Thank you, Alburgh and Isle La Motte Schools!

I spent an amazing day with the students of Alburgh and Isle La Motte Schools today – thank you, thank you, thank you for such a wonderful welcome to your classrooms!

Ms. Dobson’s class at Alburgh Elementary greeted me with smiles, their own amazing leaf journals, and one of the loveliest homemade gifts I’ve ever seen – I couldn’t get a photo to do it justice, but it’s a walking stick with small areas carved away to make little frames for student drawings of different kinds of leaves from THE BRILLIANT FALL OF GIANNA Z.  The school purchased copies of GIANNA Z. for every student, so they were all familiar with the book and had great, thoughtful questions for me after the presentation.  Then there was lots and lots of book signing! 

Then it was down the hall to meet with middle school students who had read GIANNA Z.  Many of these students are also writers and nodded knowingly when I talked about things like revision and finding time to write with homework and other obligations. They made a beautiful, colorful leaf decoration that I’m using as a paperweight for my manuscript tonight.  Then it was off to Isle La Motte, a tiny school on an island in Lake Champlain. 

I’ve been here before in summertime when the roads are busy with tourists and bike riders, and it felt so different today in the cool, quiet of November. 

I knew when I stepped out of my car at Isle La Motte and heard a little voice shout from the playground "KATE MESSNER is here!!"  that it was going to be a special afternoon.  Moments later, on my way into the building, I was greeted and tackled hugged enthusiastically by several excited readers.

This school visit brought another first — I was served lunch made by the third and fourth graders, and guess what they cooked up? 

Eggplant Parmigiana!  If you read THE BRILLIANT FALL OF GIANNA Z. you know that’s a specialty of Gianna’s grandmother, Nonna, so they thought it would be appropriate for our visit.  (And it was delicious!)

After lunch, we talked about books and writing, and because this group included some younger students, too, I read a tiny bit of my upcoming picture book SEAMONSTER’S FIRST DAY.  The kids laughed and laughed at Andy Rash’s great illustrations and made me excited for this new book to be born. (We all have to wait a few more months, though…it’ll be released this summer.)  

I was told I needed to end my presentation just a bit early because the students had a surprise for me.  They’d collaborated on a special project in art class…

A bright, beautiful sugar maple plaque! This weekend, I’ll be hanging it up on the wall in my writing room — inspiration for stories yet to come and a reminder of the amazing readers I met today.  Thanks, Alburgh and Isle La Motte students and teachers, for a wonderful day at your schools!

A Tuesday Poem: Revolution for the Tested

Revolution for the Tested

by Kate Messner (Copyright 2010)

 

Write.

But don’t write what they tell you to.
Don’t write formulaic paragraphs
Counting sentences as you go
Three-four-five-Done.
Put your pencil down.

Don’t write to fill in lines.
For a weary scorer earning minimum wage
Handing out points for main ideas
Supported by examples
From the carefully selected text.

Write for yourself.
Write because until you do,
You will never understand
What it is you mean to say
Or who you want to be.
Write because it makes you whole.

And write for the world.
Because your voice is important.
Write because people are hurting
Because animals are dying
Because there is injustice
That will never change if you don’t.
Write because it matters.

And know this.
They’ll tell you it won’t make a difference,
Not to trouble over grownup things,
Just fill in the lines
And leave it at that.
Tell them you know the truth.
That writing is powerful.
Just one voice on the page
Speaks loudly.
And not only can a chorus of those united change the world.
It is the only thing that ever has.

Read.

But don’t read what they tell you to.
Don’t read excerpts, half-poems,
Carefully selected for lexile content,
Or articles written for the sole purpose
Of testing your comprehension.

Don’t read for trinkets,
For pencils or fast food coupons.
Don’t even read for M&M’s.
And don’t read for points.

