RhyPiBoMo 2016 Day 3 Agent Tricia Lawrence

We have an agent in the house!

Erin Murphy Lit Ag logo

        Today, we are fortunate enough to have an agent’s perspective on rhyme. Raise your hand if you’ve heard, “We don’t accept rhyming manuscripts.” or “We don’t publish rhyme.”

We all know that’s not true. Brilliant, singing rhyme is published every day and the children who listen to it love it. So why do they say not to write in rhyme?

Answer: shhhhhh….listen carefully…

“It’s a trick so that unprofessional writers won’t send stinky rhyming manuscripts.”

 Only the good stuff gets through, is published and blesses the laps of parents everywhere. Today’s guest blogger is here to share why this winning title is one such book.

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 I’m pleased to introduce

Agent Tricia Lawrence with

Erin Murphy Literary Agency

Tricia Lawrence

Agent Tricia Lawrence

Rhyme From Acquisition to Award

It’s the quintessential children’s book ideal. A sweet, rhyming story, sold in bookstores everywhere, something children adore and fall asleep to, quietly, orderly, and did I mention, quietly?

I hate to burst the bubble, but kids today, while still hankering for stories to fall asleep to every night, really want toe-tapping, dancing and singing, RHYME.

Enter Penny Parker Klostermann. Her words tip-tap-toe off the page and dance in your head. You can’t not nod along as you read her rhyming picture books, especially THERE WAS AN OLD DRAGON WHO SWALLOWED A KNIGHT.

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We all find ourselves nodding along to music and poetry and the cadence of a really great public speaker. It moves us, inspires us, and it looks SO EASY.

It’s SO NOT.

With Penny, what got my attention was her craft focus on the art of writing a picture book. She was always reading, reading, reading a ton of picture books. And she didn’t force her rhyme onto every single manuscript.

Very few writers START with rhyme. They start with a story, an idea, something that can propel a child to continue to turn the pages, to yell “Again!” when the parent turns the final page. And that’s when the decision to rhyme comes in: Does the story need rhyme? Does it rollick and jump off the page when rhyme is added or does the prose work?

Rhyme has to sing. It has to make you dance. Penny’s THERE WAS AN OLD DRAGON makes you feel the rhythm in your head all the way down to your toes. Rhyme added another amazing layer to DRAGON, so much so that it gleamed! Penny set it to song and sang it, over and over and over to herself, and then she sanded off any slow edges and tightened up any laborious stanzas.

Penny wasn’t just a picture book writer; she was also a poet. She inhaled poetry books. She listened to poetry, especially to cadence and stanza length.

And when Penny’s editor, Maria, saw her manuscript, she knew right away. She could feel the craft work in Penny’s manuscript. The melding of two incredible skill sets: the art of a picture book, the story world, the motivating idea and the world of poetry, the beautiful sound and feel of words and language.

Every time I read THERE WAS AN OLD DRAGON, I’m tapping my foot all over again.

Bio:

Tricia is the “Pacific Northwest branch” of EMLA—born and raised in Oregon, and now lives in Seattle. After 20 years of working as a developmental and production-based editor (from kids books to college textbooks, but mostly college textbooks), she joined the EMLA team in March 2011 as a social media strategist.

As agent, Tricia represents picture books/chapter books that look at the world in a unique and unusual way, with characters that are alive both on and off the page, and middle grade and young adult fiction and nonfiction that offers strong worldbuilding, wounded narrators, and stories that grab a reader and won’t let go.

Tricia loves hiking, camping out in the woods, and collecting rocks. She loves BBC America and anything British. She has way too many books and not enough bookshelves. You can find Tricia’s writing about blogging, Tweeting, Facebooking, and other social media topics (for authors and the publishing industry at large) here and here.

Thank You Tricia!

PLEASE like our guest bloggers on Facebook, follow them on Twitter, go to their websites and express your appreciation for their time and wisdom! Many have generously donated multiple prizes and this event would not be successful without their support, so please support them! Oh…and buy their books too!!

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To be eligible for today’s prize drawing by Random.org you must comment at the bottom of the page where it says “Leave A Reply” AND add your FIRST and LAST name in the comment. If I don’t have your name or how to contact you via email, you can’t win.

You must be a member of the RhyPiBoMo Facebook Group and if you haven’t officially registered, you are not eligible to win.

Please follow the pledge rules daily to get the most out of this challenge!

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The drawings will be done daily and announced on Saturday of each week.

 

 

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Day 2 Author Penny Parker Klostermann

The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award Winner!

