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The Toymaker's Apprentice Blog Tour - Sherri L. Smith on Literary Heroes

October 20, 2015 Alyson Beecher

Thank you Sherri L. Smith for stopping by and sharing about your literary heroes as we celebrate your new book THE TOYMAKER'S APPRENTICE.  And thank you to Penguin Random House for coordinating the blog tour. 

Literary heroes… that’s a tough title to live up to, in part because I find that I learn a lot from all sorts of writers—the ones I think are amazing, and the ones who might not be my cup of tea, but introduce me to a technique, a structure or a way of writing that helps unlock my own work.  Probably the first name that comes to mind is Marion Zimmer Bradley.  In her fantasy masterpiece, The Mists of Avalon, she did two things that blew me away.  One was a broad effect—she retold a very familiar tale about King Arthur, and convinced me that this was the only way it could have happened.  Her version of the story, from Morgan Le Fay’s point of view, felt like I was reading the truth.  The other thing she did was on a smaller scale.  There is a scene in the book where Morgan is weaving and at the same time enacting a spell.  The effects of the spell during a boar hunt are intercut with the act of her weaving.  It’s something we see in movies all the time, but in writing it was striking.  How she kept the rhythm of that moment, and built the tension was amazing to me.  It’s something I studied for use in my own work.

For The Toymaker’s Apprentice specifically, aside from the primary inspiration of E.T.A. Hoffman’s story, The Nutcracker and the Mouse King, I looked to another fantasy favorite of mine—David Eddings.  In Toymaker there is a rat named Ernst Listz.  He’s a scholar and an adventurer, a minstrel and a scribe.  Shortly after we meet him, he sings a song in a tavern in exchange for a meal.  Writing music into a story can be difficult.  In fact, I had an editor once tell me it couldn’t be done successfully.  But, clearly, she hadn’t read Eddings’ The Mallorean. 

In book three of this fantasy series (which I highly recommend, especially the first series, The Belgariad)  there is a scene at a feast where three women, including an immortal sorceress—sing an ancient song about the fall of a city in a great battle.  The sorceress was actually there, so her version has great resonance.  I first read these books in high school and I remember the breathless effect the scene had on me.  Eddings was smart.  He didn’t write the song.  He wrote the intent.  He wrote the feeling of the moment and the effect on the listeners.  I leaned heavily on this when crafting Ernst’s song.  It has the same sort of history to it.  He is singing about the Pied Piper of Hameln.  From a rat’s point of view, this is the story of a massacre.  You’ll have to read the book to see how I managed it.  The one difference is, I did write lyrics, but only the chorus appears in the story.  (If you want the rest, it’s there in the appendix.)

Lastly, I’ll credit Lloyd Alexander’s Westmark trilogy with telling me what is possible when telling an historic, or historically inspired, tale.  Sweeping stories work, but you have to have heroes you want to be swept along with!  At the end of the day, this book is about two motherless boys with great expectations upon their shoulders, and where their loss and ambition leads them, across a landscape where I hope many readers will want to follow!

The Toymaker's Apprentice
by Sherri L. Smith
G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers (October 13, 2015)
Audience: Grades 4 to 7
Fiction * Action *  Adventure * Fairytale
Indiebound | WorldCat | GoodReads

About the book: 
Young Stefan Drosselmeyer is a reluctant apprentice to his toymaker father, and he wants nothing more than to escape the family business. That is until the day Stefan’s world is turned upside down when his father is kidnapped by a mice army. Matters only gets worse when he is enlisted by his mysterious cousin, Christian, to find a mythical nut called the krakatook in another world and to cure the Mouse Queen's curse.

Embarking on a wild adventure through Germany and beyond, Stefan must save Boldavia's princess and his own father from the fanatical Mouse Queen and her violent, erratic seven-headed Mouse Prince. Based on The Nutcracker and the Mouse King by E.T.A. Hoffmann and The Nutcracker ballet, this fascinating journey through a world of toymaking, magical curses, clockmaking guilds, talking mice, and erudite squirrels will have readers on the edge of their seats until the very last page.

