School Library Journal Mobile
Log In  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to SLJ Magazine
Email
Learn RSS

A Fuse #8 Production   



My Reviews Collected

  • A Fuse #8 Production Reviews
  • A Selection of Kidlit Bloggers I Like

  • Read Roger
  • bookshelves of doom
  • Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast
  • Collecting Children's Books
  • Educating Alice
  • Oz and Ends
  • 100 Scope Notes
  • Shaken & Stirred
  • Jen Robinson's Book Page
  • Children's Illustration
  • ShelfTalker
  • Chasing Ray
  • Kids Lit
  • Finding Wonderland
  • Mother Reader
  • The Excelsior File
  • Book Moot
  • Crooked House
  • Wagging Tales
  • What Adrienne Thinks About That
  • Pink Me
  • A Chair, A Fireplace and A Tea Cozy
  • Chicken Spaghetti
  • Pinot and Prose
  • ALSC Blog
  • Cynsations
  • Planet Esme
  • Interesting Non-Fiction for Kids
  • The Brown Bookshelf
  • Becky's Book Reviews
  • Early Word Kids
  • Children's Writer/Illustrator Blogs

  • The James Preller Blog
  • The Neil Gaiman Blog
  • The Sarah Miller Blog
  • The Longstockings
  • The Sam Riddleburger Blog
  • The Mo Willems Blog
  • The Adam Rex Blog
  • The Blue Rose Girls Blog
  • The Gail Gauthier Blog: Original Content
  • The Mitali Perkins Blog
  • The Lisa Yee Blog
  • The Laini Taylor Blog
  • The Jarrett Krosoczka Blog
  • The Matthew Holm Blog
  • The Melanie Hope Greenberg Blog
  • The Douglas Florian Blog
  • Blogs by Children's Book Editors

  • Editorial Anonymous
  • Mishaps and Adventures
  • Brooklyn Arden
  • bloomabilities
  • Children's Publisher Blogs

  • First Second Books Blog
  • On Our Minds @ Scholastic
  • Unabridged: The Charlesbridge Blog
  • Book Related in Some Way (Maybe)

  • Kidlitosphere Central
  • KidLit Interview Wiki
  • Wiki of Children's Book Reviews
  • GalleyCat
  • Bookninja
  • Paper Cuts
  • Guardian Unlimited: Books
  • Deaf Characters in Adolescent Literature
  • Saints and Spinners
  • LISNews
  • Bildungsroman
  • Jacket Flap
  • AS IF
  • Podcasty Goodness

  • Just One More Book
  • Cynopsis: Kids!
  • PotterCast
  • Recent Posts

    Recent Comments

    Most Commented On

    Archives

    Blog

    Link This | Email this | Blog This | Comments (7)


    What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?

    October 8, 2007

    Well, the first official conference of the children and YA literary bloggers has come to a close and it was, not to put too fine a point on it, a roaring success.

    Now we hit our dilemma.

    I am now blogging about a conference on blogging.  And others, I've little doubt, are blogging about blogging, and so on and such and around and around it goes...  Like a snake eating its own tail, it's hard to know where to stop. 

    My person problem is that I shouldn't be blogging about the conference at all.  I should be blogging about the Eric Carle Museum reception I attended last week and how cool that little event was.  Still and all, I'll say a couple words about this past week-end first.  I feel obligated to do is to ply you with random pieces of information too, though.  Things like:

    Did you know that Kelly Herold bears a striking resemblance to a young Judy Blume?
    Did you know that at times Robin Brande sounds like Jennifer Aniston?
    Did you know that they sell wine in Target stores in Illinois?

    And so it goes.

    My week-end began with flying into Chicago on Friday and having dinner with author Elizabeth Fama and her family that night.  Note to the General Public: I highly recommend having dinner with Elizabeth Fama and her children.  Wry, witty kids, great food, even better conversation, and I happened to be wearing a t-shirt sporting her teenage son's now terribly famous Hippo character.  Ms. Fama's house was directly across the street from Chasing Vermeer author Blue Balliett's home, which was cool.  Plus we discussed, amongst other things, the possibility of fellow Chicago resident Amy Timberlake (of "That Girl Lucy Moon" fame) and her adaptation of her book (done with Adam Rex) "The Dirty Cowboy" into a musical.  I am THERE, babies!