 Rhyme Award Best In Rhyme

Last year the RhyPiBoMo Group decided to honor one rhyming picture book as the Best in Rhyme and several honor books. The RhyPiBoMo Facebook Group nominated books that fit the criteria discussed in this post, The Best in Rhyme Committee narrowed the list to the Top 20 RPBs and then voted. This idea bloomed into a book award ceremony and RPB Revolution Conference in New York City last December. Thanks to many people in the group who volunteered many hours to make this happen. Stay tuned for nominations for the 2016 Best in Rhyme Awards!

Here is a link to the award ceremony with more thanks to Julie Gribble of KidLitTV who hosted us, recorded the conference and made it available for us to sell. This recording made it possible for us to have the conference and will help us prepare funding for future conferences. Please check it out! It’s only $49.99 for over 4 hours of video! You get to submit to the presenting agents and editors included with your purchase! Here’s more information about the conference recording.

   RPB Reg Open Logo    KidLit TV blk-white logo

Today I am honored to introduce our winner of this esteemed award. Her book THERE WAS AN OLD DRAGON WHO SWALLOWED A KNIGHT is exactly what we should all aspire to write. It includes a brilliant story, lots of tension, a surprising ending and has wagon loads full of poetic techniques that make it a true winner.

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 I’m pleased to introduce

Author Penny Parker Klostermann

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Penny Parker Klostermann Image 2

Author Penny Parker Klostermann

 

You Are the Band: The RPB Best in Rhyme

Award Rubric

A whole month devoted the rhyming picture books! Yes! Great rhyming picture books are pure entertainment.

I know. I know. We’ve all read rhyming picture books that aren’t pure entertainment. But notice I said “great” rhyming picture books. These are the ones that bring it all. That means that the author has done their homework and has paid attention to all elements that belong in a rhyming picture book. This is not an easy feat. As I was thinking about this, it reminded me of a one-man band. Think of one person playing all those instruments and producing music that entertains. Every note . . . every beat . . . must be just right or the audience will lose interest.

That’s why the committee for the Rhyming Picture Book Revolution Conference created a comprehensive rubric to score the books that were nominated for the Best of Rhyme Award. They wanted to make sure the books they chose to receive an award were hitting every note . . . every beat.

Take a look at the elements on the rubric.

Story/Plot/Structure – Clear arc with beginning/middle/end. Incorporates conflict and satisfying resolution that ties back to beginning

Character – Well-developed, active character(s) with distinctive traits and flaws, and a clear want or problem.

Rhyme – Consistently clever rhyme (not predictable) including the use of several multi-syllabic rhyming words. No slant, inversions, or forced rhyme.

Rhyming Pattern – Consistent.

Meter – Consistent meter. No variation, except intended variation for emphasis.

Appeal – Universal kid appeal and includes something for the adult reader

Verbs – Filled with action-packed verbs.

Concept/Theme (Message or Take Away) – Completely original concept or fresh take on old concept. Subtle message kids can grasp, universally relatable. Excellent use of showing versus telling.

Language – Uses 3 or more different poetic techniques with multiple occurrences of the following: alliteration, assonance, consonance,, onomatopoeia, Internal rhyme, metaphor, simile, personification, and has original and clever use of words/phrases, beyond poetic techniques  – wordplay, puns, & phrases including those adults will appreciate/enjoy.

Sentence Fluency – Highly effective sentence length variation or intentional yet highly effective non-variation (by design). Sentence structure enhances the rhythm. Use of repetition is highly effective and purposeful. Overall, word choice results in consistent rhythm. Economical use of words.

To view the entire rubric with scoring criteria click here.

Notice that seven of the ten elements on the rubric have nothing to do with rhyme or meter. Rhyming picture books have to include all the elements in a non-rhyming picture book, plus perfect rhyme and meter. Wordsmith-ing alone will not cut it. Rhyme and meter may get some toes tapping, but it won’t bring readers back to your book if there isn’t a story.

Therein is the challenge. If you decide to take the challenge and write your story in rhyme, remember you are the band. You have to hit every beat, every note. You have to bring every element in the rubric to your story. Yes, it’s challenging. Yes, it’s hard. But in the end, if you hit every note . . . every beat, the music you make will draw readers from all around to hear your story. You will be the band!

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Bio:

Penny Parker Klostermann is the author of There Was an Old Dragon Who Swallowed a Knight (Random House Books for Young Readers, 2015) and the upcoming, A Cooked-Up Fairy Tale, (Random House, 2017). There Was an Old Dragon Who Swallowed a Knight is one of fifteen books on the 2015-2016 Sunshine State Young Readers Award Jr. List and was also named Best in Rhyme 2015 in conjunction with the Rhyming Picture Book Revolution Conference.