Perfect for the holidays and fans of The Nutcracker world, THE TOYMAKER’S APPRENTICE presents another side to the famous story beyond Clara’s perspective and explores the tension between the human and mice kingdoms. As the clock winds down for Stefan, readers will wait with bated breath to see if the curse can be broken and whether mice or men will come out on top.

About the author: 
Sherri L. Smith is the author of several novels for young adults, including the critically acclaimed Flygirl and Orleans. This is her first middle grade novel.

For more stops on the tour, check out the schedule below:

The Book Smugglers –  10/12

Novel Novice – 10/13

Owl for YA – 10/14

The Compulsive Reader – 10/15

Teen Librarian Toolbox – 10/16

Green Bean Teen Queen – 10/19

Kid Lit Frenzy – 10/20

Great Imaginations – 10/21

The Children’s Book Review – 10/22

Word Spelunking – 10/23

 

In Blog Tours & Giveaways, MG Lit Tags Front Page

Survival Strategies of the Almost Brave Blog Tour

June 15, 2015 Alyson Beecher

Survival Strategies of the Almost Brave
by Jen White
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (June 9, 2015)
Fiction * Sisters  * Single-Parent Families
Reading Guide | Teacher's Guide | Read Chapter 1
IndieBound | WorldCat

Description from GoodReads: 
After their mother's recent death, twelve-year-old Liberty and her eight-year-old sister, Billie, are sent to live with their father, who they haven't seen since they were very young. Things are great at first; the girls are so excited to get to know their father – a traveling photographer who rides around in an RV. But soon, the pressure becomes too much for him, and he abandons them at the Jiffy Company Gas Station.

Instead of moping around and being scared, Liberty takes matters into her own hands. On their journey to get home, they encounter a shady, bald-headed gas station attendant, a full-body tattooed trucker, free Continental breakfast, a kid obsessed with Star Wars, a woman who lives with rats, and a host of other situations. 

When all seems lost, they get some help from an unlikely source, and end up learning that sometimes you have to get a little bit lost to be found.

My favorite 5 Survival Strategies from SURVIVAL STRATEGIES OF THE ALMOST BRAVE:
Throughout Survival Strategies of the Almost Brave, Liberty carries a notebook. Each chapter heading corresponds with one of the survival strategies that Liberty writes in her notebook or uses to care for her and her sister. Here are 5 of my favorites.... 

Survival Strategy # 3: BLUE SKIES DO NOT MEAN HAPPINESS - The book begins shortly after Liberty and Billie have lost their mother. Even at a young age, Liberty learns that the sky can be a perfect blue and the weather the best beach day ever despite life feeling so stormy.  

Survival Strategy # 11: SOMETIMES YOU SHOULD FEEL SORRY FOR THE COBRA- Liberty and Billie's father left when the girls were very young. Since he is a photographer for National Geographic, Liberty watches animal programs to have something to speak with him if she were to see him again. After her mom's death, they are reunited with their dad. An interesting animal fact, snake charmers sew together a cobra's mouth because venom is poisonous. The knowledge of learning how to behave around cobras becomes an analogy for learning about how to act around her dad. In life, we all have people we have to learn how to behave around, but like cobras, maybe we should feel sorry for them?

Survival Strategy # 16: IF IT'S GOOD ENOUGH FOR A SEA TURTLE, IT MIGHT BE GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU - I like sea turtles and enjoyed the various references that Liberty would make about sea turtles. At one point, after her father abandoned her and Billie, she talked about instinct and how baby sea turtles knew what to do. Will Liberty know by instinct how to care for herself and Billie?

Survival Strategy # 20: PANIC IS NOT YOUR FRIEND - As someone prone to anxiety and worry, I usually say "anxiety is not your friend". Panic, similar to anxiety, is never helpful in a stressful situation. Liberty has to figure out how to care for herself and her sister, Billie. In a tough situation, she must remain calm rather than panic, even when Billie has a meltdown.

