Author Visits 101

Ok.  I am going to admit right here right now that I don’t know anything about being a children’s book author.  That’s not true.  I know how to write books.  I like writing books. Writing is so cozy.  It feels just right to be curled up with a pen and a journal and my own head, writing a story or a poem.  Just right.

The part I don’t know anything about is the showing-the-world-I-wrote-a-book part.  For example, my wonderful brother made this website.  He knows I have to show the world I wrote a book.  He told me to write posts on the website.

I don’t know what to write.

I teach elementary school.  My favorite things to teach are writing and science.  When my students don’t know what to write, I tell them to write about how hard it is to come up with an idea to write.  Boom.  Instant idea.

I do, however, have an idea for this post.  I swear.

When one doesn’t know how to do something, one must teach one’s self.  I need to go to some author visits.  Luckily, since I am a teacher with two kids of my own, and a writer, and a New Yorker, I tend to feel like a busy person.  When my school had an author come to visit, I felt like the master of the universe!  I can do it all.

On Monday, the lovely Anica Mrose Ricci, author of the Anna, Banana series and The Teacher’s Pet came to my school for a visit.  Here are some things I learned:

  1. Cross your fingers that your mom saved everything you ever wrote as a child, because — oh, boy.  It is super cute to put your second-grade writing up on the smartboard in front of second graders when you are a published author.
  2. Cross your fingers that your mom or dad took lots of pictures of you reading and writing when you were a little kid.  Extra super cuteness.
  3. Make a connection between things that you like and things that you write.
  4. Talk about the publishing process.  Let them know that you don’t draw the pictures (if you didn’t, which I don’t) and you don’t know how to bind a book.  But that you did have cute little back-and-forths with the illustrator.
  5. Ask the illustrator to share some of their process illustrations with you.
  6. Wear something cute and quirky.

That’s what I have learned so far.  Thanks, Anica, for the lesson.  Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go call my mom about some photos.