Penny loves all kinds of books, but especially loves very silly picture books that make her laugh. She has been known to hug her favorite picture books and seriously hopes that someday her books will gain huggable status too.

 

Facebook

Twitter

Pinterest

Thank You Penny!

PLEASE like our guest bloggers on Facebook, follow them on Twitter, go to their websites and express your appreciation for their time and wisdom! Many have generously donated multiple prizes and this event would not be successful without their support, so please support them! Oh…and buy their books too!!

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To be eligible for today’s prize drawing by Random.org you must comment at the bottom of the page where it says “Leave A Reply” AND add your FIRST and LAST name in the comment. If I don’t have your name or how to contact you via email, you can’t win.

You must be a member of the RhyPiBoMo Facebook Group and if you haven’t officially registered, you are not eligible to win.

Please follow the pledge rules daily to get the most out of this challenge!

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The drawings will be done daily and announced on Saturday of each week.

 

 

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Day 1 Tanya Anderson

Welcome to RhyPiBoMo 2016!

Can you believe it’s April? I am SO excited for this year’s event. Each year I think it can’t get any better and then…I am blessed that our wonderful guest bloggers have agreed to share their insight into how to write professional RPBs and what will get you noticed…and what NOT to do! PLEASE like them on Facebook, follow them on Twitter and go to their websites and express your appreciation for their time and wisdom! Many have generously donated multiple prizes and this event would not be successful without their support, so please support them! Oh…and buy their books too!!

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Calendar

Every year we honor an author of rhyme and poetry. This year’s honoree is Theodor Geisel aka Dr. Seuss. He is a man of many talents and we owe him our praise for creating such treasured books for children. The quote this year, “Why fit in when you were born to stand out!” is the perfect mantra for us rhymers. Let’s all take pride in our rhyming efforts and not let criticism of rhyme keep us from creating the books that children, parents and teachers treasure! But, to do it well means lots and lots and lots of time and work and rejection.

So, go…stand out!

I had the good fortune of meeting our first guest blogger about 15 years ago at an SCBWI conference in Indiana. She spoke to us about poetry and rhyme and even mentioned that she authored a biography about Ted. I still have a copy of that book in my office and I believe that was the moment I fell in love with writing rhyming manuscripts. So who better to begin our month of rhyme than Editor and Author Tanya Anderson!

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TanyaAnderson photo news sun

Author/Editor Tanya Anderson

 

A Tribute to Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss)

and Rhyme

Long before he hopped on Pop or put a hat on a cat, Ted Geisel was a success. He had had a happy childhood, was popular in high school, and graduated from Dartmouth College (with a major in English!), where he met his first wife, Helen. She is the one who noticed him doodling in class one day and told him, “You’re crazy to be a professor. What you really want to do is draw.” It was love at first sight.

Ted set himself up as a freelance writer and illustrator, hoping to make enough money to finally marry Helen and start their life together. He was a humor writer, and the odd illustrations of unrecognizable animal and trees became cartoons (think: James Thurber but bizarre). He submitted his work to New York publishers, hoping to get a paid gig or to sell his work outright. Rejections piled up. He fought discouragement by drawing more silly scenes, including some hysterically funny political cartoons. He sold his first work to Saturday Evening Post for $25 and signed it “Seuss.”

Dr. Seuss cartoon 1

From the National World War II Museum Archives

In 1927, Ted was hired as a staff writer at Judge magazine in New York City. He began using the name “Dr. Seuss” on a regular feature in that magazine. He also drew advertising cartoons for the publication—and that skill paid off in big ways. His silly-looking ads for Flit bug spray went far beyond one magazine, showing up on billboards, in newspapers, and in the subway. He made good money (even though the Great Depression had hurt so many), but something was still missing.

He played with words. He doodled and colored. The rhythms of his mother’s voice, from far back in his childhood when she read to him, were imbedded in his literary ears. Rhythm and rhyme were the hooks. In the summer of 1936, Ted and Helen were returning from a trip to Europe aboard a luxury liner. Unable to sleep, Ted went to the bar and listened. He heard it—the ship’s engines kept a rhythm, over and over again. It matched the beat of “’Twas the Night Before Christmas,” and Ted began writing: “And that is a story that no one can beat, and to think that I saw it on Mulberry Street.”

