The website Quotery.com has created an infographic called “20 Inspiring Children’s Book Quotes.” An embed code is provided at this link, so you can add the graphic to your website.See it below… I think they’ve made excellent choices – beautiful and wise words from a variety of texts – from Aesop’s Fables to a Brothers… [Read More]
Politics and Picture Books: A Proposed Lesson for High School Students
If I told you the U. S. Defense Department’s procurement process would be a great subject for a picture book, you might not take me too seriously. The topic sounds complicated and boring and nonfiction writers tend to look for the exotic, the unheard of, the crazy, the bizarre. A good story idea can also… [Read More]
Edith Wharton still going strong at 153! Her Birthday Being Celebrated at The Mount on January 24th
At Edith Wharton’s former home and museum, The Mount near Lennox, Massachusetts, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author’s birthday is celebrated in style and with an emphasis on all things literary. This Saturday, January 24, her birthday begins with bookshares over bagels and continues with dramatic readings, silent reading time, raffles, and a poetry open mic –… [Read More]
On Your Mark, Get Set, READ! – First Annual National Readathon Day on January 24th!
On Saturday, January 24, from noon to 4 p.m. is the first annual National Readathon Day, a marathon to encourage reading across the nation and promote literacy. The National Book Foundation, Penguin Random House, Goodreads, and Mashable are partnering on the event, which will benefit the Foundation’s education programs. Just think, to participate you have… [Read More]
Bookends – Some Suggested Christmas Reading
I like “bookend” plots that start in one place and then circle back to the beginning of things. I like January and December because they bookend the year. And I like bookends – the real thing – because they’re useful when you have as many books as I do. Here are some books you might… [Read More]
The Big and the Small of it
Speaking is a part of the writing life. Initially I thought I would speak to larger and larger audiences as I became better and better known. Two events this past weekend show how wrong I was! On Friday, October 31, I joined forces with illustrator Will Hillenbrand and Richmond Symphony Orchestra flutist Evelien Woolard to… [Read More]
Edith Wharton Teaches English
As I mention in my biography (pp. 66-67), an early short story Edith Wharton wrote called “The Line of Least Resistance” caught the eye of Henry James, a writer she was dying to meet. It was the beginning of a long friendship between “The Master” (as James was known) and the up-and-coming Edith. That same… [Read More]
Connie is Speaking at the Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana Children’s Literature Conference, Saturday, Nov. 8th
Connie will be speaking at the Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana Children’s Literature Conference, Saturday, November 8, 2014. Traditional registration is now available for the 2014 Ohio Kentucky Indiana Children’s Literature Conference! Adventure Across the Ages: Exploring Literature from Pre-K to YA, featuring Stephanie Bodeen, Sneed Collard III, and Jon and Pamela Voelkel will be held November… [Read More]
A Thoroughly Dislikable Character
Undine Spragg was one of the most dislikable heroines Edith Wharton ever created. This social “swell,” star of the novel, The Custom of the Country, ruthlessly trampled over family, friends, and enemies alike in her quest to rise as far as possible above her humble Apex, Kansas roots. There was hardly a redeeming word to… [Read More]
When a Writer Isn’t Writing
Seeing young people experience live symphonic music – some for the very first time ever – is an event worth leaving my desk for. One morning a few weeks ago, I watched a line of school buses pull up at the entrance to Richmond Civic Hall and drop off hundreds of seventh graders. After they… [Read More]