Random thoughts on waiting for reviews

They do not sell thicker skins at Target; I’ve looked. They don’t sell them at the indie shops downtown.

Thicker skins don’t grow from seeds like corn and Swiss chard. You can’t paste them on with Elmer’s or Mod Podge.

My editor tells me to throw myself into the next book.”Focus on that,” she says, and she’s right.

My husband tells me to toughen up. “You’re not going to make it, otherwise,” he says, and he’s right.

Someone called Pride and Prejudice “insipid” on Goodreads, you know. In Kirkus, next to Harry Potter, there is no star. Jimmy Page is a writer of “weak, unimaginative songs” in Rolling Stone’s review of Led Zeppelin 1.

I fold laundry. I cook dinner.

Sticks and stones, sticks and stones, sticks and stones.

I consider the pros and cons of hibernation, and then I remember: it’s almost spring.

I look at my empty garden and decide what to plant.

Posted in gardening, kidlit, reviews, waiting | 2 Comments

Interview with Alexi Natchev

Alexi Natchev

Welcome to my virtual living room. Today’s guest, Alexi Natchev, doesn’t spend a whole lot of time sitting on couches, virtual or otherwise. For the past few weeks, the Bulgarian-born artist and professor has spent his waking hours preparing for a solo exhibit at the Delaware Art Museum. The exhibit, entitled Imagined Places: The Art of Alexi Natchev, features more than 40 of Natchev’s illustrations. A hand-colored relief print of the seder scene from The Elijah Door, A Passover Tale, which just received the Sydney Taylor Honor Award for Younger Readers, is  included. Alexi took brief timeout from his preparations this week to talk by phone about the book, which was written by Linda Leopold Strauss.

The Elijah Door (Holiday House, 2012) tells the tale of neighboring families who share their Passover seders for years, until the death of two geese and an insult halt their friendship. Can their children and a clever rabbi find a way to bridge the gap?

Me: Please talk a little bit about the way you went about creating the art for this book.

Alexi: The initial idea about the art work came from the text. There is a mention of a geographic region somewhere between Russia, Poland and Ukraine. In this part of the world as well as in other European countries there is a tradition of so-called “popular prints” from the 18th and 19th century that are a reflection of every day life of the people — of country life. They are, in a way, folk art with a charming, primitive feel. They sold these prints at the Sunday markets and people used them for their home decoration. They were block prints, but they colored them with egg dyes — not even with brushes, but with pieces of rag. It’s called lubok, and that was, I thought, very appropriate to the character of the folk tale. I offered this line of work to the editors and the art director at Holiday House. They embraced the idea.

Me: Had you tried it before?

Alexi: I had done this many, many, many years ago. I didn’t know clearly what I was getting into — it turned into a three-years project. It was a lot of work. I used wood blocks and then I had to hand color them in the same tradition. But it was really a great experience for me. I think I was able to convey the spirit of the story. And the images — you cannot imitate this type of graphic power with anything else. The energy of the stroke — the energy of the physical effort — is translated into the image. It gives it a unique texture. The physical aspects of the work add to the power of the image.

Me: You managed to get so much detail in the facial expressions. I especially like the eyes. It is hard to believe that it all came out of a carving.

Alexi: That is the work of the artist to be able to bring individuality to each of the characters — to make them in flesh and blood, to give them pulse and breath. Humor participates in the story and makes things more understandable.  In a way this is the story we can see in every culture … families, generations, and then happy endings.

"What about my geese?" Artwork by Alexi Natchev from the Elijah Door (Holiday House)

Me: Which image took the longest?

Alexi: The multi-figural compositions, where we had the big seder scene and the landscape at the end. They are bigger in size, but I also wanted each figure to be individualized and placed in the right place with the right facial expression and to have a variety of types of people. Old ones. Children. Young people. It is really a long process — time consuming. You need to stay with the same enthusiasm and focus throughout the entire process of creating the book.

Me: Are you the sort of artist who immerses himself completely in one work, or do you have several projects going at once?

Alexi: I really immerse myself in the current project I’m working on. You have to live with your characters. When I was doing this book, The Elijah Door, I couldn’t do anything else. You’re immersing yourself and you’re learning from the process every day.

Me: What was the best part or working on this project?

Alexi: The best part was at the end when I saw all of the prints in black and white. I was pleased that they were a cohesive series, stylistically unified, but at the same time each image … was telling a story. I was doing the hand coloring, and that was a pleasure moment. It was enhancing the existing image, and most of the work was already done.

Me: As a child in Bulgaria, did you spend a lot of time reading? Were folk tales a part of that?