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From the extraordinarily surreal World War II editorial cartoons of Dr. Seuss

He finished the book six months later and started submitting it—personally—to children’s book publishers in NYC. The colorful palette and weird creatures filled the pages with creativity, but editors in New York didn’t agree. He was met with harsh criticism about the book being “too different” or “not teaching a moral.” Few picture books used rhyme back then. It seemed no one wanted to try something new. After the 27th rejection, Ted tucked his pages under his arm and started walking down Madison Avenue toward home. Then he heard someone call his name.

To think that I saw it on Mulberry Street

Mike McClintock, an old friend from Dartmouth, caught up with Ted and asked him what he was carrying. After Ted explained it was a children’s book manuscript and illustrations he intended to burn, Mike pointed at the building they were standing in front of. It was Vanguard Press, and Mike was an editor there. The two men went up the steps, showed the work to the publisher, and the rest, as they say, is history.

From Vanguard to Random House to becoming the president of the Beginner Books division there, Dr. Seuss broke old rules and opened the way for rhyming writers. His work at Random House brought in others who liked to rhyme, including Helen Palmer (his wife’s pseudonym), Jan and Stan Berenstain, P.D. Eastman, Robert Lopshire, Al Perkins, and others. (Seuss used the name “Theo LeSieg” for books he wrote but didn’t illustrate. “LeSieg” is “Geisel” spelled backwards.) Their books have sold (and continue to sell) millions of copies. Children have been delighted with the word play, the characters, the rhyme and rhythm for decades.

Learning about Ted Geisel as I researched his biography for Chelsea House made me fall in love with Dr. Seuss. I was a bit too old to have enjoyed his books as a child, but as a mother and a writer, I am grateful for his life, his talent, and his legacy. To me, it feels like this:

It’s okay to have fun,

To write stories that rhyme,

Because of a man

Who stands beyond time.

Whose books and weird art

Build a bridge in between

The things we imagine

And the things we have seen,

And a road with a future

Where young readers can meet

And to think that it started

On Mulberry Street.

—Tanya Anderson

P.S. Read all about him in Who Wrote That? Dr. Seuss (Theodor Geisel) by Tanya Anderson, Chelsea House/Infobase Books, 2011. He was a hilarious character, and you’ll love reading about this life.

 

Bio:

Tanya Anderson is an award-winning author and editor of books for young readers. She has worked for more than twenty years in various editorial functions for Pages Publishing Group, Guideposts for Teens, SRA/McGraw-Hill, Darby Creek Publishing, and School Street Media, her own business.

Anderson is the author of more than thirty books published in children’s and educational book markets. Her book, Tillie Pierce: Teen Eyewitness to the Battle of Gettysburg, is a narrative nonfiction book for young readers. It received excellent reviews, was a Junior Library Guild Selection, and won the 2014 IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award for Juvenile Nonfiction. Quindaro Press and Tanya are co-publishing the softcover edition of Tillie, coming out in May. Her next book, Gunpowder Girls: The True Stories of Three Civil War Tragedies will be available in September 2016.

Anderson lives in Springfield, Ohio, most of the year, but retreats to Palm Harbor, Florida, when it gets too cold. Her website is www.tanyaandersonbooks.com.

Tanya Anderson Book 2

Dr. Seuss (Theodor Geisel) (Who Wrote That?)

 

Tanya Anderson Book 1

TILLIE PIERCE: TEEN EYEWITNESS TO THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG

 

THANK YOU TANYA!

 

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To be eligible for today’s prize drawing by Random.org you must comment at the bottom of the page where it says “Leave A Reply” AND add your FIRST and LAST name in the comment. If I don’t have your name or how to contact you via email, you can’t win.

You must be a member of the RhyPiBoMo Facebook Group and if you haven’t officially registered, you are not eligible to win.

Please follow the pledge rules daily to get the most out of this challenge!

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The drawings will be done daily and announced on Saturday of each week.

 

 

2016 National Poetry Month Kidlitosphere Events Roundup

HAPPY NATIONAL POETRY MONTH! Did you know that National Poetry Month is “the largest literary celebration in the world, with tens of millions of readers, students, K-12 teachers, librarians, bookse…

Source: 2016 National Poetry Month Kidlitosphere Events Roundup

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Blogger Calendar

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Calendar

Thank you to all our fabulous authors, agents and editors who support what we do and have graciously agreed to share their knowledge with us! We are grateful!

