Out and About with Author Hat On

Fun with the SCBWI Canada East Fall 2010 Retreat

So you take pictures at a writing retreat, and they sit around doing nothing. While you get your snow tires put on, you sit around doing nothing. Put the two together with laptop and….

…you come up with something a bit better than nothing. Enjoy.

© Lizann Flatt, www.lizannflatt.com
No part of this blog may be used without written permission from the author.

Special Skype School Visit

How cool to be asked if I could talk to the kids at  Monticello Elementary in Wisconsin about Life in a Farming Community, which focuses on Monticello, WI.

How disappointing for both the teacher and I to realize I couldn’t get there on either the school’s or my own budget. But then we settled on the possibility of a Skype visit. Jody Indergand was able to get the technology to do it. I had the capability. We agreed to do it! Was I nervous? You bet: I was going to be talking to the kids in the very community I’d written about.

To prepare, I read a lot about what other authors had done with their virtual visits to get a sense of what to do on my end and what the experience would be like. Google “skype author visit” or something like that. There’s lots of good info out there. So here’s how it went for me.

First I tested my Skype out with a friend to get a feel for it. Then teacher, Jody Indergand, and I set a date and time a few days before the scheduled talk to test how our systems worked together. By turning her camera she showed me where the kids were going to be sitting. We made sure she could see and hear me and that I’d show up on their large screen. We double checked our time zone differences so we knew exactly what time we’d scheduled in local terms.

After that, I needed to tidy my desk, which regularly looks like a disaster. More importantly I needed to tidy what the kids would see behind me (which incidentally also usually looks like a disaster). I used my webcam to see what the kids would see. Saaaay, they can’t see the floor! I hid a lot of stuff there. This is what they would see. I lined up a few of my books face out behind me so there’d be an interesting background. I had this weirdly vague feeling that I should clean the rest of my house, like I was having company or something, but quickly canned that idea. That didn’t stop me from having to remind myself that they couldn’t, afterall, see the crumbs from my lunch left on my kitchen counter.

This is what my desk looked like before the event. I’ve got water perched precariously close to the keyboard in case I needed a drink during my talk. Next time I think I’ll use a container with a lid, like a travel coffee mug or a reusable water bottle. I perched my laptop on my handy dandy Muskoka phone books because what I’d realized from testing the view from my webcam was that I needed to bring the level of my web cam up higher. My notes and props are within reach on the right. Everything was ready and then it was just a matter of waiting for Skype to ring.

Jody and I had decided who would phone whom on the day plus we’d exchanged real phone numbers in case of difficulties. There was the ring! We only had to fix the small glitch that they could see me but I couldn’t see them, and then we were all set. It turned out they even had some special guests in the audience so that the people who fact checked and provided photos for the book were there too. I waved to Richard Grahn and Sally Braem. This is the terrific audience of kids I was talking to.

I did a brief presentation on how I wrote the book. The kids found it fascinating to learn how a British book packager contacted a Canadian writer to write about a small village in the US and put together a book that is published in the US, Canada, and Australia. After I talked, some of the kids came up to their computer and web cam individually and asked me some great questions. They wanted to know things like what was my favorite thing I learned about Monticello, if I’d ever written about farming before, and whether writing was a job or a hobby for me. Like I said: great questions!

My overall experience was very positive and I’d definitely do it again. Challenges for me included:

  • not being able to read the audience as well. I could see and hear them obviously, but couldn’t make eye contact with individual audience members. 
  • my presentation felt more static to me. Because I wasn’t physically there I couldn’t walk around and change positions. Maybe that wasn’t helped by the fact that I had to stay fairly still in my chair because my chair is annoyingly squeaky and creaky when I move. Next time I’ll hunt down the WD-40 first.
  • hanging up was a downer. When it was all done and we’d said goodbye and thank you, you just hang up and presto you’re back to your regular life. After a physical school visit you get to do some handshaking or whatever and drive away. There’s a more gradual transition or something. 
  • forcing myself to look at my web cam was difficult. Other authors have commented on this too. You have to make yourself look at a small black dot when your brain wants to look at the kids on your computer screen. But if you don’t look at the dot, to your audience it will look as if you’re looking down whereas if you look at the dot it looks to them as if you’re looking at them.

