Good News from the Online Author Visits Team!

Good News from the Online Author Visits Team!

Skype school visits have been a terrific way for author/illustrator Erik Brooks to expand the participation in his Presidential Polar Bear Post Card Project. After some terrific in-person conversations in Boston at ILA, Erik just did his first PPBPC Skype visit of the new school year with a fantastic group of second graders in Maryville, TN. You can read about it on the classroom blogspot here. With much thanks to teachers Alyson and Courtney for the awesome write up!

Erik also has a new cover reveal for his fist board book project, If I Were a Whale by Shelley Gill (Little Bigfoot, Feb. 2017) and a newly published paperback version of last fall’s The Runaway Tortilla (by Eric Kimmel) that published on Sept. 1st.

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For those attending the upcoming Write on the Sound Writers’ Conference in Edmonds, WA, Lisa L. Owens would love to see you at her session “Exploring Your Voice As a Children’s Writer.” The content is appropriate for writers at all levels, whether you’re already actively publishing or just starting to think about writing for the children’s market. It’s scheduled for Sunday, October 2, at 1:45 p.m.
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my-dog-japaneseLaurie Ann Thompson was thrilled to receive her author copies of the Japanese version of My Dog Is the Best! She’s also looking forward to reading the English version at the Seattle Public Library’s Central Library storytime on October 1st from 11am to noon.

 

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In addition, she’s excited to be joining the incredible team of authors at iNK (Inter­est­ing Non­fic­tion for Kids), which “pro­motes the use of non­fic­tion in classrooms through pro­grams that help teach­ers use real books to teach to cur­ricu­lum stan­dards in ways that excite and inspire students.” Stay tuned for more!
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Suzanne Williams and Joan Holub are going to be writing a new series together! THUNDER GIRLS (tentative title) will be their fourth co-written series. This time they’ll be delving into the world of Norse mythology and writing about tween-age gods and godesses at Asgard Academy, which is located in the top one of nine worlds under the sheltering branches of the World-Tree, Yggdrasil. Books 1 and 2 (of an initial four) will pub Spring 2018. Suzanne is especially excited about this new series as she visits Norway often. Her daughter (and now a granddaughter too!) live in Oslo.

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The Norse god, Odin, rides on his eight-legged horse, Sleipner, in this painted wooden frieze, one of many depicting Norse myths on the side of Oslo’s town hall.
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And if you’re attending the Washington Library Association’s conference on October 15 at Highline College in Des Moines, WA, come hear OAV members Erik Brooks, Dori Hillestad Butler, Martha Brockenbrough, Janet Lee Carey, Clare Hodgson Meeker and Dana Sullivan talk about their new books at two “Behind the Books” sessions. Deb Lund will be moderating the elementary session and Laurie Ann Thompson will be moderating the middle and high school session.

Good News from the Online Author Visits Team!

Here’s a peek at what our members have been up to this month:


Erik Brooks has final cover art/design to share for July’s Later, Gator! (Sterling Children’s Books), and he couldn’t be more pleased. He is also excited to Skype with Schickler Elementary for his first World Read Aloud Day on February 24.

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Martha Brockenbrough was on the national SCBWI faculty in New York, where she taught techniques in social media. She also interviewed Rainbow Rowell. She’ll be visiting a community in Kansas City in March, and a school in Connecticut in April.

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Patrick Jennings has been visiting schools in the Sno-Isle Library District as his book, Odd, Weird & Little is on the reading list for their Mega-Fun, Biblioday-Trivia, Rockem Sockem Reading Challenge. He’s also been doing Skype visits with participating schools that he’s not visiting. (There are 40 schools participating in the challenge!) The kids, all in third grade, are super-excited about participating (i.e. studying the books that they will be quizzed on in team competitions). He’s been having a ball!

Patrick’s drawing pad after a presentation. They wrote a story in fifteen minutes based on audience suggestions.
A librarian’s jacket with last year’s book list embroidered on it

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Dana Sullivan writes: I just had a GREAT experience in New York City! While there for the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators winter conference, I stopped in at the 42nd St. Public Library, where I met Louise C. Lareau, the children’s librarian. She grabbed some of my books off the shelves, which I signed. THEN I got to sign the author guest book! And THEN I got a NYC library card! You don’t have to be a NY resident and it’s good for three months. I don’t have any plans for checking books out, but I flash that card whenever I can. The next day I went back for a visit and my books were on display. I definitely  ♥ New York!

