What’s New

  • The Republic of Childhood

    05/06/13
    pumpkin

    Just inside the cover of an 1895 book by Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin entitled The Republic of Childhood is a librarian’s note:  “Attention Patron:  This volume is too fragile for any future repair.” In the aftermath of recent shootings and bombings, it’s tempting to ask if the Republic of Childhood itself (that brief season of life when protective adults create
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  • Etched in Clay Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    04/22/13
    etched in clay_1

    Etched in Clay; The Life of Dave, Enslaved Potter and Poet by Andrea Cheng; illustrated with woodcuts by the author; Lee & Low, 2013.  143 pages; $17.95 (hardcover); reading level:  ages 10 and up. Born into slavery in 1801, Dave should have lived an invisible life and died unknown.  That he didn’t is due to an almost miraculous series of events.  His
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  • Writing Nonfiction (Two Views!)

    04/15/13
    Highlights Foundation Writer's Workshop - Writing

    It would seem that, when you do something as solitary as writing, you probably never meet other writers. But that’s not true. We writers meet each other all the time at book events, presentations, online…somehow we find one another. I’ve known children’s writer Andrea Cheng for quite a few years and when she asked me to collaborate on a project for
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  • Reid Hospital Goes to the Library!

    04/03/13
    Connie Speaks To the Children (Click to View Larger)

    According to the preschool set, MONSTERS ROCK!!! When a group of Reid Hospital physicians’ spouses were invited to bring their children to Morrisson-Reeves Library in Richmond, Indiana, for the morning, they created a monster craft, ate monster cupcakes, and listened to yours truly reading monster books. Those who participated (and you, If you’ve found your way to this blog) wouldn’t be surprised to learn
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  • USS Monitor Crewmembers Buried

    03/25/13
    Crewmen from Monitor Buried

    The year 2012 marked the 150th anniversary of both the launch and the sinking of USS Monitor. The news continues in 2013. On Friday, March 8, 151 years after they went down with the Monitor, two unknown sailors were buried with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery. In case you missed it, you can watch the full ceremony (courtesy
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  • Edith Wharton in the Magazine Popular Science

    03/11/13
    Click to View Larger

    I’ve gotten used to seeing Edith Wharton’s name all over the place but when I found out she’d popped up in the magazine Popular Science, I really had to check it out. Before I hit the link, I took some guesses on what her scientific connection might be. One possibility: She was intrigued by Charles Darwin and his hot new
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  • Julian Fellowes on Edith Wharton

    02/27/13
    Julian Fellowes on the Set of Downton Abbey (click to view larger)

    I know both Downton Abbey and Edith Wharton fans will appreciate this article from the Berkshire Eagle in which Julian Fellowes, the writer of Downton Abbey talks about how his late-in-life reading of two Wharton novels inspired first his failed writing venture, then Gosford Park and then, of course, Downton Abbey. “She observes but she does not judge…” is Fellowes’
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  • Win a Complimentary Manuscript Critique by Connie!

    02/27/13
    manuscript_250px

    I’m offering a free manuscript critique of a picture book or up to 3,000 words of a book for older readers. To be eligible to win this opportunity, simply sign up to receive my enewsletter and very occasional communications for writers and readers. Please share this opportunity with writers that you know! A winner to be selected on March 31st.
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  • Anatomy of Nonfiction

    02/27/13
    Anatomy of Nonfiction

    If you click on the “Resources” tab on the home page of my website, you’ll find all kinds of helpful information I’ve gathered (and continue to gather!) for writers, readers, and educators. The most recent addition is a blog by Peggy Thomas called Anatomy of Nonfiction: Writing True Stories for Children.  A  wonderful nonfiction writer herself, Peggy is also the daughter of longtime
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  • Highlights for Children and Me

    02/11/13
    Boyds Mills, The Small Cabins

    Late on a Saturday night a few weeks ago, a writer friend and I arrived at the Boyds Mills, Pennsylvania, homestead belonging to the family that started, and still publishes, the venerable magazine Highlights for Children. The editor, Kent Brown, and his family have been intertwined with the magazine for three generations and my writing life seems to have been
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  • Revolutionary Friends – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    02/04/13
    Revolutionary Friends

