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WOOD, WIRE, WINGS and the Process of Engineering a Story

Happy (Belated) Book Birthday, Plus a Signed Book Giveaway!

By Kirsten W. Larson

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In 1906, just three years after the Wright Brothers first flew, Emma Lilian Todd, an inventor and self-taught engineer, looked at the airplane designs of the day and decided she could build something better. The process of creating her own unique airplane took Lilian four years, multiple designs and redesigns, and numerous tweaks and tests. Nevertheless, she persisted (as they say).

One of my favorite images of Lilian Todd, hard at work in her workshop, which was also her studio apartment. Photo credit: The Library of Congress.

One of my favorite images of Lilian Todd, hard at work in her workshop, which was also her studio apartment. Photo credit: The Library of Congress.

Like Lilian, I spent four years finding the best way to tell her story, including trying out multiple formats and revisions sent out to critique partners and others to “test” my story. This week is the official birthday of WOOD, WIRE, WINGS: Emma Lilian Todd Invents an Airplane, illustrated by Tracy Subisak and published by Calkins Creek. In celebration, I thought it would be fun to take a look back at some of my early “designs” with a focus on my opening line.

I started this book in author Susanna Hill’s Making Picture Book Magic class in March 2014. From the start, Susanna encouraged a flexible approach to writing and required us to brainstorm several first lines. I selected this one for my first draft:

“Even as a child, Emma Lilian Todd couldn’t hold a bit of wire or tin without twisting and turning them and making something new.” (March 2014)

I loved this first line from the start. It spoke to Lilian’s visceral need to make. Inventing wasn’t something Lilian chose, but something she had to do, as elemental as breathing. The line had a lot of heart.

Like Lilian, airplanes were in my blood. Here I try on my dad's flight helmet.

Like Lilian, airplanes were in my blood. Here I try on my dad's flight helmet.

But like Lilian, I wasn’t satisfied. I kept tinkering in response to conference critiques and brainstorms I had for new directions. As is often the case, successive attempts didn’t necessarily improve my design. Here’s another crack at it from a year later:

“Toolbox by her side, Emma Lilian Todd whacked and snapped and snipped. In her hands, wood, wire, and tin transformed into toy airplanes.” (Feb. 2015)

This time I started the story not with Lilian as a child, but as an adult tinkering with toy airplanes. The lines have some nice alliteration and vivid verbs. Yet looking back on it now, I see that this approach didn’t speak to Lilian’s character as much as my initial first line from March 2014. Still, this is the version that enticed my agent (whew!) and eventually went out on submission to editors.

I soon learned my latest version wasn’t quite good enough to soar — yet — as many rejections came my way. Lucky for me, Carolyn Yoder, my brilliant and patient editor at Calkins Creek, offered me the opportunity to revise and resubmit my draft, encouraging me to add both context and heart. I tinkered some more and came up with this:

“Even as a small child, when Emma Lilian Todd saw problems, she sought solutions. At first, the problems were small, like how to find metal to make her inventions (Answer: She saved tin cans from her supper.) But as Lilian grew, so did the problems she wanted to solve.”(Jan. 2017)

Now, if you’ve read the book, you know this is close, but not the final opening. It captures Lilian’s problem-solving nature and places her invention of the airplane in that context. But let’s face it, it’s a bit flat.

Carolyn encouraged me to tweak my design AGAIN, and in April 2017, we came up with the final opening, part of the final design that soars onto shelves today.

 “To Emma Lilian Todd, problems were like gusts of wind: they set her mind soaring. Sometimes the problems seemed small, like where to find metal to craft her inventions. (Solution: she saved tin cans from her supper.) But soon Lilian’s challenges ballooned.”

The opening still speaks to Lilian’s fundamental need to solve problems. Yet it uses lyrical language, including simile, alliteration, and assonance, which help it sing. My word choices also hint at aviation by invoking gusts of wind and balloons.

In my first job after college, I traveled to air shows like the Reno Air Races to talk to the public about NASA and its aviation programs. It was good training for writing a picture book about airplanes!

