A childhood dream realized!

I’m a couple of weeks behind due to travel, so I’ll use this week’s Gratitude Sunday to catch up on all the goodness that has happened.

I do have to make special mention of one event that was truly extraordinary. I got to meet one of my childhood/adolescent heroes at the SCBWI LA conference – Henry Winkler, a.k.a. The Fonz. I’m sure, after all Henry Winkler has accomplished as an actor, director, producer and now children’s author since the end of Happy Days, it’s a bit frustrating for him to have fangirls like me who still can’t get over him in that role. But, in my defense, it is not an exaggeration to say that show got me through my wrecked middle school years. In the midst of some very unhappy days, I’d watch marathons of Happy Days reruns in syndication in order to get me to Tuesday night when the new episodes would air.

PLUS, Night Shift is one of my ALL TIME favorite movies. I swear one summer my brother and I watched that movie on tape so many times we could recite every single line from memory. “Hello, this is Chuck to remind Bill to SHUT UP…” and “I’m alright. Fortunately the ground broke my fall.” 

Now he writes the Hank Zipzer series with none other than Lin Oliver, SCBWI Executive Director. Hank is a humorous series that features a 4th grade boy with dyslexia, a learning disability Winkler himself suffers from. I can only imagine how difficult it would have been for him to grow up with dyslexia before parents, educators and doctors really understood the condition. What an inspiration for children with learning disabilities to have a hero in a book series who’s like them.

I could go on and on, but I’ll end with this. I was a bit embarrassed because I practically tackled him as he was on his way on out the door at the end of the book signing party. I apologized up and down, but I simply could not let the opportunity to meet him pass me by. He looked me right in the eyes and said, “Don’t apologize.” We took the photo, and then he rubbed my back and gave me a hug. *Picture me melting now*

I was trembling for a full 30 minutes after he left. Luckily, that’s exactly how long I had to wait in Jon Klassen’s line to get Extra Yarn signed…

When I showed the picture to my daughter, she wasn’t immediately convinced of Winkler’s status as an iconic hero. So I had to play a few Fonzie clips for her on YouTube and now she is more than convinced. I’ve included one at the end of this post for your own enjoyment. Aaaay!

Quotes on Gratitude

“In the end, though, maybe we must all give up trying to pay back the people in this world who sustain our lives. In the end, maybe it’s wiser to surrender before the miraculous scope of human generosity and to just keep saying thank you, forever and sincerely, for as long as we have voices.” — Elizabeth Gilbert

“True happiness is to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future, not to amuse ourselves with either hopes or fears but to rest satisfied with what we have, which is sufficient, for he that is so wants nothing. The gratest blessings of mankind are within us and within our reach. A wise man is content with his lot, whatever it may be, without wishing for what he has not.” — Seneca

“Piglet noticed that even though he had a Very Small Heart, it could hold a rather large amount of Gratitude.” — A.A. Milne, Winnie the Pooh

Gratitude list for the week ending August 11

  1. I went to San Francisco the day before the SCBWI LA conference to stay with my college friend Erica and got to right a 20-year wrong – the fact that we had to leave Les Miserables early as poor study-abroad students in London. We saw the 25-year anniversary show at the Orpheum Theater downtown – all the way to the end!
  2. Although I took pitifully few photos at the conference, I got to meet many friends who up to this point had only been virtual – Carter Higgins, Kirsten Larson, Miranda Paul, Jan O’Neill, Christine Alemshah, Mira Reisberg, Karen Cheesman, Sue Fliess, Lori Degman, Tammi Sauer, Debbie Ohi, and Emma Dryden.
  3. Getting a chance to thank agent Steven Malk for two very personal, very helpful rejections (yes, rejections). In an industry where “if you never hear anything from me that means no,” I think it’s very genteel and classy that he takes the time to respond.
  4. Tony DiTerlizzi’s keynote speech. I swear he transforms into Robin Williams on the stage. He could easily play at the Improv.
  5. Getting my eBook on Submissions finished! For a long time I’ve wanted to offer a free gift to people who sign up for my newsletter, and now I can.
  6. Two amazing books by Robert Hellenga, which kept me great company on my travels – The Sixteen Pleasures (a re-read) and The Italian Lover (a sequel of sorts). Now I’m reading The Fall of a Sparrow, which features a character from The Italian Lover. Next up is Philosophy Made Simple, which features the father of the female protagonist in The Sixteen Pleasures. Brilliant!
  7. The Brain Burps About Books podcast episode I was in, talking about apps, came out this week.
  8. My kids both got the teachers they most wanted for the upcoming school year.
  9. My mom’s amazing fried chicken and the company of my aunt and cousin to enjoy it with
  10. Sleeping to the sound of crickets at night

What are you grateful for this week?