This is the 3rd year for Rhyming Picture Book Month and I am humbled to see the support this event continues to receive. This idea of celebrating RPBs in 2013 started out small and now has blossomed into an annual event, a Best in Rhyme Award, a RPB Revolution Conference, the sale of our 2015 Conference Recording and a thriving Facebook Group of over 500 people!

  Rhyme Award Best In Rhyme      RPB Reg Open Logo

   Writing in Rhyme to WOW! class logo       Critique badge

I stay busy teaching my monthly Writing in Rhyme Class as well as doing Rhyming Manuscript Critiques. Last year was an exceptionally exciting and CRAZY year of firsts! This year, I vow to write more RPBs as my planning hat took over and stomped on my writing hat in 2015! I promised my very understanding and supportive agent that I would get my butt in the chair and my mind on writing…but I have had some time to plan this year’s shindig!

There are a few changes this year…As things have grown, I found a need to narrow the scope of the platform to only encompass rhyming picture books. So, this year, there will not be a poetry contest. Instead, I have added a Classroom Challenge where teachers and students see how many RPBs they can read in April.

 

The RhyPiBoMo 2016 Classroom Challenge

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Classroom Challenge Badge 2

If you know a pre-school – 5th grade teacher, please share this information. It is a simple project for the teacher and will put many, many RPBs in the hands of children!

There are two categories: Pre-school – 1st Grade and 2nd Grade – 5th Grade

The winning classrooms will win a 30 minute Skype visit with Author Lori Degman!

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Classroom Challenge Hat

We Love you Dr. Seuss!

The talented illustrator Tanja Bauerle is working on the RhyPiBoMo Badge that will be revealed very soon! This year’s honored writer is the esteemed Theodor Geisel! Who can deny his right to be celebrated and what a contribution he made to rhyming books and language development? He is our rhyme hero and has earned his spot in history. We salute you Dr. Seuss!

 

Rhyming Critique Groups

Don’t forget that we offer rhyming critique groups during RhyPiBoMo through the Facebook Group!

Dawn Young will again be setting up the groups and keeping them running through April. We hope you will stay together forever! It’s tough to find a rhyming critique group so make the most of it.

 

Registration runs March 20 – April 8th

For more information, see the Registration tab above. You must be registered to be eligible for daily prizes.

Please join our Facebook Group, as this is where you will get daily information and meet lots of other writers who support writing RPBs and each other! Stay tuned for the badge and the pledge that will be posted soon!

You will be asked to read 2 RPBs a day for participation in the event so start gathering your favorites now!

I’ll see ya in April!

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Save the Date

 

 

Monster Trouble

RhyPiBoMo 2016 Save the Date

Save the date for RhyPiBoMo 2016!
Don’t miss this event, for children’s writers, that celebrates rhyming picture books. Visit my website for daily blog posts by some pretty spectacular authors, agents and editors who will share tips on how to write professional rhyming manuscripts. Read and comment daily for weekly prizes and don’t forget to join our RhyPiBoMo Facebook Group for camaraderie, rhyming critique groups and rhyming parties, where we see how much you remember from the week’s blog posts and…we can only type in rhyme!
It’s zany-rhyming-mania and it’s coming soon!!
Watch for the calendar of bloggers as well as info about registration!

RPB full logo for blog

Our 2015 Best in Rhyme Award Ceremony last December was a great success and we are gearing up for nominations for 2016. As I mingled after the award ceremony that night, I met Lane Fredrickson, the author of MONSTER TROUBLE and a top 10 finalist! She kindly mentioned that somehow, I had missed posting the review of her book prior to the event…”What,” I said, as I shook my head. “I remember,  Annie Bailey wrote the review and I uploaded it into the blog.”
Well, yes and yes…but somehow, I never posted it. I promised Lane that I would share it! It has been sitting here quietly, waiting for its turn to shine.
So without further ado
I am proud to introduce

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MONSTER TROUBLE

Author: Lane Fredrickson

Illustrator: Michael Robertson

Publisher: Sterling Children’s Books

Review by Annie Bailey

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Winifred Schnitzel isn’t afraid of anything—not even monsters. In fact, she thinks they’re quite cute. But even cute monsters can get a little tiresome. Night after night they growl, belch and cause all sorts of monsterly mayhem, hoping they’ll finally give Winifred the spooks. But Winifred is fearless, and they only interrupt poor Winifred’s beauty sleep.

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Tired and fed up, Winifred decides she must get rid of the monsters once and for all.

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So Winifred constructs the Sticky-String, Small Monster Snare . . .

. . . which bursts when the large monsters show up first.

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What about stinky, Limberger cheese?

