Wednesday, April 17, 2024

The Fourth Annual GROG Arthropod Roundtable

 by Sue Heavenrich

Welcome to the Fourth Annual Arthropod Roundtable! Today's guests are: Susannah Burman-Deever, whose book Before the Seed came out last month; Helen Frost, whose book The Mighty Pollinators also released last month; Loree Griffin Burns, whose book One Long Line hits the shelves next month; Amy Hevron, whose City of Leafcutter Ants will be out near the end of June; and Megan Litwin, whose first two chapter books in the Dirt and Bugsy series were published last summer.


I’ve spent many hours following ants and counting bees. Even so, my relationship with the local insect community is … complex. Sure, I love watching the pollinators in my garden but there are some arthropods who truly bug me. Especially when they stab their blood-sucking proboscis in my earlobe!

Me: How you relate to the arthropods living in your neighborhood. 

Amy Hevron
Amy: I love nature and am fascinated by all the little critters that live outside. Sometimes they come inside too, mostly cute little doodle bugs and lady bugs. And sometimes we get giant spiders in the house as well. I’m a little scared of spiders but know they’re helpful to have around. So I usually talk to them to try to convince them to go hide somewhere. 

Megan: I grew up a book and animal lover…but not exactly a bug lover. I had such an intense fear of spiders that I would refer to them as “you-know-whats” rather than saying the name aloud! Over time I changed my mind because I learned more about bugs and spiders – first as a second-grade teacher who taught an insect unit every year, and then as a mother of two boys who loved dirt and bugs from the start. That fear was slowly replaced with awe and wonder as I realized arthropods are fascinating! It is amazing how getting to know something (or someone…) can change your perspective.

Helen: I have always loved insects. As I have moved from one neighborhood to another, I have kept my little patches of earth free of pesticides and herbicides, and have delighted in watching the little friends who share my space. I plant milkweed and nectar flowers for the migrating monarchs. I love the flashes of color all the butterflies bring, and the bright green beetles that sometimes cross the table as I am eating my lunch outdoors. In the summer evenings, fireflies light up my backyard as cicadas emphatically let us know when they are with us! I know that most of the insects are staying hidden from me most of the time, but I do what I can to increase the possibility of our close encounters.

Loree: I’m a former scientist who now works as a writer and a writing teacher. I write about science! The natural world! And curious people—young and old—who are passionate about both. I’m an enthusiastic amateur naturalist and entomologist, and I’m fascinated by the incredible variety of insects living their strange and beautiful lives all around me. I’m grateful for access to green spaces in which I can watch these lives unfold and libraries in which I can research what others have learned about those lives, too. And, of course, I’m also grateful to have a job that sometimes involves sharing what I learn about my neighbor arthropods through books and essays for readers of all ages.

Susannah Burman-Deever
Susannah: In college, I was lucky enough to work with a scientist who was studying how swarms of honey bees search for and decide upon a new home. I spent a couple of summers sitting beside swarms and tracking the dancing as the bees told the others about their finds. I no longer study insects professionally, but I’m lucky enough to have a pretty big yard to play and garden in. Over time, I’ve been adding habitat for insects, with areas for nesting and more and more flowering plants and native shrubs. The insect diversity in my yard has definitely boomed. I love watching all the different insects in my gardens, from orchard bees to gorgeous green sweat bees to hummingbird moths. It’s a wonderful reminder that there is a whole world of amazing creatures just outside our doors.

Me: I always want to know how authors come to write their book. Was there a specific question or thought that grabbed you and wouldn’t let you go until you wrote about it?

Helen: The Mighty Pollinators is my eighth book about the natural world, and my seventh collaboration with photographer Rick Lieder. We settled on this topic during the early days of the pandemic when small children were baffled by the fact that something as small as a virus could upend their world so dramatically. We tried to think of things that are very tiny, but not quite invisible, and also important, and we settled on pollen and began thinking of how to make it seen and real to children.

Megan: Bugs are cool! Kids love bugs! I saw this natural curiosity and connection with bugs as a teacher when we raised and released butterflies in my second-grade classroom. Kids loved getting up close and personal with the caterpillars and then witnessing the magic of metamorphosis right before their eyes. I saw it again as a mom when my boys would spend hours playing in our backyard. They would catch bugs. Name them. Build whole cities for them with friends. I have them all to thank for the Dirt and Bugsy books!