 

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Earlier this month, Laurie Ann Thompson presented to 130 young changemakers at the Pacific Northwest Association of Independent Schools (PNAIS) Student Diversity Leadership Retreat for middle school. Students learned about acceptance and social justice, brainstormed ideas and plans for how they could increase diversity and inclusion at their schools, and then shared their best ideas with the group. It was an inspiring event for all! Laurie also spoke recently about how to Be a Changemaker to a mixed group of students and adults on behalf of the Newcastle Youth Community Engagement Program.

In awards news, My Dog Is the Best was awarded a 2015 Blue Ribbon from the Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books (BCCB), and Emmanuel’s Dream is a finalist for the 2016-2017 Georgia Children’s Picture Book (Gr. K-4) Award!

Good News from the Online Author Visits Team!

Here’s a peek at what our members have been up to this month:

Martha Brockenbrough worked with aspiring novelists and poets at the Northwest Institute of Literary Arts, where she was a guest faculty member for their winter master’s degree residency. She likes working with grownup writers almost as much as she likes working with students (and is available to Skype with groups of teachers as well).

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Dori Hillestad Butler thought she was ending her Haunted Library series at book 8, but two days after she turned in the final revision, her editor offered her two more books. She had to quickly do a little more revision to book 8 so she could continue the series, but now she’s prepared to keep the series going indefinitely. Here’s a sneak peak at the cover of book 7, The Ghost in the Tree House, which comes out the end of March.

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Dia Calhoun and Lorie Ann Grover are excited to announce the upcoming publication of The Magic Cup by Howard Behar. The two critically acclaimed authors collaborated in the writing of the corporate fairy tale with Behar, former president of Starbucks International. The book encapsulates the values he has held as a leader throughout his life, such as truth, courage, compassion, and responsibility. The Magic Cup helps us discover that only by acting on sound moral values can we fill our lives with the personal and professional success and satisfaction we seek.

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Joan Holub has two new books out this month. This Little President: A Presidential Primer is a board book with simple information and facts for your little leaders-in-training. Perfect for Presidents Day and Election Year 2016. What Was Woodstock? is a groovy new chapter book for ages 7 and up about the 1969 rock music festival in New York.

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The ALA Youth Media Awards were announced last week, and Emmanuel’s Dream: The True Story of Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah by Laurie Ann Thompson received a Schneider Family Book Award! This award is for books that “embody an artistic expression of the disability experience.” Emmanuel’s Dream was also included in the ALA Notable Children’s Books list for 2016.

The Cooperative Children’s Book Center announced its CCBC Choices list for 2016, which included Emmanuel’s Dream and My Dog Is the Best.

And, Be a Changemaker: How to Start Something that Matters won a Gelett Burgess Children’s Book Award in the Helping Others & Philanthropy category.

 

Good News from the Online Author Visits Team!

Here’s a peek at what our members have been up to this month:

OAV authors Erik Brooks, Dori Hillestad Butler, Dana Sullivan, Laurie Thompson, Trudi Trueit and Suzanne Williams recently joined their Northwest colleagues in Seattle for the Inside Story. Educators, booksellers and book lovers of all ages packed the auditorium above Mockingbird Books to hear our authors talk about what inspired their new books. The event is sponsored by the Western Washington Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators. The highlight of the evening was the presentation of SCBWI’s Crystal Kite Award to OAV’s own Laurie Thompson for her inspiring book, Be A Changemaker. The Crystal Kite is an award voted on by peers, recognizing outstanding books from 15 SCBWI regional divisions around the world. Congratulations, Laurie!

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OAV authors Martha Brockenbrough and Janet Lee Carey joined YA authors and hundreds of YA librarians at the YALSA Symposium in Portland, Oregon. Highlights included the Book Blitz–a terrific confluence of energized YA librarians and YA authors coming together at a single Saturday evening book signing. Martha and Janet signed stacks of The Game of Love and Death and In the Time of Dragon Moon for library shelves and lucky teen winners in libraries across the U.S. Generous publishers (Scholastic for Martha B. and Kathy Dawson Books/Penguin Random House for Janet C.) donated books for the YALSA Blitz. Here’s Martha with Mindy Mathis, a Napa library. A good time was had by all!

