Shennen Bersani's ONCE UPON AN ELEPHANT - Guest Post

Today I have the honor of featuring a fellow Picture Book Artists Association creator, Shennen Bersani. She's stopped by to tell us about her new book, ONCE UPON AN ELEPHANT written by Linda Stanek.

e: What is your creative process, can you walk us through it?
Shennen: The very first thing I do with any new book, whether I'm the author/illustrator, or illustrator, is "hands on" research. I want to experience what I'm about to create, I feel this brings an extra level of reality to my work. I've traveled all corners of the country visiting creatures in their habitats. I swam with Florida manatees, crawled in Carlsbad Cavern, held: bats, snakes, jellyfish, squid, spotted salamanders, seals, turtles, frogs, sea slugs, octopus, lobsters, fish of all description, insects of every kind, birds, and more I'm probably forgetting.
      From there the creation begins.
      I spend countless hours "painting" pictures in my head. While I'm cleaning, driving, catching up on my to-do list, my mind is running though an illustration or piece of art - step by step. By the time I sit down to work I have every stroke and color mapped out ready to execute. Before I begin I will clear out the day's stresses; tend to my plants, meditate on who and what I am grateful for, drink six cups of coffee…. kidding, well not really kidding, five cups minimum. (After a few hours of work I move to mugs of tea. My creative process involves a lot of caffeine.) I also love listening to something while I'm working, usually audio books. Any genre! I've just started illustrating my 26th book, so over the years I've listened to every topic under the sun! It all fuels my creative energy.
e: What is your medium?
Shennen: My usual "go-to" medium has been colored pencils on Arches. I scan this art and create a digital file to send to the publisher. Each book has its own voice, with some books I stop there. With others such as, Achoo! Why Pollen Counts, I added a coating of pollen covering the characters in Photoshop. When using Photoshop I have a Cintiq monitor I draw on. I would have to say though, that over time I am going more digital and I love having a variety of tools to choose from. The Shape Family Babies (written by Kristin Haas) was illustrated only using Photoshop. The fire scenes in Once Upon an Elephant (written by Linda Stanek) were created digitally. It is nice not being constrained by one medium.
e: Is there a unique or funny story behind the creation of this story?
Shennen: My most recent release, Once Upon an Elephant, came about after I illustrated Animal Partners (written by Scotti Cohn). My editor and I got together at the NSTA Conference in Boston to be on a panel discussing researching non-fiction books. While in Boston she mentioned the elephant book, and how it would work well with Animal Partners. I loved the idea, I had secretly been hoping for an African safari type book to come my way! I didn't get a chance to visit Africa for my research, but I did go to see three very lovely African girls (elephants) at the Roger Williams Park Zoo in Providence, RI.

e: What was your path to publication?
Shennen: My first paid illustration assignment was in the Boston Sunday Globe Magazine back while I was still in art school... It was many years down the road, and thousands of illustrations later, when I got into illustrating trade books. I had illustrated many book and magazine covers, articles, numerous educational assignments, and corporate stuff, and on and on. I had shown my portfolio at the Boston Graphic Artists Guild's (GAG) See Party. Each year I passed out post cards to art buyers and I received plenty of work. So when the NYC GAG had their version of the "see party" I figured I would go BIG for their event! I had tri-fold brochures printed showing many images of my published work. I went off to NYC with these colorful promotional pieces, happy as could be... only to be crushed when no art director took them!
      The box of unused brochures sat in my basement. It caused me sadness to look upon it. I shoved the box further and further into the cobwebs until it was out of sight. Years passed by. When the spring of 2002 came along I found myself illustrating Androcles and the Lion, a second grade reader for McGraw Hill. One day I picked up my son from the commuter rail. He was attending Boston College High School in the city and took the rail home each day. He was studying Ancient Greek and Latin, he was the perfect model for Androcles! Ryan hopped into the car all excited saying, "Mom, MOM, I got you a job today!!!” I said something flip like, "Oh what, they need a cafeteria worker at BC High? Or maybe a gardener?"
      "MOM, MMOOOMMM YOU'RE NOT LISTENING," Ryan belched. He handed me a baseball card with author Jerry Pallotta on it. I looked at it and instantly commented we had some of his alphabet books, that he was famous... how could Ryan have met him?
      Ryan recalled how Jerry was an alumni and how he had gone to the school that day to discuss his writing career with the students. Jerry had mentioned he was interested in an illustrator who could draw a lion. So Ryan simply raised his hand and asked how he hired his illustrators. "Oh, why kid, you know someone who can draw a lion? Let me know."
      Unbeknownst to me Ryan was super proud of his "famous" mother. Months earlier he had taken those discarded tri-colored brochures and used them as bookmarks in his textbooks. After Jerry finished speaking to the group of boys, Ryan went up to him, handing him a brochure he said, "You should hire my mother. She is perfect for your books!" Jerry then (surprised? shocked?) asked if I was busy, which Ryan replied, "Not after she finishes Androcles and the LION".
      Two weeks later I was assigned Jerry's, Icky Bug Shapes, published by Scholastic. I haven't had a moments break since. Today I am illustrating a new alphabet book for Jerry, and a Hawaiian seal book for Arbordale.