Loree Burns (photo by Carter Hasegawa)
Loree: One day when they were very young, my twin sons found a new-to-us caterpillar (we did not know what kind it was) crawling across the grass of our back yard. They wanted to keep it as a pet, which I’m generally okay with. “But,” I told them, “we have to figure out what it eats.” All caterpillar species have a host species—a plant or related group of plants on which the adult butterflies/moths of that species lay their eggs and which those caterpillars eat. So they followed it around the yard until they caught it eating something. The view from my kitchen window: a tiny caterpillar crawling through a grassy lawn and two small boys on their hands and knees, crawling behind it. Later, I learned about Jean-Henri Fabre who studied the pine processionary caterpillars that travel form one place to another in long, single-file lines … I wanted to share that story.

Amy: I first became fascinated with leaf cutters ants while on a hike in Costa Rica. We saw this long parade of little ants carrying leaves down the trail. The ants were all different sizes. I just had all these questions. Where were they taking the leaves? Why were they different sizes? Did they eat the leaves? I started researching them and felt like this could be a really fun book.

Susannah: The inspiration for this book comes from my garden. Caring for my garden feeds my soul, and I find a lot of joy in learning about the relationships between the plants and animals around me. I wanted to write a book that celebrates the beauty and diversity of those relationships, and explore how the needs of both plants and animals have shaped the pollination process.

Me: How do you bring your passion for this topic to writing for children?

Susannah: I’m endlessly curious about the living world. It makes me feel small in the best possible way: that there is always more to discover about the world around us. And being curious means looking and asking questions. So with this book, I started with something that children might have noticed (that there are lots of different types of flowers in the world) and asked why. Why are there so many different types of flowers? Why do they have different shapes and colors and scents? The book is structured as a series of questions, with answers that lead to more questions. Which is really what science is all about. 

Loree: For One Long Line, I wanted to share my passion for the scientific method and how we humans use it as a tool to learn about the world we live in. And the story I used to demonstrate all that? The story of those pine processionary caterpillars and the man, Jean-Henri Fabre, who studied the ones living in his own backyard. The experiments he did helped us understand how and why these unusual caterpillars march in lines the way they do. One Long Line is beautifully illustrated by Jamie Green. (https://www.jamiegreenillustration.com/)

Helen Frost (photo by Tim Andersen)
Helen: Three things I love – insects, children, and poetry – come together in the creation of this book. I bring the topic to life through details and the delight of language! And I continue to learn as I think about how to bring the importance of pollination to the attention of children as I share this book with them.

Megan: Two things I happen to be passionate about are nature and unstructured play. I got to blend what I know about kids and bugs from my own life with themes of nature, imagination, and problem-solving. I also brought my teacher heart to the table because these books are written for kids learning to read on their own. That is another passion of mine…literacy education! I used simple sentences and vocabulary along with purposeful repetition so that a newly independent reader could find success. I hope these books encourage kids to be both book lovers and bug lovers. Bookworms, in the best sense!

Amy: I’ve always been interested in ants and how they live in colonies. I love those little ant farm kits – and had one once, until all the ants got out! Leaf cutter ants are especially interesting to me with the complexity of their society. And from a visual perspective, as an illustrator, I knew it would be fun to illustrate the underground nest with all the chambers and pathways. And show all the ants with their different jobs in their society.

Me: What can we – and the kids we write for – do this Earth Day and every day to help make our backyard and neighborhood a better place for bugs?

Loree: We can pay attention to bug lives and recognize that the places we live are the very same places they live. The decisions we make about how to manage those places matters: Mow the lawn, or let the grass grow? Rake up the leaves or let them rot in place? Share our garden with the neighborhood animals and insects? Or fight with those animals and insects over rights to the tomatoes? These are decisions that have real consequences for us and for the insects around us, though it’s only a matter of life and death for them. So my wish is that all of us will start to pay more attention to the arthropods in our lives, learn their stories by first-hand observation, share what we see and learn, and then keep those stories in mind as we make decisions about the land we share.

Megan Litwin
Megan: I think if we encouraged kids to get outside and to pay attention, all sorts of good things would happen…for both the arthropods and our Earth. Once you notice the incredible life teeming around you, you are more likely to take care of it. I’ll say what I say at the end of Dirt and Bugsy readings. Go outside. Look for bugs. Build bug houses. Plan a nature scavenger hunt. Find tiny things. Find shiny things. Plant things. Just get out and explore your world!!

