Showing posts with label Philip Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philip Lee. Show all posts

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Unpacking from the ALA : Part One


waiting for the shuttle


The ALA Conference in Chicago this past week and weekend reminded me of why I feel so lucky to be part of the children's literature community. Librarians from every state stood in long lines and laughed while they waited for their favorite authors to sign personal copies. These librarians are my heroes. They are the ones who make the connection between the books we write and the kids who read them. Thank you librarians! You make the party.

Another highlight of the convention was the farm tour of City Farm on Chicago's north side. Dan Hurowitz, city farmer, showed us the lush crops of greens, cucumbers, tomatoes, carrots and herbs, and explained the mission of City Farm. And thanks to Gillian Engberg @ Booklist  who co-sponsored the tour.

urban and farm

Marilyn Ackerman (Brooklyn Public Library) and Susan McConnell of Publishers Group West check out the chickens, who are locked in every night to protect them from urban coyotes



 

Marilyn Ackerman, Rick Brooks (Little Free Libraries) and Dan Hurowitz talk about tomatoes







The smell of tomato plants mingled with the smell of city buses and we were glad to think of the neighbors who come to this corner farm to buy fresh food two or three times a week. The farm also sells to area restaurants.


Urban farming came into the convention center in the Readers to Eaters booth as Philip and June Lee of Readers to Eaters Books and I were excited to share advance copies of Farmer Will Allen and the Growing Table.

from left: Philip Lee, me, June Lee

 So many librarians told us of gardens at their schools, or libraries, or in their communities. I'm hoping they all send photos so we can start a page of urban farms and gardens. I want to see those tomatoes growing in buckets, beets in window boxes, potatoes in sacks.  

And, while visiting with friends at the Palmer House hotel in downtown Chicago, I looked out the window to see this green rooftop.  

Green is growing--and that's exciting.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Urban Farm Tour





If you are going to be at the ALA in Chicago later this month, I hope you'll join us for one of both of these tours. I am excited about seeing these urban farms.  And, if you are not going to be at the ALA,  check here. I'll report back.

















          6/27 Thursday 4-5:30p.m.                         
          City Farm Chicago                                 
          1487 W. Irving Park Rd. Chicago, IL         
          www.cityfarmchicago.org                       
          Co-hosted by Gillian Engberg                     
          City Farm Board member,                         
          Truck Farm Chicago,                                
          Little Free Library
          Reception following tour.

               6/28 Friday 1-2 p.m.
               Growing Power's Iron Street Farm
               3333 S. Iron St. Chicago, IL 60608
               www.ironstreetfarm.com
               Meet Erica Allen, Growing Power's Chicago project
               manager and Will Allen's Daughter, Truck Farm
               Chicago, Little Free Library

Please RSVP to Philip Lee-- Philip@readerstoeaters.com-- if you'll be able to attend.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Life on the back porch. Life in the street.

Regular life feels somehow frivolous, undeserved, when friends in Boston have been recently locked inside their homes, waiting for the next round of firing, when we have all witnessed via television, bombs, explosions, shootouts, lives thrown into grief and chaos.

A blog about writing for kids almost feels like playing on the back porch when there's a fire on the street. But our lives are webs, I think, and in that web--along with the fear and sadness and mystery of a desire to maim--are the uplifting qualities of courage, caring, in real life and the buoying, courageous characters found in good books.


So along the journey to good books, to community ...

 In January, Lauren Stringer-- very talented author-illustrator of a new book called When Stravinsky Met Nijinsky-- tagged me for the blog-around-the-world tour called "The Next Big Thing." I quickly said, "oh of course I can do that"--send you a photo of my new book, and brief description and then a short time later, tag others and answer some questions about the book.

Then life intervened with its own here-and-there demands.But today I am "doing that," doing what I said I would do, writing about my new book, coming out in September--Farmer Will Allen and the Growing Table (Readers to Eaters Books). It seems appropriate, even in this tumultuous time, to tell you about Will Allen, because he is a man committed to the goal of giving hungry people everywhere access to good food, to making our world community stronger, in the face of all who would tear it down.

Farmer Will Allen and The Growing Table-2 xs


Questions:

1. What is the title of your new book? Farmer Will Allen and the Growing Table.

2. Where did the idea come from? I was interested in urban farming and when I read of Will Allen and his Milwaukee farm, I knew writing about an urban farmer was the best way to tell the story of an urban farm.

3. What genre does your book fall under? Picture book biography.

4. What actor would you choose to play the part of your character? Danny Glover would be perfect. Will Allen reminds me of Danny Glover.

5. What is a few-sentence synopsis?  When Will Allen was a boy he hated farm work and wanted a "white shirt" job. When he grew up he realized he loved growing things, built a city farm and taught neighbors to help grow good food. But that table wasn't big enough; he wanted to invite more to the table and has worked to build a world-sized table.
pots and buckets at Will Allen's Growing Power
growing on the ground at Growing Power

6. Who is publishing your book? The very committed Philip Lee of Readers to Eaters Books.

7. How long did it take to write the first draft? The first draft of this book took about five months, but there were several "pre-first" drafts in previous months while I homed in on my real subject.

8. What other books would you compare this story to in your genre?  Possibly The Boy Who Drew Birds: a biography of John James Audubon by Jacqueline Davies  (illustrated by the wonderful Melissa Sweet) because they are both biographies of people with one passion; in the gardening sense White House Kitchen Garden and How It Grew by Robbin Gourley, another story of growing good food.

9. Who or what inspired you to write this book? The actual life and deeds of Will Allen. Many people around the world go to bed each night with good food in their stomachs because of his work.

10. What else about the book might pique a reader's interest?  There's a lot of good stuff about red wiggler worms.

And now I am pleased to tag my friend and fellow-writer Jane Kurtz and her lively Anna, of Anna Was Here:

 
 
 
Anna knows she will be fine in her temporary move to Kansas.  After all, she gets
gold ribbons for always being prepared.  And it's her first chance to meet cousins
and aunts and great aunts where her grandma grew up.  The Great Plains has always
held huge challenges for people, though, and she finds herself in the middle of
disasters too big for any nine-year-old girl asking "Who's in charge here, anyway??"
 Anna discovers a lot about what we cling to when everything is out of control. 
 
More from Jane soon.
 
More here, soon, about writing, gardening, finding stories, telling stories.