I know. It's Monday. It's raining. And if you're like me you've eaten all of your black jelly beans. Also the red and orange ones. Also the yellow ones. And you're down to the reject colors like white and pink. Seriously, does anyone like white jelly beans? Why do they even make them?
But cheer up! You're here, among friends, in our happy little corner of the blogosphere! And I have someone awesome for you to meet, AND you could get a present!
So tell me, doesn't the day seem brighter already? :)
(Oh, but just one tiny thing before we get started. Tina put up an awesome post on Phyllis's visit to South Korea! If you haven't had a chance, please check it out! And I heard a rumor that her visit to Corey in New Jersey might be up today... fingers crossed :) Also, fabulous news, she will be visiting St. Lucia and maybe, hopefully Africa!!! Okay! Enough digression... :))
SLH: Where/when/how do you get your ideas?
But cheer up! You're here, among friends, in our happy little corner of the blogosphere! And I have someone awesome for you to meet, AND you could get a present!
So tell me, doesn't the day seem brighter already? :)
(Oh, but just one tiny thing before we get started. Tina put up an awesome post on Phyllis's visit to South Korea! If you haven't had a chance, please check it out! And I heard a rumor that her visit to Corey in New Jersey might be up today... fingers crossed :) Also, fabulous news, she will be visiting St. Lucia and maybe, hopefully Africa!!! Okay! Enough digression... :))
Today I am so excited to be introducing a fabulous author/illustrator to you all. Please give a warm welcome to the wonderful and talented Lisa Thiesing!
Author/illustrator Lisa Thiesing |
Hi Lisa! Thanks so much for joining us today!!
Hi Susanna! Thanks so much for inviting me! I’m excited to be here!
SLH: When did you first become interested in writing and/or illustrating? Was it something you always did, or something you came to later in life?
LT: I first became interested in children’s books when I was very little. My mother always read to me and she was very excited about all the new books that were coming out at the time. Things like the Little Bear books and Eloise were brand new! Can you believe it? Eloise was a character I particularly related to since I grew up in Manhattan, just a few blocks away from you! We even had a mail chute by the elevator. It was tempting but I never did pour water down it! Oh! and Harriet the Spy…. I often ran around the park pretending to be her. These characters seemed so real and were my friends. My mother would also point out interesting things in the drawings, like how a certain expression on a character was just so perfect for the story. She made books seem important and fun. Also, this is probably bad, but she would let me stay home “sick” from school so that I could work on my tremendously original novel about Old Boy, a dog that was constantly saving his boy from falling down wells and other disasters.
SLH: Were you encouraged by family/teachers?
LT: I was definitely encouraged by my mother. I was VERY shy as a girl and I think she saw writing and drawing as my way of communicating.
SLH: You are both an author and an illustrator. Which comes first for you, the story or the art?
LT: The story comes first. When I write a story, what usually happens is that a certain phrase will keep repeating in my head. Sometimes it’s the beginning of the story, sometimes it’s the ending. When I wrote my first picture book, Me &You, my daughter was very little and she kept doing things that I used to do when I was that age. So I kept saying to her that I used to do whatever it was, just like you! That would be my beginning. And I knew I wanted to end it with And when I grew up, I wanted to have a little girl…just like you! I had a beginning and I had an ending. I just needed to fill in the middle. I had lots of photos of me and Katherine doing the same things but completely differently. So that took care of the middle. And with the photos for reference, I was able to tell the other part of the story – the differences in time, place, personality, attitude - through the illustrations.
SLH: Is there an author/illustrator who has been especially inspirational or instrumental in your own development as a writer/illustrator?
LT: I really like the early reader genre. So people like Arnold Lobel, Syd Hoff and James Marshall are particularly inspirational.
SLH: What was your first published children’s book? Tell us about the moment when you got your first offer!
LT: My first book assignment was The Ghosts of Hungryhouse Lane by Sam McBratney. I had been taking my portfolio around to all the various publishing houses for a couple of years, with no luck. I did keep working on my portfolio, showing it again and again, and kept sending out postcards to editors. I was close to giving up when the phone rang and it was Brenda Bowen, then at Henry Holt! She asked if I might be interested in illustrating a middle grade novel! I nearly fell on the floor! I thought to myself, “Are you kidding me?!?!” But I was cool and instead shouted, “YES!!!!” I got to go to her office, but now as an actual illustrator because I had a real book to do and we’d talk about our project! It felt wonderful.