Amy: Most people don’t really want more ants near their homes but something fun to do for other insects on Earth Day could be to plant some native flowering plants in your yard for your local bees and butterflies.

Susannah: So often we think of people and nature as being separate from each other. But we are a part of the ecosystem. We are connected to all the living things around us. What can we do to help? Maybe plant native plants. Maybe leave some leaves unraked in the fall to provide wintering habitat for insects. Even if you don’t have your own yard, you can work with neighbors in community gardens to promote insect habitat. Only by seeing what’s out there can we answer the question of how we can help protect the life that surrounds us every day.

Helen: I treat little ones (both insects and children who observe them) with respect and affection. I plant a garden to be welcoming to insects and other pollinators, and I share information with neighbors who may question why we don’t mow our lawn in early spring, why we let dandelions and clover and violets grow, why we let the milkweed remain even when it may no longer be seen as beautiful. When, as happens each spring, a salesman goes door-to-door offering to rid our neighborhood of “creepy crawlies,” I alert the neighbors to all the good we receive from insects, and try to educate the salesman that it is not possible to kill some insects without harming all of them, and in turn harming ourselves.  

Me: I know I could talk about arthropods all day long! But my coffee cup is empty and it’s a perfect day for bug-watching and flower-planting. Please drop by our websites and blogs, and remember to go outside and make friends with members of another phylum.

Loree Griffin Burns https://loreeburns.com/
 

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Celebrating Poetry Month ... and Civic Engagement ~by Christy Mihaly

2024 Poetry Month poster:
Art by Jack Wong, words from Lucille Clifton poem

Happy National Poetry Month! It's time to celebrate poetry again!

Many poetry-loving writers, educators, and organizations post suggestions for elevating poetry this month. Reading Rockets has a great collection of resources here. Of course, we can celebrate poems all year long -- but it's nice to have a whole month to focus on bringing more poetry into our lives. 
Music-themed poetry in music store window

One of my favorite celebrations is "Poem City," a month-long event in Vermont's capital, Montpelier, during which the shop windows are filled with poems and libraries, coffee shops, and general stores resound with poetry readings. I'm so pleased to have one of my poems included in the collection, along with many others by poets from near and far. More about Poem City here.

Poetry can engage learners, not only in learning reading and writing, but in lessons about history, science, math, and my personal passion: civics. In Free for You and Me: What Our First Amendment Means, I turned to writing poems as a way to simplify constitutional concepts and make reading about them fun. 

It has turned out to be an effective way to communicate the concepts. Recently, on one hand, an editorial in a local paper reiterated the importance of teaching civics in our schools, and cited my books; and I did a read-aloud of this book with an engaged 5th-grade class as part of a workshop on civics and poetry -- more on that below. 

Spread from FREE FOR YOU AND ME on Freedom of Assembly

Of course you can find and write poems for all kinds of kids and all kinds of interests. 

In their anthology Hop to It: Poems to Get You Moving, poets Sylvia Vardell and Janet Wong collected 100 poems by 90 poets (including me!) that incorporate movement. Many of the poems relate to STEM themes. But this book, published in 2020, also includes several poems about civic engagement. Here's mine: 

STAND UP

by Christy Mihaly

Be a friend when someone's hurting
Give a smile or helping hand
Don't be shy about asserting
what is right: just take a stand.
Stand up!

If you want to make things better,
think of things that you can do.
Make a call or send a letter.
Illustrate your point of view.
        Stand up!

In a tizzy, feeling nervous?
Know your rights and learn your laws.
Join a march or day of service.
Find some friends to join your cause.
                STAND UP!

Don't just sit there on the sidelines 
when you know there's work to do.
If you think we need new guidelines,
write them up--it's up to you!

                                    STAND UP!

Lisa Powell created a fun video to go with this poem, posted here.

And yes, this month I've been working with an amazing fifth grade class to explore poetic forms and write poems in a series of workshops exploring freedom of expression and engagement in our democracy. Big concepts -- but we make it concrete through writing haiku, Fibonacci poems, and other poems about topics of concern to the students. 

Poetry can be magic! 

For more ideas and resources, check out GROG's Poetry Month posts from years past: here, or here, or here. (You can search for past poetry posts for lots more good stuff from 10 years of GROG archives!)

And happy month to all!


Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Jen Malia's :Connor and Taekwondo Tournament + Book Review by Kathy Halsey


 
Book Review by Kathy Halsey

I first met author Jen Malia this past November at NCTE 2023 in a group of SCBWI Northern Ohio and Central-South Ohio friends. We were Facetiming with former SCBWI NO Illustrator Coordinator Merrill Rainey. Authors were spilling out of their chairs, onto the floor, happy to meet new authors and share experiences. 


Later I “met” her again as a member of the Soaring ‘20s Debut group that has stayed together since their debut for marketing purposes. (genius idea IMO). The GROG blog has reviewed debut group books before in our 10-year blog journey. I was thrilled to get an ARC of Jen’s newest book to review book 3 in her chapter book series The Infinity Rainbow Club.


 Even though Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament is the third book in the series,  it stands on its own even if a reader hasn’t read the other two books. From the beginning I was hooked by the main character Connor vs. his archenemy, Wyatt. They face off sparring in Master Park’s Taekwondo dojang, gradually get to know each other at school and finally support each other as friends. 


The Taekwondo scenes throughout the book are filled with authentic, action-packed scenes that will engage readers as well as teach them more about the art and practice of this Korean martial art form. Backmatter with Junior Belt ranks and Korean terms are a great addition to this book featuring a boy with ADHD and other neurodivergent characters who we get to know in the classroom, at home, and in their Taekwondo practice, teams, and tournaments. 


The themes of perseverance, focus, struggling through tough situations apply specifically to each character’s brain difference, but also apply universally to readers who don’t face these challenges. Peter Francis’s black and white illustrations detail the moves, stances, and forms of Taekwondo making this chapter book even more inviting.


As a former K-12 school librarian, I see this series as filling a need for more chapter books with neurodiverse characters going through typical chapter book experiences. Jen has also piqued my interest in Taekwondo, too.


(P.S. Don't forget to day is Day 7 of our 10 Year Anniversary Party. Check out today's prize & Rafflecopter here:)



Interview with Jen Malia

Kathy: Tell us a little about yourself. 

Jen: I’m the autistic author of the children’s chapter book/lower middle grade series, The Infinity Rainbow Club, and the picture book, Too Sticky! Sensory Issues with Autism. I live in Virginia Beach with my husband and three kids. I love running, taekwondo, hiking, and outdoor adventures. I’ve traveled to 20 countries around the world and many places in America.

For four years, I lived and worked in the United Arab Emirates as an assistant professor of writing at the American University of Sharjah. I currently work as a professor of English and the creative writing coordinator at Norfolk State University. I have a PhD in English from the University of Southern California, and I’m currently working on my MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults at the Vermont College of Fine Arts.

Kathy: What inspired you to write Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament?

Jen: As an autistic mom of three neurodivergent children, I write the books I didn’t know I needed, but wish I had, as an undiagnosed autistic girl, and the books I want my neurodivergent kids and other kids like them to have now. I was diagnosed with ASD in my late thirties, and I’m self-diagnosed with ADHD and OCD.

My family of five, including my husband and three kids, has different combinations of ASD, ADHD, OCD, dyslexia, and dysgraphia. In The Infinity Rainbow Club series, I draw on my own and my kids’ experiences with neurodivergence. Each book is told from a different point of view and centers the voices of neurodivergent kids.

Jen, family, Connor (book3) and Taekwondo!

Kathy: How did you get the idea for this next book in the INFINITY RAINBOW CLUB series?

Jen: For Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament, I knew that I wanted to focus the internal plot on Connor, a fourth-grade boy with ADHD, who has to work on his focus at the taekwondo dojang, in school, and at home. I also wanted to develop the external plot around Connor’s goal of earning his taekwondo junior black belt and competing in a taekwondo tournament.

In this chapter book, I draw on my own and my kids’ experiences with ADHD and taekwondo. A lot of the scenes with Connor in the dojang are based on my experiences testing for my taekwondo black belt and sparring in tournaments.

Kathy: How long did it take to write this story?

Jen: I wrote three books for the Infinity Rainbow Club series in a little over a year. I had about four months between contract deadlines, and each book turned out to be around 18,000 words. While I was drafting Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament, I was completing copy edits for the first book in the series, Nick and the Brick Builder Challenge, and developmental edits for the second book, Violet and the Jurassic Land Exhibit. It was the ultimate test of multitasking book projects!

 

Kathy: How long did it take to sell this story? 