    Revolutionary Friends; General George Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette by Selene Castrovilla; illustrated by Drazen Kozjan; Calkins Creek, 2013.  40 pages; $16.95 (hardcover); reading level:  ages 7-12. The story of the reserved George Washington’s initially reluctant friendship with the young French officer whose heart “enlisted” in the American struggle for independence from Britain, is told in a spare, sprightly
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  • Elizabeth Starr Academy School Visit

    01/28/13
    Elizabeth Starr Academy

    If you think that national school standards are creating cookie-cutter schools, I wish you could have tagged along with me on my last school visit! The Elizabeth Starr Academy, which I visited for Author Day along with Josh Brown, Diana Medler, Randy Wisehart, and Natalie Goeke Proudfoot, has created a “Discovery Zone”: a micro-society with officers, a common council, and
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  • The Doorway to High Society

    01/21/13
    tophat

    In Edith Wharton’s Gilded Age New York, the new-money people were storming the gates of High Society and the Old Guard (people of birth, background, and breeding) were making a vain attempt to keep those gates firmly closed.  Today, Society is open to all comers!  The only requirement to entry is the desire to become immersed in a particular subject
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  • What Writers Do Right

    01/14/13
    Writing

    My eighth-grade English teacher was named Mrs. Crisick. She seemed like any old  teacher way back then but I know, in remembering bits and pieces from her class, that she was extraordinary. Once, when we were assigned to write a story, she stood in front of the class with mine in her hand and said she wanted to read a wonderful sentence
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  • Diana Morón Meets Edith Wharton

    01/07/13
    Click to View Larger

    When I wrote The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton, I was hoping the book would be discovered by high school teachers and used to introduce a new generation of readers to Edith Wharton. You can imagine my delight when Diana Morón, a sophomore at Porterville High School in Porterville, California, introduced herself to me by e-mail last November and asked
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  • Ericsson and da Vinci – A Conversation Across Time

    12/31/12
    Leonardo da Vinci Ship with Rotator (click to view larger)

    A group of Italian artisans (Niccolai Teknoart SNC) has undertaken a marvelous project: using the drawings of Leonardo da Vinci to create models of the very machines da Vinci imagined. When I attended one of their exhibits at the Denver Pavilions (which runs through January 31, 2013) I was struck by how much da Vinci had in common with the
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  • The Year of the Book – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    12/22/12
    Click To View Larger

    The Year of the Book by Andrea Cheng; illustrated by Abigail Halpin; Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012. 148 pages; $15.99 (hardcover); reading level: ages 7-11. Anna Wang is just beginning fourth grade and the word of the week is “perseverance.”  “It’s when you don’t give up,” her best friend, Laura, tells the class.  Both girls will learn, over the course of
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  • Build a Book Christmas Tree

    12/06/12
    Click to View Larger

    Of course I’m behind on my shopping, my Christmas cards, etc. and of course I have no time to spare so of course, when a friend sent me a link to a site where people were building Book Christmas Trees I just had to stop everything I was behind on and build one of my own. Books came down from
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  • Mom, It’s My First Day of Kindergarten! – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    11/19/12
    Click Here To Purchase This Book From The Blue Marble Children's Bookstore

    Mom, It’s My First Day of Kindergarten! Written and illustrated by Hyewon Yum; Frances Foster Books/Farrar Straus Giroux, 2012. 32 pages; $16.99 (hardback); ages 4-6. The five-year-old hero of this tale is well-adjusted, brimming with energy, and ready for his first day of kindergarten. His mom? Well…not so much. As the illustrations (literally!) make clear, she feels small and blue.
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  • An Encore for Captain Ericsson – Now in Paperback!

    10/25/12
    Captain Ericson

    When both the Mariner’s Museum in Newport News, Virgina and the John Ericsson Society let me know they were having trouble finding copies of my out-of-print picture book, Thank You Very Much, Captain Ericsson!, I decided to spring into action.  With permission from Holiday House, the original publisher, and Andrew Glass, the illustrator, I started a company and created a
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  • Connie to Read at Morrisson-Reeves Library on November 3rd

    10/25/12
    Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    Morrisson-Reeves Library and K-Ready present a Preschool Reading Open House Saturday, Nov. 3rd from 10:00 am – Noon Morrisson-Reeves Library 80 North 6th Street Richmond, Indiana You’ll enjoy storytimes with… Local Children’s Author, Connie Wooldridge Pam Hancock, Amigos (reading in Spanish) Kathy Campbell and Holly The Therapy Dog >>  View the Flyer

  • Thank You Very Much, Captain Ericsson – Coming in Paperback & Video!