It turns out monsters find it especially tasty on bagels with fish-eyeball jelly.

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Enter the mother of all traps: “The Prickly Bum Chair!”

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But poor Winifred is so, so sleepy that she slips into a snooze without ever seeing her final creation in action. When she awakens to a menacing hisssss, sleep-dazed Winifred does the unthinkable . . . and discovers that there might be a way to outsmart the pesky monsters after all.

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Told in perfect rhyme and silky-smooth meter, this humorous, cleverly crafted tale is a perfect pick for your own little monster.

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Lane Fredrickson Ghiloni RhymeWeaver RhymeWeaver.com Watch Your Tongue Cecily Beasley Writing Children's stories Rhyme and Meter

Lane’s Website: Rhymeweaver

 My first picture book, Watch Your Tongue, Cecily Beasley, came out in September 2012. My second, MONSTER TROUBLE, came out in late 2015. When I initially decided to write a rhyming picture book, I wasn’t sure how to go about it, or what the rules were. I joined a critique group and SCBWI (The Society for Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators), took some poetry classes, went to workshops, and even got a degree in English along the way. A lot of people tried to discourage me from writing in rhyme.

If you’re considering writing a rhyming picture book, some people will tell you that editors don’t like them, and that they are difficult or impossible to sell, and that agents won’t represent picture book authors.

But mostly, people will tell you that you have to write “perfect” rhyme and meter to publish.  I wasn’t sure what “perfect” rhyme and meter were when I first heard this.

And there seemed to be a lot of conflicting opinions bouncing around about the elusive “perfect” rhyme and meter. It took a long time for me to realize that writing a picture book with rhyme and meter wasn’t impossible; there just wasn’t a really good resource that laid out all the details I needed to know in a way that was easy to understand.

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

 

This wonderful review was written by Annie Bailey,

a Best in Rhyme Committee member.

Thank you Annie!

Annie’s Website

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Interstellar Cinderella

Rhyme Award Best In Rhyme

The top 10 finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award have

been announced! The committee and I are thrilled to share reviews of each of these

wonderful rhyming picture books!

Please support these authors and illustrators by

purchasing their books this holiday season!

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The Top 10 RPB finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

The Announcement Video link

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KidLit TV blk-white logo

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These reviews are done by the Best in Rhyme Committee in no particular order. The winner and honor books will be named on December 4th in NYC in a live-streaming announcement from Julie Gribble’s KidLitTV Studio. We are so appreciative of Julie’s support of our event!

Thank you Julie!

RPB full logo for blog

I present

the 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

top 10 book reviews!

Watch for more reviews all month!

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Interstellar Cinderella

Authors: Deborah Underwood

Illustrator : Meg Hunt

Publisher: Chronicle Books

*Review by Angie Karcher

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Interstellar Cinderella is an asteroid of a rhyming picture book! It’s a futuristic take on our beloved Cinderella story…plus an atmosphere of rocket ships, gravity and galactic terminology.

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Did you know that interstellar Cinderella has her own tool box? Yes, she is a mechanic who repairs spaceships. But when she’s not mechanic-ing, she’s sweeping space-ial cinders and doing space chores.

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This futuristic interpretation is genius, as author Deborah Underwood and Illustrator Meg Hunt take us on a journey of an orphaned girl, dreaming of a brighter future. With brilliant meter and rhyming perfection, accompanied by lovely illustrations, this book is a must read!

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Interstellar Cinderella is just like any young girl, dreaming of love, romance and carburetors. She is gifted in the occupation of fixing things…especially broken spaceships.

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Once the Prince’s ship breaks down, it’s Cinderella to the rescue. He is memorized by her techy-side and able to fly away once she repairs his ship…if only he saw her face. That darn spacesuit helmet prevented a match made in heaven.

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Thankfully, she dropped her socket wrench. The prince searches the galaxy for the lady mega-mechanic who repaired his spaceship and warmed his heart.

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You must read this star-worthy book to see how this all ends,

but my vote is on true love.

This fractured fairy tale is a breath of fresh air as our protagonist is quite the feminist, career minded, yet willing to work for just the right…prince.

Grab this book before it floats off the shelves of every town

in every world of every galaxy!

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I urge you to find

INTERSTELLAR CINDERELLA

to read to your little space robots!

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About Deborah:

I grew up in Walla Walla, Washington. When I was little, I wanted to be an astronomer. (The bear in the photo is named Ursa Major, like the constellation.) Then I wanted to be a singer. Then I wanted to be a writer. Today my jobs are writing and singing. I guess two out of three’s not bad!

