Author Archive

Picture books look simple, right? Well, they’re meant to look simple. But like most books, Over and Under the Snow represents years of work, conversations, revisions, impatience, worry, and inspiration.

While discussing the principles of a good picture book would take much longer than one blog post, Over and Under offers a nice opportunity to explore some of the ways children’s books do a great deal in spare words and art.

CADENCE / MUSIC

Over the snow I glide. Into woods, frosted fresh and white.

Cadence is not something you can build from instructions; Ikea does not sell it. Most talented writers seem to have an innate sense of the various musics of our language and the effects of those musics—I don’t know anyone who does this by anything other than feel.

And yet the effect here is very deliberate. The rhythm of these sentences is regular; it is the rhythm of the skiers’ movements; the repeated “ess” sounds evoke the swish of the skis on snow. (In these spare eleven words, there are five sets of repeated sounds. Alliteration and assonance generate a connectedness in these words in addition to their meaning.) And listen to the pauses—you can’t hurry through this arrangement of words. Particularly the combination of ‘frosted’ with ‘fresh’ makes a very slight tongue-twister. Between that and the punctuation, the reader unconsciously pauses three times in this short speech. What we hear in Kate’s words is as important as what she makes us hear in between the words—the space, the hush of this winter landscape.

ACCURACY

“Under the snow is a whole secret kingdom, where the smallest forest animals stay safe and warm. You’re skiing over them now.”

Chipmunk, mouse, squirrel—their renderings here vary a bit, tempting the reader to pause on them, wonder about them. But their proportion to each other is deliberately consistent, because some children will never before have seen a chipmunk (for example). Research by the author, the artist, and the fact-checker (always, a fact-checker, just to be sure) underlies every piece of good nonfiction.

Accuracy is less sexy than other qualities, but still of fundamental importance. Behind the scenes at the publisher of any nonfiction book, there is a great deal of discussion about the line between artistic interpretation (in both text and art) and the factual import children need from nonfiction books. How much abstraction for artistic intent is acceptable? What needs to come across in information? What needs to come across in feeling?

Another example of the thoughtful choice between fact and interpretation is the term “secret kingdom”, which is used more than once in the book. Not until the backmatter does Kate explain that the technical term for the place under the snow but above the ground is “subnivean zone”. Both terms are powerful for different reasons, and we deliberately made space for both in the book.

CONNECTION

Over the snow I glide, past beech trees rattling leftover leaves and strong silent pines that stretch to the sky. Under the snow, a tiny shrew dodges columns of ice; it follows a cool tunnel along the moss, out of sight.

The girl is skiing among the columns of trees; the shrew is scampering among the columns of ice. Over and over, Kate and Chris draw parallels (sometimes gentle, sometimes direct) between the aboveground, visible world, and the hidden worlds under the snow. Connection is important: the central character in almost every book is a proxy for the reader, and that means the connection between the girl and the under-the-snow world is the connection between the reader and the under-the-snow world.

This book offers readers the chance to identify more strongly with these small, often forgotten animals—and the more a child can identify with the world around them, the more that child has the experience of feeling that the world they inhabit belongs to them. That’s a powerful feeling for a child.

MYSTERY

Under the covers, I snuggle deep and drift into dreams.

Of cuddling deer mice and slumbering frogs. Hungry beavers and tunneling voles. Drowsy bears and busy squirrels. And the secret kingdom under the snow.

All of this text could have happened cozily on the spread of the girl under her covers, and the ending would have been satisfying. But Chris took us back outside to a sky full of woodland animal constellations, and the ending became . . . magical.

We don’t talk about this element of books much. Partially we avoid it because it is tempting to use the word “magic”, and that runs the risk of people not taking us seriously, but mostly it is because it is difficult to describe and highly subjective.

Nevertheless, mystery is the secret spice of all compelling books. It is the unexpected and yet perfectly fitting element; when it appears its rightness is palpable, and yet often just beyond the reach of easy explanation. Why does it feel so right? We can’t quite put our fingers on it.