LT: It seems I often get ideas for stories while driving. I don’t know why that is. Or doing the dishes. My Peggy the Pig books were adaptations of stories I already knew. The Viper is based on the old campfire scary joke. The Aliens Are Coming! is a variation on War of the Worlds. A Dark and Noisy Night is a combination of The Tell Tale Heart and my cousin’s daughter’s fear that the tree branches scratching at her window were witches’ fingers! And The Scarecrow’s New Clothes is from an old story a friend’s mother used to tell.
If I’m illustrating someone else’s story, then the ideas, of course, stem from the story. Except that I do get to make the characters look how I want and set the scenes where I want. It’s like being a movie director. You get the story and then you can interpret it visually as you like.
SLH: What has been the most challenging thing you have faced as an author/illustrator?
LT: The most challenging thing I have faced is the current climate of publishing in general. It used to be that even if you were not a super star, bestselling author/illustrator you could still work and still publish books. It seems that now you are given a small window of opportunity and if in that time you don’t produce a best seller, that’s it. As Heidi Klum would say, “One day you’re in and the next day you’re out.”
SLH: What has been the most wonderful thing that has happened to you as an author/illustrator?
LT: That’s a difficult question. A couple of things come to mind. A few parents have told me that their children actually learned to read with my All Better book. That is really gratifying. There is a lot of repetition in that book and it was my goal to help kids learn to read and to enjoy it. And they did!
Also, the first time I saw my Two Silly Trolls in the front of the I Can Read display at Barnes & Noble. I took a picture of that and then the sales person said I wasn’t allowed to do that. And I said, “But that’s my book!” And he said, “Well, it’s our policy, blah, blah, blah…”
It’s also really wonderful at school visits when kids say, “I LOVE you! You are the best writer and illustrator ever! Don’t ever leave!!!”
SLH: Do you do school visits? Would you be kind enough to briefly describe your program/presentation? What is your preferred age range and group size? Do you have materials available for parents/teachers to go along with your books(s)?
kid's drawing of Peggy :) |
LT: So, yes, I do school visits. I have a PowerPoint presentation of one of my books, complete with sound effects! Currently I’m doing The Viper. There’s also a little bit about printing and binding because I have found that kids really want to know how a book is actually made. My books are geared toward K-4 and I prefer smaller groups. After we do questions and answers, I also give a short drawing lesson. I’ve been using basic shapes and have the kids follow me step by step. We draw Peggy and also do other animals or a scene. All of them, even the youngest, have made beautiful, wonderful pictures which they are really excited about.
SLH: Can you give us any hints about what you’re working on now?
LT: This seems an unlikely turn of events. But recently I was contacted by someone from The Guggenheim to work on a project with them! I will be writing a narrative for children that will be performed at the end of the month for the museum’s Family Day. It is part of the “still spotting” project, which finds different places in the city that inspire peace, quietness, “home”, transformation. This will be in Jackson Heights, Queens. http://stillspotting.guggenheim.org/about/
SLH: Do you attend writer’s conferences?
LT: I have attended conferences. I think they are valuable when you are starting out because they do provide a lot of information. Sometimes there is a really great keynote speaker and that can be inspiring.
SLH: What has been your best-selling book so far? Which book's sales (if any) did not do as well as expected? Why do you think that might have been? Have all your titles earned out? Are they all still in print? Have sales affected publishers' willingness to do further projects in a good or bad way?
LT: My best-selling books so far have been the Two Silly Trolls books. They were part of the HarperCollins I Can Read program, which is one of the best, most trusted and well-loved group of books ever. So there is a built-in safety umbrella. Both retail customers and educational outlets are going to buy books that are published by them. That doesn’t happen with most books.
Lisa's studio (nice, isn't it?:)) |
Most of my books have earned out and I’ve received royalties. But ALL of my books should have sold better than they did and they are now out of print. And that, of course, does affect publishers’ willingness to publish more.
SLH: Where can we find you?
Website:
Facebook:
Info on School Visits:
I’ve started giving art lessons to kids in my studio! It’s been really fun!
Info on Art Lessons:
Also, I’ll be participating in the Hudson Children’s Book Festival on May 5th. I would love to see everyone there! It’s a great opportunity for people who love children’s books to come out and meet some of their favorite authors and illustrators. Bring the kids!
Reader question: how important is it to have a story? Can you just entertain and make people think, or do you have to have a story to make a picture book?
LT: A story is very important. But I’m not sure what you mean by story. Even a concept book about color, for example, is a story. And I think it is tremendously important that a book be entertaining. Reading is fun! A silly book can also be thought provoking and that’s a challenge as a writer for children.
Just for fun quick questions:
Agented or not? Not.
Traditionally or self-published? Traditionally.
Hard copy or digital? Hard Copy.
Apps or not? Not.
