Jan. 10th, 2011

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Second Sight: An Editor’s Talks on Writing, Revising, Editing, and Publishing Books for Children and Young Adults
By Cheryl B. Klein
Asterisk Books, New York, 2011

A review by Rose Green

Second Sight is a collection of talks and workshops and blog posts on writing by Cheryl Klein, editor at Arthur A. Levine, an imprint of Scholastic. Some of these talks have appeared on her web site, and others not. Here they are all collected into one handy resource. If I was leaving the country and could only take a handful of books with me, I would include this one. It’s the single most practical writing book I’ve read.

What this book is not: an introduction to writing and/or children’s publishing. It will not tell you the standard format for manuscripts, nor will it tell you how to write a bestseller. It will not tell you how to get rich “like that woman from England who wrote a book” or how to get on Oprah. It has very few examples from adult books--with the exception of Aristotle’s writings, which should tell you something about the depth and seriousness with which Cheryl regards children’s literature.

Who this book is for: the intermediate to advanced writer, preferably someone who has already completed (or at least is deeply into) a first draft. There is definitely a hole in the market for books for intermediate writers, the ones who are past the introductory stages of how a book is put together but who don’t yet have an agent or editor of their own to guide them. It’s full of practical suggestions for deep revision, for finding those “electric fence emotions” (as she describes the raw feelings of middle school) and pulling them forward to connect with readers in a real, believable way. The book itself is written with authority; not just because of Klein’s editor hat, but because she herself is an excellent writer, particularly gifted at pinpointing and expressing plot structure, voice, characterization—in short, the underpinnings of a novel.

Some topics covered in the book: The Annotated Query Letter from Hell, back to back with an example and discussion of a good (real) query and why it works. Deep discussions of character, plot, theme, and voice. An excellent tutorial on how a picture book is put together, complete with a sample storyboard (which my daughter had me read to her--twice). An entire chapter detailing the editing process of one of her author’s books. (Note: if you think all the revision is over once you sign a contract, this chapter will be very eye-opening!) A revision checklist for writers. And more. If you are most concerned with getting the emotional heart of a book right, whether serious or funny or whatever, this is the book for you.

The only warning I need to give is that you may find yourself stopping often to put the book into practice. As I was reading it, I also happened to be revising a first draft of a book of my own, and found myself diving back and forth between my draft and this book, making notes and thinking through character arcs. So, bring a pencil when you sit down to read!

Second Sight will be available in February 2011 and further information about ordering can be found at Cheryl’s web site, www.cherylklein.com.
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ALA

Jan. 10th, 2011 10:40 pm
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So it was a pretty good day, even though I'm feeling completely loopy from lack of sleep. My husband went to the annual MLA (Modern Languages Association) conference he always goes to. It was in Los Angeles, and he got to see his family down in southern California (as well as sit outside in the sun). But the rest of the country is NOT having such balmy weather, and he also got to sit for hours in the Denver airport, and didn't get back here until after 3 am. So basically we are all zombies today.

It was fun to see the winners for the ALA awards posted. The Morris winner, Blythe Woolston, is a fellow member of Verla Kay's Blueboards, so it was great fun to celebrate with her. Most of the books were ones I didn't know, as I've been moving and changing libraries. (And my current library has all of zero of the children's media that received awards today. They have three of the Alex awards, but those are adult books of interest to teens, not books actually published in the children's market. I imagine that will change, though...) But I hadn't even heard of a lot of them, so it will be fun to track them down and find out what they're all about.

Have you ever read a book whose cover absolutely didn't match the inside? I don't even mean the wrong race or description of the character. I mean--it looks like a different genre. I'm reading one right now that has a contemporary beach read cover, but the inside is more like women's literary. Or something. I never would have picked it up if it weren't for word of mouth, because the cover so clearly says one particular genre (that I'm less interested in).

Okay. It sounds like people are finally settling down. I think I'm going to fall asleep over the keyboard, so I'd better just give up and go to bed!

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