                                                                       
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Martha Brockenbrough‘s Game of Love and Death continues to collect awards. It was one of Amazon’s YA Books of the Year and also made Publisher’s Week’s Best of the Year list for YA.
                                                                       
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The sixth book in Dori Hillestad Butler‘s Haunted Library series, The Ghost at the Fire Station, launched on November 3 and to celebrate her publisher sent her on tour! She visited schools and bookstores in Fort Collins, Chicago and Miami. The highlight of the tour was reconnecting in person with her 6th and 7th grade English teacher, Mr. Hartshorn. When Dori was in 6th grade, she wrote a novel for
Mr. Hartshorn for extra credit. She believes she is an author today in part because of his response to that novel.

Dori’s first Haunted Library book also won the Silver Falchion award for “Best Children’s Chapter Book” at Killer Nashville, a place for thriller, suspense and mystery writers and literature lovers.

If you’re in the Seattle area, visit Dori and the 26 other local authors who are participating in the Seattle 7 Writers Holiday Fest at the Phinney Neighborhood Center on Saturday, November 21 from 3:00 until 5:00.

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November is Picture Book Idea Month and Joan Holub helped kick off PiBoIdMo 2015 with three ways she comes up with ideas. And she’s giving away a wooden castle to celebrate idea #2, which inspired her new picture book, The Knights Before Christmas. Read to the end of her post on ideas for a chance to enter!

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In addition to the Crystal Kite award, Laurie Ann Thompson has a couple of other new awards to smile about. Emmanuel’s Dream won a Eureka Nonfiction Honor Award from the California Reading Association and Be a Changemaker received a Gold Medal from the Moonbeam Award.

She also recently returned from the AASL annual conference in Columbus, Ohio, where she met many inspiring teacher librarians, signed books, and moderated a panel on “Changemakers in Society: Books that Motivate Kids to Solve Problems and Make the World a Better Place,” featuring fellow nonfiction authors Shana Corey, Loree Griffin Burns, Melissa Steward and Don Tate.

And she released this new book trailer for My Dog Is the Best.

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Trudi Trueit is excited to again be in the author line-up for Sno-Isle Regional Library’s AUTHOR NEXT DOOR series. Come meet her, along with seven other Northwest authors, at this relaxed panel format on Saturday, December 5 at the Mountlake Terrace Library from 2:00 to 3:30pm. Don’t miss this fun event! Probing questions will be answered at deep secrets reveals (writing secrets, that is!). Books will be available for purchase following the event.

Trudi had a great time recently skyping with 3rd to 5th grade students at Old Town Elementary School in Maine all the way from her home in Seattle! The students asked some insightful questions, including one she’d never had before: how does writing affect your social life? The answer? Writing is a solitary career, but she gets out as much as she can!
                                                                      
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Cover Reveal!!! Suzanne Williams reports that she and Joan Holub are thrilled that two more books will be added to their Grimmtastic Girls series in 2016. Book 7: Snowflake Freezes Up releases on April 26. “Snowflake isn’t sure which fairy tale character she is. But with her magical powers causing lots of trouble, she’s definitely on thin ice! So just in case she might be a villain, Snowflake is chilly to her classmates. Can she keep her cool until she knows her whole story or will her social life at Grimm Academy be permanently frozen? 

Good News from the Online Author Visits Team!

Here’s a peek at what our members are up to this month:

Martha Brockenbrough’s Game of Love and Death is a finalist for the Kirkus Prize. It was also an ALA Booklist pick for Top Ten Romance for Youth, and is a finalist on the YALSA Best Books for Young Adults list. If you’re in the Seattle area, she’ll be speaking with Nancy Pearl and Steve Scher this Sunday at Town Hall about grammar.

