2019 NAPIBOWRIWEE DAY 4 – Meet Guest Author Curtis Manley!

WELCOME TO DAY 4 OF THE 2019 NATIONAL PICTURE BOOK WRITING WEEK WITH GUEST AUTHOR CURTIS MANLEY!

Curtis Manley

Welcome to Day 4! We are halfway through NAPIBOWRIWEE! Warning: Day 4 & 5 sometimes are the breaking point for a lot of participants because the first few days are fun, and then by Day 4/5, you’re like, “OMG I STILL HAVE TO WRITE AGAIN?” LOL! So hang in there! If you can make it through today and tomorrow, you can sprint to that Day 7 finish line! šŸ™‚

MY DAY 3 EXPERIENCE: As I have mentioned before, I’ve been swamped with my own book deadlines and TV work meetings plus entertaining family houseguests staying with us all week. I was a little blocked and didn’t know what to write. And then I remembered my show! I am currently a Co-Executive Producer for the spin-off series PRETTY LITTLE LIARS: THE PERFECTIONISTS on Freeform. My episode called “Dead Week” aired on Monday May 1st. (You can see the trailer preview here: https://youtu.be/NGlkbXjnKW0 It’s a mystery series. So I thought – is there a mystery my cats can solve in a poem? And BOOM! Book #3 done. It was fun and very rough but since I worked on a TV mystery series all last year, it was at least easy to come up with a simple plot and clues. I might go back to this one after NAPIBOWRIWEE wraps up! šŸ™‚

And now, it’s Day 4. Bonus points for Day 4 being on a Friday! That means hopefully some of us have a little more time to write this weekend! For our NAPIBOWRIWEE parents, if you have activities this weekend with your children, see if those events inspire book ideas for Days 4, 5 & 6! For anyone who has a social event to attend like a party or movie etc., use that as inspiration for your next book if you are running dry on ideas! And to kick off our weekend with a bang, here’s our Day 4 Guest Author CURTIS MANLEY!

DAY 4 ā€“ GUEST AUTHOR Q&A WITH CURTIS MANLEY

PUBLICATION INFO: Just Right: Searching for the Goldilocks Planet (Roaring Brook Press/Macmillan, published January 29, 2019) Book synopsis: Our sun is a star. In the night sky are all kinds of stars, and orbiting those stars are planets like the ones in our own solar system. Some of those planets are too big to be habitable. Or too small. Too hot or too cold. Planet Earth is just rightā€”our very own Goldilocks planet. Are there other habitable planets besides Earth? Are they home to beings like us? How would we interact with them? Follow a young girl as she explores these questions in this book about the wondrous search for another Goldilocks planet.

BIO: Curtis Manley was a scientist in a previous life, and his interests range from science and technology to art, haiku, and poetry. He writes fiction and nonfiction picture books and enjoys including real-world facts even in stories that otherwise seem fantastic. Curtis grew up in Pennsylvania but now lives near Seattle with his wife, daughter, and cat. His books include the fiction picture books THE SUMMER NICK TAUGHT HIS CATS TO READ and SHAWN LOVES SHARKS, the retold folktale THE CRANE GIRL, and the nonfiction picture book JUST RIGHT: SEARCHING FOR THE GOLDILOCKS PLANET. Visit him at curtismanley.com.

Q&A WITH CURTIS MANLEY

What inspired you to write picture books?

My wife and I both wrote poetry when we met, and beautiful, well-written books always caught our eye. When our daughter came along, we had an extra excuse for looking at books. We found many picture books we loved, and after several years, in addition to the poetry and flash fiction I was writing, I began coming up with ideas that I thought might make good picture books. From then until my first book was published was only 16 yearsā€¦

Do you write in any other genres of writing? If so, what and why? Any preferences?

Iā€™ve written and published scientific papers, poetry, flash fiction, haiku, and articles for childrenā€™s magazines. Currently Iā€™m concentrating on fiction and nonfiction picture booksā€¦ but also exploring a few ideas for middle grade novels and (perhaps) chapter books.

What do you like most about picture book writing versus other genres?

I love that I can tell an interesting story in 32 (or so!) pages, and that if Iā€™m lucky the illustrations will make the book even more amazing than whatever Iā€™ve accomplished with the words. And Iā€™ve been VERY lucky with what illustrators have created to pair with my words!

What is the most challenging part about writing picture books?