Plotter or pantser? Don’t even know what that means!
Laptop or desktop? Desktop.
Mac or PC? PC.
Day or night worker? Day worker.
Coffee or tea? Coffee!
Snack or not? Not.
Salty or sweet? Both.
Quiet or music? Quiet for writing. Music for drawing.
Cat or dog? Dog. (But I have 3 cats, too.)
Thanks for visiting everyone! And now you have a chance to win a personalized signed copy of Lisa's fun and popular book A Dark And Noisy Night! (And I just want to say that I'm trying out Rafflecoptor for the very first time and pretty much just hoping it works!!! :) - If you don't' see the Rafflecoptor widget, try hitting the comments button and see if it shows up!)
I really enjoyed the breadth of this interview, ladies. I especially like dreading about school visits and the realism of book sales. The Guggenheim project sounds inspirational, what a wonderful opportunity. Thank you for pointing out that a concept book, too, has its own story!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this interesting interview. I love to hear about other authors and how they write their books.
ReplyDeleteI do too, Andrea, although it saddens me to know author/illustrators as talented as Lisa have all their books out of print! What is the publishing world coming to? :(
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for reading, Joanna. Glad you enjoyed it!
ReplyDeleteGreat interview Ms. Hill and Ms. Thiesing! I like the Viper story and I would love to see the Peggy book for it! :) I liked learning about Ms. Thiesing!
ReplyDeleteErik
Great interview and giveaway. I love that Lisa is inspired by Arnold Lobel--one of my faves too!
ReplyDeleteOh and Susanna, white and pink are your reject jellybeans?? Black is what was always left mingling with the fake grass at the bottom of my basket :)
Thanks for another wonderful Monday post. I so enjoyed hearing about the writing experiences of Lisa Thiesing. I just put some of her books on hold at the library. The had several available. The illustrations of the Peggy are so appealing! I look forward to reading the stories that resulted in such a precious pig :-) I especially liked hearing about where you have gotten your ideas. It is amazing the directions a mind goes if you let it.
ReplyDeleteLisa and Susanna, such a wonderful interview. As someone who only writes, because I can't draw to save my life, this was a reminder of who the word and he art both have very interesting roads. I'm glad you stuck to it, Lisa, and was able to see your dreams come through.
ReplyDeleteSusanna, I'm not so sure I did the Rafflecoptor correctly. I used my email and then I it didn't change the number of entries so I clicked on a +1 button. Then it gives all these options for extra entries "liking this and liking that"???? I didn't do but just the one. Am I doing it right? I am Rafflecoptor challenged :-(
ReplyDeletePenny, with Rafflecopter you can have a whole bunch of chances at winning. Every time you complete one of the tasks and click the corresponding green button, you get that many "points" thrown in the hat. So if you do just the first thing, your name goes in the hat once, if you "like" Susanna on FB, your name goes in two more times, and so on... Hope that helps!
ReplyDeleteAnother excellent interview -- thank you Susanna and Lisa. I loved this glimpse into the whole process!
ReplyDeleteLovely interview, Lisa and great questions Susanna!
ReplyDeleteDonna L Martin
www.donasdays.blogspot.com
Oh!!! Ok! I just didn't want to throw in so many hats that I seemed like a "hat hog" :-) But, hey, if that's the way it works...I may just pig out!
ReplyDeleteMy comment isn't showing up from earlier, but I have done all the rafflecopter stuff. Wonderful interview ladies, I particularly like the sound of Two Silly Trolls :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Catherine! I am struggling with this Rafflecoptor widget because I can't see it, although I know some people can because they've entered - like you :) I didn't see an earlier blog comment from you, but I see this one, and your "who wants the book" comment showed up on Rafflecoptor!
ReplyDeleteI didn't know there was a rafflecopter until I saw Catherine's comment. I was able to do one thing and now it's disappeared. I'll try later. Enjoyed the interview ladies. Love your work space.
ReplyDeleteLisa, thank you for sharing your experience as a writer and illustrator. Great interview.
ReplyDeleteI want to thank Lisa's mom for letting her stay home 'sick' to work on her book. She nurtured a great talent!
ReplyDeleteSyd Hoff is wonderful! Great story, Lisa. I am sure your school visits are awesome. I can't wait. But I do know that there is a very small window. Sad. I love coffee too! *waving*
ReplyDeleteThanks for the wonderful interview Lisa and Susanna. I loved hearing about all the tips and writers advice especially about the classroom visits.