                       

                                                                        

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Dori Hillestad Butler has online author visits scheduled with schools in Kansas, New Hampshire, Minnesota and Iowa this month. She will also be participating in the Humboldt County Children’s Author Festival in Eureka, CA from October 15-17, and she’s looking forward to promoting her new Haunted Library #6: The Ghost at the Fire Station in early November. She’ll be traveling to schools and bookstores near Denver, Chicago, Miami and around the Seattle area.



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Joan Ho-Ho-Holub “launched” her new picture book, The Knights Before Christmas at Quail Ridge Books with cake and catapults! Publisher’s Weekly called her book’s premise “great”: On Christmas Eve, three young knights guard the king’s castle against a red-and-white invader–Santa Claus!

And more jolly reviews just in for The Knights Before Christmas:
“This rousing, ridiculous Medieval “Night Before Christmas” parody jingles with castle and holiday wordplay. Cheeky digital illustrations brim with good cheer.” – Horn Book

“An excellent interplay between the amusing illustrations and the polished text, with lots of clever jokes for readers to discover in the art. These knights know how to keep the castle safe and readers entertained.” –Kirkus Reviews


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Dana Sullivan is hard at work on final art for Digger and Daisy Plant a Garden, the sixth in the Digger and Daisy early reader series, written by Judy Young. He reports that this book has not improved his attitude toward kale, but the unusually hot summer in Seattle did produce some delicious cherry tomatoes in his own garden.

He’s also teaching graphic novel workshops for the King County Library System. They are for all ages and FREE to library patrons. If you’ve always wanted to create your own graphic novel or comic book in two hours, check out the details and schedule here.

This coming weekend Dana will travel to Beaumont, Texas to speak at a literacy conference at Lamar University. His talk focuses on his path to diversity and inclusion, but Digger and Ozzie are really more excited about Beaumont being the reputed home of hte world’s largest fire hydrant. We’ll give you a full report upon their return.

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Praise for Trudi Trueit’s new middle grade novel, The Sister Solution (Aladdin M!X):”An insightful, engaging tale that celebrates the relationship that sisters share.” –Kirkus Reviews

Tween bloggers 5GirlsBookReviews “recommends this book for anyone that has sisters.” To learn more about The Sister Solution (for ages 9 and up) and download the reader’s guide, head to Trudi’s website: www.truditrueit.com.

If you live in the Seattle area, you’re invited to THE SISTER SOLUTION Book Release Party tomorrow night, Friday, Oct. 16th, from 7 – 8 pm at University Books in Mill Creek, WA! There will be an author chat/signing, food, a trivia contest w/prizes, a student writing display, and more!

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Laurie Ann Thompson has just wrapped up a slew of in-person events for all three of her books, especially Be a Changemaker.
She is soon heading off to Austin to read Emmanuel’s Dream at the Texas Book Festival, where she gets to meet illustrator Sean Qualls for the first time ever!
And, she was tickled to see this new review of My Dog Is the Best pop on Goodreads:

“I just hugged this book. It may be because this dog looks like my dog. But the text is cute and the dog is cute and the little boy is cute. I love it. Hug Hug Hug”  —Laela

Laurie Ann Thompson, Author of the Month: It Comes Down to Heart

Do you remember that song from Sesame Street that went, “One of these things is not like the other?” It’s probably no surprise that it was one of my favorites.

Sometimes I feel like I’m living that song: none of my books is very much like the others! That genre-hopping is one of the things I like to talk about with kids during my author visits. How can all of those different books come out of the same person? It’s fairly obvious how they’re all different, but what about them is them is the same? My answer is—it comes down to heart. Writing a book takes a long time and a lot of hard work. If I didn’t have an emotional attachment to what I was writing, I wouldn’t want to persevere through all of those months and years or put in the necessary effort to finish a manuscript. It doesn’t matter how worthy the topic might be or how marketable, the subject has to matter to me.

When I was a kid, and for most of my adult life as well, I desperately wanted to make a difference in the world. Unfortunately, I had no idea how to begin or any confidence that I had the ability to achieve anything important. I wrote my teen nonfiction, Be a Changemaker, for that person and others like her, so no one would need to feel like they had to wait in order to contribute something of value.

Emmanuel’s Dream, my picture book biography, comes out of a similar place. When I first heard about Emmanuel’s story, I was so moved by his confidence and perseverance. It affected how I thought about myself and my capabilities, and it inspired me not to give up on my own dreams of being a published children’s book author. I wanted to show kids they, too, could follow their dreams, no matter what others might try tell them.