Another reason mystery is less talked about, I think, is because many people meet this fascinating, fleeting sense of a meaning almost grasped, a music almost heard, and conclude it is a failure in themselves and in others to fully comprehend a book. This is not so.

Conceptual layers, conceptual depth, is what creates nuanced and interesting books. The elusive intellectual feeling of mystery comes from our minds’ effort to compare multiple conceptual frameworks, like looking through layers of tracing paper to see the one image those layers create. It’s intellectual exercise, and it’s fun. And it means you’re doing it right.

Mystery is what draws us back to a book again and again; it is what makes any work of art more than the sum of its parts.

If you want to see the many other instances of cadence, accuracy, connection, and magic in Over and Under the Snow, you’ll have to buy the book. Enjoy!

Melissa Manlove
Editor

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Popularity: 1% [?]

I wear sneakers on my way to and from work, and keep a pair of shoes at the office.

But this morning I arrived at the office to find my turquoise flats missing, and in their place, a piece of paper:

Did it fall out of a submission? Where were my shoes?!

I went to the website:

VENGEANCE!

(The caption says, “MM: follow the star!”)

Ok, I am a little bit known for pranks around the office. Who left stick-on moustaches on all of the office’s wall art? Who hid a dozen donuts in a colleague’s files, papers, shelves, and desk, and then invited her department to interrupt her to look for them? Yes, it was me.

So I’m kind of due, right? However, I firmly believe that no amount of justified karma precludes revenge. Revenge is its own reward.

Next to my computer,

one of our Christmas books, standing out of place on my desk. Hmm.

I open the book.

Post-it notes!

“Maybe everything…

“…leading to invisible…

“…shoes sits within…

“…a man who went to the far side of the moon. (first floor book room.)

“…marked above the number nine…

“…lies one non-verbal explanation.”

The Man Who Went to the Far Side of the Moon is a Chronicle book (and a really good one, too, in case you’re looking for something about astronauts).

I hustle down to the first floor book room, where there is just one copy of The Man Who Went to the Far Side of the Moon on the shelf (it’s the silver one you can’t read in this photo).

AHA!

And on page 9, I find a piece of tracing paper with little circles on it:

The circled letters spell: “Go to the Library.” This is, of course, not a non-verbal clue. Is it a red herring? Did the orchestrator of this hunt just change his or her mind?

Blast it, it’s too early for all these stairs. Up to the fourth floor. I find one of our rolling easels, on which someone has been writing notes about our projected yearly gross revenue. But underneath that:

“MM: you’ll find what you’re looking for under the 3rd floor stairs.”

And I did. Down the stairs to the awards shelf, I find my shoes tucked in like little trophies. The happy ending:

And the happiest ending: REVENGE.

Melissa Manlove
Editor, Children’s

Popularity: 1% [?]

If you’ve been in a bookstore lately, you may have noticed a growing section in children’s books: doodling and drawing. In the last couple years there has been an absolute boom of these books. The reason?

Taro Gomi. When Taro Gomi first published Scribbles, the other drawing books available were largely cheap, didactic, and poorly designed. Taro Gomi’s 300+ page, $19.99 doodling book is a wonder of imaginative play and elegant, accessible art. They’ve been wildly successful.

Now there are many books that are rushing to imitate Taro Gomi, but I haven’t seen one book yet that appeals as easily and widely to so many people: Taro Gomi is beloved by children and adults, people who care about design and people who don’t, people who think of themselves as artists and people who aren’t sure they’re holding their pencil the right way.

You may also know Taro Gomi from his picture books: Spring Is Here, My Friends, Bus Stops. Everybody Poops is his as well (though Chronicle doesn’t publish that one).

There’s really no imitating him. Everything he does has a simplicity that draws readers in, and you don’t realize how subtly layered his work is until you realize you’ve spent more than twice as much time with his books as any of the others your kid likes.