e: LOVE IT!!

e: What is your favorite or most challenging part of being a creator? Shennen: My most challenging part is wearing multiple hats. As an author I want to spend my time out in the public promoting my book. I love sharing it with school kids! But, as a creator who makes her income from illustrating books, I need to be hunkered in my studio for weeks on end alone illustrating. It's very challenging balancing both.

e: How do your creations invade your reality?
Shennen: In a literal sense, I've taken up all the spare space in two houses, filling them with rooms of framed art, floor to ceiling stacks of boxes of my books, and art supplies. On a spiritual level I end up imagining what the characters I've created are doing, how would they respond to a situation. I jot these thoughts down, with hopes of writing new manuscripts.
e: Is there something in particular about this story you hope readers will take away with them, perhaps something that isn’t immediately obvious?
Shennen: The book's message is pretty straight forward, elephants are important for the African landscape - from providing water pools for tiny insects - to creating large swaths of trails to break fires. My hope is that the book, and my illustrations, will ignite a child's interest in pachyderms and get kids excited to research more about the creatures.
e: What are you working on next or what would be your dream project?
Shennen: Wow, what I'm working on next IS my dream project! Research for my newest book just brought me to Hawaii, where I spent long days in the surf, in search of wild seals. It was a totally amazing experience leaving cold, snowy Boston in the morning, and arriving to walls of sunny blossoming flowers in the afternoon. This trip, I made it over to the Kilauea Volcano - something I have always dreamt of experiencing. But that didn't come close to being off the beaten path and walking on lava among monk seals and sea turtles basking in the sunshine. Paradise.

e: Congratulations!

Bio:
Shennen Bersani is an award-winning children’s book illustrator with 2 million copies of her books cherished and read by children, parents, and teachers throughout the world. Her art delivers a unique blend of realism, heartfelt emotion, love of nature, and life lessons for children of all ages. She has illustrated Once Upon an Elephant, Salamander Season; Sea Slime: It’s Eeuwy, Gooey and Under the Sea; The Shape Family Babies; Animal Partners; Shark Baby; Home in the Cave; The Glaciers are Melting!; and Astro: The Steller Sea Lion for Arbordale. In 2015, Shennen made her debut as an author with Achoo! Why Pollen Counts. Shennen lives with her family near Boston. For more information, visit her website at www.shennenbersani.com.