And my newest book, My Dog Is the Best, comes from—you guessed it—my love of dogs, plus a family story and a somewhat quirky sense of humor! I grew up with dogs. For the first few years of my life, I’m pretty sure I thought I was a dog. And dogs have always been my best friends. When I was young my grandfather used to say his dog was “one of the better dogs.” I worried about what he would think of my dog, but thankfully Grandpa proclaimed him “one of the better dogs,” too. Since then, everyone in my family has called each of our dogs “one of the better dogs.” As an adult, I realized that whatever dog we fall in love with is, of course, the very best. I also noticed that I tended tell my dog, “Good dog!” when she was curled up asleep, which struck me as hilarious. All of those things combined to produce a lighthearted fiction picture book for younger children.

Readers can expect even more genre-crossing strangeness in the future with Two Truths and a Lie, a middle-grade fiction/nonfiction hybrid series co-authored with my agent, Ammi-Joan Paquette. These books reveal my nerdy side and love of the unbelievable and the absurd.

And there’s lots more weirdness where those came from, because I plan to keep following my heart and writing whatever grabs me, pigeonholes be darned!

In my author visits, I encourage kids to do this with their assigned writing, too. Yes, in the classroom there are requirements to do a particular kind of writing, be that persuasive writing, personal narrative, fiction, etc. But, within those confines, finding a way to tie a particular assignment to something that is uniquely them—a passion, interest, personal characteristic, or family story, for example—can make the assignments easier and more meaningful at the same time.

Professional authors choose their topics carefully to maintain that connection with their innermost emotions, and student writers should attempt to do the same thing. After all, if what to write about comes more easily, then perhaps more effort can be focused on trying to write about it well.

And that’s one way we’re all the same!

Good News from the Online Author Visits Team!


Here’s a peek at what our members have been up to lately …

Dori Hillestad Butler‘s Haunted Library recently made the ILA Children’s Choice list. The list is a joint endeavor by the International Literacy Association (ILA) and the Children’s Book Council (CBC) and is the result of voting by 12,500 school children from all over the U.S. Haunted Library is also part of Barnes & Noble’s 2015 Summer Reading Program. Children can earn a free book by reading any eight books, recording them in their reading journal and then bringing the completed journal to their local B&N store. Haunted Library is one of the 15 books that first- and second-graders can choose.

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 Joan Holub and Suzanne Williams Goddess Girls Books 1–8 starter collection is now available at Costco! Be sure to pick them up in bulk. Also, a bound collection of Heroes in Training Books 1–4 is soon to be available through Amazon, B&N, & Costco!

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Look for an essay by Lisa L. Owens in Dr. Bernie S. Siegel’s forthcoming Love, Animals & Miracles.

 
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Dana Sullivan gave a graphic novel workshop at Third Place Books Lake Forest Park on June 15. After a quick demo, he turned them loose with these instructions: 1) Introduce the hero, 2) Introduce the villain, 3) Conflict ensues, 4) Surprise twist ending! In less than an hour they all came through brilliantly with crazy and unexpected stories. Below right is one from his friend, Annie. O … 

 
Dana also just received the text for the sixth book in the Digger & Daisy series written by Judy Young  This new title is Digger and Daisy Plant a Garden and he’ll have a few months to complete the final art.

 

In July, Dana will be speaking at the ILA Conference in St. Louis about writing and illustrating his books, focusing on Kay Kay‘s Alphabet Safari, which also made the ILA Children’s Choice List. He can’t wait to meet Shaq and tell him about the real-life inspiration for Kay Kay. (Hint: he’s a real artists in the Kenyan village where the Star of Hope school and orphanage supplies love and education to more than 120 kids). Come to their fundraiser dance July 11, 2015, if you’re in Seattle!)

                                                                              

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Laurie Thompson has had a very busy spring. Her Be a Changemaker won a Parents’ Choice Recommended Award, along with the Society of Children’s and Bookwriter’s (SCBWI) Crystal Kite Award, an honor bestowed on her by her peers in the children’s literature writing community! Laurie’s children’s book, Emmanuel’s Dream was selected for the First Book Stories for All campaign. Laurie also just had a launch party for My Dog Is the Best, which is now available at your favorite online or retail bookseller. 

