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Talent, Radio, and Shocks of Pink Hair
October 10, 2007
Every time I try to slow down my blog posting, fun stuff just sucks me right back in again. Isn't there some e-mail I should be answering?
- I was recently alerted that a whole hosting of big big talent will be on display picture book-wise this coming Saturday at Books of Wonder. I can't go myself, but if you're in town and you want to see an unholy overwhelming mass of children's author/illustrators for free, this would be the place to go.
- What defines a true fan? When they find out who you are and make a doll in your likeness. Check out Laini Taylor below. I was particularly taken with the doll's tiny skull purse.
- For those of you curious as to how Walden Media is going to be filming subsequent Narnia films, here's your answer via Dark Horizons: "Walden Media co-founder and president Cary Granat confirms that auds could expect one "Narnia" installment each May for the next few years. Granat is committing publicly to only four or five, saying "Silver Chair" might be the best bet for the fourth, followed by "Magician's Nephew"..." (full details)
- Man. Is there anything better out there than free audio programs available online? Check out the following radio program I was alerted to: A look at the children's book publishing business with John Stewig, Director of the Center for Children's Literature at Carthage College. They are presenting a two-day workshop this coming weekend on the topic. We also speak with one of the guests of the workshop, Tim Tavaglini, a senior editor at G. P. Putnam's and Sons in their Penguin Young Readers division. He talks about the work he does as an editor to help bring projects from initial conception to full completion.
You can hear it here. I was pleased to hear Tim getting some air play. Tim was the fella who first directed me to the delicious work of Laini Taylor (featured in a dollified condition up above). I've never met John Stewig, but I love his voice. When he says "publisher" it's positively Mr. Rogers. It's positively bizarre when the man doing the interviewing starts asking Tim about editing within the context of Alice Walker's new book, though. I'm glad to hear Tim holding his own there.
Posted by Elizabeth Bird on October 10, 2007 | Comments (4)