Jen: Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament was part of a 3-book deal. My agent sold the series on proposal to the same editor that I worked with for my debut picture book, Too Sticky! Sensory Issues with Autism.

Kathy: What do you hope readers take away from reading this book?

Jen: I hope that neurodivergent kids see themselves in this book and that their neurotypical peers understand better what it’s like to have a different brain. Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament is not so much a book about ADHD as a book about a boy who happens to have ADHD going about his everyday life at home, in the taekwondo dojang, and at school.

I hope kids will be inspired by Connor’s story of perseverance. In his words, “to not give up even when it’s hard to keep going.” I want to encourage more kids to participate in sports like Connor too. Some parents have already told me that their kids signed up for taekwondo or other martial arts after reading Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament.


Kathy:What do you like most about Peter Francis’ illustrations? What surprised you about the illustrations?

Jen: I love the level of detail in Peter’s illustrations. The characters really come to life on the page. I got to see every stage of how the illustrations for the book developed and to provide feedback along the way.

For Connor and the Taekwondo Tournament, Peter and I went back and forth via my editor to get the forms, stances, kicks, punches, board breaks, and sparring moves right. I was surprised with how much I fell in love with the illustrations for this series. I can’t picture the stories being illustrated any other way.

Peter Francis, illustrator

Kathy: What advice do you have for writers interested in chapter books?

 

Jen: Chapter books are a tough sell because they are almost always part of a series, which means a publisher has to commit to buying multiple books from an author. To stand out, aspiring authors need a unique concept that can be explored across multiple books.

 

Using the concept for my series as an example, I created a club-based series, which is clear from the title, the Infinity Rainbow Club. The infinity rainbow is the symbol for neurodivergence. In this series, I wanted to center kids with different brains—the roughly 1 in 5 kids who are neurodivergent. I emphasized in my series proposal that hardly any chapter books have neurodivergent protagonists despite the large number of kids with diagnoses like ASD, ADHD, OCD, dyslexia, and dysgraphia to show the need for more books like mine in the market.

 

Kathy: What’s next for you?

 

Jen:I’m currently working on a middle grade horror novel and some picture books.

Kathy: Anything else you’d like to tell us?

Jen: You can learn more about me, my books, essays, and speaking on my website at JenMalia.com.

Biography: Jen Malia is a professor of English and the creative writing coordinator at Norfolk State University. Originally from Pittsburgh, Jen currently lives in Virginia Beach with her husband and three kids. Jen has written for the New York Times, the Washington Post, New York Magazine, Woman's Day, Glamour, Self, and others. Jen is the author of Too Sticky! Sensory Issues with Autism as well as the Infinity Rainbow Club series. Jen was diagnosed with ASD in her late thirties and has three neurodivergent kids with different combinations of ASD, ADHD, OCD, dyslexia, and dysgraphia.

Contact Information for Jen Malia 

Website: jenmalia.com

Twitter: @JenMaliaBooks

Instagram: @jenmaliabooks

Facebook: @MomWithAutism



Wednesday, March 20, 2024

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY! Celebrating GROG Blog’s 10th ~ By Julie Phend




Happy Tenth Anniversary, GROG!

The GROG Blog has been offering support, information, and encouragement to members of the children's writing community for ten years! To celebrate this milestone, we're going to review GROG's history and mission and highlight some of the people who have made this wonderful resource happen. And for you, our readers, we're offering gifts and prizes as a thank-you for spreading the word. 


Intrigued? Read on.

The GROG Mission:
To provide:
    G: Guidance and support
    R: Resources on the craft of writing
    O: Opportunities to expand our skills
    G: Great folks who support readers and writers of all ages.
That spells GROG!

How Did GROG Get Started?
2014 WOW Retreat
The GROG origin story began in the mountains of Georgia in the summers of 2013-2014 when a group of writers who didn't know each other bonded at the Week of Writing (WOW) nonfiction writing retreat. GROG evolved out of their desire to gather a group of writers to form a new blog about children's literature. Being energetic, intrepid souls, these writers made their vision a reality.

Kathy Halsey & Christy Mihaly

Two of the writers at that original event, Kathy Halsey and Christy Mihaly, are still writing for the GROG blog. GROG grew by inviting writers from all over the world through online forums.



