Effie Lee Morris Lecture 2013

Tuesday, April 30, 2013 –FREE event, Open to the Public
5:00 pm Reception and Book Signing: San Francisco Main Public Library, Lower Level Latino/Hispanic Meeting Room

6:00 pm Lecture: Lower Level, Koret Auditorium 

Eve Bunting, 
Award Winning Children’s Author of over 250 Books!

“Picture Books That Can’t Be Written: Social Issues in Children’s Literature” 

Smoky NightBorn in Ireland, Eve Bunting grew up in a tradition steeped in the art of storytelling and the magic of words. “There used to be Shanachies in the Ireland of long ago,” she says. “The Shanachie was the storyteller who went from house to house telling his tales of ghosts and faires, of old Irish heroes and battles still to be won. Maybe I’m a bit of a Shanachie myself, telling my stories to anyone who’ll listen.”

 

In 1958 Eve Bunting moved to California with her husband and three children. It was there, several years later that she enrolled in Writing for Publication class at her local junior college. Filled with ideas and a strong desire to write, she was, nevertheless, uncertain of what to expect 

Finn McCoolSince the first book, a retelling of an old Irish folktale about the giant Finn McCool, Eve Bunting has carried on her homeland’s storytelling tradition in over a hundred books for children and young adults — books about everything from sharks and horses to football players. 

“I like to write for every child,” she says. “For every age, for every interest. That is why I have such a variety of books — from pre-school, through the middle grades and beyond. The young adult novels I write border on the true adult novel, but I enjoy keeping my protagonists in their upper teens where lives are new and filled with challenge, where nothing is impossible.

 

Eve Bunting

Eve Bunting

“One of my greatest joys is writing picture books. I have discovered the pleasures of telling a story of happiness or sorrow in a few simple words. 

Eve Bunting has received many awards, including the Golden Kite Award from the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators in 1976 for One More Flight (Warne). In 1995 the Caldecott Medal was presented to David Diaz for his illustrations for her Smoky Night (Harcourt). 

This marks the 17th Annual Effie Lee Morris Lecture, presented by WNBA-SF Chapter in partnership with the Friends of the SFPL and the SFPL’s Main Children’s Center. There will be books for sale and book-signing before and after the lecture. WNBA-SF Chapter will provide FREE books in a raffle and for all those who have their picture taken with the author Eve Bunting and tweet about it! 

Come to the Reception for a delicious array of healthy food and to get your raffle ticket!

Twitter Marketing for Writers: Out with the Old Twitter Apps, In with the Four New Apps

Frances Caballo

Frances Caballo


 

 By Frances Caballo

 

With more than 500,000 applications available, it’s not surprising that some simply don’t survive.

StrawberryJam, a Twitter application, rose to early stardom last summer when social media bloggers merrily opined about the benefits of an application that would sort through your news stream, discard the bad seeds, and serve up a delectable summary of the most cogent messages populating your stream. Today? Well, StrawberryJam can’t be found.

Three More Twitter Applications that Died

  • FollowFridayHelper: This was a terrific application that could quickly list your best retweeters of the week. One day it was working, the next day it vanished.
  • TweetEffect: This application would analyze your last 200 tweets and provide an array of information. It’s gone too.
  • Timely: This tool would analyze your past tweets and schedule your future tweets at suggested time slots for your optimum exposure. Adios, Timely.
  • TwitTrans: I loved this application, but it no longer exists. It used to translate your tweets into a variety of languages.

Four New Twitter Applications

  • Twtrland (http://twtrland.com/): Serving more than 750,000 users every month, this nifty application helps you to understand current and potential followers by the type of content they share.
  • TwitCleaner (http://thetwitcleaner.com/): Now this is a great tool that I use several times a month. After analyzing your news feed, it will tell you which Tweeps are bots (software applications that run automated tasks), never interact with their followers, never retweet, and more.
  • Sayonara (http://www.sayonarapp.com/): Would you like to be notified every time you lose a Twitter follower? Then sign up for this application.
  • Twaitter (http://www.twaitter.com/): Twaitter, which I discovered a few months ago, has already experienced a name and software change. Now called Gremlin, the application promises to provide “essential and intuitive features” to enhance your social media marketing strategies.

