Kate’s Book Tour Schedule for THE SEVENTH WISH

My next middle grade novel, THE SEVENTH WISH, comes out June 7th! I’ll be on tour much of June, sharing stories, visiting with readers and signing books. I hope you’ll come say hello if one of these stops is near you, but if not, you can still order a signed copy through my local indie bookstore…

TO ORDER PERSONALIZED, SIGNED COPIES OF THE SEVENTH WISH:

Call The Bookstore Plus in Lake Placid at 518-523-2950 during business hours.

Let them know how you’d like the book signed & they’ll ship it out to you after I sign it on June 9th!

 

Here’s where you’ll be able to find me in person this June & July. All bookstore events are open the public. You can click on the links to RSVP to the event on Facebook & invite friends who might be interested, too. 

The Seventh Wish

June 6 – School visits in Gouverneur, NY

June 7 – Guilderland Elementary, Guilderland, NY

June 8 – Orchard Elementary and Chamberlin Elementary in South Burlington and C.P. Smith School in Burlington, VT

June 9 – Morrisonville Elementary & Tupper Lake Middle School  (and Bookstore Plus to sign orders!) 

June 12 – 1pm – Barnes & Noble – Augusta, ME  (with Carrie Jones & Megan Frazer Blakemore!)

June 13 – Oxford Elementary School & James Otis Kaler Elementary in South Portland, ME

June 13 – 7pm Porter Square Books, Cambridge, MA

June 14 – Medway Middle School & Dover Sherborn Middle School – MA

June 15 – Wilson Middle School, Natick, MA

June 16 – Bonnie Brae & Mantua Elementary Schools in Fairfax, VA

June 16 – 7pm – Politics & Prose, Washington, D.C. 

June 17 – Swanson & Kenmore Middle Schools in Arlington, VA & Churchill Rd. Elementary in McLean, VA

June 21-22 – American Booksellers Association Children’s Institute – Orlando, FL

June 24-25 – American Library Association Conference – Orlando, FL

July 7 – 3-5pm – The Bookstore Plus, Lake Placid, NY

July 8-10 – International Literacy Association, Boston, MA

July 10 – 4pm – An Unlikely Story in Plainfield, MA (with Carrie Jones & Megan Frazer Blakemore!)

Here’s a little more about THE SEVENTH WISH…

From Publishers Weekly…

Twelve-year-old Charlie—a devoted friend, loving sister, enthusiastic Irish dancer, and budding ice fisher—has read enough stories to know not to be greedy when making wishes, so she is extra careful when a wish-granting fish turns up at the end of her ice-fishing pole. She isn’t always careful, however, to be specific with the wording of her wishes, leading to muddles for her friends and family in this rich and daring novel. What initially seems harmless becomes seriously hurtful when well-meaning Charlie is unable to wish away a loved one’s struggle with addiction, and the book takes a hard but important turn from the ordinary fun of middle-school crushes, sibling rivalry, Irish dancing, and fish-wishing into drug abuse and its aftermath. As she did in All the Answers, Messner lightens a heavy theme with a bit of magic (this time the talking fish rather than a talking pencil) while humanizing a growing epidemic and helping readers understand that even “good people make awful mistakes.”

From Kirkus (*Starred Review*)

In this novel-length riff on “The Fisherman and His Wife,” when Charlie goes ice fishing with pal Drew and his nana, she catches a fish who says it will grant her wishes in return for its release.

Charlie would like some control over her life, so she keeps hooking the fish even as she learns, like her fairy-tale predecessors, that wording matters. After all, Charlie’s hope that Roberto Sullivan notice her goes unfulfilled. Instead, a boy named Robert O’Sullivan shows up! Her generous intentions toward friends and family meet with varying success as well. Drew makes the basketball team, except he doesn’t like sports; and good friend Dasha passes her ESL class only to find keeping up in regular classes difficult. Charlie narrates, making dry, honest observations that zing straight to the hearts of readers, especially as the story builds toward one of Charlie’s most anxious pleas: that her beloved college-student sister be cured of her heroin addiction. But wishing doesn’t make it so. Charlie’s largely white upstate New York world is fully realized, typical in its everyday concerns and complicated by a frightening, news-making epidemic. As Charlie processes the changes in her life, her perspective shifts. Friends of all ages, old and new, support her. And she finds outlets in ice fishing and Irish dance. Most affecting, Charlie begins to understand the serenity prayer. Hopeful, empathetic, and unusually enlightening.

From School Library Journal…

In this realistic novel with a whimsical twist, 11-year-old Charlie catches a magical wishing fish and tries to use it to solve all her problems. Her wishes range from getting rid of her fear of the ice to getting her sister to come home from college for a visit. Not surprisingly, poor phrasing causes her wishes to go wrong, and she ends up making things worse instead of better. The plot covers a lot of ground, ranging from Charlie struggling to save enough money to buy a dress for her Irish dancing performance to helping one of her classmates learn English. The most serious subplot involves the discovery of her older sister’s heroin addiction and her subsequent treatment. Charlie eventually decides she does not need to rely on making wishes to solve her problems. Though somewhat sanitized, the gentle portrayal of heroin addiction may serve as a good way to introduce this serious issue and engender discussion. VERDICT A charming fantasy story with threads of several deep themes that could serve as the basis for thoughtful discussion.