Fitting the story as I want to tell it into a length that an editor thinks isnā€™t too long. There are always more details or dialog that I want to use than will actually fit into the typical word-counts of picture books that get published today. It can be a great struggle to pare down and revise the text in a way that allows me to retain my satisfaction with the story and the rhythm and feel of its language.

Tell us about your first published book ā€“ what inspired the idea for the book?

My first published book was THE SUMMER NICK TAUGHT HIS CATS TO READ. Its inspiration was my then-middle-grade daughterā€™s ā€œbook trancesā€ā€”when the outside world disappeared and she couldnā€™t hear me or her mother talking to herā€¦ However, the published version of the story is not about book trances at all, but about how some of us humansā€”I mean catsā€”donā€™t learn to read as easily or as quickly as othersā€¦

How long did it take to write?

I started it early in 2009. Several versions later it caught an editorā€™s eye in early 2014, went through seven more revisions, and was published in 2016.

Do you have a favorite picture book or a picture book that most inspires you with its writing and/or art? If so, which one is it and why?

Two of my favorite books when I was very young were THE POKY LITTLE PUPPY and THE COLOR KITTENS. They were fun stories, and my brain really enjoyed the repetition of phrases and the rhythm of the words. Some of my own stories use techniques I unconsciously learned from those books long, long ago.

Where is the best place for you to write your books?

Although I donā€™t do this every day, or even every week, I enjoy staying in bed in the morning and either brainstorming notes and details for a project, or beginning the first draft of a new storyā€”with a pencil on paper. Thatā€™s one place I have no distractions: no cell phone, no internet, no social media, and no breaking newsā€”and sometimes Iā€™m lucky enough to have the cat curled up asleep beside me! Once that first draft is typed into the computer, most of my work takes place in front of a screen and is subject to distractions big and small.

Tell us something about yourself that most people donā€™t know.

My education was in geology and planetary geology: the history of the Earth and of the other rocky planets and moons in the solar system, respectively. I hope at some point Iā€™ll have books about aspects of those topics for young peopleā€¦

If you werenā€™t a writer, what would you be?

Iā€™ve worked in retail, as a laboratory assistant, as a geologist, as a software test engineer, and most recently as a technical writer and editor; Iā€™d most likely be doing the latter right now if I werenā€™t writing childrenā€™s books.

If you could give one piece of writing advice for our NaPiBoWriWee participants, what would it be?

One of my biggest problems when writing a first draft is feeling paralyzed by all the possibilities. Each paragraphā€”and every sentenceā€”could go in any number of directions! Which one sounds best? Which one is most interesting? Which one moves the plot forward? This paralysis is diminished when Iā€™m writing with pencil and paper: itā€™s so easy to cross out a sentence and just keep goingā€”or follow one thread and then follow another. And I know that later Iā€™ll have many opportunities to re-think each word as I reviseā€”but once I have a full, first draft, those possibilities seem more manageable.

Thereā€™s been a growing demand for more diversity in childrenā€™s book publishing for women and people of color either as book subjects/stories/characters or for diverse writers/illustrators. What are your thoughts on that, if any?

I suspect it will take a long time to reach the point where the characters in U.S. childrenā€™s books actually resemble what the people who make up this country look like, but some good progress is being made. Itā€™s important not just so everyone can see themselves in books, but so we can all see everyone else, too.

My stories tend to reference shared popular culture, nature, and scienceā€”instead of anything specific to a particular ethnicity or religion. I also tend not to stipulate the personal appearances of my characters, and so the editors, art directors, and illustrators have been able to decide how best to show diversity in the protagonists as well as in the background characters. I feel their decisions have worked perfectly for the stories I was telling in my books.

Thereā€™s been increasing pressure for writers and artists to be active on social media. Are you on social media? If so, where can your readers reach you? Has social media helped your writing journey and career? Any advice for writers or artists who might feel overwhelmed by the social media ā€œburdenā€?

To make a significant difference in the sales of my books by my own actions on social media, I feel I would need to be a one-person dynamo on all the platformsā€”and that would leave me no time for writing or for the kind of intensive research that some of my book projects require. It would also be a poor fit for my personality. So Iā€™ve limited myself to Facebook, and generally just post about my books in a wayā€”and with a frequencyā€”that I hope is not too pushy or annoying. I also donā€™t put much of my life on Facebook, but thatā€™s just meā€¦

Tell us about your most recent book.