 

Watch for intuitive features being touted more frequently. The trend is to develop applications that will know what information you need to better enhance your marketing or simply to help you become more efficient when you’re online.

It’s your turn. What are your favorite Twitter applications?

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Frances Caballo is a social media trainer, blogger and author of Social Media Just for Writers: The Best Online Marketing Tips for Selling Your Books. Presently, she is the Social Media Editor for the Women’s National Book Association-SF Chapter and the Bay Area Independent Publishers Association. You can find her on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest, and Google+.

About Jerry Pinkney: Speaker, May 15

A native of Philadelphia, Jerry studied at the Philadelphia College of Art (now the University of the Arts) where, in 1992 he received the Alumni Award. He has been illustrating children’s books since 1964, illustrating over one hundred titles, and earned the 2010 Caldecott Medal for his nearly wordless picture book The Lion & the Mouse.

Lion and the Mouse

Among his many other accolades he has also been the recipient of five Caldecott Honor Medals, five Coretta Scott King Awards and four Coretta Scott King Honors, five New York Times Best Illustrated Book awards, and in 2006 the Original Art’s Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of Illustrators, New York, NY.
In addition to his work in children’s books, Jerry has had over thirty one-man retrospectives at venues ranging from the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL to the California African American Museum, Los Angeles, CA. He has exhibited in over one hundred group shows in the USA, Japan, Russia, Italy, Taiwan and Jamaica. Jerry has illustrated for a wide variety of clients, including the U.S. Postal Service, National Park Service, and National Geographic.

His works have been featured in The New York Times, Arts Section, American Artists Magazine, The Horn Book Magazine, The CBS Sunday Morning Show and PBS Reading Rainbow Room. Pinkney is also a past trustee for the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art and the Katonah Museum of Art. He lives with his wife, author Gloria Jean, in Westchester County, NY.

Examples on How to Pitch to Agents, Acquisition Editors, Publishers at WNBA’s Signature Event

WNBA-SF chapter President Lynn Henriksen http://www.telltalesouls.com has invited 15 agents, acquisition editors and publisher to the March 27, 2010 event.

Writing Career Coach Teresa will help you practice your pitch at WNBA’s  “Meet the Agents, Acquisition Editors, & Publishers”

on March 24, 2012   http://wnba-sfchapter.org

 

“Make Every Word Count When Pitching to Agents or Acquisition Editors” by Writing Career Coach Teresa LeYung Ryan

You have spent months, perhaps years, writing and rewriting your project/work.  And, you’ve decided to pursue either an agent (who earns his/her commission when he/she sells a client’s work to a publishing house) or an acquisition editor (whose job is to buy authors’ works for the publishing house he/she works for). Let’s say you’ve done your homework and have compiled a list of agents or acquisition editors who specialize in the kind of project (commodity) you wish to sell.

An agent or acquisition editor receives hundreds of pitches/query letters each week.  What can you do to catch these folks’ attention?  Use the right bait.  Make every word count.

Whether you’re pitching in person, over the telephone, through an E-Mail, or by old-fashion mail, keep this in mind—the pitch (bait) has three components:
•    who needs your project (start the pitch with the “marketing hook”)
•    the unique qualities about your commodity
•    why you are the perfect author for this work (How big is your platform?)

Agents are having tough times pitching their non-celebrity authors to publishers; thus the importance of the marketing hook.  The marketing hook is a must for prescriptive non-fiction/self help.  The hook is also a must for memoirs, narrative non-fiction and novels; these genres can longer reply solely on story).  Here are 6 examples:

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Genre:  Self-Help/Metaphysical/Psychology

Most people over the age of ten dream at least 4 to 6 times per night.
Through My Dreams: A Simple Guide to Dream Interpretation, I can help everyone  interpret dreams by combining their feelings with personal symbolism, dream what they want to dream, and improve their waking lives through their dreams.
I am Angie Choi, a certified hypnotherapist who has utilized radio, television, workshops, classes, articles, and website to educate and inspire people to tap into their dreaming potential.  I’ve worked with school districts, youth groups, and community-based organizations. http://www.alivehypnosis.com

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Genre:  Journal/Guide/Inspirational

More than 50 million people provide care for a chronically ill, disabled or aged family member or friend during any given year.