Print Workshop at the University of Edinburgh

Two of my professors, Jane Hyslop and Jonny Gibbs, recently held a print workshop for all of us MAs and MFAs in Illustration to go over the relief printing methods of linocut, woodcut, wood engraving and monotype.
We gathered around as Jane went first. She showed us various examples of a wide range of artwork achieved using these methods. Then she walked us through several different ways to do monoprinting.
In this picture you can see where she rolled out some black ink, covered half of an MDF board with it, laid some newsprint on top to create random lines and shading (simply by rubbing her finger over it). The newsprint picked up the ink that had been rolled onto the MDF. Brilliant line quality!
     Of course, it's called a monoprint because you can't do multiple identical prints using this method. But what's cool about monoprinting is how much FUN you can have with it.
Here Jane is rolling out red and yellow ink to create a gradient on a wood block. Then we went over to the more modern relief print machine. (In the top photo, behind Jonny, you can see the Eagle printer I've used in the past.)
It's important to get the pressure right when doing relief printing, so the entire bed of the relief printer moves up and down to accommodate various width papers and, in this case, wood blocks.
     And then, you just mess with it! Keep in mind, all the black and red and yellow you see is wet ink.
Jane did a quick print of the first set-up, then cut that up and scattered it about for the next prints. It got more complicated looking the more she went back and forth, and yet, really, it was just a lot of playing around with texture and paper. Very cool.
Very quickly she ended up with some very sophisticated looking work.
Of course, the ink gets lighter every time you go over it as well, which makes for some lovely textures.


. . .

After that, Jonny introduced us to linocut, woodcut and wood engraving. You may recall my first linocut at the beginning of last term. But I haven't tried woodcutting yet - which I plan to. This is Jonny's preferred method, so his comfort level with the media was obvious.
First he did a woodcut piece (very quickly). Off the printer, it looked like this. The actual woodcut is at the top with the printed result below.
Then he did a wood engraving, which is basically a woodcut at the end of the wood grain - the hardest side. They tend to be much smaller and much harder to carve. Here are his results. This was about 2 inches wide.
All of this is for a brief on relief printing we've been assigned - to create a piece with the theme "Arrival." We're each to make 15 impressions of our work to pass out to each other. We'll also be making an album of some sort (Jane taught us book binding last semester) to hold each other's work. It will make a lovely souvenir to take with us when we graduate - a little bit of art from all our fellow classmates. What a lovely idea! I'll share my results soon...

Coloring Page Tuesday - Happy Owl!

     This is another image that started out as an illustrated card (hence, the shading, which won't show up in the coloring page version). This one was for one of my students at Hollins University and it's doing a double job making this week all about OWLS!!
     CLICK HERE for more coloring pages!
     CLICK HERE to sign up to receive alerts when a new coloring page is posted each week and... Please check out my books! Especially...
my debut novel, A BIRD ON WATER STREET - winner of six literary awards. Click the cover to learn more!
     When the birds return to Water Street, will anyone be left to hear them sing? A miner's strike allows green and growing things to return to the Red Hills, but that same strike may force residents to seek new homes and livelihoods elsewhere. Follow the story of Jack Hicks as he struggles to hold onto everything he loves most.
     I create my coloring pages for teachers, librarians, booksellers, and parents to enjoy for free with their children, but you can also purchase rights to an image for commercial use, please contact me. If you have questions about usage, please visit my Angel Policy page.

The Pitt in Edinburgh

The other day Stan and I had lunch at Earthy down in Cannonmills. I love it! But as we were finishing our meal, who should be walking by but our friend Blythe! We'd just had dinner the night before. He was on his way to a gourmet truck food market and invited us to join him. As the creator of Lunchquest, Blythe has the corner on all things foodie in Edinburgh, so even though we'd just eaten, we had to go!
      It's called The Pitt and it's tucked into an old mechanic yard.
Despite only its second weekend, word is spreading among hipsters and foodies that this is the place to be!
For one thing, the food is amazing.
I had hot chocolate made by a bicycling barista. Seriously, the whole thing was set up and encased around a bicycle.
Stan broke down for a margherita pizza at the pizza truck.