JUST RIGHT: SEARCHING FOR THE GOLDILOCKS PLANET is very different from my previous books (two fiction picture books and one retold folktale) in that it is a nonfiction picture book. Iā€™m very happy that I get to write about science topics in a format that makes the subject accessible to young people! My lifelong interest in outer space and the questions that science fiction explores helped keep me up-to-date on developments in the search for potentially habitable planets around other stars, so my first draft flowed easily. Thatā€™s not to say that I didnā€™t agonize over revisionsā€”I did! I had to decide which subtopics to retain (I wanted to keep them all!), how to clearly explain complex concepts, and how to limit the amount of jargon without misleading readers; making those calls wasnā€™t straightforward.

Although I had been keeping up on how the search for exoplanets was progressing, the idea for the book actually came from my editorā€”but I was silly and worked on other manuscripts for two years before starting on JUST RIGHTā€¦ Writing it took six months, another six months was spent on several rounds of edits, and publication was two years after that.

As of now, astronomers have discovered more than 4,000 exoplanetsā€”including more strange worlds than could ever fit into one book. Remember Vulcan, the home world of Mr. Spock from Star Trek? It supposedly orbited the star 40 Eridani Aā€”and weā€™ve now found a rocky exoplanet around that star. And in Star Wars, Luke Skywalker cast two shadows because there were twin suns in the sky of his home planetā€¦ Weā€™ve found an exoplanet like that.

Iā€™m very pleased with how the book turned out, but I certainly wasnā€™t prepared to learn that it made someone feel like crying: ā€œcrying in a good way at the absolutely perfect ending.ā€ Thatā€™s the kind of emotional investment I thought was only possible with a novelā€”but I donā€™t mind being wrong!

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Thank you Curtis Manley for talking with us! I love how he is both a scientist and a poet who writes children’s books! His science background and latest book will totally inspire kids to join more STEM programs and to teach them how science is COOL! It’s so fascinating to me as to how long and in-depth his JUST RIGHT book took in terms of research and writing on its way to publication. If you are writing non-fiction like Curtis & I, please note that sometimes these picture books can take longer because of all the research and fact-checking you have to do to make sure the info is right… while at the same time, also making sure you are telling an entertaining story that is not only informational but also has emotion in it. In fact, Curtis has inspired me to try my hand today at either a non-fiction or science-related cat book today for Book #4! Thanks, Curtis! šŸ™‚

For more info his books, go here: curtismanley.com

Curtis will graciously donate an autographed copy of his latest book JUST RIGHT: SEARCHING FOR THE GOLDILOCKS PLANET to a lucky winner in our annual drawing contest! (Winners are chose at random). Winners will be announced on our May 8, 2019 blog, so stay tuned!

Good luck to everyone on Day 4! Please remember to post comments here in the blog and on social media. I am going to catch up finally this weekend on posting replies to your blog comments – thank you so much for your patience! And until Day 5, remember…

… HAPPY WRITING! WRITE LIKE YOU MEAN IT!

59 Comments »

  1. Wow, so much for me to think about. I worked in educational outreach for a Materials Science Lab and have craved writing nonfiction. I’m thinking you pushed me fully into it. lol Also, the advice about not expressing physical characteristics in PB writing is excellent ….
    Thank you
    hjr

    • Hi Holly — Educational outreach for a science lab sounds like a great springboard to writing nonfiction… and materials science is likely underrepresented in children’s nonfiction (even though all kids pay attention to the properties of the interesting materials around them). Good luck with whatever topic you decide on!

      Thanks for the kind words!

  2. Thanks for the interview Curtis. I’m hoping 7 unique drafts in 7 days helps with the paralyzed feeling as it just has to get done. Inner editor must take a vacation!
    I’m working on #4 and hoping to make it through any mid-week slump.

  3. Thanks so much, Curtis, for telling us about your writing process, and your books sound wonderful! I look forward to reading them.

    And thanks, Paula, for hosting NaNoWriMo! It’s wonderful, as always!

  4. Great post, Curtis! Thank you for giving us a glimpse of your writing life. One of my very favorite books is also, ā€œThe Poky Puppy,ā€ and I still have my copy!

    I really connected with what you said about trimming the length of your book. ā€œIt can be a great struggle to pare down and revise the text in a way that allows me to retain my satisfaction with the story and the rhythm and feel of its language.ā€ All of my stories tend to be long, 1,000 words or more, and sometimes I feel that I lose the magic of the story during the revision process.