    07/25/12
    Click Here To View "Thank you Very Much Captain Ericsson!"

    About the Video Soon to be available on the website: A reading of Thank You Very Much, Captain Ericsson! (by yours truly!) in its entirety, complete with the original illustrations by Andrew Glass. This should be a great resource for you teachers doing a Civil War unit OR for parents/grandparents of 7-10-year-olds. About the Paperback As stated, a paperback version of Thank
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  • Author Tip: Importance of Structure in Nonfiction

    07/25/12
    the-immortal-life-of-henrietta-lacks

    I’ve just finished reading Rebecca Skloot’s The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, a terrific example of creative nonfiction. Check out this link for some great behind-the-scenes information on the importance of structure in a nonfiction piece and on how Skloot decided to include herself in the very story she was researching. >> See My “Just For Writers” Blog

  • Teacher Resources & Lesson Plans Available For “Just Fine the Way They Are”

    07/25/12
    Click Here To View "Just Fine the Way They Are"

    Since school will be starting soon, educators and parents who would like to engage their children in some fun learning activities can download lesson plans that accompany Just Fine The Way They Are; From Dirt Roads to Rail Roads to Interstates. Developed by two elementary educators who are also adjunct professors in the Department of Education at Earlham College, the
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  • The National Road Brings the Historic Road Conference to Indianapolis

    07/25/12
    Click Here To View "Just Fine the Way They Are"

    The national non-profit group Historic Roads is holding their annual conference on September 20-22, in Indianapolis, Indiana. Dedicated to identifying, preserving and managing our nation’s historic roads and scenic byways, Indy was specifically chosen because of the region’s unique transportation history, which includes the Historic National Road. Read more about the work of this important group and the conference. >>
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  • Get a Chance to Win a Signed Copy of Just Fine The Way They Are

    07/07/12
    Just Fine the Way They Are

    To be eligible you must be subscribed to my mailing list. The winner will be randomly selected on July 31, 2012.   Details In Celebration of Audiobook Month in June we’re giving away a signed copy of Just Fine The Way They Are, which is now available in school and local libraries on CD and cassette thanks to Recorded Books. To participate, please sign up
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  • National Road Yard Sale

    05/30/12
    Just Fine the Way They Are

    Beginning on May 30 and running through the early part of June, folks will be setting up shop along the National Road (US 40) and creating one of the longest yard sales going:  from Baltimore to St. Louis!  For 9 years now, beginning on the Wednesday following Memorial Day, churches, museums, stores, and plain old ordinary people have been selling
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  • Visit to Northwest Elementary School

    05/17/12
    Northwest Elementary

    The drive to McDermott, Ohio winds through the greenest, most idyllic countryside you’ll find anywhere.  Northwest Elementary School sits 5 miles off of US-23 and is home to around 800 K-5 students.  A step inside the front door brought me into a high-energy zone:  several parents in the office, classes of students filing through the halls…the next few hours would
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  • More Letters From Edith!

    05/09/12
    Connie Speaking at "The Mount"

    Just as my Edith Wharton biography was going to press, a stash of letters from Edith to her governess (and later secretary) was discovered.  How can I get my hands on those? I wondered.  The answer wasn’t long in coming.  In April of 2011, when I spoke at The Mount, I met Irene Goldman-Price who was hard at work editing
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  • Jane Thurmer Wins a Signed Copy of “The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton”

    05/09/12
    View "The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton"

    Congratulations to Jane Thurmer, the winner of our March Women’s History Month give-away!  Jane will receive a signed copy of The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton (Clarion 2010), Connie’s YA biography about the iconic writer who would be 150 years-old this year!  Thank you, Jane, and everyone who entered.

  • Writer’s Retreat

    04/14/12
    Highlights Foundation Writer's Workshop

    In February, I drove east for eleven hours, through Ohio and the very mountains of Pennsylvania I used to call home, to the town of Honesdale, Pennsylvania. I turned left onto the property of the family that created the magazine Highlights for Children and pulled up to a small cabin with two twin beds, a shower, a small refrigerator and
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  • Connie To Speak at Northwest Elementary School in McDermott, Ohio on May 11, 2012

    04/14/12
    Northwest Elementary Library

    Connie will be visiting the students at Northwest Elementary School in McDermott, Ohio, on Friday, May 11. She will meet with students in grades K through 5th at the school’s library. Librarian Alyssa Bach-Enz heard Connie speak at the Appalachian Conference at Shawnee State University and invited the author to visit her school. “We want students to love reading!,” she
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  • Just Check the Monitor’s Manifest!