But we were able to exchange some valuable information (like I learned how locals pronounce Monticello) and interact when we otherwise wouldn’t have been able to. I think until an author can project a hologram of themselves elsewhere (you know, like in Star Wars!) doing visits this way works very well for short presentations.

Finally, this is a screen shot of my entire computer screen. This is Skype on my desktop background during our call. When I wanted to hold something up for my audience to see, that little window of me showed me what they could see so I could hold things up properly for them.

So a big thank you to Monticello Elementary for inviting me to visit! It was a pleasure, and I hope that one day I will indeed get to visit your beautiful corner of the world–in person!

© Lizann Flatt, www.lizannflatt.com
No part of this blog may be used without written permission from the author.

Top Takeaways from SCBWI NY 2010

I had an amazing time at the SCBWI NY 2010 conference. Being surrounded by people who share a passion for writing and illustrating for kids is energizing. There is no better complete rundown of the conference than the SCBWI Team Blog, but here are a few gems I gathered.

Strive for the small unexpected moments that surprise you as you write. ~Libba Bray

Re social networking: Be yourself because everyone else is taken. ~Jenn Bailey

Feel what’s happening in your story as you’re writing it. If you’re not, the scene isn’t working. ~Jacqueline Woodson

Draw or write every day for the fun of putting ink on paper. ~Jim Benton

Be professional, and remember your job as a writer is to write. ~Sheldon Fogelman

Never give up. ~Jane Yolen

Words for the writer to live by for sure.

© Lizann Flatt, www.lizannflatt.com
No part of this blog may be used without written permission from the author.

Big Belated Book Week Thank You

I admit it: I mostly avoided my computer over the holidays. I think I needed the break. Either that or it was just so darned hard to find it on my desk, practically buried with papers and cluttered with miscellaneous office type crap, that really needed to be tidied before anything else happened. So it just didn’t happen.

My first post of 2010 will look back on 2009 and give a big belated Thank You for the biggest thing to happen to me in my writing life: You know that has to be the TD Grade One Giveaway. I’ve been remiss in not doing up a roundup before now.

The whole experience was something not likely to be duplicated for me, ever again. It’s hard to put it all into words (and isn’t that a bit ironic?). It’s not just that my book was given to so many Canadian kids…

It’s not just that I got to tour southern Ontario with the book’s illustrator, Scot Ritchie

And it’s not just that I got to see my book cover and name in huge type behind the TD bank president’s head at a big publishing industry gala with free hors d’oeuvres and cocktails…

But all those things were excellent!

Writers mostly write alone, you know? I’m holed up in my little office (or really my supposed-to-be-a-dining-room writing space) trying to create something that fascinates me while hoping I’m not completely off my rocker and that someone else would also like to read it and in fact actually pay money to do that. Then I found out that the book’s been chosen for this program that enabled it to reach EVERY grade one child in Canada. How do you wrap your head around that? The TD and the Canadian Children’s Book Centre do an amazing job supporting Canadian book creators and literacy for Canadian kids. Thank you to them!

The schools and libraries Scot and I visited all Book Week were welcoming without exception, and the grade one audiences were always terrific, playing along with our action games and listening to the process of how I wrote the book and how Scot illustrated it.

Some public schools wore uniforms, some did not. Some schools were new and some were old. Some schools were small and some were, well, HUGE. (We went to the largest elementary school in North America and saw all approximately 240 grade one students. Yes, three groups of 80 kids back-to-back!) Quite a few of the schools had done a lot of work talking about the history of transportation and then displayed their work around the school. That was awesome to see!

As an unexpected bonus, we received some lovely hardware,

and some beautiful, er, software…?

Thank you to all who hosted us!

Scot and I got to and around the five cities by train and taxi. Given that the book is about transportation, it was quite appropriate to be using a couple different types of transportation while talking about that topic. I recorded some of the sights seen from the train each night during the tour here on the blog. They’re filed under the Book Week 09 label.

Overall the opportunity to connect with all those kids made a big impression on me personally. And I think it was wonderful for those kids to see that an author and an illustrator are just regular people. We don’t sit down and write or sketch something perfect the first time around. We work hard at revising our words and our pictures just the way they do when they write and draw.

To see the connections made between the book, the audience, the topic, the teachers…wow. Thank you for Book Week, book publishers, book creators, book readers, book supporters, and books everywhere!

© Lizann Flatt, www.lizannflatt.com
No part of this blog may be used without written permission from the author.