    • All stories can be made shorter, but at some point the story suffers, even with very careful revision. For a fiction story, I end up examining individual words for the best, shortest way to get across a meaning or an emotion; if I’m lucky I can get rid of a sentence or two as I distill the language into something stronger. For nonfiction, the backmatter is a lifesaver!

      Thanks so much for your comments!
      Yay Poky Little Puppy!

  5. Great post today, it is interesting, informative and inspiring! My middle son also loved the Pokey Little Puppy and now it my grandson’s favorite also, so it was fun to see it as one of your favorites. Thank you!

  6. Finished with manuscript #4! It has potential for back matter, but I’m a little intimidated to try my hand at it.

    Curtis and Paula, I applaud you for writing non-fiction. I am too scared to do it. I write fiction because it’s much easier for me to make things up Haha!

    • Hi Maryna — Thanks for your comments!

      Even a fiction manuscript can have backmatter if there are nonfiction elements that relate to the story. And remember — it’s just a manuscript: you can play around with writing some backmatter for it, as that counts as good writing practice, too. If you don’t like how it turns out, you don’t have to show it to anyone!

      Happy writing!

      • Thank you for your response, Curtis! I think I’ll try writing some backmatter. Which citation style do you recommend using?

  7. Paula and Curtis, thanks so much for this wonderful sharing!

    I’m excited to read this book now too, and super congrats, Curtis, on achieving the dream ā€œcrying in a good way at the absolutely perfect ending.ā€

  8. Fighting the paralyzed by possibilities syndrome coupled with Day 4 slumpitis. Second cup of coffee is helping. And the mantra – Never give up. Never Surrender!

  9. I just added JUST RIGHT… to my order list for the library because it’s the perfect fit for this year’s Summer Reading theme “Reading is Out of This World” or something along those lines having to do with space. Thank you
    Also thank you for the insight. I took the kids on a four mile hike today and saw a tree that had fallen down with evidence of a duck nest so I have a story idea that might work better for what I was struggling with yesterday. I’m off to write and fingers crossed I make it start to finish.

  10. Thank you for this interview, Curtis! I love that you wrote a book about how children learn at their own pace. My daughter and I could really use that book.

  11. Thank you Mr. Manley. I appreciate hearing about your writing and I look forward to getting your book for my grandchildren.

  12. I absolutely love THE CRANE GIRL! Folktales have always been my favorite. Thanks for the interview!

  13. Thank you, Curtis, for your unique telling of The Crane Girl. I am so happy there is the rescue of one child by another child in your thoughtful story, instead of the traditional maiden, or wife. It renders the story fresh and believable enough for kind, young children.
    Like you, my favorite first story was Margaret wise Brown’s Color Kittens. Even though I was mesmerized by the poetic, amusing text and rhyme, it was the bright and exuberant cats, and their exploits in search of green, painted by Alice and Martin Provensen that imprinted itself on my memory! So, for me, a picture book creation comes first as an image, a scene that just begs for its own story.
    So here I am still, still working on drafting the best plot to lead my characters down picture book lane.

    • Thanks so much, Gretchen!

      I loved the Provensen illustration in The Color Kittens, too, and searched for other books they worked on.

      Though I’m not an artist, there are manuscripts I’ve worked on that started with an image — but an image I then had to decipher or explore mentally to be able to begin writing words for…

  14. Thanks, Curtis. It’s so interesting to hear about the journeys authors have taken. I’m a teacher and love writing with my students. I haven’t done a lot of my own non-fiction writing but wonder if I should give it a try more often. I don’t put much of my life on Facebook either. I think it is important to be true to yourself. Looking forward to reading your books.

  15. What a great looking book and such a journey. I remember the first book about Nick, and someone recommended it. It is terrific. Loving these posts and this challenge. Draft #4 is done. Phew.

  16. Thanks Chris, I love the sound of your books. Sometimes I feel a little paralysed by all the possibilities my stories could go. In any number of directions! That’s why thinking time, for me, is so important to allow all the pieces to fall into place is. I count staring in to space as work. Definitely!

  17. “I started it early in 2009. Several versions later it caught an editorā€™s eye in early 2014, went through seven more revisions, and was published in 2016.”
    I find statements like this super encouraging. This one drives home the idea that publication is not a race, and that good books will find their way to the light in their own good time. I also love the idea in this post that we can be daunted in the first draft by so many possibilities. As Dory says, “Just keep swimming” – persist and push through. That’s what I’ll try to do today. Thank You Paula and Curtis, and good luck to everyone who is drafting today.