I mean, how can you say no to a pizza truck with it's own pizza oven built into it? And rather than parmesan cheese on top, the pizza truck offered arugula as a lovely garnish. There was also a cocktail stand, and a wine stand, and a cheese stand nearby. Palettes were turned into tables and old car seats turned into living rooms. Burning rubbish barrels kept everybody warm.
The beer truck was adorable - all the food trucks were. And next to the beer truck a fantastic musician played slap guitar - Dave BeMac. Click his name to have a listen on Facebook or CLICK HERE to listen to him on Soundcloud.
There was a stand selling home-made donuts (sadly, not gluten free - although perhaps that was for the best), and another selling soups which will be the main reason I return.
The whole place was so quirky, cute, and just crowded enough.
Stan and I hope to go again next time The Pitt pops up! And maybe Blythe will be our gastronomic muse once again. Cheers!
@thepittmarket Check it out on twitter: https://twitter.com/thepittmarket.

Our first visitor - Jane Yolen!

Recently we had our first visitor to the flat - the lovely and prolific author Jane Yolen! Jane spends half the year in St. Andrews and she had been invited down to do a poetry reading at the Outhouse (a pub just up the street from us) by the Shore Poets society.
     My life in Edinburgh has a lot more poetry than it did in the states. I don't know if it's because it's a bigger deal here (which I suspect it is), or if it's just where I happen to be creatively (might be that too). At any rate, traditional and performance poets are big here.
     As proof, the venue was completely packed - standing room only. If we hadn't come in with Jane, I'm not sure we would have had a place to sit!
     There were four poets throughout the evening. Other than Jane there was also Maoilios Caimbeul (yes, that's Gaelic), Vicki Feaver and Marjorie Lotfi Gill (who read some wrenching poems about leaving Iran as a child). Their readings were interspersed with interludes by the Poetics, a mandolin and guitar orchestra playing traditional Scottish ballads. Jane read a lovely range of her poetry from serious to political to funny to serious again. I've heard her read before and she really is so good - an absolute delight to listen to. The audience loved her.
As for the flat - it accommodated Jane beautifully! Being a two bedroom, one bath flat, we're set up ideally for one guest for a short stay. (There's not much storage space in the guest room.) So this was a perfect trial run.
     The itinerary went as such. Fellow poet, Christine De Luca picked Jane up from Waverly Station in her car, then we all met for an early dinner at Treacle on Broughton Street. From there we went to the reading, then home to our flat. In the morning we had a lovely breakfast at the Broughton Street Deli. Jane and I talked shop for a good, long time - how wonderful! And she really got a (literal) taste of our wonderful neighborhood. Afterwards we had a leisurely walk to the train station and saw her off on the train which was waiting right on time.
     I meant to get a pic of the two of us, but forgot. We were so wrapped up in sharing this passion for books, I didn't think about it. At any rate, it was a lovely visit and will, I hope, be one of many!
     By the way - Jane writes a poem a day, which you can sign up to receive in your in-box. CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP!

KidlitTV: Ready Set Draw

Kidlit TV has a new feature where children's book illustrators teach you (and your kids) how to draw the popular characters from their books. It begins with Kelly Light teaching us how to draw the cat from LOUISE LOVES ART. Click the image to watch on YouTube:

Illustration Challenge #39

Try to draw something ephemeral - like smoke or gauze or moving water - in black and white. :)

Friday Linky List - 4 March 2016

From StumbleUpon/Idealist4ever.com: 40 words for emotions you've felt, but couldn't explain - I especially like "silience."

From Fiction University: 5 Common Problems With Endings

The Setup Wizard. Just read. Trust me.

From PWs ShelfTalker (Elizabeth Bluemle): Pleeeeeease: New Covers for These Classics (interesting!)

From PW: Children's Illustrators Brighten Up NYC Commutes

From HuffPost Books: When a Publishing Expert Opens a Bookstore

From The Washington Post: Jane Smiley explains her first picture book, "Twenty Yawns."

From the Independent Book Publishers Association: It's the Why That Matters - Rana DiOrio of Little Pickle Press (my publisher for A BIRD ON WATER STREET on representing kindness and environmental responsibility in business. :)

From PW: 2015 Was a Bright Spot for Bookselling (!!!)

From The Children's Book Academy Blogettes: A View From The Other Side: The Subjective Nature of Book Awards

Sean Taylor's HOOT OWL, MASTER OF DISGUISE? - Guest Post!