    03/19/12
    Click Here To View "Thank you Very Much Captain Ericsson!"

    This month marks the 150th anniversary of the sinking of the USS Monitor back in 1862, less than a year after its launch.  As the most recent newsletter of the John Ericsson Society New York (JESNY) points out, the Monitor had a short life but left a long legacy, with Monitor class vessels actively deployed as late as World War
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  • Win a Signed Copy of “The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton”!

    03/07/12
    View "The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton"

    You can win a signed copy of  ”The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton” just by liking Connie’s Facebook page. It’s March and in the spirit of Women’s History Month and this year’s theme – Women’s Education, Women’s Empowerment – I am giving away a signed copy of The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton (Clarion 2010). 2012 is also the 150th anniversary of Edith’s
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  • Leif Brisfjord Won a Signed Copy of “When Esther Morris Headed West”!

    03/07/12
    Leif Brisfjord Winner of the "When Esther Morris Headed West" Promotion

    Congratulations to Leif Brisfjord, the winner of our February give-away, a signed copy of Connie’s book about the first female US judge, When Esther Morris Headed West (Holiday House) by “liking” Connie’s Facebook page. Leif is President of the John Ericsson Society in New York City. Ericsson was the inventor of the ironclad ship the USS Monitor and the subject
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  • A Visit to St. Paul’s School

    02/29/12
    Click to go to St. Paul's Website

    Late on a February Tuesday morning, I packed a pile of books and papers into the back of my car and drove south and then east along some winding Indiana roads that led me further and further into the country. An hour and fifteen minutes later, I arrived at one of the most charming little schools I think I’ve ever
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  • The Elijah Door – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    02/21/12
    Click Here To Purchase This Book From The Blue Marble Children's Bookstore

    The Elijah Door; A Passover Tale Written by Linda Leopold Strauss; illustrated by Alexi Natchev; Holiday House, 2012.  32 pages; $16.95 (hardcover); reading level:  ages 6-10. Long ago, in a small village that was “sometimes Poland and sometimes Russia,” the Lippas and the Galinskys lived in “side-by-side houses.”  They were fast friends whose children, Rachel Galinsky and David Lippa, would
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  • A Late Arrival at Downton Abbey

    02/17/12
    Downton Abbey

    I confess. I arrived late to the Downton Abbey party. When season one began I was intrigued, but Sunday nights didn’t work for me. Then everyone was watching it and my contrarian instincts kicked in: Who wants to watch what everybody’s watching? When season two began I told myself I didn’t want to jump in to the thing midstream. And
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  • Connie Wins Award at The London Book Festival!

    02/10/12
    Grosvenor House

    On January 26, 2012, Connie accepted an award at The London Book Festival for Best Biography for The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton, two days after Edith’s 150th birthday. The 2011 London Book Festival Awards dinner was held at Grosvenor House, London – formerly the estate of the Earl of Grosvenor (1732), renovated into a luxury hotel in 1927.

  • Tales of the London Book Festival and John Ericsson Events

    02/10/12
    Connie and the Brass

    If you want to find characters for a novel, there’s no better place to look than a writer’s event.  Since the January 26 awards dinner for the London Book Festival was an international gathering the “characters” were even more colorful:  A former Yugoslavian who spoke very little English, a tall-tale teller from Montana, a charming widow from South Africa, a
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  • Win a Signed Copy of When Esther Morris Headed West!

    01/18/12

    You can win a signed copy of When Esther Morris Headed West! just by liking Connie’s Facebook page. 2012 is a big year for politics and in honor of Esther Morris, the first female judge in the United States, I’m giving away a signed copy of my book When Esther Morris Headed West: Women, Wyoming and the Right to Vote (Holiday House 2001), illustrated
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  • Happy 150th Birthday, Edith Wharton!

