Finding Something Friday on Reading (Fun) and Writing (Freebies)

(You’ll enjoy this first bit more if you sing it to the tune of “My Favorite Things.” P.S. You might want to hum if you’re at work. Or tone deaf.)

“Reading and writing, they all fit together! Letters make words sing like birds of a feather.

Paper and colored pens having their flings! These are a few of my favorite things!”

Ah, how I love the sound of music in the morning! Just about as much as I love reading and writing. And as much as I love Share-A-Story, Shape-A-Future!


All week, folks have been “Unwrapping the Gift of Literacy” though blog posts, and tweets and Facebook comments. Today’s the last day, but you can still zip over to illustrator Elizabeth Dulemba’s blog where she asks a ton of authors how they fell in love with reading. And perhaps win her giveaway! Isn’t that a fun and wondrous thing to find on a Friday?

Then you can zip over to All Freelance Writing and find a ton of writing freebies. There are ebooks, and writing tools, and business and blogging templates, all for free! Maybe today’s the day you’ll get serious about freelance writing.

Or maybe you’ll just curl up with a great book or write a lovely little poem. It’s all good.

“When the kids gripe, when the bills sting, when I’m feeling bad…I simply sit down to my favorite things. And then I don’t feeeeeeeeeel so bad!”

Finding Chapter Book Gold from Katie Carella

Am I the only one who thinks of conferences as gold-mining excursions? Because I felt as if I were panning for nuggets of wisdom as I sat in the Springmingle audience when Katie Carella, an editor from Grosset & Dunlap/ Penguin Young Readers and Price Stern Sloan! gave her presentation. And it was well worth the trip–I struck chapter book gold!

First of all, Katie Carella is young and engaging and very thorough. So if you ever have the chance to attend a conference where she’s speaking, you should pack your gear and go. That being said, I can’t possibly give you all the details. But I can give you a few sparkly highlights.

Chapter books can be anywhere from 1,000 words to 15,000 words, and they can be shelved in the library in a Chapter Book/Easy Reader section or in with the Juvenile or Middle Grade fiction. It’s all very confusing. What’s not confusing is that most chapter books stick to a tried-and-true format: short chapters, ending with cliffhangers. But if you read a lot of chapter books, you’ve already figured that out.

You probably also have figured out that chapter books are character-based. Find a great character that your audience will connect with and you’re golden. So if you know the technical side behind writing chapter books, why is it so hard to find a publisher for yours?

That’s where Katie’s glittery wisdom comes in. Here’s a question she offered that I think may be the most important one to ask yourself: Is there room in the marketplace for your story?

The only way you’re going to find that out is to research the marketplace. Investigate characters to find whether the character you’ve created has something special or different from what’s already out there. Read, read, and read some more. Know the hooks of the series that are available so that you’re not copying something that’s been done to death.

Basically, as Katie put it, you need to “think outside the box.” It’s a simple little nugget, but it can lead to a vein of chapter book gold!

P.S. That’s Katie Carella holding Cathy-on-a-Stick. She wanted Ashleigh Hally (a writer bud) to stand with her. Because two people standing with a pic-on-a-stick isn’t weird at all.