Sean Taylor is the author of many books for young readers. He has published middle grade and teenage fiction, but he is best known for picture books such as WHEN A MONSTER IS BORN, CROCODILES ARE THE BEST ANIMALS OF ALL, ROBOT RUMPUS! And IT’S A GROOVY WORLD, ALFREDO!. Here he talks about HOOT OWL, MASTER OF DISGUISE (illustrated by Jean Jullien), which has been shortlisted for the 2016 ‘Lollies’ Best Laugh Out Loud Picture Book Award. It comes out in paperback on 3rd March this year.
E: What is your creative process, can you walk us through it?
Sean: Any ability I have to write picture book stories probably owes a good bit to an apprenticeship in poetry. I wrote poems seriously (sometimes comically) for many years. This included a good bit of performance poetry. And my first book was a collection of poems for adults. Writing poetry taught me to work at language until it is, as Samuel Taylor Coleridge put it, “the best words in the best order.” (Or as near to that as I can manage…)
      I was doing this yesterday. I scribbled out the first 300 words of a new picture book story. Then I sat working at it from midday until about 7 at night, shifting words around, distilling them down, working on the rhythm of the story, and the music and sense of the language - sometimes making it feel more right, sometimes making it feel more wrong. But trusting that the playful, instinctive drafting process pays off.
      This is the work poets do. It’s what Oscar Wilde made fun of (though he may well have been telling the truth) when he said, “I was working on the proof of one of my poems all the morning, and took out a comma. In the afternoon I put it back again!”
E: Is there a story behind the creation of HOOT OWL, MASTER OF DISGUISE?
Sean:I had a feeling an owl might make good character for a picture book. Then I came across a photograph of a very starey-eyed hoot owl, who looked as if he was trying to be scarier than he really is! It made me think an owl might be funny too.
      This was about six years ago. My oldest son was three back then, and dancing with delight about dressing up (as three year olds do.) I sometimes find myself exploring a specific theme in my picture book stories. I went through a phase of writing stories about bedtime. (See THE WORLD CHAMPION OF STAYING AWAKE, published in 2011.) More recently I’ve written a string of stories exploring the funny side of fear (an example is my second book to be illustrated by Jean Jullien, which I can reveal will be called I WANT TO BE IN A SCARY STORY!) Right now, I’m trying out some stories about making friends. At the time I came up with HOOT OWL MASTER OF DISGUISE, I was interested in writing about dressing up. I had that image of a starry-eyed owl as a character in my mind. And a moment of writing magic happened. Two unconnected ideas met and joined. And a third idea…a story about a dressing-up hoot owl was created.
      That meeting of unconnected ideas has led to quite a few of my picture book stories (and poems) over the years. If you have an interest in writing, it’s a good thing to try to make happen.
E: What was your path to publication? 
Sean: A long and winding road in the case of HOOT OWL, MASTER OF DISGUISE. I wrote it back in 2010. My agent was Celia Catchpole. She tried to sell the story, but no publisher would have it. ‘How do you illustrate an owl disguised as a sheep?’ came the feedback. ‘Where does this owl produce its costumes from? Does it carry them in a bag?’
      I remember reading the story out, myself, to my editor at Walker Books at the time, Lucy Ingrams. She wasn’t the most shockable of editors. But she did look slightly shocked by HOOT OWL MASTER OF DISGUISE! So the story went in the Walker Books filing cabinet for at least a year.
      Then my current agent, James Catchpole, took a liking to the language and the humour of HOOT OWL, and he was unashamed enough to try selling it all over again. At some point he read it out at Walker Books again, and the bright-eyed Walker picture-book craftsman, David Lloyd, heard it. Apparently he walked into the office some weeks later saying, “What was that book Sean Taylor wrote about an owl dressing up as a carrot? Let’s have a read.”
      It made them laugh. David Lloyd wasn’t worried where Hoot Owl’s costumes might come from. Walker Books bought the story. Maria Tunny (the editor) and Deirdre McDermott (the designer) managed to get Jean Jullien involved on the basis of some drawings they’d spotted on a menu in a burger restaurant! And HOOT OWL, MASTER OF DISGUISE happened.
E: What is your favourite or most challenging part of being a creator?
Sean: I’m up at 6am when I’m writing. And the start of the day, with the hours ahead, is both my favourite and my most challenging moment. The way I get going often defines the day. I’ll generally feel excited about the possibilities that lie ahead. At best, the excitement stays with me as the writing hours pass. I have a rule not to look at emails or anything on the Internet until 11am. I have been known to break my own rule. But when I stick to it I usually have my better writing days.
E: Is there something in particular about HOOT OWL, MASTER OF DISGUISE you hope readers will take away with them, perhaps something that isn’t immediately obvious?
Sean: Good writing offers readers things that not even the author is aware of. I hope my stories are good enough to do that.
What are you working on next, or what would be your dream project?
Sean: I’m in love with the picture book form (see this piece on my own blog) And I’m working on fresh picture book stories. But I’ve been asked to come up with some comic writing for 7-9 year olds, and am having some fun with that. I’m collaborating with a Muslim theatre company to make a book of Islamic humour and wisdom for young readers. And I have another writing love-affair going on with children’s theatre. I’ve written two children’s plays, which were produced in Brazil. There’s a possibility of a third in the pipeline – a puppet show based on my book for 6 – 9 year olds, WHERE THE BUGABOO LIVES!
      These are all dream projects for me. That’s why I manage to feel excited at 6 in the morning!