Survival Strategy # 41: DR PEPPER CAN RUIN EVERYTHING - I partially picked this one because Dr Pepper is my least favorite soda, so in my mind it does ruin everything. However, Liberty shares about an incident involving Dr Pepper and an accidental spill all over her father's maps and magazines.  This event was emotional and pivotal. In all of our lives, we can identify something that may be mundane but becomes the symbol for something much more significant. For Liberty and Billie, Dr Pepper was that pivotal moment. 

Look for SURVIVAL STRATEGIES OF THE ALMOST BRAVE by Jen White at your local indie bookstore or public library to read more about Liberty, Billie and their survival strategies.

Check out the interview with Jen White at Read Now Sleep Later, click here.

About the author: 
Jen White grew up in California, the oldest of five siblings.  In kindergarten, during a parent/teacher conference, her teacher told her mother, “She’s a little bossy.” Unfortunately, Jen thinks that same assessment might still be made today.  She blames it on birth order. When she was young she wanted to become an author and a teacher.  One of her earliest memories was learning how to read.  She remembers how excited she was when she realized she could read the signs she saw through the window when she was in the car with her mother. She also remembers how her stomach hurt when she read out loud because she read with such gusto.  

Jen has a degree in English teaching and also earned her MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts in writing for children and young adults. SURVIVAL STRATEGIES OF THE ALMOST BRAVE is her debut novel and was born from the real experience of Jen being accidentally forgotten at a gas station with her younger sister and cousin.  Jen currently tries not to boss around her five children and husband in San Clemente, California.  You can find Jen White on Twitter: @jenwhite_ | Tumblr | Website

Giveaway: One lucky reader, with a US mailing address, can win a copy of Survival Strategies of the Almost Brave by Jen White. Please enter the rafflecopter to have a chance to win. 

In MG Lit, Blog Tours & Giveaways Tags Front Page

The Luck Uglies Series

May 7, 2015 Alyson Beecher

Fork Tongue Charmers (The Luck Uglies #2)
by Paul Durham
HarperCollins (March 2015)
Audience: Ages 9 to 12
Fiction * Adventure * Secret Societies 
The Luck Uglies (Book #1) | Fork Tongue Charmers (Book #2)
Indiebound | WorldCat

Description from the publisher:
Rye O'Chanter was shocked to discover that her father was the leader of the notorious band of outlaws known as the Luck Uglies. Now she too has been declared a criminal in her own village, and she must flee to the strange and remote Isle of Pest while her father faces off against the Luck Uglies' bitterest rivals, the Fork-Tongue Charmers, on the mainland.

But all bets are off when the battle moves to the shores of Pest. To defeat the Fork-Tongue Charmers, Rye must defy a deranged earl, survive a test meant to judge the grit of the fiercest men, and lead the charge in defending the island against a strangely familiar enemy, which means uncovering some long-buried family secrets. . . .

The first book in the Luck Uglies series was named an ALA Notable Children's Book as well as a New York Public Library Title for Reading and Sharing, and it won the Cybil Award for Middle Grade Speculative Fiction. This second installment ratchets up the humor, charm, and adventure, taking the series to brand-new heights!

Check out the official book trailer for The Luck Uglies (Book #1):

Quick thoughts: Gargoyles. Check. Bog Noblins. Check. Adventure. Check. Looking for that middle grade series for the student who likes fantasy adventures with lots of pages? Then look no further than Paul Durham's Luck Uglies.  Durham has created a fast-paced fantasy adventure that will draw you in and keep you reading until you finish.  Since Fork-Tongue Charmers is the 2nd book in the Luck Uglies series, I strongly encourage you to pick up the first book The Luck Uglies. If you are a teacher looking for an end of the year read aloud, The Luck Uglies will be one of those books that will draw in readers and leave them searching for the second book when you are done reading. So, who will you be recommending this to? 

About the Author: 
Paul Durham wrote this book and The Luck Uglies in an abandoned chicken coop at the edge of a swamp. He lives in New Hampshire with his wife, two daughters, and an enormous, bushy creature the local animal shelter identified as a cat. Find out more about Paul Durham on his website: http://www.pauldurhambooks.com/

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