    01/18/12

    A 150th birthday is cause for celebration – and not just for one day! The Mount will be commemorating Edith Wharton’s 150th birthday throughout 2012 and you’ll want to keep an eye on events as they’re posted. While most people are impressed with Edith Wharton’s intelligence, it’s her boundless energy that continues to stun me. I could hardly keep up
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  • Where’s Walrus? – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    01/16/12

    Where’s Walrus? Written and illustrated by Stephen Savage; Scholastic Press, 2011.32 pages; $16.99 (hardback); ages 2-5. The gates to the zoo are open but, alas, there are no visitors. While the zookeepersnoozes, walrus sneaks away. In wordless two-page spreads, walrus eludes thezookeeper (belatedly awake) by donning various hats and blending in with a statue ona fountain, some workmen, some painters
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  • Preschool Day Hooray! – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    01/13/12

    Preschool Day Hooray! Written by Linda Leopold Strauss; illustrated by Hiroe Nakata; Cartwheel Books/Scholastic, 2010.  22 pages; $8.99 (hardback); ages 2-5. A simple, rhyming text follows a little boy through a day at preschool from the rush to get there (“Tick-tock clock/Makes Mommy scoot”), to various activities (“Painty hands and/Gooey glue”), to a tumble on the playground (“Rainbow Band-Aid,/No more
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  • Where’s My T-R-U-C-K? – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    12/22/11

      Where’s My T-R-U-C-K? by Karen Beaumont; illustrated by David Catrow; Dial Books for Young Readers, 2011.  32 pages; $16.99; reading level:  ages 4-7. When Tommy loses his (don’t say the word or you’ll set him off!) t-r-u-c-k, the whole family’s day goes haywire.  Tommy refuses help from Mom, Dad, sister, brother, and Grandma:  “I don’t want jeeps or cars
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  • Mr. Mosquito Put on His Tuxedo – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    12/22/11

    Mr. Mosquito Put on His Tuxedo by Barbara Olenyik Morrow; illustrated by Ponder Goembel; Holiday House, 2009. $16.95; reading level: ages 6-9. When Mr. Mosquito puts on his tuxedo, arrives at a ball hosted by Queen Bee, and greets the other guests (gnats, lice, and fleas to name a few) he never suspects his particular talent will make him a
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  • Postscript to Just Fine the Way They Are

    12/22/11

    You might think that, when a book is published, the story it tells is finished. Not true! In the final illustration for the picture book Just Fine the Way They Are, Richard Walz reaches into a mythical future to imagine what a post-automobile era might look like. He envisions a jet-pack like invention – a personal flying machine – that
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  • Just For You Teachers

    12/02/11

    When I asked two educators to create lesson plans for Just Fine the Way They Are, I had no idea how far the term “lesson plan” had evolved since my days as a first grade teacher back in the 1970s. The “Social Studies/Transportation” resources they have written for home-school and classroom teachers are formatted just like the “Writer’s Craft” and
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  • Book Signing – Indiana History Society’s 9th Annual Holiday Author Fair

    11/27/11

    What: Book Signing – Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana History Center, Indianapolis, IN Location: Indiana Historical Society’s Holiday Author Fair 9th Annual Holiday Author Fair December 3, 2011 – 12:00pm – 4:00 p.m. Connie will be one of the more than 60 authors featured at the Holiday Author Fair. She will also be a guest on Nelson Price’s radio show
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  • The Brave New World of Book Reviews

    11/14/11

    Many times I’ve compared this new world of websites, social media, blogging and internet radio to the Wild West! One new force in the book world is online book reviews, many of which are written by “MommyBloggers,” literature bloggers and online publications. I want to thank the many folks who are reading and reviewing Just Fine the Way They Are
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  • “Loud Voices”

    11/14/11

    Lucretia Jones could not have had an easy time raising her daughter Edith. She was a woman of average intelligence and superficial interests suddenly confronted by a child whose brilliance was apparent from the get-go. She probably tried valiantly to maintain her maternal authority and, if her daughter’s claim that pleasing her mother and pleasing God were at the top
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  • Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes – Reviewed by Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge

    11/10/11

    Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes by Mem Fox; illustrated by Helen Oxenbury; Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2008. 32 pages; $16.99 hardcover; $11.99 oversized boardbook format; reading level: ages 2-5. Fox’s spare, rhyming text spotlights pairs of babies from around the world, connected by the refrain, “And both of these babies, as everyone knows, had ten little fingers and ten
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  • Maggie’s Monkeys – Reviewed by Connie Norhielm Wooldridge