Read for yourself.
Read because it will show you who you are,
Who you want to be some day,
And who you need to understand.
Read because it will open doors
To college and opportunity, yes,
And better places still…
Doors to barns where pigs and spiders speak,
To lands where anything is possible.
To Hogwarts and Teribithia,
To Narnia and to Hope.

Read for the world.
Read to solve its problems.
Read to separate reality from ranting,
Possibility from false promise.
And leaders from snake oil peddlers.
Read so you can tell the difference.
Because an educated person is so much harder
To control.

And know this.
They’ll say they want what’s best for you,
That data doesn’t lie.
Tell them you know the truth.
Ideas can’t be trapped in tiny bubbles.
It’s not about points
On a chart or a test or points anywhere.
And it never will be.

Copyright 2010 ~ Kate Messner

I shared this poem as part of my 2011 NCTE/ALAN presentations, and I’ve had many teachers write to ask if it’s okay to share with students and colleagues in the classroom. The answer is absolutely yes.  Share away!

But please do not republish it online without permission. The best way to share a copyright protected poem (or story, or article) with blog readers is to share a short quote from the piece and then link to the original post. Thanks!

SUGAR AND ICE Book Launch (and how to get a signed copy if you can’t make it!)

SUGAR AND ICE doesn’t actually come out until December 7th, but a few people have asked about getting signed copies in time for holiday gifts, so I figured I’d share the launch plans a little early. Considered yourself invited!

SUGAR AND ICE Book Launch!
When: Saturday, December 11th from 3-5pm
Where: The Bookstore Plus – 2492 Main St. in Lake Placid

I’ll be signing books, visiting with readers, and sharing some cookies as part of Lake Placid’s Holiday Stroll. The Bookstore Plus felt like the perfect place to launch this book because a) it’s one of our family’s favorite indies and b) it’s right up the street from the Olympic Center where much of SUGAR AND ICE takes place.

If you can’t make it…I can’t mail cookies (they’d be too crumbly) but you can still get a personalized, signed book.

SUGAR AND ICE Virtual Book Launch through The Bookstore Plus!
Call 518-523-2950 by Dec. 10th to order a personalized, signed copy.


The bookstore has a special order form for our SUGAR AND ICE launch and will take down all your information about how you’d like the book signed. When I come for the launch party on the 11th, I’ll personalize and sign your copy, and they’ll mail it out that week so it arrives in plenty of time for the holidays.

The Amazing Rochester Children’s Book Festival

Saturday morning, we hauled the kids out of bed at 3:30 and piled into the van for a dark, starry drive through the Adirondacks.  What was worth getting up so early? Just about the coolest book festival in the history of book festivals…

This is part of the crowd at the annual Rochester Children’s Book Festival, where more than 40 children’s authors & illustrators spent the day chatting and signing books for thousands of kids, parents, and teachers. Want to see some serious excitement about reading? This was the place to be.

One of the nicest surprises for me was arriving to find that I was table-mates with Julie Berry, the author of THE AMARANTH ENCHANTMENT and SECONDHAND CHARM from Bloomsbury as well as the hilarious SPLURCH ACADEMY chapter book series.  Julie and I both grew up in Medina, NY, and her older sister Joanna was my best friend in junior high school, so we had a wonderful time catching up and book talking one another’s books.

Here’s Julie signing SPLURCH in her reform school garb (the book is about a reform school for naughty boys, run by monsters!)


Here’s Bruce Coville, who made my whole entire day before the festival even started. When I was taking my daughter to the rest room, I saw Bruce in the hallway and stopped to say hello, since he was a speaker at the very first writers’ conference I ever attended.  He looked at my nametag and said, "Gianna Z. right?  I loved that book."  I was blown away but gathered my thoughts enough to say thank you before we walked away.  Then my daughter looked at me, eyes huge, and captured exactly what I was thinking, "That was Bruce COVILLE, and he said he liked your book!"


Here’s Elizabeth Bluemle, signing DOGS ON THE BED, MY FATHER THE DOG, and HOW DO YOU WOKKA WOKKA?