In my first job after college, I traveled to air shows like the Reno Air Races to talk to the public about NASA and its aviation programs. It was good training for writing a picture book about airplanes!

Through this lengthy process, I came to realize that crafting stories (and even airplanes) is not necessarily about the flash of inspiration or the initial effort. The ability to create something that really works comes down perspiration — in other words, persistence — over many years.

So here’s my advice to writers: If a story speaks to your heart, stick with it. Keep tinkering and tweaking your draft. Make sure you add to your toolbox along the way, keeping up with the latest designs (by reading new books) and honing your craft. Someday the book of your heart will take flight, too.

Book Details

WOOD, WIRE, WINGS: Emma Lilian Todd Invents an Airplane

by Kirsten W. Larson
Illus. by Tracy Subisak

Pub Date: February 25, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-6297-9938-4
Publisher: Calkins Creek

GIVEAWAY DETAILS:

In celebration of the book birthday of WOOD, WIRE, WINGS, I’m giving away a signed copy to one lucky follower. Enter using the Rafflecopter below. Entries will close at 11:59 PST on March 4. Winners will be chosen at random and announced here and on social media on March 11.


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Kirsten W. Larson used to work with rocket scientists at NASA. Now she writes books for curious kids. Kirsten’s debut book, WOOD, WIRE, WINGS: EMMA LILIAN TODD INVENTS AN AIRPLANE, illustrated by Tracy Subisak, is available now from Calkins Creek. THE FIRE OF STARS: The Life and Brilliance of the Woman Who Discovered What Stars Are Made Of, illustrated by Katherine Roy (Chronicle), will follow in fall 2021. Kirsten also has written 25 nonfiction books for the school and library market.

Follow Kirsten:
Twitter: @kirstenwlarson
Instagram: @kirstenwlarson
Website: kirsten-w-larson.com

Top Ten Things to Love About Picture Books (A Book Birthday Countdown)

by Christina Soontornvat
author of The Blunders: A Counting Catastrophe!

10. They are meant to be shared with someone — a child, a grownup, or even a whole classroom full of wiggly people.

9. You can give your favorite ones as gifts to nice people. Mean people should never be given picture books. Give them smelly cheese, loosely wrapped in thin newspaper instead. 

8. They can be so silly that you bust a gut laughing (like KID COACH by Rob Justus).

7. They can be so moving that they bring a tear to your eye (like MUSLIM GIRLS RISE by Saira Mir and Aaliya Jaleel).

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6. They don’t have to have any words at all (like DRAWN TOGETHER by Minh Lê and Dan Santat).

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5. You can read them again and again and again. (When you are the parent of a three-year-old, this can seem annoying at the time, but years later you will still remember all the words to CHICKA CHICKA BOOM BOOM, and that’s gotta be worth something). 

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4. Sometimes when you read them again, you catch something that you missed the first time (like in TEA PARTY IN THE WOODS by Akiko Miyakoshi).

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3. They can help you feel fully seen, and loved just as you are (like JUST LIKE ME, by Vanessa Brantley-Newton).

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2. We picture book authors write our books for children, but you don’t have to be a child or have a child to enjoy them. In fact, I think our world would be a way better place if all the grownups read a picture book every day.

1. Wait . . . I don’t have this one . . . hold on a second — I must have lost count!

Annnnd . . . cue the segue to my new picture book, out today:
THE BLUNDERS: A COUNTING CATASTROPHE! (Gosh, that was brilliant, wasn't it? You never saw that coming.)

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Book Details

THE BLUNDERS: A Counting Catastrophe!

by Christina Soontornvat
Illus. by Colin Jack

Pub Date: February 11, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5362-0109-3
Publisher: Candlewick


Cathlin McCullough Photography

Cathlin McCullough Photography

Christina Soontornvat is the author of several books for young children, including the Diary of an Ice Princess chapter book series and the forthcoming novel, A Wish in the Dark. The Blunders: A Counting Catastrophe! is her first picture book. Learn more about all her books at www.soontornvat.com/books/


Connect with Christina:
Twitter: @soontornvat
Instagram: @csoontornvat

Connect with illustrator Colin Jack:
Tumblr:
colinjack.tumblr.com
Instagram: @colinjackstories

Happy Book Birthday, KID COACH!

