Creating a picture book
Lauren Stringer is the wonderful artist who is illustrating a new picture book I've written. I've loved her books since I first saw them, so it was a big thrill to be able to meet her in Minneapolis earlier this year, especially as we instantly felt that we'd been friends for years - what a shame we live so far apart!
Now I feel like it's a sneaky little thrill to peek in and see what she's doing on the book:
Studio-working on now
Wendy Orr's author diary: the journal following a writer's working life and the progress of new books, from idea to manuscript to publication.
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Saturday, August 30, 2008
Thursday, August 07, 2008
Onions and Cake at Siena College
For all the girls at Siena College who I met yesterday - thanks so much for making it a lovely visit. Since you had to rush off afterwards, I thought I'd post a picture of your gifts so you could see how much I appreciate them! Only readers of Peeling the Onion would understand the significance of the cake, so it really did make me smile. Even before I tasted it! (The flags say: Dear Anna, Love 8A)
(It made my husband smile too. I have to tell you the cake doesn't look quite like that anymore...)
Sunday, August 03, 2008
Shakespeare and me
KJ, who writes http://bardfilm.blogspot.com/ an interesting blog on Shakespeare in film (and popular culture - at least there was a very funny cartoon there today) has asked me about Shakespeare's influences on my writing.
A rather challenging question, which exposes my fears of not having a great theoretical literary background - my degree is in applied Science (Occupational Therapy.) Moving schools frequently also meant that I studied The Merchant of Venice in Grades 8, 9 and 10, which of course limited the number of other plays!
And yet, somehow, I'm familiar with most of the plays as well as the poetry. I was the type of kid who lay on the couch reading my way through a dense volume of English poetry - I can still picture the book, and the feel of it, so heavy it had to be propped up at the end of the couch. Later, in high school, I remember one of my English teachers, in encouraging me to strengthen my sense of rhythm in my poetry, telling me to read Shakespeare, and other poets, aloud, which is some of the best advice I've ever received. (I read all my own work aloud now too, to hear the faults in its rhythm.)
One of my earliest memories is of seeing a film of the ballet of Romeo and Juliet, at the Russian pavilion at the Brussel's World Fair, when I was three. I fell in love with the story, and with the play when I was old enough to read it.
So my point in these reminiscences is that although I've never been consciously aware of being influenced by Shakespeare when I'm writing, Shakespeare's work is so much part of my love of literature that it must have influenced what I do. And then, when I was writing Nim's Island, I did briefly consider naming the marine iguana Caliban - marine iguanas really are very ugly - before deciding that Fred was much more suitable for this particular one.
A rather challenging question, which exposes my fears of not having a great theoretical literary background - my degree is in applied Science (Occupational Therapy.) Moving schools frequently also meant that I studied The Merchant of Venice in Grades 8, 9 and 10, which of course limited the number of other plays!
And yet, somehow, I'm familiar with most of the plays as well as the poetry. I was the type of kid who lay on the couch reading my way through a dense volume of English poetry - I can still picture the book, and the feel of it, so heavy it had to be propped up at the end of the couch. Later, in high school, I remember one of my English teachers, in encouraging me to strengthen my sense of rhythm in my poetry, telling me to read Shakespeare, and other poets, aloud, which is some of the best advice I've ever received. (I read all my own work aloud now too, to hear the faults in its rhythm.)
One of my earliest memories is of seeing a film of the ballet of Romeo and Juliet, at the Russian pavilion at the Brussel's World Fair, when I was three. I fell in love with the story, and with the play when I was old enough to read it.
So my point in these reminiscences is that although I've never been consciously aware of being influenced by Shakespeare when I'm writing, Shakespeare's work is so much part of my love of literature that it must have influenced what I do. And then, when I was writing Nim's Island, I did briefly consider naming the marine iguana Caliban - marine iguanas really are very ugly - before deciding that Fred was much more suitable for this particular one.
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