Cinda Williams Chima was there, too, signing her latest, THE EXILED QUEEN.


Michelle Knudsen signs a copy of LIBRARY LION for a festival reader.


Here’s author and festival co-organizer Kathleen Blasi (right) with two book lovers!

And here’s Kathleen’s partner-in-crime, the always energetic author/organizer Sibby  Falk.


Every time I went to get a photo of Vivian Vande Velde, she was busy signing books for kids…so here’s a picture of the top of her head.

One of my Lake Champlain historical novels, CHAMPLAIN AND THE SILENT ONE, deals with the fur trade between Native Americans and the French in the early 1600s, so I brought along this taxidermied beaver that I picked up at a yard sale this summer. He was quite a hit!

Linda Sue Park was there, too!


She signed a copy of her latest book, A LONG WALK TO WATER, for my 7th graders. (I will have it available for sign-out right after I book-talk it today!)


Here are Jane Yolen and Mark Teague, who were busy-busy-busy signing all day long!


Mark Shulman was there, signing his books, including his latest, SCRAWL.

When the festival ended at 4:00, I looked over at Julie – Where had the day gone?  Six hours of visiting with readers and signing books seemed to fly by in minutes. Thank you SO much, organizers, volunteers, and most of all, readers, for such an amazing celebration of books!

A Bookish Thankful Thursday

I woke up this morning to find a bunch of Twitter friends pointing me to a lovely, lovely review of SUGAR AND ICE from Betsy Bird’s Fuse #8 Blog at School Library Journal. Here’s an excerpt:

Kids reading the book will appreciate that the author knows how to speak to more than just ice skating fans. Don’t get me wrong… for fans of ice skating this book is nothing short of a dream come true. If I don’t see a copy of this book in every single ice skater’s gym bag by the end of December I will eat my proverbial hat. But there’s a lot of rich writing at work here, above and beyond the obvious plot elements. It’s got a relatable heroine, three-dimensional villains, a rags to riches element, some convincingly exhausting sequences, and an ending that will probably catch a couple folks by surprise.

You can read the full review here, but do note that the second-to-last paragraph contains just a bit of a spoiler, so you may want to skip that part if you’re the kind of reader who likes to discover all of a book’s secrets on your own.

Other bits of bookish thankfulness this week…

I’m looking forward to this Saturday’s Rochester Children’s Book Festival at Monroe Community College — one of my favorite events of the year!  It’s a high-energy celebration with more than 40 children’s authors & illustrators.  If you’re a Western NY person, I’d love it if you’d come by and say hello!  I’ll be signing my regional historical novels as well as THE BRILLIANT FALL OF GIANNA Z.   I’ll have SUGAR AND ICE bookplates to sign, too, and Lift Bridge Books will be taking pre-orders for the hardcover, which comes out December 7th.

I’m also excited about NCTE in a couple weeks.  I’m participating in a panel presentation on Skype author visits, speaking at the Middle Level Mosaic, and signing THE BRILLIANT FALL OF GIANNA Z. and ARCs of SUGAR AND ICE at the Walker/Bloomsbury booth on Saturday, November 20th.  I’ll post my full schedule with times, etc. when I have it.

I also got an unexpected email from my Scholastic editor this week, letting me know that ARCs of MARTY MCGUIRE, the first title in my new chapter book series illustrated by Brian Floca, will be ready in time for NCTE as well!  If all goes as planned, I’m scheduled to sign MARTY at the Scholastic booth from 10:30-11:30 on Saturday, right after my Walker/Bloomsbury signing.

I’m  feeling some reader-thankfulness, too, this week.  I just finished this book:

SUGAR CHANGED THE WORLD by Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos is a fascinating and compelling work of narrative nonfiction that looks at the history of sugar, or rather, the history of the world as it was shaped by sugar.  Amazing book – and I’ll have more to say about it later on.