You Want Me to Do What? Journaling for Caregivers allows these caregivers to process their stress and celebrate what is right by giving them open-ended instructions on spilling their guts in the safety of a private journal and offers two hundred sentence starts to help them begin writing.

I am B. Lynn Goodwin who teaches workshops on caregiving.  I write for numerous publications, and, I am the founder and managing editor of WriterAdvice which has been helping writers for twelve years.  http://www.writeradvice.com/

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Genre:  Self Help / Relationship / Marriage

 

The 50% and 60% divorce rates, for first and second marriages respectively, are a wake-up call for the United States 55.2 million married couples.

Through my book, I empower couples to get the marriage they’ve always wanted. The Marriage Meeting Program: 45 Minutes a Week to Guarantee the Long Term Relationship You’ve Always Wanted shows how to conduct a weekly meeting that increases intimacy, romance, teamwork, and smoother conflict resolution.

A proactive, preventive approach is crucial. Regardless of how good a relationship is, there is always a need to keep it on track and room for it to grow. The Marriage Meeting Program’s step-by-step approach makes it easy to conduct the meetings. Follow-up studies show a 20 to 80 percent increase in marital happiness for couples who implement the program.
I am Marcia Naomi Berger, a psychotherapist, writer, speaker, workshop leader, and instructor of a class for therapists and counselors at the University of California Berkeley Extension. http://www.marriagemaven.com

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Genre:   Memoir

There are more than 38-million boom-generation women in this country.  Through my book, I show middle-aged women how to cope with family and social pressures while dealing with their own mortality issues.

My memoir, Oldham Street, is about my journey from east coast to west bearing the pain of a son in prison, the long slow death of my father, the end of my counseling career and a ten-year relationship.  I knocked on a lemon-colored door on a short block in San Francisco.  In the next twelve years, the woman who opened that door, along with the other quirky characters in the neighborhood, inadvertently joined me in a process that brought me home to myself and into a comfortable role as the matriarch of my tribe.

I am Lynn Scott:

  • author of A Joyful Encounter: My Mother, My Alzheimer Clients, and Me (a memoir about the abundance of spirit that I found among my Alzheimer clients).
  • contributor to eight anthologies of fiction, memoir, and poetry.
  • a guest on Oprah and other talk shows.

http://lynnscottbooks.com http://lynnscott.wordpress.com

 

 

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Genre:  Women’s Fiction

Recent survey data indicates that 22% of the 55,000,000+ married women admit to having an extramarital affair.  STAYING AFLOAT is the story of one of these women –although she wouldn’t have admitted it if she hadn’t gotten caught.

Crystal Scott is a stable and stalwart, stay-at-home wife and mother, aiming only to run an efficient home, care for her children and avoid confrontation.  Whatever her private thoughts are, she keeps them to herself.  But when her husband loses his job and shows no signs of looking for another, fault lines in their marriage are exposed.  She’s forced to re-enter the workforce, and when her dazzling, dynamic boss takes a personal interest in her, she slips into territory that most women have fantasized about, even if they don’t want to admit it — she morphs into a sex-starved adulteress.

I am Judith Marshall, author of the award-winning novel, HUSBANDS MAY COME AND GO BUT FRIENDS ARE FOREVER.  I’ve been writing for thirteen years and am a member of the California Writers Club and the Women’s National Book Association. In addition, I am the President of Human Resources Consulting Services and a member of the faculty of the Council on Education in Management, for whom I teach a number of public seminars on a variety of HR-relates topics. I’m currently working on my third novel, BITTER ACRES.

http://judithmarshall.net/

 

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Genre:  Women’s Fiction / Humor

39%  of the 68 million women employed in the U.S. work in management, professional, and related occupations. Through my book Katie Carlisle, I show women how to hold onto their integrity, humor, and vision . . . in spite of having to fight sexism in the corporate world.

Katie Carlisle has been lucky enough to have a mentor (her boss) who has taken her to a point where her promotion is pretty well guaranteed.  Only then everything goes wrong.  Her beloved mentor leaves the company under a cloud; his successor is a man whom Katie hates and fears; and a downward spiral in her fortunes starts.  This is the story of a smart woman’s struggle to hold onto her integrity, humor and vision in spite of the tumult around her—and her eventual triumph.