    What I learned during my time in Chicago was that it is best to stay in the hotel where the conference is taking place.  Fail to do that and you run the risk of coming into the 7:45 a.m. *shudder* opening ceremonies late.  Which I did.  The CTA (Chicago Transit A-word) runs super duper slow on Saturday mornings and my 5:45 a.m. wake-up call was pretty much for naught. 

    So I walk into the Radisson and lo and behold there's the conference room, front and center, and there are 500 people present.  Do I exaggerate?  Of course.  But it feels like 500 people, and there's organizer and author Robin Brande front and center handing me my name tag and allowing me to scoot in while Tasha Saeker of Kids Lit (the children's literary blog that got me started in the first place) was discussing Kidlit Blogging, Part 1.  I lurked quite happily for much of the time.  I'm a lurker by nature.  If I'm on a listserv, a Yahoo or Google Group, or a classroom I tend to keep completely silent.  

    Class act on the conference room too.  I'm new to all this stuff so I was blown away by the bowls of peppermints, food in the hallway (continuous and throughout the day), and copious amounts of water.  I'd show you how cool it all was... but the batteries in my camera died and I wasn't able to replace them until 4 p.m. or so.  So here is how Mark Blevis saw it.

    But this is not what you want to hear.  You want to hear about the conference attendees themselves, yes?  You want to hear what it is like to step into a room and see face-to-face the people of whom you have, until now, only gotten the slightest inkling of lookwise.  You know what I wanted?  I wanted to walk into that room and have it be like I was playing a game of The Sims.  I wanted to see, floating above each person's head, a small spinning box containing the front page of their blog/podcast/website.  And for authors I wanted their book covers to be spinning there as well.  How hard would that have been?  It'll happen someday, mark my words.  Later on, people would discuss whether or not each blogger looked and sounded like their online "voice".  Not all did.

    (CONTINUED IN PART TWO)



    Posted by Elizabeth Bird on October 8, 2007 | Comments (7)


    Email
    Learn RSS


    October 8, 2007
    In response to: What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?
    KELLY HEROLD commented:

    Judy Blume? Well, I can't complain about that comparison! I have no idea what I look like, but she's nice looking :)




    October 8, 2007
    In response to: What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?
    KELLY HEROLD commented:

    P.S. It was FABULOUS to meet you, Betsy!

    Sorry...still drinking coffee...




    October 8, 2007
    In response to: What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?
    hope commented:

    Kelly Herold and Robin Brande sell wine in a Target? They work together?

    *is soooo surprised****




    October 8, 2007
    In response to: What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?
    Fuse #8 commented:

    The Target line is explained later in the piece. And Kelly, Judy Blume is GORGEOUS. Just FYI.




    October 8, 2007
    In response to: What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?
    Elizabeth Fama commented:

    B: You won the kids over, and you more than kept up with their frenetic pop-culture/Internet/gaming banter -- proving that you're not just a bookish librarian...you're a HIP bookish librarian! And, self-centered as she is, Hippo always appreciates a good plug. Thanks.




    October 8, 2007
    In response to: What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?
    Laini Taylor commented:

    Great to see you, Betsy! Now I can be SLIGHTLY less jealous of kidlit drinks night! You know, after the Target excursion. . .




    October 9, 2007
    In response to: What is the Sound of 40+ Bloggers Blogging?
    Camille commented:

    It was terrific to meet you in person. A good time was, indeed, had by all.





    POST A COMMENT
    Display Name or Registered Users Login Here.
    Please restrict submissions to less than 7,000 characters (including any HTML formatting).

    Change Image
    Before submitting this form, please type the characters displayed above.
    Note the letters are NOT case sensitive.

    Advertisement

    Advertisements





    ©2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
    All rights reserved.
    Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
    Please visit these other Reed Business sites