Voting…34 years later

I was six years old on the eve of the Ford-Carter Presidential election, and I’d heard lots of talk around the house about voting. The grownups were all discussing who was voting for whom, and why, and I was trying to make my own decision.  Somehow, I’d missed the memo that you had to be eighteen to vote, and so I fully anticipated pulling levers of my own on Election Day.  I wanted to make well informed choices. 

"I’m trying to decide who I want to vote for," I announced one night at dinner.

"Is that so?" my mother said. "And what are you thinking?"

"Well, I’m not sure if I want Ford or Carter," I said, sighing.  "Which one do you think would let me go out trick-or-treating without wearing a coat over my Halloween costume?"  (I was one of those single-issue voters.)

"Hmph. Probably Carter," my father said. "He’s irresponsible."

"Oh good! Then that’s who I’m voting for."  I got up to get a cookie.

"No, no, wait…don’t you see? Ford would be more like a father. He wouldn’t want you to catch a cold. You want someone like that, don’t you?"

No. I didn’t.  I’d had it with giant winter coats swallowing my costumes. Enough was enough, though I think I probably let the conversation go at that point.

I didn’t get to vote that year, and I considered it a great injustice. But this Election Day, I do.  These days, health care and education and social justice have replaced Halloween outerwear at the top of my issues list, but I’m still thankful for the conversations around that dinner table at my house back in 1976 and in the years that followed. They paved the way for me to be aware and involved, and though I still disagree with my dad on plenty of issues, I’m thankful that we talked about things then, and still do.

One of my favorite quotes from the 2008 election season came not from one of the candidates, but from Bob Schieffer, who quoted his mom at the end of the final debate.

"Go vote now.  It will make you feel big and strong."

DELIRIUM by Lauren Oliver

Due out in February, this is a pretty amazing book – and it’s one that I want to talk about as both a reader and as a writer.

Kate-the-reader/teacher says:

This was the first e-galley I ever read on my iPad, and even though I’m not a big fan of e-readers, I’ve never been so motivated to finish a book on one. DELIRIUM is a major league page-turner, full of romance, conflict, and action. Like Ally Condie’s MATCHED, coming out this fall, it’s about a future world where people’s mates are chosen for them by the government. In DELIRIUM, love has been identified as a deadly disease (Delirium Nervosa!) that is "cured" by a mandatory procedure performed when a person turns 18. What happens to those who resist — including main character Lena — forms the central conflict of this book, and keeps readers turning pages through a whole lot of great twists, to find out how it will all end. My 7th grade HUNGER GAMES fans are going to eat this one up.

Kate-the-writer says:

I knew this book was classified as dystopian and assumed that it was set in the future. Because I’m revising a dystopian novel right now and navigating my way through all the related world-building details relating to everyday life and technology, I pay close attention to the way other authors handle this challenge. As I was trying to figure out the time period in which DELIRIUM was set, I found myself confused by the references to present-day name brands, even though oil was strictly rationed and other elements of the novel (regulator squads, government approved music lists) felt more futuristic. It was only after I’d finished reading that I realized that the novel is actually not set in the future but in an alternate reality of our present times. (Note: I read this one quickly, and it’s entirely possible that I missed a reference to the time frame early on in the text – or perhaps I was just so sure it would be futuristic that I ignored the references. I do things like that sometimes…)

Anyway, as a writer, I find this setting choice fascinating because it allowed the author to manipulate the elements of society that needed to be changed for the story to work without reinventing the world in other areas. Now I find myself wondering how the story might have been different if it had, in fact, been set in the future instead. Would the technology changes and other futuristic elements have detracted from the main conflict and the love story? Maybe. Either way, I think it was an interesting choice, and one that worked beautifully for this particular story. 

I also love the cover design. Look carefully.  See the girl showing through the letters in the text?  When the hardcover comes out, you’ll be able to take off the jacket to see the rest of her face. Aside from being lovely and clever, it’s fitting for the story, too.