Finding A Picture Book Tip from Mary Kole

So, yes, of course, you can find lots of tips from Mary Kole if you check out her Kidlit.com, “a place for people who love, read and write children’s literature.”

And I’m pretty sure you’ll get your money’s worth of tips if you sign up for her Picture Book Craft Intensive this week. Because not only will you get her tips, but you’ll get a critique of your picture book. That is HUGE.

(I attended the Harriette Austin Writers Conference in Athens this past weekend, and Mary Kole evaluated my manuscript. With a fine tooth comb. All I can say is that I’m glad she wrote stuff down, because seriously. That woman talks fast. But it was amazingly thorough and if I had a great picture book manuscript, I’d risk getting a creepster stalking reputation and send 90 bucks right this minute. )

Anyway, she said something during her talk at the conference that I hadn’t considered. Or if I’d heard this tip, it hadn’t connected. So here’s the tip: Your picture book should have multiple hooks. I’d never thought about it, but I suppose most picture books have more than one hook. Take Green Eggs and Ham, one of my kids’ absolute favorite books.

There’s the message hook, about trying new things. There’s a rhyming hook, and of course, there’s that unique Dr. Seuss zany humor hook. And really, there’s also the illustration hook. I’m not sure if Theodor Geisel consciously thought about all those hooks or if they grew organically out of his creation process. But somehow, he managed multiple hooks in every book.

Looks kinda simple, when you read Green Eggs and Ham. But I have a sneaky suspicion that it’s much harder than it looks.

(P.S. That’s Mary Kole, holding Cathy-on-a-Stick, with Donny Seagraves, another presenter, standing next to ’em. I’m not sure why the pic’s a little fuzzy. Maybe I was quaking in my boots around that threesome of talent.)

Keeping Up With Word Counts

I’m not sure how I missed this word count post by Jennifer Laughran, what with me pouncing on her blog like a cat on a clueless mouse. But there you have it, I did. Maybe you did, too.

So here’s what I love about her discussion of word counts:

1. She includes books in each category, books that are mostly classics and make me say, “Wow. I have not read that yet. Perhaps I should.”

2. She gives word count ranges. Ranges give me breathing room. Ahhhhh….

3. And then, just in case I was still freaking out, she shared this super bit of advice…

 “Remember, this list is by no means exhaustive and should not be considered law. Don’t get too freaked out about it… just find the average word count for books similar to your own, and try to be somewhere vaguely in the ballpark.

And before I could pull my hair out and scream, “What? How do I find these golden word counts?”, she took my freaked-out hand and directed me to the AR Bookfinder to click upon. Which I think was really swell of her and why when I dream of really swell agents, I dream of Jennifer Laughran.