Learn more about Sean Taylor at http://www.seantaylorstories.com.

A hike up Calton Hill

Hints of warmer weather are in the air here in Edinburgh. Despite chilly temperatures, the sun is becoming more prominent - coming up earlier and setting later. Carlton Hill has been a tease all winter long. So, recently Stan and I took advantage and finally hiked up Calton Hill.
Calton Hill isn't the big former volcano called Arthur's Seat, this is the smaller volcano near our flat, which was turned into one of Edinburgh's first public parks by philosopher David Hume. (Click the image to read more easily.)
     We'd never hiked Calton Hill before, so we made some incorrect assumptions. One, we brought a picnic. Turns out there's a little cafe at the top. Here was our view:
Also, I thought this would be a HIKE. Turned out to be more of a pleasant walk. Third, I thought this would be a wildlife experience. Well, there were some cool birds which I'd never seen before, such as a UK Robin (google "UK Robin"). But it's mostly a grassy hilltop with a monument, an observatory (under renovation), another monument, and views to die for.
      Want to get the full effect? Check out my videos, which in order will give you a 360° view from the top of Calton Hill.
The view of New Town and the Firth:
Video 1: https://youtu.be/ONRALryrKps
The view of Arthur's Seat:
Video 2: https://youtu.be/lSGAeqSPCTU
The view of the city and the castle:
Video 3: https://youtu.be/O-2WsMcrbIc
Why they call Edinburgh the Athens of the North (and our view during lunch):
Video 4: https://youtu.be/WoVfc2Tw_U4

Coloring Page Tuesday - Possum Babies

     This is an image that started out as an illustrated card (hence, the shading, which won't show up in the coloring page version). This one was for one of my students at Hollins University who had a passel of kids with her. (Did you know possums carry their babies on their back?)
     CLICK HERE for more coloring pages!
     CLICK HERE to sign up to receive alerts when a new coloring page is posted each week and... Please check out my books! Especially...
my debut novel, A BIRD ON WATER STREET - winner of six literary awards. Click the cover to learn more!
     When the birds return to Water Street, will anyone be left to hear them sing? A miner's strike allows green and growing things to return to the Red Hills, but that same strike may force residents to seek new homes and livelihoods elsewhere. Follow the story of Jack Hicks as he struggles to hold onto everything he loves most.
     I create my coloring pages for teachers, librarians, booksellers, and parents to enjoy for free with their children, but you can also purchase rights to an image for commercial use, please contact me. If you have questions about usage, please visit my Angel Policy page.