 
 

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Trudi Trueit recently signed a deal with Simon & Schuster’s Aladdin MIX division for a new middle grade book. American Kestrel (working title) tells the story of an American teen who travels to Canada to help save her grandmother’s ski lodge from foreclosure. To do it, she’ll have to battle of pair of evil twins, save a rock star dangling from a ski lift, and overcome her own worst fear! Publication is scheduled for Spring, 2017. This will be her third title for MIX, following Stealing Popular (2012) and The Sister Solution (releasing this Sept. 29th). 

If you live in the Seattle area, you’re invited to the book launch party for The Sister Solution on Friday, Oct. 16th at 7:00 pm at the University of Washington Bookstore in Mill Creek. Bring your sister (or a best friend that’s like a sister!).
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7:30 BELLS Guest Post: Laurie Ann Thompson

The following is a repost from author Dia Calhoun’s 7:30 BELLS, a blog series about what makes us ring, resonate, and fell alive.
 
I’m so pleased to introduce 7:30 BELLS readers to Laurie Ann Thompson, my new friend and author of two wonderful non-fiction books for kids. Be a Changemaker: How to Start Something that Matters, and Emmanuel’s Dream.
I recently did an author visit with two classes of sixth graders for their Teachers’ College Reading and Writing Project (TCRWP) unit on teen activism. I normally plan to speak for about 40 minutes and save the last 20 minutes for questions. For the first time, I ran out of things to say only 20 minutes in. I still can’t figure out what happened: did I skip a section, talk too fast, what? I was in a little bit of a panic when I realized I had 40 minutes left to fill and no plan for keeping 50 hungry 11-year-olds focused on the topic (it was right before lunch!). I decided to open it up to questions in the middle, which would give me time to frantically try to figure out what to say for the last 20 minutes.

Fortunately, the kids were awesome. Engaged and interested throughout, they had a TON of serious, insightful questions. We had meaningful discussions about being a changemaker, about reading, about writing, and about how the three overlap and enhance each other. Lo and behold, we used up all of our time! Despite its lack of structure, it was one of the best visits I’ve ever had, and I’m still feeling a little bit high from it.

The truth is I always feel like I’m walking on air after a presentation. As I told those kids, that never ceases to amaze me! When I was contemplating switching careers to become an author, one thing terrified me more than anything else—public speaking—and I’d do just about anything to avoid it. Toward the end of my senior year of high school, the administration posted our GPAs. I was one of the top in my class, which meant I’d have to give a speech at graduation. I nearly failed my last semester of Spanish—after having gotten As for four years straight—in a desperate attempt to end up third in my class. Success! No speech.

At that point, my main goal was to not be noticed. I lived in constant fear of making a mistake, terrified of failure. I avoided doing anything I wasn’t already sure I was good at. No one could find out I was a fraud, that I wasn’t really as smart as they all said I was. I played it safe and stuck to what I knew. That is no way to be a changemaker. In fact, it’s no way to live.

Of course, life has a way of changing us. Since then I’ve been put in situations that were way outside my comfort zone. Each time, successful or not, my comfort zone expanded. Succeeding at or even just surviving something I thought was out of reach is the best high there is. The bells ring for me when I’ve pushed myself to do something I never thought I could. That rush of adrenaline tells me I’m alive and growing, and that’s the best feeling there is.

 
Laurie Ann Thompson writes for children and young adults to help her readers—and herself—make better sense of the world we live in so we can contribute to making it a better place. She strive to write nonfiction that gives wings to active imaginations and fiction that taps into our universal human truths. She believes that each of us is capable of doing amazing things once we discover our passion, talent, and purpose. Thompson’s books are: Be a Changemaker: How to Start Something that Matters, and Emmanuel’s Dream, both Junior Library Guild Selections. My Dog Is the Best, is coming soon.

7:30 BELLS Posts run every Tuesday.

7:30 BELLS Guest Posts run on the second Tuesdays of every month. Join Dia Calhoun on April 14 for a guest post with the wonderful children’s author Dave Patneaude.