My dad was a math professor, and my mom taught English. My sister got all the math brains, but some of my mom’s word sense rubbed off on me, thank goodness.

I finally decided to write for kids. At first my stories were pretty awful, but I kept trying. They got better in time–but writing sure is a lot of work! Luckily, I have a bunch of great writing friends that help me. We read each other’s manuscripts and make suggestions. And whenever I say I’m going to get a job pasting labels on pianos because writing is too hard, they talk me out of it.

Deborah’s Website:

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

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Everybody Sleeps (But Not Fred)

Rhyme Award Best In Rhyme

The top 10 finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award have

been announced! The committee and I are thrilled to share reviews of each of these

wonderful rhyming picture books!

Please support these authors and illustrators by

purchasing their books this holiday season!

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The Top 10 RPB finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

The Announcement Video link

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KidLit TV blk-white logo

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These reviews are done by the Best in Rhyme Committee in no particular order. The winner and honor books will be named on December 4th in NYC in a live-streaming announcement from Julie Gribble’s KidLitTV Studio. We are so appreciative of Julie’s support of our event!

Thank you Julie!

RPB full logo for blog

I present

the 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

top 10 book reviews!

Watch for more reviews all month!

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Everybody Sleeps (but not Fred)

Author/illustrator: Josh Schneider

Publisher: Clarion Books Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2015

*Review by Suzy Leopold

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Many children have a nighttime routine that includes a bubble bath, dressing in favorite pajamas and brushing teeth before being tucked into bed. So, does Fred.

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From West to East and everyplace in-between everyone and everything must sleep when it is time for bed. In the jungle, the toucans, sloths are cockatoos are snoozing, snoring and dreaming.

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Fred is not snoozing, snoring and dreaming. Fred has more important things to do than sleep. He is busy consulting his lengthy list of things to-do. Fred’s list includes: jumping, hunting, shouting and more.

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Will reading bedtime stories to Fred help him to close his eyes and get some ZZZzzzs? Kids will delight in the “Warning! Close book softly or Fred will wake up . . . ” Shhh! Don’t make a peep.

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About Josh:

Josh Schneider is the Theodor Seuss Geisel Award-winning creator of Tales for Very Picky Eaters, as well as The Meanest Birthday Girl. His first book for Clarion, You’ll Be Sorry, was named “Book That Provides Best Ammunition to Parents Weary of Warning Their Kids About Socking Their Siblings” by Publishers Weekly magazine. He lives in Chicago, Illinois.

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Website

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

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This wonderful review was written by Suzy Leopold,

a Best in Rhyme Committee member.

Thank you Suzy!

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Lady Pancake and Sir French Toast

Rhyme Award Best In Rhyme

The top 10 finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award have

been announced! The committee and I are thrilled to share reviews of each of these

wonderful rhyming picture books!

Please support these authors and illustrators by

purchasing their books this holiday season!

*

The Top 10 RPB finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

The Announcement Video link

*

KidLit TV blk-white logo

*

These reviews are done by the Best in Rhyme Committee in no particular order. The winner and honor books will be named on December 4th in NYC in a live-streaming announcement from Julie Gribble’s KidLitTV Studio. We are so appreciative of Julie’s support of our event!

Thank you Julie!

RPB full logo for blog

I present

the 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

top 10 book reviews!

Watch for more reviews all month!

Lady Pancake and Sir French Toast

Author: Josh Funk

Illustrator : Brendan Kearney

Publisher: Sterling Children’s Books

*Review by Darlene Ivy

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Haven’t you always wanted to peek inside the refrigerator and witness the world that wakes when the door closes? Well, now you can! Join author Josh Funk and illustrator Brendon Kearney in the slightly-less-than-chivalrous wonderland of Lady Pancake & Sir French Toast.

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“Deep in the fridge and behind the green peas

way past the tofu and left of the cheese,

Up in a corner, and back by a roast,

sat Lady Pancake beside Sir French Toast.”

 

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            These leftover friends were as happy as two best friends can be until they heard the most distressing news – just a single drop of maple syrup was left. Just one drop!

            Without so much as a curtsy or a by your leave, the race was on! Who would savor the sweet taste of victory?

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            What an obstacle course! What a competition! What fast-paced storytelling with perfect meter and rhyme!

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            The rivals ran through the Broccoli Forest. They slogged up Potato Mash Mountain and slid down again. One rappelled down a rope of linguini. The other skied past the spinach and artichoke dip. They escaped the terror of the giant, bean avalanche. First, Lady Pancake was ahead. Then, Sir French Toast was in the lead.