    • Itā€™s great to see a scientist! My family and I love science šŸ§¬šŸ˜ŠšŸ‘©ā€šŸ”¬

  18. Thank you Curtis…your books are very inspiring! (I loved the Poky Little Puppy, too!)

  19. Thank you to everyone for such wonderful comments and kind words!

    Every book takes a different amount of percolation, writing and rewriting, setting aside, taking apart and putting back together, and a dozen other techniques for getting all the moving parts working together. Writing a lousy first draft that you can revise is the single best thing to do to get on the right path…

    Best of luck with the rest of NaPiBoWriWee!

  20. I love your honesty about the freedom that comes with writing on paper as well as how you don’t feel the burden to be on all social media platforms. Awesome!

  21. Thanks for sharing your journey Curtis.
    I also prefer making my first drafts by hand. I find the words flow better that way.
    Hope to find your version of the Crane Girl one of these days. Sounds like a lovely version of a great tale.
    Have you got any other thoughts on retelling traditional tales ?
    Best of luck with creating more science related books. I love science too.

  22. Thanks for sharing Curtis your thoughts and your process of writing. Congratulations on your new book!!

  23. Thanks again for everyone’s comments!

    And thank you, Paula Yoo, for inviting me to be part of this great opportunity to hear from fellow writers and push forward with (hopefully) seven of our own projects this week!

  24. CURTIS: I LOVE that you can look back and see how the Golden Books inspired your writing today! This reminds us of HOW IMPORTANT and MAGICAL pic books are; they have the ability to touch a young life–for the REST of their life!!! BEAUTIFUL!!! THANK YOU for reminding us why we do what we do!!! My day 4 almost didn’t work out. Still being sick–sicker!–I wasn’t sure I could do the writing thing today. But, ONCE AGAIN, in the 11th hour (I’m sensing a theme here with me this week!), I was able to pick a kid’s book idea randomly and just GO AT IT! I even finished it EARLIER than the previous ones this week! It made me SO HAPPY! I have found that we often wait for “the perfect” inspiration, environment, feeling, time, etc. to write. But that perfection NEVER comes. We have to WRITE THROUGH IT–whatever “it” is. And, as Paula says, “Write like [we] mean it.” I HOPE you’re all continuing to Keep on Writin’ on!!!

  25. As of 5/5/19: Wow thank you everyone for your comments on these blogs! And apologies for our little glitch this week where newer comments were not appearing (they were posted, just not actually appearing on the blog itself). We fixed it! I also love everyone’s posts on Twitter & Facebook, too. Thank you! I am sorry I have not been able to personally respond to comments this year because of our computer glitch. I hope to catch up before Day 7, so stay tuned. Until then, I have read all comments and am very inspired by everyone. Thank you! More soon! xo Paula

  26. Yay, Curtis. I absolutely loved THE SUMMER NICK TAUGHT HIS CATS TO READ. I enjoy writing NF, too. Keep going!

  27. JUST RIGHT sounds super clever, Iā€™ll be requesting it at my library. Thank you for your advice & expertise, Curtis

  28. Thanks so much for sharing your journey, Curtis! JUST RIGHT is a wonderful book–so many talking/teaching points, and so well-researched. And gah, Paula! I didn’t know there was a PLL spin-off (and that you’re working on it–too cool)!! After NaPiBoWriWee, I need to catch up!

  29. Curtis, thank you for sharing your 16 year book journey to PB publication šŸ™‚ These are gorgeous books you created and worth the time and painful revisions.

  30. I’ve been hearing so many great things about “Just Right” so this post was a perfect reminder to request it from my library! And thanks for sharing your long journey from first deciding to write for kids to finally being published. My journey has a similar number of years! šŸ™‚

  31. I love your idea for the draft you wrote for Day 3, Paula!
    Curtis– It was very helpful to hear about your journey. Thank you for talking about the “which direction should I take” paralysis that accompanies first drafts! I loved “Just Right!”

  32. I love that Curtis said he gets overwhelmed writing a first draft at all the possibilities and which one’s the best avenue–me tOO! This is one of those things you feel surprised that another person has experienced besides yourself.
    My personal events this day and many visitors meant a draft didn’t even get started for Day 4.