Lookybook is a new marketing idea for picture books - I think it's a great way of getting your PBs seen - if, that is, zillions of people subscribe to its email updates and publishers get behind it etc etc!Meanwhile, you can sign up your picture books on the Lookybook submit page. But at the moment it's only free for the first year ... I wonder what publishers think of it.
(And this PB He Came With the Couch byDavid Slonim is rather fine as well!)
Notes from the Slushpile is a team blog maintained by eight friends who also happen to be children's authors at different stages of the publishing journey.
Wednesday, 12 March 2008
Sunday, 9 March 2008
The Scattered Authors Society and Time Travel
In my ceaseless quest to meet famous children's authors, I accepted an invite to speak to the Scattered Authors Society (about websites, of course. I would have nothing to tell them about getting published!).
"Scatty authors?" my husband said. "You would be perfectly at home with them."
But the SAS see themselves as more, well, special forces than scatty.

Anyway, one of the famous people I met was Sue Price, winner of the Carnegie Medal in 1987 for her book The Ghost Drum. When I got home from the conference, I Googled 'Sue Price' and found this:
She doesn't look like that in real life, I assure you. Here is Sue's website. Go there. Buy her books.
We got to talking about time-travelling, as one does at conferences like this (my favourite stories as a young girl had to do with either time travel or amnesia. Don't ask). Two of Sue's books, The Sterkarm Handshake and A Sterkarm Kiss, had to do with time travel.
"Where would you go," Sue asked. "If you had a time machine?"
I was about to say something corny like I love where I am now when I realised that there was a time that I would love to revisit. Here's what I said:
The mind, at that point, boggled.
What would my younger self say if she ran into me as I was time travelling?
Thank you to the Scattered Authors Society for the warm welcome!
"Scatty authors?" my husband said. "You would be perfectly at home with them."
But the SAS see themselves as more, well, special forces than scatty.
Anyway, one of the famous people I met was Sue Price, winner of the Carnegie Medal in 1987 for her book The Ghost Drum. When I got home from the conference, I Googled 'Sue Price' and found this:
We got to talking about time-travelling, as one does at conferences like this (my favourite stories as a young girl had to do with either time travel or amnesia. Don't ask). Two of Sue's books, The Sterkarm Handshake and A Sterkarm Kiss, had to do with time travel.
"Where would you go," Sue asked. "If you had a time machine?"
I was about to say something corny like I love where I am now when I realised that there was a time that I would love to revisit. Here's what I said:
I'd love to go back to my late twenties when I was just starting to have babies. I would tell myself to get on with writing. I had no idea at the time that it would take so long to get published"So you think you would meet your younger self?" Sue asked. Famous authors are like that. They ask follow up questions.
The mind, at that point, boggled.
What would my younger self say if she ran into me as I was time travelling?
Friday, 7 March 2008
A Children's Book David Takes On the Amazon Goliath
David Walker, a self-avowed aviation nut, wrote Tales From An Airfield (illustrated by Keith Woodcock) - a hardcover picture book featuring Archie the Airplane (the first story: The Wrong Airport can be downloaded on the Tales from an Airfield Website and you can buy postcards, a CD and a floor mat of Archie's airfield at the website's online shop.
Walker was determined to support the cause of independent/local bookstores and keep his book out of the grubby virtual shelves of the Amazon juggernaut and the big chains. The website lists the websites and locations of local bookshops that stock the book.
To his dismay, Amazon listed the book.
There was a face-off between Walker and Amazon book buyer Kes Neilsen on BBC Radio 4's You and Yours programme. Walker declared:
We didn't like the way the high street volume discount sellers take these things to market in such an offhand way. We are big fans of local independent bookshops ... we specifically didn't want to be lined up with these volume discount houses.Neilsen was incredulous.
It's an incredibly unusual situation. We usually find that the millions of authors and many thousands of publishers who have books listed on the site are usually absolutely thrilled to see them. And certainly authors spend hours everyday looking at the site and checking their ranking.Neilsen said the listing appears on the site but admitted that they didn't have any copies of the book.
"Isn't it a bit naughty then, to have it listed on your site?" the BBC presenter chided him.
Listen to this children's book David take on the Amazon Goliath here!
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