Alexi: Absolutely. My love for illustration started exactly at that age before seeing any television. The book was my window to the world that I was dreaming of. The book gives me the type of experiences I was missing in my real life: to participate in some risky adventures, to see the world’s exotic places with strange names. I was a young boy imagining sailing oceans, being on other continents. The folk tales were a big part of our culture. I was reading a lot of Bulgarian folk tales and folk tales from other countries. That maybe sparked my interest in illustration. And in my artistic education, illustration was really not just for children. In my formative years, art was part of the idealogical system. We were living at that time on the other side of the Iron Curtain so everything was very idealogical and politicized. But in the illustration field you could be a little more creative, not so rigidly following certain requirements of clichés and artistic concepts with which you didn’t necessarily always agree.

Me: Did you have a favorite folk tale?

Alexi: I cannot say I had a single favorite. But I really think that if we have great literature, it is for every age. One of the tales I have read and read over and over again is not necessarily a folk tale, but the story The Little Prince (Le Petit Prince) by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. It is one of my favorite stories. At 4 years old you can understand it and at 90 years, you can appreciate it.

Me: Aside from your solo exhibition (Alexi notes that the opening reception, March 3, coincidentally coincides with Liberation Day in Bulgaria) what else are you working on? Any books?

Alexi:  I’m not currently working on another book. It is interesting, I had my first book published here the first year I came to this country, 20 years ago, without knowing too much about the publishing business. I had years where I had three  books published in the same year. But the book publishing business is changing. Publishers are getting bigger but smaller in number. The interest is going to other forms of interaction with the text. The phenomena of reading will stay but with a new format. Whether I will have place in this process I don’t know. I imagine we will see more moving images in the future, in these devices. The distinction between illustration, animation and graphic design will be even more blurred, which probably is normal and good, but I’m afraid that children don’t read as much as they should in the years that they really form their perceptions. And now there are other vehicles of forming imagination and imagery that probably are more attractive because of the moving and dynamic image.

But I like the still image because we may really look and discover details and think about more sophisticated means of expression that you cannot see when you have a moving image. Things like texture, the luminosity of the wash, the richness of the color relationship in a field or form or shape.

Me: What is your favorite medium?

Alexi: For books, I try to use different media and techniques because I think each text has an individual feel and requires a different look and mood. Primarily I work with water-based media or a combination of several media like line and wash or water color and color pencils. I wouldn’t say I have a favorite.

Me: Where do you do your work?

Alexi: I have a studio that is part of my house, but is, in a way, separate. It has good, natural light and high ceilings. I have all of my reference books, all of my supplies. It is my territory.

Me: What do you tell your students about illustration?

Alexi: We are visual communicators. Using fine art, we are telling a story, relaying a message, visualizing a concept. Nowadays the digital technology is part of our vocabulary.

Me: Do you use digital technology much?

Alexi: No. I am the old school. But [whatever the technology] the goal is not much different: you still have to visualize, in a powerful way, your ideas and your narrative.

Alexi Natchev/Photo by Amanda Rahman for Delaware College of Art and Design

Me: When I was afraid that Alexi would be too overwhelmed by his exhibit preparations to talk, I asked the book’s author, Linda Leopold Strauss, about her reaction when she first saw the artwork for The Elijah Door.

Linda: I was thrilled — blown away.  I think almost every picture book writer has ideas of what the illustrations for her book should look like, and she hopes that the illustrator will see the story her way. For me, THE ELIJAH DOOR story began with an image in my head of Seder tables spilling out of two front doors and meeting in the middle.  Long tables, with LOTS of people.  The actual plot of the story developed from that image, so it was really important  to me that that particular illustration be just right.  And because of my strong association of Passover with my Eastern European grandparents, the Eastern European look of the pictures was also very important to me.  And Alexi captured it all!

Me: Do you have a favorite image?

Linda: I think my “first favorite” is the two-page spread of the seder scene.  The detail in that woodcut is astonishing , and it’s remarkable to me how Alexi managed, in that very difficult medium, to make the story characters recognizable, to include holiday detail, and to add so much humor and humanity to the illustration. I also love the illustration of Mama Lippa hanging her family’s holiday clothes on the line to air — how Alexi has captured the wind blowing the clothes.  And the picture of the mother and the children sleeping over their plates at the end of the Seder, which reminds me of how sleepy I used to get as a child at the end of our very long Seders.

***

Linda is officially spending the day with Shannon Hitchcock over at  Pen and Prose, so please be sure to follow her over there. Many thanks to the author for popping in here, too. And a humongous thanks to Alexi Natchev for making the time to talk during such a crazy, stressful work week.

If you’d like to see Alexi Natchev’s wood block prints in person, they’re on display through March 31st at Hebrew Union College. Virtually, you can them posted on his  web site. And of course you can see them, beautifully rendered, in The Elijah Door.