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            Until finally –

“Battered and soggy, exhausted and crumbling,

too tired to push, they were limping and stumbling.

There stood the bottle of syrup at last.”

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            Who savored that last drop? You might be surprised. You’ll have to read the book to find out.

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            Then, to learn the real-life back story behind the book, check out an interview with Josh Funk at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-henry-sterry/josh-funk_b_8185874.html

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I urge you to find

Lady Pancake and Sir French Toast

to read to your little breakfast eaters!

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About Josh:

Josh Funk grew up in New England and studied Computer Science in school. Today, he still lives in New England and when not writing Java code or Python scripts, he drinks Java coffee and writes picture book manuscripts alongside his wife, children, and assorted pets & monsters.

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Josh’s Website

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

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This wonderful review was written by Darlene Ivy,

a Best in Rhyme Committee member.

Thank you Darlene!

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Stick and Stone

Rhyme Award Best In Rhyme

The top 10 finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award have

been announced! The committee and I are thrilled to share reviews of each of these

wonderful rhyming picture books!

Please support these authors and illustrators by

purchasing their books this holiday season!

*

The Top 10 RPB finalists for The 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

The Announcement Video link

*

KidLit TV blk-white logo

*

These reviews are done by the Best in Rhyme Committee in no particular order. The winner and honor books will be named on December 4th in NYC in a live-streaming announcement from Julie Gribble’s KidLitTV Studio. We are so appreciative of Julie’s support of our event!

Thank you Julie!

RPB full logo for blog

I present

the 2015 Best in Rhyme Award

top 10 book reviews!

Watch for more reviews all month!

 *

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STICK AND STONE

Author: Beth Ferry

Illustrator: Tom Lichtenheld

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

Review by Patricia Toht

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As a picture book writer, perhaps you’ve heard the advice to “leave room for the illustrator.” For a stellar example of how to do this, look no further than STICK AND STONE.

 

The main characters in the story are a stick and a stone. I repeat, a stick. A stone. Not exactly stock characters for a picture book. But in 152 words, author Beth Ferry Words manages to simply and compactly convey a tale of friendship and loyalty between these two characters. Illustrator Tom Lichtenheld expands the words with pictures heavy with the emotions of sadness, anger, worry, and happiness.

 

The opening begins:

Stick. Stone.

Lonely. Alone.

 

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The problem is clearly established through the words – Stick and Stone both need a friend. But study the illustrations to see how the pictures enhance the emotion. In the first spread, Stick and Stone are physically separated by white space on the page. Their names are at opposite ends of the spread, physically apart.

 

In the next illustration, not only are Stick and Stone in different locales at different hours, but they also are staring into the vastness of nature, which magnifies their isolation and smallness. Brilliant teamwork!

 

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Beth Ferry has carefully chosen her words. Despite the tiny word count, she has sprinkled in poetic techniques. A simple example is when Stick ends up in a puddle:

I love the alliteration of “Stick stuck” (as well as the upside-down “help!” in the illustration).

 

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My favorite bit of cleverness is when Stone is being bullied by Pinecone and Stick comes to the rescue:

 

“Vanish!” says Stick.

 

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The author did not choose “bug off” or “get lost,” or other options that might fit with the meter. “Vanish” is a magician’s word and sets the reader up for the sentence that follows.

 

His word does the trick.

 

Does the author mean this phrase as an idiom? Or has magic happened to make Pinecone go away? It’s up to the reader.

 

The end also delivers a satisfying twist, but I will let you discover that for yourself.

 

Pick up STICK AND STONE.

Read. Study. Enjoy!

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I urge you to find

Stick and Stone

to read to your little sticks and stones!

 

Fun Facts About Beth:

Lives just within reach of the beach in New Jersey

Mom to three not-so-small, but oh-so-great kids.

Represented by Elena Giovinazzo of Pippin Properties, Inc.

Loves finding turtles in her backyard.

Beth’s Favorite Things: lilacs, bulldogs, Halloween, reading and every shade of purple.Beth

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Beth’s Website

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

 

This wonderful review was written by Patricia Toht, a Best in Rhyme Committee member. Thank you Patty!

About Patricia:

Patricia Toht is a children’s author and poet. Her poetry has appeared in children’s magazines and anthologies. Frances Lincoln Books will publish her debut picture book, ALL ABOARD THE LONDON BUS, in spring 2017. PICK A PINE TREE by Walker Books arrives autumn 2017.

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