    11/10/11

    Maggie’s Monkeys by Linda Sanders-Wells; illustrated by Abby Carter; Candlewick Press, 2009. 32 pages; $16.99; reading level: ages 4-7. Being the older brother of an imaginative little sister can be a trial – especially when her pink monkeys take up residence in the refrigerator and only Older Brother seems to know they’re not real. Dad tacks a DO NOT DISTURB
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  • Connie Interviewed by Children’s Author and Radio Host Renee Hand

    11/07/11

    Connie was interviewed Live by Renee Hand who is a children’s author and radio host on BlogTalkRadio.com.  The interview was recorded at 2pm eastern on Wednesday, November 7th. Connie talks about her latest book, Just Fine the Way They Are. > Renee’s Review of Just Fine the Way They Are Listen to internet radio with storiesfromunknownauthors on Blog Talk Radio

  • Jack is Back!

    10/28/11

    You just can’t keep a bad man down.  Connected, as he is to Halloween (ever wonder where the term “jack-o-lantern” came from?), October is Wicked Jack’s favorite month and he was invited back to Indiana by the Richmond Symphony Orchestra.  What were they thinking???  Aren’t symphonies stuffy organizations?? Evidently not!  Five woodwind players from the orchestra were brave enough to
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  • Esther Morris Gets Some Company

    10/10/11

    “If you visit Statuary Hall in the United States Capitol,” I observe, in the Author’s Note to When Esther Morris Headed West, (Holiday House, 2001) “you’ll see fifty statues, one from each state, standing in a circle.  Forty-nine of them are men.  The fiftieth is Esther Morris…” That changed in 2009:  Helen Keller, representing Alabama, joined Esther as the second
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  • On the Road

    10/03/11

    One of the joys of writing nonfiction is that your books take you places in the research phase and take you places again when people start finding out what you’ve written and want you to come and talk to them.  So I was on the road or, more precisely, on The Road last weekend. Just Fine the Way They Are
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  • The Good Company of Story

    09/12/11

    There’s a lovely sculpture by Victor Issa in the Frederic Meijer Gardens in Grand Rapids, Michigan.  It’s called “Grandpa, the Storyteller” and it captures for me the essence of story:  Story connects, it communicates across time and generations.  As the novelist Graham Smith put it, “As long as there’s a story, it’s all right.” For me, a story is also
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  • Shakespeare

    08/29/11

    I’m just home from the Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Ontario, reading through the “Twelfth Night,” and trying to pick up anything I might have missed when I saw it on stage.  Shakespeare is a challenge and there’s no getting to the bottom of any of his plays.  There’s no last word on what the bard was trying to say.  There’s
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  • New Release: Just Fine The Way They Are

    08/23/11

    In this new historical non-fiction picture book children’s author Connie Nordhielm Wooldridge and artist Richard Walz worked closely with experts and firsthand accounts to tell a “just fine and accurate” illustrated story about how dirt roads of the 1800s turned into the U.S. highway system of today. >>  Official Press Release Just Fine The Way They Are: From Dirt Roads
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  • Connie To Be Interviewed by Barbara Gray on “Around Cincinnati”

    08/23/11

    Connie’s interview with Barbara Gray will air on Sunday, September 4. The program is “Around Cincinnati,” and will air between 7-8 p.m. on WVXU 91.7 FM and WMUB 88.5 FM. It can also be heard online at wvxu.org and wmub.org. When: Sunday September 4, 2011  – 7-8pm Listen on the Radio: WVXU 91.7 FM and WMUB 88.5 FM, Cincinnati, OH
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  • Ship Ahoy!

    08/22/11

    A good illustrator will go to great lengths to make sure what s/he draws is accurate and matches the words in the text.  Andrew Glass, who illustrated Thank You Very Much, Captain Ericsson! (my picture book about the inventor of the Civil War ironclad ship the Monitor) had a particular problem: the Monitor was at the bottom of the ocean
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  • Come For a Ride?

    08/16/11

    As the third set of lesson plans for Just Fine the Way They Are (“Writer’s Craft”) is posted and ready for you teachers out there to download, I realize how much I like the illustration my graphic designer chose for the “button” that clicks you to those lesson plans:  A car in motion…a car obviously on its way somewhere…a car
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  • Celebrate!

