Bush Viper

BushViperbyRataMahatta

illustrated by Rata Mahatta

eye of beholder

slippery scales of propulsion

single focused lens

Camden

IMG_1355

yesterday

Owen, Annika, Emily and Oliver

buried Camden

their lab marvel

after many years of loving service.

I

will plant flowers at the site

to celebrate her

loyalty

and watch for

her spirit moves.

Center Stage

Oliver6-2016

photo by Owen

who’s the star in frame?

mushroom, bike or trail-rider?

team sports all of them!

Myths About Writing Children’s Books

TenPinkFingertips

Top 10 Myths About Writing Children’s Books

Myth #1
Children’s books are easy to write.

Myth #2
If I write a picture book, I have to illustrate it too (or hire an illustrator.)

Myth #3
Children’s books have to rhyme.

Myth #4
Since my kids/grandkids/class love my stories, they would make a great book.

Myth #5
It’s really important to follow trends, and write about things like vampires and dystopias if you write for teens.

Myth #6
Boys will only read “boy books” and girls will only read “girl books.”

Myth #7
As soon as I sell my book, I can quit my day job.

Myth #8
After my book is published, I’ll be sent on a book tour and be a guest on Ellen.

Myth #9
Picture book characters should be talking animals, not children.

Myth #10
I’ll never get published unless I have an agent.

Writers with Children

DSC05059

Louise Erdrich
She said, “By having children, I’ve both sabotaged and saved myself as a writer. […] With a child you certainly can’t be a Bruce Chatwin or a Hemingway, living the adventurer-writer life. No running with the bulls at Pamplona. If you value your relationships with your children, you can’t write about them. You have to make up other, less convincing children. There is also one’s inclination to be charming instead of presenting a grittier truth about the world. But then, having children has also made me this particular writer. Without my children, I’d have written with less fervor; I wouldn’t understand life in the same way. I’d write fewer comic scenes, which are the most challenging. I’d probably have become obsessively self-absorbed, or slacked off. Maybe I’d have become an alcoholic. Many of the writers I love most were alcoholics. I’ve made my choice, I sometimes think: Wonderful children instead of hard liquor.”

Four Abreast

Quenby'sWomen6-2016

women’s club struts strength

in sun’s solidarity

shoreline’s freedom trail

Eco-friendly

OwenBiker2016

land loves leaps of faith

root dances-bike strokes-sun rays

wispy whirls of wheels

Frazzled

Bub'sCatbyElizStanton

illustrated by Elizabeth Stanton

.

Tipsy top frazzle

feelers at attention; HUT!

tail end held aloft!

Ginger’s House

GingerBos2

Ginger’s spicy house:

where violets thrive; fabric’s hemmed;

and Kavi’s fed and loved.

Water

water

Water me
Swim me
Tip your toe
Slurp your tongue.

Freeze me
Throw me
Catch me
Puddle me.

Float me
Dive me
Ponder me
Respect me.

Jeanne Poland
June, 2016

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