One of the original online recruits is Tina Cho.  
"In 2014, I was living
Tina Cho
in South Korea with my husband and kids," she said. "I had started writing in 2008, so when we moved to Korea, I participated virtually in critique groups, blogs, and social media groups. I started with the GROG blog when I took Kristin Fulton's nonfiction picture book biography class online. Todd Burleson was in the class, and he asked if we'd like to continue together and write a blog. I joined and have been submitting blog posts ever since."

Let's give a SHOUT OUT  to original Groggers Tina Cho, Kathy Halsey, and Christy Mihaly, who have been contributing great information for TEN YEARS! 

Watching the GROG Grow

The first GROG post came out on February 24, 2014. At that time, there were fourteen contributing writers. GROG came out daily, with a different focus each day. Talk about ambitious! 

Here's a quote from one of the first posts on March 22, 2014: "Why are we doing this? The answer is simple. It is for YOU--the writers, librarians, teachers, and lovers of books--especially books for young readers." That's still true today.

The post listed the fourteen original bloggers: Jan Godown Annino, Tina Cho, Christy Mihaly, Sherri Jones Rivers, Patricia Toht, Marcie Flinchum Atkins, Leslie Colin Tribble, Pam Vaughn, Suzy Leopold, Janie Reinart, Todd Burleston, Kathy Halsey, Cheryl Mansfield, and Jackie Wellington. I'm sure many of their names are familiar. (You can read the full post here.)
An early WOW Retreat
With some of the original Groggers

Over the years, the GROG blog has evolved and changed. Some bloggers moved on, and new voices were added. We now post weekly instead of every day. But our mission is unchanged. GROG remains a great place of enlightenment and support in the children's writing community.

Did You Say Something about GIFTS and PRIZES?

You bet! Keep reading to learn how. (Even that has roots in the past.)

How does a new blog get readers?

With a Blog Launch, of course. GROG's launch ran from March 24-April 7, 2014. Bloggers conducted a raffle, giving away free books and services. Readers could enter by visiting the blog and leaving a comment, signing up to subscribe, and re-posting about GROG on social media. The more you did to spread the word, the better your chance of winning a prize.

It worked, too. In its first year, the GROG blog had over 59,000 page views and 16,732 visitors from all over the world. (See the whole post at Happy One Year Anniversary )

As of today, GROG has 851, 244 views with 13,483 comments on 814 posts. Well done, Groggers!

Happy Ten Year Anniversary: 
GROG Giveaway!
In celebration of our tenth anniversary, we're doing another giveaway. Here's your chance to be part of our story and win some fabulous prizes.



How to Enter the Raffle:

We're giving away 10 prizes over 10 days! To enter, you need to comment on a blog post and follow the GROG Blog. For an extra entry, reblog a post on another form of social media and share the link.

What Can You Win?

Here are the prizes and the date entries will open for each one, as well as link to follow:

 

Books:

 

Day 1

3/20 Tina Cho, My Breakfast with Jesus

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e3/?

 

Day 2

3/21 Sue Heavenrich, The Pie that Molly Grew

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e4/?

 

Day 3

3/22 Eileen Meyer, The Superlative A Lincoln and swag bag

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e5/?

 

Day 4

3/23 Christy Mihaly, three-book package: Little Golden Book about Mel Brooks; Patience, Patches; and choice of Free for You and Me or The Supreme Court and Us

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e6/?

 

Day 5

3/24 Julie Phend, D-Day and Beyond: A True Story of Escape and POW Survival

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e8/?

 

Day 6

3/25 Tina Cho, God's Little Astronomer

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e7/?

 

 

Services:

 

Day 7

3/26 An Ask Me Anything Zoom chat with author, speaker, former librarian Kathy Halsey (For more information, see Ask Infowoman: A Library Consult )

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e9/?

 

Day 8

3/27 An Ask Me Anything Zoom chat with author Sue Heavenrich

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e10/?

 

Day 9

3/28 A nonfiction manuscript critique from author, editor, and agent Fran Hodgkins (1500 words, max. )

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e2/?

 

Day 10

3/29 One ten-page fiction manuscript critique by author Julie Phend

http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/e998ca2e12/?

 

 


THANK YOU for being a GROG reader and helping us spread the word about this great resource. Sign up to follow us each Wednesday for informative new posts and Blasts from the Past, where you'll find previous posts that are still relevant today. 

Look for a post on May 29, when I'll interview some long-time Groggers about what's changed in the world of children's publishing over the past ten years.

And good luck with the RAFFLE!