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyed the interview Lisa and Susanna. Wow, a mother who nurtured your talents very early! I liked knowing about the Harper Early Reader and how that guarantees your book is selected. And, I found it interesting that your books earned out, you received royalties, but they are out of print, and how that impacts a publisher's interest in your writing. Would have been interest in knowng why you thought they should have sold better. I listened to Roger Sutton of Horn Book, and he commented there are too many books.
ReplyDeleteThank you all for your wonderful comments! I'm really enjoying hearing from you!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great interview! I loved Lisa's story about photographing her book at the B & N. I am positive I would have done the same thing! ;)
ReplyDeleteI'm with you Susanna--don't like the pink or white jellybeans, and don't like the black either (*GASP). But save all of the orange, yellows and greens for me! YUM!
Hi Lisa! I'm told you are friends with my super talented aunt and uncle in Shokan and my kids have one of your books and get such a kick out of it. Very nice to sort of meet you! Thanks, Susanna! It's been fun to follow Phyllis's journey around the world.
ReplyDelete-Vicki
I LOVE The Viper - so clever and fun! Glad you enjoyed the interview Erik :)
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed the interview Coleen. And about the jelly beans... wanna trade? :)
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed the interview, Penny! I love Lisa'a books - such fun! And her little piggies are so appealing :)
ReplyDeleteI can't draw either, Angela (and believe me, there are plenty of days I feel like I can't write either :)) so I am filled with admiration for people who can do both! :)
ReplyDeleteYOu and me both, Penny! I can't even see the widget! But it looks like you're doing it right :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for that excellent and elucidating explanation, Renee! :)
ReplyDeleteRenee LaTulippe (unregistered) wrote, in response to Penny Klostermann (unregistered):
Penny, with Rafflecopter you can have a whole bunch of chances at winning. Every time you complete one of the tasks and click the corresponding green button, you get that many "points" thrown in the hat. So if you do just the first thing, your name goes in the hat once, if you "like" Susanna on FB, your name goes in two more times, and so on... Hope that helps!
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Thank you so much for reading Renee. Glad you enjoyed it!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Donna! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for trying, Stacy. I definitely see you up there once. I think if you hit "read more" you might see the widget again. Technology confounds me! :) Glad you enjoyed the interview!
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading, Tracy! Glad you enjoyed the interview :)
ReplyDeleteSo true!!
ReplyDeleteApparently it's a small world, Vicki - how cool that you know someone who knows Lisa :) Glad you're enjoying Phyllis's journey - it's slowed down a bit but it's not quite over yet!!! :)
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked the interview, Natalie! And I love that B&N story too - I have been guilty of the same thing! :) Actually, come to think of it, I don't like green jelly beans either. Or purple. But I really like Starburst pink...
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed hearing from Lisa, Robyn - and I agree, the authors she mentioned are among my favorites for early readers too! Also, my coffee is now on it's 67th warm-up of the day... not quite as good as this AM when it was freshly brewed :)
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed it, Jen :)
ReplyDeleteOh, how can there ever be too many books? That sounds like an oxymoron to me! Thanks for reading, Pat. Glad you found it interesting!
ReplyDeleteA black jelly bean lover- a girl after my own heart. I love the interview with Lisa and got a kick out of the B&N story. Of course, she had to take a picture- who wouldn't?
ReplyDeleteSome of us are just sneaky enough not to get caught :)
ReplyDeleteGreat interview, Lisa (and Susanna)--looking forward to seeing both of you at all the upcoming children's book festivals and learning more about that intriguing Stillspotting event. And such insanity about not allowing you to take a pix of the B&N window spotlighting your book--I hope you snapped it anyway!
ReplyDeleteSusanna, thanks for sharing Lisa's story with us. Lisa, how thrilling it must be to work with the Guggenheim. Best of luck with that project!
ReplyDeleteHi Vicki! You must mean Robert and Nancy. They are super talented and their daughters are, too! Nice to meet you. Which book do you have? So glad you enjoyed it! Perhaps we'll meet in real life some day.
ReplyDelete-Lisa
Hi Kirsten! Yes, it was really thrilling to be contacted by the Guggenheim and completely unexpected. I wrote a diary about growing up in Jackson Heights (which I did not do) and the first performance was last Saturday. I hope the kids enjoyed it!
ReplyDeleteHi Animalauthor! So you prefer to remain anonymous. You'll have to introduce yourself at the book fair! There's lots of insanity at B&N!!!
ReplyDeleteOf course I took the picture!
ReplyDeleteHi Tiltonph! I do appreciate a lot of the things my mother did. She was definitely one of a kind! And, well, I think my books should have sold better because they are wonderful! But they did not get the support that was needed from the publisher who decided to drop Early Readers altogether.