For more information on great Jewish books, visit the Association of Jewish Libraries, especially the official Sydney Taylor Book Awards page. The blog tour wraps up tomorrow at The Whole Megillah, and the whole tour schedule can be found here.

 

Posted in art, artist interview, author interview, illustration, judaism, kidlit | 4 Comments

Sydney Taylor Blog Tour

Hoping you’ll join us next week for the Sydney Taylor Blog tour, where bloggers go behind-the-scenes with award-winning authors and illustrators of some amazing Jewish children’s books. Check back here on the 14th for my interview with illustrator Alexi Natchev. The full tour schedule is below:

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 2013

Ann Redisch Stampler, author of The Wooden Sword, visits  Shelf-Employed

Carol Liddiment, illustrator of The Wooden Sword, is over at Ann Koffsky’s Blog

Doreen Rappaport, author of Beyond Courage: The Untold Storyof Jewish Resistance During the Holocaust will be at Bildungsroman

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2013

Linda Glaser, author of Hannah’s Way, is at This Messy Life

Adam Gustavson, illustrator of Hannah’s Way, will be at Here in HP

Louise Borden, author of His Name was Raoul Wallenberg, is at Randomly Reading

Deborah Heiligman, author of Intentions, will be at The Fourth Musketeer

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2013

Sheri Sinykin, author of Zayde Comes to Live, is at Read, Write, Repeat

Kristina Swarner, illustrator of Zayde Comes to Live, is at Reading and Writing.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2013

Linda Leopold Strauss, author of The Elijah Door, will be at Pen and Prose

Alexi Natchev, illustrator of The Elijah Door, will be right here!

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2013

Blog Tour Wrap-Up at The Whole Megillah

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A thank-you note

Thank you to the Jewish Book Council for naming The Schmutzy Family (with super-groovy illustrator Paul Meisel) as a finalist in the National Jewish Book Awards for illustrated children’s books. I keep going back to the web site and checking to see if my name is still there. (It is!)

Thank you to the Sydney Taylor Book Award Committee for listing The Schmutzy Family among your notables. Taylor’s All-of-a-Kind Family books were extremely important to me growing up in Blacksburg, Va., where there weren’t a whole lot of Jewish girls. Grateful to Ella, Henny, Sarah, Charlotte and Gertie for the company.

Here’s a photo of my daughter’s diorama for her book report last year, for All-of-a-Kind-Family Downtown. This is before it was colored in and before the Sculpey  pushcarts, and while she was experiencing technical difficulties (i.e. an invasion by The Cat).

 

Posted in judaism, kidlit, thank you | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Birthday of the Trees

It’s nearly Tu B’Shevat, the Birthday of the Trees, but you don’t have to be Jewish to celebrate your leafy friends. (See Arbor Day, Earth Day and Every Day.)  Here are some activities you might try with your kids, even in January, when the trees are stripped of their finery:

Leaf rubbings: Grab some leaves and crayons. If you can’t find any maple or oak leaves still hanging around, try evergreens. They make great patterns, which in turn make fine covers for letters or notes (you did make a New Year’s resolution about keeping in better touch with friends, right?) Try holding your paper against the tree and make a bark rubbing. Study the differences between different trees.

Plant a tree. I always thought you needed to wait until spring to plant a tree, but when I was doing some research for Happy Birthday, Tree, I learned that it’s okay to plant them while it’s still winter, so long as the ground is soft enough that you can dig a proper hole. (Apparently, when the trees are in their “sleepy” states, they’re less likely to suffer from root shock.) Here are some planting tips from The Tree People.

Be the tree. (Very zen sounding, no?) Hold your arms up to the sky. Bend in the breeze. Ask your child: If you were a tree, what kind of tree would you be?

Have a birthday party for your trees. Make a cake (I recommend chocolate, to look more like dirt.) Add a few gummy worms for authenticity. Make newspaper hats, like the ones Joni makes in Happy Birthday, Tree. Some templates are here, from Martha Stewart, no less.

Have a Tu B’Shevat Seder. Or for the secular crowd: eat as many different types of fruits as you can.

Find the strangest fruit you can find. Read about it. Eat it!

Count the trees. How many different kinds do you have in your yard? Do you see anything living in your trees? Count the different ways trees are used in your home. (Wooden tables or floors or chairs? Home for animals? Paper?)

Climb a tree.

Sing about trees, in Hebrew and English.

And of course: Read about trees.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

Hug a tree, and say “thank you” for all your trees offer you, every day.

 

Posted in gardening, holidaze, reading with kids, Trees, Tu B'Shevat | Leave a comment