    08/01/11

    I started thinking about The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton in 2001. It was published in 2010. It seemed to me that, when it officially hit the bookstores, a celebration was called for. First, I alerted my “staff” (a.k.a., the special events committee of the Richmond Symphony Orchestra from whom Carl and I had purchased a catered event at a
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  • Connie Wooldridge To Appear On ‘The Sounds of the Symphony’

    08/01/11

    Show: ‘The Sounds of the Symphony’ with Host Marci Asher-Whalen on Whitewater Community Television – Trailer Description: A new ‘The Sounds of the Symphony’ with Host Marci Asher-Whalen will air Monday, August 1 at 8:30PM on WETV, channel 20. This month’s guest will be Amy Noe & Connie Wooldridge. Start Time: 8:30pm Date: 2011-08-01 We will post Connie’s segment here
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  • If Kids Can’t Read

    07/25/11

    If kids can’t read, this writer is out of a job. Which is why this writer was up bright and early last Friday morning to greet 100 students who, at the end of their third grade year, were not reading at grade level. If kids can’t read by the end of their third grade year, there is a high probability
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  • Serious Research

    07/14/11

    Writing for children often means doing serious research.  I brought my husband along on a research trip just last weekend. I carefully observed two little boys, one aged two, the other aged four. I observed as they woke from their naps, the older boy dapper and ready to meet the world, the younger temporarily speechless with hair looking like someone
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  • Fighting for Democracy in the Bagel Shop

    07/05/11

    My assignment: An article on the Development of Democracy covering ancient Greece, ancient Rome, and the years surrounding the Revolutionary War in the U.S. Length: 1400 words First draft delivery date: Four weeks I commandeer my usual table at the Fifth Street Bagel Shop and set to work.  I start with the ancient Greeks to whom I’ve alloted 600 words. 
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  • Twenty Years

    06/27/11

    Twenty years ago, my husband and I, our four children, and our basset hound, Wobegon closed the door to our house in Philipsburg, Pennsylvania for the very last time and drove to our new home in Richmond, Indiana.  I was sporting a full leg cast (a skating accident…don’t ask!) so I had to sit in the back with my leg
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  • Backyard Stories

    06/20/11

    In 2004, I signed up for a Highlights Foundation Workshop on writing nonfiction and I grumbled silently for weeks before I set out for Honesdale, PA. The workshop leader, editor Carolyn Yoder, had asked each of us to bring a nonfiction piece about something “in our own backyard.” Up until then I had written about Greece and Rome and Korea
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  • Tree Calculations

    06/13/11

    When I was ten years old, I climbed a tree with my best friend every day of the summer. Its lower branches (all seven of them) began spreading within a foot or two of the the ground and each of them was thicker than the circumference of the two of us when we hugged each other.  The branches grew in
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  • Connie Wooldridge Will Speak to the National Stanley Family Association

    06/06/11

    When: Saturday June 25, 2011 Location: Earlham College – 801 National Road West, Richmond, Indiana 47374 Event Description: National Stanley Family Reunion – You are welcome to a weekend of Stanley family fellowship, entertainment, history and interesting family stories and historical sites. Topic: Saturday Evening: “The Story Behind the Stories” by Connie Wooldridge About the Reunion: “Back Home Again in
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  • Up and Coming Writers

    06/06/11

    Those of us involved with books – writers, editors, librarians, teachers – worry a lot about the whole reading and writing process.  Will there be people in the next generation willing to read challenging literature?  Will there be people in the next generation who can write articulately? I can name one for sure.  She is Rachel Baumgarten, a high school
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  • Say Thank You

    05/31/11

    Anyone out there who thinks saying “thank you” is a lost art should visit an elementary school – any elementary school – and give a presentation. In response to my talk to the 3rd and 4th graders at Crestdale Elementary School last week, I received the most colorful, creative, effusive thank you notes ever: I really like your book (Just
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  • A Green Truck

    05/23/11

    When I traveled out to Wyoming back in 1998 to do research for When Esther Morris Headed West, I was stunned when I got off the plane in Cheyenne.  It was so unlike anyplace I had ever been I thought I might have landed on the moon. I walked across a brief stretch of tarmac into the terminal and found
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  • Arguing With Friends

    05/19/11

    I met one of my oldest friends in Athens where we both attended a year-long college program. Together we studied the architecture of the Parthenon, flew to Cairo and rode camels, and spent endless hours deciding which Greek island we would sail to next. When the year came to an end, she departed for her home in Los Angeles a
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  • I Don’t Talk – I Just Write