So Chronicle was absolutely thrilled to have him fly over from Japan to visit our offices this month. THRILLED. We sat with him for hours, talking books, children’s book philosophy, and new formats. We did some brainstorming, which was fascinating.

Brainstorming is one of the things we love to do most at Chronicle, so getting the chance to brainstorm with someone as conceptual and creative as Taro Gomi was a rare treat. Practically the whole design floor turned out for him.

We’ll be sending him blank printer’s mock-ups of several new formats over the coming months so that he can see what unique spin he’ll give them. It’s awfully exciting! I can’t wait to see them finished and out in the world.

This is difficult for you, blog readers, because the new formats won’t be ready for a year or two. We’ll be working hard to finish them as soon as possible. But if you need a taste of Taro Gomi now, pick up one of the fab books we have out already. Look for the big, thick books that you can’t put down… and accept no substitutes!

WIN A FRAMED, AUTOGRAPHED TARO GOMI PRINT!
Write a comment by Friday, February 12th and tell us why you love Taro Gomi, or your favorite Taro Gomi book, and we’ll choose one winner to receive this adorable, limited-edition print signed by the master himself! Good luck!

Melissa Manlove
Associate Editor, Children’s

Popularity: 2% [?]

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People I Don’t Want to See Naked: Jeez, there are lots. In fact, I think it’s almost everyone.

The discomfort factor in nudity is for me, as it is for most people, a matter of inappropriateness. Aside from private (extremely private) instances, there are just very few instances of nudity which you can witness in a socially acceptable way.

But of course there are exceptions. Small children running around naked: who cares? They have no conception of why clothes should matter. Nudity means nothing to them. Depictions of the human form in Art: no problem. About beauty rather than sex.

These public nakednesses are the only ones that do not give me an icky feeling. You, too? I thought so.

Which brings us to People You Don’t Want to See Naked People: children, right? Children… young enough that nudity means nothing to them?

Yeah, there’s the problem. Some people seem to take issue with young children seeing depictions of the human form in Art, in spite of the fact that (a) they’re small children and (b) it’s art. It’s like not letting children wander into the woods for fear they might meet a sculpture of a wolf.

This image here is from a book for children just that young– it’s kind of Richard Scarry meets Where’s Waldo. It’s a bestseller in 13 countries, but it almost failed to find a home in the largest children’s book market in the world–the U.S.–because of the two small representations of nudity-in-art that you can see below.

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Yes, that’s right. Abstract ta-tas and an itsy pee-pee. That’s what the hoopla over censorship, American prudishness, and Boyds Mill is all about. Boyds Mill dumped the whole four-book series because the author wouldn’t change this image. Sheesh.

Children do not care about this kind of nudity. So guess what? These books have found a home here at Chronicle, and thhpppt to the people so terrified of overprotective parents that they won’t make a good book available to the public.

You’ll see an omnibus edition of the four books by Rotraut Suzanne Berner (Winter, Spring, Summer, and Fall) on our list in Fall 2008, and kids are going to love it.

And the parents with a tendency to hyperventilate can take a deep breath and get over it.

Popularity: 6% [?]

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Most people get into children’s books because, deep down, they want to affect children’s lives and, you know, maybe make the world a better place. I may have had some of that motivation.

Then you actually start working in children’s books, and discover that you do affect children’s lives… but maybe not in the way you had in mind. I just heard from a kid who read Children’s Miscellany Too (for which I was the American editor; it was originally a British book). Her family was on a road trip, and happened to stop at a restaurant that had live chickens running around outside.

Using the book, she successfully hypnotized one of them.

If you want to know how to do it yourself, watch this great YouTube video of somebody doing essentially what the book recommends. (And if you search YouTube for “hypnotize chicken,” you’ll find there are other ways to do it, too. Evidently it takes very, very little to short-circuit a chicken brain.)

Yup, I’m changing the world. One chicken at a time.

Melissa Manlove
Chronicle Children’s Group

Popularity: 4% [?]