Teachers Write 2016 – Introducing This Summer’s Guest Authors!

It’s almost time for Teachers Write 2016!  Our free online summer writing camp for teachers & librarians kicks off on Monday, June 27th here on my blog. If you’d like to join us, please sign up by May 26th if you’d like to be entered in a drawing for Scholastic dollars!) If you’d like to know more about Teachers Write, you can learn all about it here.

Now, (drum roll, please…) I’d like to introduce our guest author mentors for Summer 2016.  These writers are all volunteering their time, so we ask that you support Teachers Write by purchasing guest authors’ books when you can and requesting them for your school and public libraries. Please spend a little time checking out these writers’ websites and books. Authors are listed in the order in which you’ll meet them.

Kate Messner That’s me – I’m your Teachers Write hostess & will kick things off with the first mini-lesson on Monday, June 27th. 

The Seventh WishRanger in Time -- Race to the South Pole

Gae Polisner  Gae hosts Feedback Friday on her blog and is generally the best cheerleader this side of the Mississippi. The best in all the land, in fact. Gae wrote these amazing books.

memory

Jo Knowles  Jo will kick off each week with her Monday Morning Warm Up, a writing prompt to get your fingers moving and writer’s brain thinking. Here are some of Jo’s great books. 

stillawork

Guest Authors – These folks will be stopping in to teach Monday Mini-Lessons, offer Tuesday and Thursday Quick Writes, answer your questions on Q and A Wednesdays, and share reflections & essays to think about all summer long.They’re all great writers (as well as editors, educators, and reviewers in some cases) and even better human beings, and I’m so happy to be introducing them to you.

Anne Marie Pace

Sarah Albee

Jody Feldman

Liz Garton Scanlon

Lisa Schroeder

Caroline Starr Rose

Susan Hill Long

Elana K. Arnold

Lisa Papademetriou

Cynthia Lord

Kekla Magoon

Nancy Castaldo

Michelle Cusolito

Anne Nesbet

Kristen Kittscher

Mara Rockliff

Megan Frazer Blakemore

Karen Rivers

Phil Bildner

Debbie Reese

Erin Hagar

Erica Perl

Mike Jung

Kat Yeh

Mike Winchell

Heidi Schulz

Ammi-Joan Paquette

Dayna Lorentz

Cheryl Klein

Linda Urban

Madelyn Rosenberg

Hannah Barnaby

Laurie Ann Thompson

Jen Malone

Tracey Baptiste

Grace Lin

Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich

Audrey Vernick

Nanci Turner Steveson

Augusta Scattergood

Karen Romano Young

Tracy Holczer

For now, please check out the links above. Buy some books. Get to know your guest authors. Follow them on Twitter & find them on Facebook if you like to hang out in those places, too. We’ll be back Monday, June 27th to get started writing!

Dear Grace: Hiking Your Mountain on 10.19.15

May 15, 2016

Dear Grace*,

The snow has melted in the valleys, but I could still see patches up on the High Peaks driving up the highway from yesterday’s track invitational in Queensbury. It reminded me that soon, mud season will be over, the black fly clouds will thin, and it will be time to climb again. It also reminded me that I never told you about my last mountain of the fall ’15 season. It was your mountain – Grace Peak, on October 19th. 

The forecast was for warm temperatures, but snow had fallen in the mountains the night before, so autumn’s reds and golds were laced with white.

IMG_0128IMG_0130

IMG_0138

My friend Marsha and I were taken off guard (even though we shouldn’t have been) to find the rocks on the water crossings covered with ice. We’d started the first crossing without micro-spikes and had to sit down halfway across to fish them out of our packs and put them on. 

This wasn’t our first trailless peak, but it was the most difficult. Between the fallen leaves and new snow, the herd path from Rt. 73 was often challenging to follow. We had to take it slow on the way up, keeping a close eye out for the cairns that occasionally marked the way.

IMG_0135IMG_0141

When we made it to the ice-covered slide, we ventured out for a few quick photos but veered quickly back to the herd path for more solid footing. The first slide climb is something we’ll save for another day, with less ice and a more experienced climber friend along for advice. 

IMG_0158

The summit was beautiful, as always. It took us 4.5 hours to climb up (this includes time wandering around to find our way) and 3 hours to descend. Busy schedules and more snow on the way meant this was my last High Peaks climb of 2015.

But writing this now, smelling spring in the air, has me longing to go back. Soon…

IMG_0171

Good climbing!

~Kate

—————–

* Grace is Grace Hudowalski, the first woman to climb all 46 high peaks. She was a founding member of the Adirondack 46ers, the group’s 1st president, and later on, its secretary and historian, roles she filled until she died in 2004. It used to be that if you wanted to be a 46er, you had to log each climb by writing a letter to Grace. And Grace would write back. She answered thousands and thousands of letters, with encouraging words and sometimes, her own reflections on a climb, too.  Today, the 46er application process is simplified; one only needs to keep simple climb records on a club form that can be downloaded. But I wish I’d had the chance to climb these mountains and write letters about them when Grace was around to read them. I love her story and her strength and the way she urged others to get outside and explore and tell their stories. So I’ve decided to write the letters anyway. I think Grace would have liked that.