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, 23 April 2008
Choice Lookybook : Dory Story by Jerry Pallotta and David Biedrzycki
I really liked this one - my boys would have loved it when they were still toddlers. In fact, they probably will still love it now.Do click through to see the larger version on Lookbook
Tuesday, 22 April 2008
Polly Toynbee on Girlification
Mention of the "pink disease" pricked up my ever-vigilant ears as I'd only recently contributed to a discussion about pink book covers (it was about the highly pink cover of my friend Fiona Dunbar's book Pink Chameleon) at The Bookwitch blog where Ann Giles (who is no witch)wrote:
I’d like to know if they sell more books with pink or lilac covers (glitter optional) because they are pink or lilac, or if the pink and lilac puts more prospective buyers off? Not all girls love pink and lilac. Lots of parents are allergic to pink and lilac, after years of nothing but. (from Think Pink)I commented that a clever book like Pink Chameleon - which re-imagines a high tech fashion future - should have a sticker on the cover, warning: "Smart Inside".
Toynbee had some pretty shocking back-up research for the girlification rant:
A report from the American Psychological Association shows how sexualisation harms girls - and it's getting worse, more of it and more extreme. One study showed how anxiety about appearance harms brain function: girls were asked to try on a swimsuit or a sweater in a private dressing room, supposedly to give their opinion. While waiting they were asked to do a maths test. The girls given swimsuits did much worse than those in sweaters, as thinking about their bodies, mostly negatively, undermined their intellectual self-confidence.Aww.
At the end of the day, ridiculing girliness is negative in its own right, isn't it?
As the mother of a girl who is just emerging from a strong anti-pink phase and entering a more fashion conscious age, I say: let's not suck the fun out of being a girl. What will really empower a girl is permission to be whoever they want to be.
P.S. The second book in Fiona's Pink Chameleon series is Blue Gene Baby - with a BLUE cover.
Sunday, 20 April 2008
What if Alex Rider Were Black?
A publisher asked me an interesting question a short while ago. What would it have done to my sales if I had made Alex Rider black?The only popular black kid's character that immediately comes to mind is George of the genius Captain Underpants series. Or was it Harold?
Horowitz of course never declares that Alex Rider is white. But it's obvious. Would sales have been as good with a black character? It makes one think.
As Horowitz says in the blog post:
Literacy and the love of reading is a bigger answer than we might think. We just need to be more ambitious with the questions.Do read the whole of Horowitz's piece. It's important. Here's the link again
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