    05/09/11

    Here’s something I didn’t consider before I got into this writing business:  As soon as you’ve published something, various groups start wanting you to talk to them.  My first invitation came from one of my sons’ classroom teachers.  What I (terrified!) wanted to say was:  “I don’t talk – I just write.”  What fell out of m mouth instead was,
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  • Edith Wharton…Pleased

    05/02/11

    Connie & Emily Tarjick, poet Edith Wharton would have been enormously pleased at the event that took place at her former home – The Mount – on Saturday, April 29. She would have been pleased with the guests: aspiring high school writers who participated in the Edith Wharton Writing Contest, families and friends, published authors, and people from near and
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  • Mean Girls

    04/25/11

    There were some mean girls in my fifth grade class but I wasn’t one of them.  I was a nice girl and I had nice girl friends.  Four of us nice girls had formed a group to work on a school project and we had divided up all the tasks and figured out how we were going to get the
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  • Translating

    04/18/11

    The biography that first introduced me to Edith Wharton was Shari Benstock’s  No Gifts From Chance (1994).  From there, I worked my way back to R.W.B. Lewis’ Edith Wharton; A Biography (1975) and then forward to Hermione Lee’s Edith Wharton (2007).  By the time I’d devoured these three books I was grabbing anyone I met by the lapels and insisting
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  • Fairy Tale

    04/18/11

    I taught first grade at an English-speaking school for foreigners in Seoul from 1975-1977.  Korea was a poor country at that time and the walk each morning from my small, Korean-style house to Seoul Foreign School was dusty and colorless.  Animal carts and bicycles pulling heavy loads shared the road with cars and it was hard to find even a
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  • A Place to Write

    04/11/11

    Here’s some advice I received years ago that I’ll pass along to you: Never let yourself get tied to one specific place where you write. It’s much better to be able to write anywhere. Here’s the truth about how carefully I followed have that particular advice: My absolute favorite place to write is the Bagel Shop on Fifth Street here
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  • Program at Helen Berube Teen Parent Program

    04/09/11

    April 29, 2011 10:30 AM – 11:30 AM Helen Berube Teen Parent Program School Near The Mount (Edith’s Home in Lenox, Massachusetts), Helen Berube Teen Parent Program students participate in the annual “Edith Wharton Writing Competition.”

  • Program at Miss Halls School

    04/09/11

    April 29, 2011 12:35 PM – 1:45 PM Miss Halls School School Near The Mount (Edith’s Home in Lenox, Massachusetts), Miss Halls School students participate in the annual “Edith Wharton Writing Competition.”

  • Thinking Hard

    04/04/11

    At an early age, I came to the notion that there was something to be understood in the world out there and that it would take some hard thinking to get to it. I did my first thinking on a wooden rocking horse with metal springs.  Things to think about would pile up, I’d climb on my horse, think them
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  • A Real Writer

    03/28/11

    It’s 1990, I’ve just had my first few stories published in Highlights for Children and Cricket, and I’m wondering if I’m a Real Writer now. The editor of a Cricket story about the legendary King Canute, who ordered the tide not to come in, is intrigued about a plaque in Southampton, England commemorating the event.  It was mentioned in the
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  • The Library

    03/28/11

    When I was in elementary school, going to the library once a week ranked even above gym class as my favorite thing to do.  My librarian’s name was Mrs. Southward.  She had us list the names of each book we checked out on a small, white sheet of paper.  The first thing she did when we came into the library
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  • Broken

    03/14/11

    When our third child Sean was growing up, he liked to know how things work, which my husband and I tried to encourage even when things got dangerous or destructive.  Stellar parents have their bad days, however, and when Sean was in middle school and I found his brand new bike in pieces all over the garage I shrieked, “You
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  • Carsick

    03/08/11

    When I was in elementary school, my family lived in Ohio and we took frequent car trips to Galesburg, Illinois where my four grandparents and various aunts, uncles, and cousins lived.  My parents would wake my younger sister and me up at 5:00 in the morning (my much younger sister and brother didn’t appear in my life until later), load
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  • Scenes From a Writer’s Life

    03/03/11

    Since this is my very first entry, I thought I’d start by describing what I imagine this blog will look like. The title “Scenes From a Writer’s Life” will give you something of an idea. I’d like to give you some snapshots – “wordshots” really – from my life: things I’ve been and done and thought, all of them relating,
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