Categories: 12 x 12 in 2012, Authors, Books, Brain Burps About Books, Children's Books, Digital Publishing, ebooks, Friendship, Gratitude Sunday, Picture Books, Publishing, Queries, SCBWI, Self Publishing, Writing · Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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I know Elvis Poultry likes to make a grand entrance and all, but it’s been so hectic this week I have to keep it simple. I’ve been running around like a chicken with my head cut off.

I mean… *cough*

Anyway, let’s just get right to the chicken winner shall we?

The lucky winner is…

Elizabeth Stevens Omlor!!!!!!!  Congratulations Elizabeth! With this book, you won’t be lonesome tonight.

Categories: Giveaway, Picture Books · Tags: , , , , ,

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First of all, I need to extend my sincere thanks to author Tammi Sauer for inviting me to participate in the official BAWK AND ROLL World Tour. Tammi is my kind of writer – a PUNNY one, and we own nearly every single book she’s written (so far!).  Plus, Tammi is giving away one copy (U.S. only) of BAWK AND ROLL to a lucky blog reader. All you have to do to enter is leave a comment telling us which Elvis Poultry song is your favorite. (Hint: Your chances of winning are greater if you don’t choose Love Me Tender. Unfortunately, too many of the chickens’ fans have taken this one out of context, and Mr. Poultry doesn’t want to have to find new dancers…)

Ladies and Gentlemen, Elvis Poultry is at it again, and this time we’re catching him on the next-to-last drumstick of his blog tour.  Since we last met Elvis, Marge and Lola in CHICKEN DANCE, the two chicks have gotten in on the act as dancers. But instead of flapping their feathers, they flop. Can Elvis Poultry get these chicks to chill, or will he have to leave them behind at the Heartbreak Henhouse? You’ll have to read the book to find out – no spoilers here!

Perhaps the most important question is, will Elvis take Marge and Lola on the road again? Will we see them in another book? I asked Elvis, and all he would say was, “The chicks’ll just have to cross that road when they get to it.”

So maybe we’ll see all of them on the other side. I sure hope so, because after reading this book I told Elvis Poultry, “I can’t help falling in love with you!”

He just winked and clucked, “I know…”

That’s all for now folks. Leave your comment and enter to win. Oh, and Elvis asked me to remind you all that if you do go see them in concert, please leave the hound dogs at home. They cry all the time, and though they’ve never caught a chicken, they ain’t no friends of his.

Tammi Sauer is officially my hero, not only because we love her books – such as Mr. Duck Means Business and Cowboy Camp, but also because she has FIVE picture books coming out this year (see below for details). You can keep track of Tammi on her website, her blog, and Twitter. If you want to check out where else you can find Elvis and the gang this week, here is the official schedule:

 April 2-6 Rob Sanders: Picture This!

http://robsanderswrites.blogspot.com/

April 3 Julie Danielson: Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast

http://blaine.org/sevenimpossiblethings/

April 4 Jennifer Bertman: From the Mixed-Up Files of Jennifer Bertman

http://writerjenn.blogspot.com/

April 4 Kristen Remenar: Author, Librarian, National Speaker

http://kristenremenar.com/

April 5 Julie Hedlund: Write Up My Life

http://writeupmylife.com/

April 6 Jennifer Rumberger: Children’s Author

http://www.jenniferrumberger.com/

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
COMING FROM TAMMI SAUER IN 2012:

Me Want Pet!
 (Simon & Schuster)

“This account of the age-old bond between animals and children is ideally paced for read-aloud pleasure.”–Kirkus
“Sauer has crafted a humorous read-aloud that’s both age-appropriate and entertaining.”–School Library Journal
“In this Stone Age comedy, Sauer and Shea imagine a child with a demand as old as time.”–Publisher’s Weekly
Bawk and Roll (Sterling)
“This flock rocks.”–Kirkus
“…punny, rocking romp.”–Publisher’s Weekly

Princess in Training (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Oh, Nuts! (Bloomsbury)
The Twelve Days of Christmas in Oklahoma (Sterling)
Categories: Authors, Picture Books · Tags: , , , , , ,

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