved to write… maybe I was even born to write.

Did you know Ellen Potter prior to your collaboration for Spilling Ink?

Anne: The funny thing is, I didn’t know Ellen very well at all when we began our collaboration! For years I had wanted to get to know her… but didn’t until Megan Shull, another children’s book author, connected us. We three appeared together for “You Read, Girl,” an event that Megan masterminded and organized. Afterward, I proposed that we all collaborate on a book about writing together. It was an idea that had been rolling around in my head for years, but I had never been able to do it on my own. It was really a ploy to get to know Megan and Ellen better! Unfortunately, Megan had to drop out after a few months, but Ellen and I continued on together. Not only did we have a wonderful time writing the book, but we became extremely close friends in the process.

We here at Writing on the Sidewalk tend to procrastinate with our writing, where do you fit in Procrastinator or Proactive?

Anne: The best way I know to deal with anxiety is to plunge into work. Writing always makes me feel better.  On the other hand, I procrastinate on just about everything else in my life…

Thanks Anne I look forward to reading your new project when it becomes available. For more information on Anne be sure to check out the following links www.annemazerbooks.com and www.spillinginkthebook.com.

Suzanne Santillan

Writing on the Sidewalk

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The other day Son #2 and I were running out the door heading for school when he stopped me, there was a snail inching across the sidewalk and he didn’t want me to step on it. As I stood there for a minute my mind racing thinking of the million and two things I had to do, the inspiration for a story hit me.

Once I got back home I began to think about my story and decided to run the idea by my Super Blog Buddy Sarah, she loved the idea, unfortunately she wrote the same story several years earlier (no wonder I thought it was such a genius idea). I happily scrapped my idea but began thinking about where we get inspiration for stories.

Author Anne Mazer in the book “Spilling Ink” , she co-wrote with Ellen Potter, shares her recipe for Mental Compost.

Here is a brief outline*:

Take:

  • All of your embarrassing moments.
  • Anything you feel very strongly about.
  • Small daily moments that capture your attention.
  • Subjects you know a lot about.
  • What you’ve observed about family and friends.
  • News shows, Youtube, advice columns…
  • Whatever makes you laugh or cry.
  • Your history.
  • Your dreams.
  • In short your entire life.

Then:

  1. Throw it all in a mental compost pile .
  2. Let it sit for a while.
  3. It may be helpful to take notes, or keep a journal.
  4. Regularly turn over the material in your mind.
  5. Spread it around in your stories.

So inspiration comes from everything around us, it is up to us as writers to develop those ideas and put it down on paper.

Happy writing,

Suzanne Santillan

Writing on the Sidewalk

*There are more details in the process and I advice checking out the book for more great ideas.

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My picture book is due out very soon and with it I usher in a new phase of my author journey, the school visit. I am comfortable with the material for the pre-K and Kindergarten-Third grade crowd, but what do you do with those oh so sophisticated 9-12 year olds? The answer is talk about the writing process. But how do I address the tough issues of rewrites, writer’s block and everything in between?  Help is on the way.

http://media.us.macmillan.com/jackets/258H/9781596436282.jpg

Spilling Ink: A Young Writer’s Handbook, written by veteran authors Ellen Potter and Anne Mazer and illustrated by Matt Phelan. This is a great book filled with writing tips for the 9-12 year olds (and certain adult picture book authors too).

Booklist states:

Avoiding traditional chapters, the coauthors address issues by turns in short personal takes. Mazer speaks to beginnings, for example, while Potter tackles endings; and both have diverting things to say about everything that happens in between, whether it’s the narrative voice or (eek) writer’s block. Always agreeable, practical, and commonsensical in their approach, the two are also refreshingly permissive (“it’s fine to break rules”), though they add the caveat that rule breakage should come from a knowledge of said rules and a good reason for breaking them.

I found this book to be fun and very insightful. The tips are easy to understand and written in a way that kids will understand. This book would be a great gift for the kids who want to work on their writing, teachers looking for some fantastic tips, or picture book writers who want to improve their craft.

Nice job ladies.

Suzanne Santillan

Writing on the Sidewalk

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