Lumpito And The Painter From Spain

I’ve been sitting on the F & G’s for Lumpito And The Painter From Spain by Monica Kulling and Dean Griffiths for almost two weeks now.  I’ve been so busy with deadlines, grant applications and freelance editing that I haven’t had a chance to get to it.  Today I finally opened up the package from Pajama Press. What a delight!

 

Lumpito And The Painter From Spain is based on the true story of how a dachshund found a home with the painter, Pablo Picasso.  Monica Kulling tells a satisfying story with simple flare. Lump is an adorable dachshund who lives in Italy with David.  He loves his master, but Lump is unhappy.  We soon discover that his unhappiness has a great deal to do with his master’s other canine companion, Big Dog. Fortunately, when David is commissioned to photograph the famous painter, Picasso, Lump gets to come along. There’s only room enough for one small dog, so Big Dog has to stay behind.  On their arrival, the painter becomes enchanted with the little dachshund and even gives him a new name, Lumpito.  When David leaves, Lumpito does not. The dog and Picasso are inseparable. It’s no surprise that Lumpito inspires his new master and even appears in several paintings.

Dean Griffith’s gorgeous artwork compliments  Kulling’s story.  I loved the cover, especially with it’s focus on the adorable dachshund which wraps around to the back cover. Griffiths’ cover illustration of Lumpito invites the reader in by having them to follow bright red paw prints past a pot of paint brushes, past the title page with it’s spilled paint can, past the CIP data pages with swirls of colour, to the story’s beginning. Griffiths is clearly as at home painting landscapes as he is animals which he does brilliantly.  He captures perfectly the warmth between Lumpito and Picasso and several of the illustrations of the two are down right heartwarming.  The smattering of Picasso style renditions are equally accomplished and satisfying.

One of the things I most enjoyed about Lumpito And The Painter From Spain was how well Pablo Picasso’s larger than life personality came across without disrupting Lumpito’s story.  I suspect that more than a few readers will be intrigued enough with Picasso to want to learn more.

I also suspect that more than one dad reading this  bedtime story will wonder if Lumpito and David are really driving a Mercedes.  Yep, they are.  The photographer who left his dachshund with Picasso was the also famous David Douglas Duncan, who drove a Mercedes 300SL.

So, the next time someone tells you that picture books are a snap, I hope you’ll remember this one lovely book, and the obvious research that went into making it a perfect gem.

Lumpito And The Painter From Spain has an October 15, 2012 publication date. 

 

The car is packed…

The car is packed to the rafters with a dresser, coffee table, a coat tree, boxes of kitchen stuff, art, and  two ottomans.  Off to Vancouver to help my youngest set up house.  I wonder if I could call this research for a book?

Aside

September 8 is International Literacy Day

Tomorrow is International Literacy Day.  If you can read and write, you may want to help others do the same.  How?  Oh so many ways:

*team up with a bookstore to donate a book a month to your local elementary school,

*leave a good book that you’ve finished at a bus stop (it may spark a life-long love of reading in a stranger),

*volunteer to read to a child at your local elementary school or library,

*read a story to an elder who struggles with reading,

*donate to CODE Canada or another organization that helps promote literacy.

The question isn’t what you can do, and WHEN and HOW.

Choose to make our world a better place.  Support literacy today!

Opening the door to Amnesty International

I’ve always had a desire to change the world, to make it a better place.  When I was young, I gravitated to peace groups, literacy groups, organizations like UNICEF, CODE Canada, and Amnesty International.  The desire for change may have burned stronger when I was young than it does now that I’m in my fifties, but it’s still a flame that lights my way.  I was heartened to see that Amnesty International was given the “keys” to the Guardian’s teen book site for a day.  Here’s why:

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing’s going to get better: it’s not,” said Dr Seuss’s Lorax.

Amnesty International, the organisation of ordinary people from around the world standing up for humanity and human rights, think that the Lorax has got it right and it’s down to all of us to make a difference in the world.

Here’s the link if you want to read more.  I hope you do.

 

Toads on Toast by Linda Bailey

My friend Linda Bailey has a new picture book coming out soon that is super awesome, so you’ll want to check it out as soon as it hits a bookstore near you. It’s called Toads on Toast, and it features Linda’s quirky humor, toads, a not so wily fox, and yes, toast. Mamma Toad will jump through any hoop to save her brood from Fox’s frying pan.  But, in the end, her secret recipe for Toad-in-a-Hole is what saves the day. The secret? No toads!

