Tuesday, March 15, 2016

"Middle Grade Mania" Author Visits

Today our third and fourth graders got to meet three authors at my school: Elana Arnold, Beth Fantesky, and Greg Neri. They came to talk to about their newest middle grade novels as part of Middle Grade Mania with HMH Kids Publishing Company. They came on tour through Anderson's Bookshop, a local bookstore and bookfair company. If we host bookfairs with Anderson's, they share their authors with schools, which is a win-win situation!

We learned that Elana Arnold's latest book, Far From Fair, was inspired by her own life. When her husband got laid off, they sold their house and car and took their two kids into an RV and went traveling up the East Coast with their pet ferret, just like Odette's family in the novel. Elana shared that she always wanted to be a writer but in her early twenties, she found herself ready to write but with no ideas. Instead she taught, raised her children, lived her life, and said she nearly forgot she was a writer. When her family started traveling in the RV, she started blogging, and people read her blog and connected with her. She commented that "road trips and life are winding weird things" - eventually, 15 years after she thought she would start writing, she got her first book published. She encouraged the students by saying that writers don't always write: they read, daydream, have adventures, get bored, and they write too.  Elana explained that the love of story is human, and being able to tell stories to people is fabulous!

Greg Neri shared that as a writer you never know where or when the next story idea will come along. Getting a story idea is like finding a piece of gold on the ground that no one else seems to notice. You start digging at it and realize it is bigger than you thought and you need to dig around to get it free...but when you do, it is priceless. Writers have their eyes and ears open all the time looking for those nuggets of gold! His book, Tru & Nelle, tells the story of Harper Lee and Truman Capote's childhood friendship. Greg described how he and his brother were interested in solving mysteries when he was a child, and when he learned that Lee and Capote liked to play Sherlock and Watson-style detectives, he felt like he struck gold with a story idea.

Beth Fantesky shared that she has lucky writing socks! She explained that her book Isabel Feeney, Star Reporter came about after she wrote her PhD thesis on 1920s Chicago news, and someone told her that topic would make a great children's book. She described getting so attached to her characters that when it is time to start writing a new book, it is like starting a new school and she always thinks she won't like it as much as her old familiar characters.  She loves creating characters and spending time with them, just like good friends.

The two copies of each of these books we purchased were immediately checked out by my students and hold lists have started. I'm glad they got the chance to see a glimpse into the lives of these three authors! If anyone would like to order any of these books, you can order them through school, just get in your order forms by Wednesday, March 23!