By Rob Justus

As a debut picture book author and illustrator, I didn’t know that “book birthdays” were a thing (I like to operate in a nice little bubble). We were told that we could write about anything that celebrates this momentous occasion in an author’s life. It’s a big deal! GUYS! I’M PUBLISHED!!!

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I thought about doing a light-hearted post focusing on the evolution of a particular spread in KID COACH that started as this:

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And turned into this:

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But I didn’t think it did my journey to publication justice.

 A lot of people think it’s easy to make a children's book. Getting published is a marathon, not a sprint.

When I found out an offer was being made on KID COACH in September of 2018, I was sitting alone in my small one bedroom apartment, eating McDonalds in the dark.

Ottawa, Canada — where I live — was in the middle of a mass blackout after a strong storm and a series of tornadoes ripped through several parts of the city. Oddly most of my friends and family were out of town. My partner had taken the car for the weekend for a bachelorette party, so I was relegated to hanging out by myself.

My agent called to tell me the good news, then told me to go celebrate with people, but there I was . . . alone in the dark eating a Big Mac.

At first it was funny. Of course no one would be around to share this news with! But as the weekend went on it gave me time to reflect on the five-year journey it took to get a book deal. The second night without power, I had decided to have a beer in the park overlooking the Ottawa River.

It was at this point that I had a good cry.

I was feeling such a mix of emotions. I was over the moon that I had finally accomplished my goal, my dream! I’d been through numerous submissions, rejections, and loads of self-doubt, but also my life had completely changed in those five years.

One of the reasons I took a shot at becoming a children’s book author and illustrator was because I’d been laid off and couldn’t find a job in my field. My industry had shrunk and I was losing job opportunities to people who had 20 years more experience than me as they scrambled for employment. It was shortly after this that my marriage suddenly came to an end. My ex-wife encouraged me to get into children's books, and I’m forever thankful to her for that, but I know it also played a role in the end of our marriage. Soon after this, my dad relapsed after 30 years of sobriety. I’m not sure what was harder. Going through my divorce or seeing my dad fall off the wagon so hard.

I could have given up then. I was broke. I had no real place to call home. It was just me and my dog, but I knew this is what I was supposed to do. The feeling was and is SO strong inside of me!

Thankfully during that time I met the most beautiful and supportive woman. She believes in me, even when my commitment “to make it” waivers. Without her support I wouldn’t have found my agent. Without her support I wouldn’t have written new stories. Without her support KID COACH would not have made it to publication, and it certainly wouldn’t be the fun read-out-loud it is today.

Needless to say, that night by the river all these emotions poured out of me. It had been such a long journey, but without all that I wouldn’t be here. It made the good news and that weekend so much more powerful. It made me appreciate where I was, what I had been through, and where I was going. Those five years taught me perseverance, persistence, and hard work.

Now here I am, a year and a half later. A new dad, engaged to the love of my life and prouder than anything that it’s my first book’s birthday! Not only that, I’m hard at work on the next three books to be released over the next two years (a second picture book with Page Street Kids and a series of middle-grade graphic novels named Death & Sparkles). FOUR books in three years!

It’s funny to think that this next phase of my new career started alone in the dark. Thankfully my future seems so bright.

Thanks, and happy birthday, KID COACH!

(Now go buy five copies of KID COACH!)


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Rob Justus is a guy who does this and that. When he’s not doing things, he’s probably doing stuff. His debut thingy, KID COACH, was born out of his love of doodads. He lives in that place where that guy with the air lives.




Follow Rob:
www.robjustus.com
Instagram: @robjustus
Indiebound
Indigo

Book Details

KID COACH

by Rob Justus

Pub Date: February 4, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-6241-4886-6
Publisher: Page Street Kids