If you haven’t heard of Linda Bailey, get on out and today and pick up one of her hilarious and endearing Stanley books.  You won’t regret it.  Linda is the award-winning author of Goodnight Sweet Pig, the Stevie Diamond Mysteries, and the Good Times Travel Agency series. She lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Buy art and support kids’ books in Canada

If you are plan to be in Montreal in mid-October, don’t miss the chance to score some fabulous art from some of Canada’s best children’s book illustrators.  It’s a two for one score since you get great art and you’ll be supporting the Canadian Children’s Book Centre who promote and support children’s literature in Canada.  They did this sort of auction a few years back in Vancouver and I came away with an original piece of art from Janet Wilson and it only cost me $50 (including a ticket for the wine and cheese social).

Rip Betty Waterton

Sad to hear that friend and author, Betty Waterton has died at the age of 88. She published her first book, A Salmon for Simon when she was 50, and she kept on publishing until 2008.  She was one of the first kid’s book writers to write about the west coast in picture book form, and was a real inspiration for me.  Another of my favorites was A Lighthouse Dog. I hadn’t seen Betty since she moved away from the coast a few years ago to be near her children and grandchildren.  Betty touched the lives of many children through her wonderful books. It’s nice to know that her stories continue to do so.  Here’s her obit link plus the link if you want to send condolences to her family.

Writing Opportunity for New YA Writers

What happens in the dark? Why are things different at night? Maybe it’s magic, or madness or both. A new anthology coming Summer 2013 from HarperTeen, Defy the Dark explores those questions and invites you to try your hand at answering them.

HarperTeen and Figment are joining forces in a new contest for new writers.  If you’re 13 or older and live in the US or Canada (excluding Quebec), you could win the chance to publish alongside professionals in a new YA anthology of short fiction.

Your short story can be in any genere but it must be between 2000-4000 words and it must take place at night or in the dark. You can write in any genre: contemporary, paranormal, horror, science fiction, romance, humor, fantasy, etc.

The Promotion began on August 1, 2012 at 12:00 a.m. Eastern Time (“ET”) and ends on September 1, 2012 at 11:59 p.m. ET (the “Promotion Entry Period”) so don’t delay.

Be sure to check the official website for exact contest rules.

Ideas

One day I’d love to go to the Edinburgh Book Festival. Such a great city and so many fabulous authors.  In an impromptu interview with the  Guardian, Patrick Ness, the author of A Monster Calls, was asked:

“What do you do when you’re struggling for ideas?”

Ness’s reply:

“Go for a run. I’m a long distance runner and I get my best ideas when I’m out running. It also helps that I can’t write it down immediately – if you hold onto an idea other things will stick on it.”

In this case, Ness didn’t have to run far for the idea.  The story is based on an idea from the late Siobhan Dowd.  And the story was beautifully and hauntingly illustrated by Jim Kay.  It was one of my favorites books from last year.

Where do you get your ideas from? is probably the question I’m asked more than any other. I think the real question is “How do you transform an idea into a story that resonates with readers?”  And that folks is where the art of writing comes in.  And so, I’d better get back to transforming ideas into something you will want to read!

Repurposing books…or not?

This video of Lauren Conrad cutting  up Lemony Snicket’s books for a craft project has gone viral, but not for the reason the TV star had hoped.  Book lovers are livid over cutting up perfectly readable books.  Ms Conrad talks about using vintage books, but here she’s a little misinformed. The A Series of Unfortunate Events books are relatively current titles that are still popular with children.

I’ve seen old books made into lamps, tables, and even Christmas trees. I’ve made “lace-like” table runners out of the  pages of an old dictionary and I’ve seen some stunning art created from books as a protest against library cutbacks.  I’m not really ofended by someone reusing or repurposing things, even books. Although, in this case, I may have passed those particular titles on to young readers or a school library in need rather than cut them up.

Lemony Snicket was asked by the Huffington Post what he thought about his books being destroyed.  His response was hilarious.

“It has always been my belief that people who spend too much time with my work end up as lost souls, drained of reason, who lead lives of raving emptiness and occasional lunatic violence. What a relief it is to see this documented.”

What do you think? Should books, even mass market books, ever be used in ways which they were not intended?

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