ReplyDeleteHi Robyn! I'm afraid I've gone up to about a pot a day!
ReplyDeleteHi Cathy! You're sweet. My teachers at the time weren't as thrilled.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed it!
ReplyDeleteThanks Angela! I'm hoping for a few more dreams to come!
ReplyDeleteHi Penny! I hope you enjoy the books when you see them! So glad your library had some! Thanks!
ReplyDeleteHi Erik! So happy that you like the Viper story! Perhaps your library has a copy of the Peggy version. Enjoy and keep on reading!
ReplyDeleteI can't believe Lisa got in trouble for taking a picture of her own book. Seriously, what did the bookstore think was going to happen when she did that????
ReplyDeleteI love these interviews from an illustrators point of view (even I'm not one). It's gives us a chance to learn about the other side of the process.
Terrific interview, Lisa!! I love your illustration style! If I ever sell another pb manuscript, I hope they choose you to illustrate it - I'm not kissing up - I'm serious!
ReplyDeleteThis is a great post. I really like your style of writing.
ReplyDeletewww.modernworld4.blogspot.com
Thanks, Susanna, for providing us with yet another amazing author/illustrator to learn from. :)
ReplyDeleteHi Lisa...this was an info-packed interview...you shared quite a few tips that will be really helpful to me! I grew up in NYC also. :) And also had a mom who called me in sick a couple of times, even when I wasn't. :)
I needed to add a bit to my comment...regarding the book sales...it is a sad commentary on our society because some really great books will fall by the wayside if you are not a celebrity...and there is so much stuff out there that is undervalued...I would grab your books in a heartbeat, Lisa!
ReplyDeleteHI Nancy! Thank you so much for stopping by! :) And I wish I was going to see you at the upcoming festivals, but I will only be at Millbrook on June 16 - didn't get into Hudson this year :(
ReplyDeleteSo true, Vivian - both about the commentary and about Lisa's wonderful books!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Vivian - glad you enjoyed it! :)
ReplyDeleteNice to "meet" you Gina! Thanks so much for visiting!
ReplyDeleteHer work is fabulous, isn't it Lori?!
ReplyDeleteI know - some places have the craziest rules! :) I also love hearing about working form an illustrator's perspective especially since I write PBs - I think it's really important to know how they operate and what we, as authors, can do to make their jobs fun instead of difficult!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Kirsten - I'm so glad if you enjoyed it. And I know - how cool is that Guggenheim gig! :)
ReplyDeleteSusanna, thanks for introducing me to Lisa. I just saw Jane Yolen speak this weekend. She feels midlist authors are important too. She says Owl Moon was never on a bestseller list, but it sells 20k-40k each year. I wish publishers would keep that in mind.
ReplyDeleteWow! If 20-40k a year (copies I assume) is mid list, just wow!
ReplyDeleteThanks for introducing Lisa to us. the post was amazing. However I could not get the raffle copter to work. I liked the blog and commented but 'enter' would not go through as well as the rest. None of the others went through. And I would love to win a copy.
ReplyDeleteLovely interview. I like your inspiration for your book Me & You and the first and last lines you shared. Very precious! Susanna, I like your quick questions. Fun!
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked the interview, Clar, and sorry if you had trouble with Rafflecoptor - I'm still learning it! The one ting you HAD to do in order to complete the rest was answer the first question - who wants the book. If you didn't do that, the rest wouldn't work. But if you did that, the rest should have worked. I will check my Rafflecoptor account and let you know if yours went through or not!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Tina! I like them too! I figure after a while, when I've interviewed enough authors and illustrators, we'll have some great data to compare and we can see whether being a coffee drinker or liking cats better than dogs is the recipe for success :)
ReplyDeleteOh! Of course it's YOU, Nancy! Looking forward to seeing you, too.
ReplyDeleteYes. Nancy is my father's sister. We have Jess and the Stinky Cowboys, a gift from Bhakta, actually. We love your stink clouds!
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed this interview and getting to know more about Lisa and her work. I used to pretend to be Harriet the Spy also!
ReplyDeleteHi Kathleen - thanks so much for stopping by and reading! It's lovely to "meet" you, and I so enjoyed looking at your illustrations - they are beautiful! I'm glad you enjoyed the interview. And I guess we all secretly dream of writing and/or illustrating those characters that make kids want to be them :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a fabulous and honest interview!! And I'm kind of salivating over here over Lisa's studio (but NOT over the black jelly beans--ick!!! I'll take all your white and pink ones!!)
ReplyDeleteSays she who is puzzled by pink! :) (Glad you liked the interview... you're going to be next one of these days :))
ReplyDelete