I am Margaret Davis.  I have a doctorate from Stanford University in Sociology, with a specialization in the structure and behavior of formal organizations.  I have had two non-fiction books published in my field.  Katie Carlisle, a humorous spoof on everyday life in a large corporation, is a work of fiction.  Yet, as many of my readers have commented, “Everyone who has ever worked in a big company will relate to and love this book.”

I am also the author of Straight Down the Middle, a family drama involving a young mother’s efforts to do what is best for her child while trying to come to terms with her own sexuality.

http://margaretdavisbooks.com/

 

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Teresa LeYung Ryan is:

  • Board member at WNBA-SF Chapter since 2004
  • Author with agent and NY publisher
  • Writing career coach
  • Past president of California Writers Club-SF Peninsula Branch
  • Library advocate

Writing Career Coach Teresa is the author of   Build Your Writer’s Platform & Fanbase In 22 Days: Attract Agents, Editors, Publishers, Readers, and Media Attention NOW http://WritingCoachTeresa.com

As a community spirit, Teresa LeYung Ryan uses her novel Love Made of Heart to:
• shed light on stigmas suffered by women, men, and children who have mental illness
• celebrate the immigrant experience
• help survivors of violence find their own voices through writing
www.LoveMadeOfHeart.com

Women's National Book Association Names Rock Bottom Remainder Founder 2008 WNBA Award Recipient

Women’s National Book Association Names Rock Bottom Remainder Founder 2008 WNBA Award Recipient

Kathi Kamen Goldmark to receive award in ceremony planned for November 8, 2008.

The Women’s National Book Association (WNBA) has named author, musician and Rock Bottom Remainders founder Kathi Kamen Goldmark recipient of its 2008 WNBA Award. A reception in her honor will take place on Saturday, November 8th at 4:30PM in San Francisco.

Dedicated to promoting literacy, a love of reading and women’s careers in the world of books, the Women’s National Book Association presents the WNBA Award every other year to honor a living American woman who derives part or all of her income from books and the allied arts and who has done meritorious work in the world of books beyond the responsibilities of her profession.

Past WNBA Award recipients include Eleanor Roosevelt, Patricia Schroeder, Nancy Pearl and, in 2006, Dr. Perri Klass, the pediatrician-author, who was recognized for her role as medical director of Reach Out and Read, a internationally recognized literacy program for children.

Join us for a mixer at Keplers Bookstore!

You are invited to a

WNBA-SF Mixer

Network & Nosh

Thurs., Sept. 4, 7 p.m.

hosted by

Kepler’s Books & Magazines

1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park, 650-324-4321

WNBA 2008 Pannell Award Winner

Come Mix & Mingle

wine and hors d’oeuvres reception for WNBA-SF members and guests

Rsvp president at wnba-sfchapter.org by Sept. 1

Please join us for our kick-off event of WNBA-SF 2008/09 year for a WNBA-SF Mixer on Sept. 4, 7 p.m. at Kepler’s Book Store in Menlo Park. This is a membership networking opportunity as well as a celebration of Kepler’s Books receiving the Pannell Award from WNBA. The Lucile Micheels Pannell Award is given annually since 1983 to bookstores that excel in contributing to their communities in ways that bring books and young people together. The 50-year-old bookstore closed for a month in 2005, but a combination of community support and revitalized in-store strategies brought the business back to life. Refreshments will be served on the red carpet in the newly renovated Kids Korner and members of the Kepler’s staff will be on hand to discuss the world of words with WNBA-SF members and guests. A wine and hors d’oeuvres reception for WNBA-SF members and guests is being provided by Kepler’s Books. RSVP to president at wnba-sfchapter.org by Sept. 1 to allow us to adequately prepare for all of our guests attending this event.

WNBA-SF Board Meeting: All WNBA-SF members are welcome to join us for our WNBA-SF Board meeting which will be held at Kepler’s at 6 p.m. before the Mixer. Contact Mary at president at wnba-sfchapter.org for a copy of the agenda, or if you have something to add to the agenda.