Caroll Spinney
Transcription
Caroll Spinney
July 2015 VOL. 1 / ISSUE 11 TM Star Ballerina Michaela DePrince Caroll Spinney Brings Decades of Sunny Days to Sesame Street Inspires Hope in Taking Flight Sebastian A. Jones Instills Positive Messages in Young Minds Barbara Bottner Loves What She Does! (and we do, too) Dr. Stephanie Cox Encourages Healthy Habits in My Doctor and Me ABC TM MEET THE STAFF PUBLISHER Linda F. Radke info@fivestarpublications.com Editor-in-Chief Cristy Bertini Cristy@FiveStarPublications.com WRITERS Rachel Koestler-Grack Melissa Fales DESIGN Jeff Yesh FiveStarPublications@gmail.com Science & Nature Editor Conrad J. Storad FiveStarPublications@gmail.com Webmistress Laurie Herring Webmaster@FiveStarPublications.com Advertising Linda F. Radke info@fivestarpublications.com Cristy Bertini Cristy@FiveStarPublications.com Jennifer Bisignano Advertising.StoryMonstersInk@gmail.com Special Contributors Darleen Wohlfeil, Jennifer Bisignano, Joshua Bloomfield, Carol Osman Brown Send us your news! 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Order your copy today by calling 480-940-8182 or email info@fivestarpublications.com. Contents Story Monsters Ink July 2015 Welcome to the July issue of Story Monsters Ink! Caroll Spinney can tell us how to get to Sesame Street. He’s been commuting to the beloved neighborhood for the better part of 46 years. He is the man behind Big Bird’s yellow feathers and Oscar the Grouch’s green and grumpy exterior. Meet the man who chased the clouds away and made all of our childhoods a little brighter. Also in this issue, Michaela DePrince tells us about her journey from being abandoned in an African orphanage to becoming a star ballerina and an inspiration to us all. Sebastian A. Jones is on a mission to make the world a better place, Barbara Bottner outlines the many chapters of her amazing career and Dr. Stephanie Cox has a prescription to make children more comfortable during doctor visits: read her book! “Buzz” on over to Conrad’s Classroom, get your grill warmed up for this month’s recipe and check out our 2015 Purple Dragonfly Book Award winners! HAPPY 4th of July! Features 4 Caroll Spinney 8 Star Ballerina Michaela DePrince Brings Decades of Sunny Days to Sesame Street Inspires Hope in Taking Flight 12 Sebastian A. Jones 16 Barbara Bottner Loves What She Does! 18 Dr. Stephanie Cox Instills Positive Messages in Young Minds (and we do, too) Encourages Healthy Habits in My Doctor and Me ABC 15 Kids Can Publish 20 Activity Page 22 Meet Story Monster 24 Purple Dragonfly Book Award Winners 26 Monster Book Reviews 28 Conrad’s Classroom 30 Spring Reading Guide 34 Monster Munchies 35 Juicy Jack’s Spanish Corner 38 SMI Academy Sign up for a free monthly subscription at www.StoryMonstersInk.com! “Like” us on Facebook! www.Facebook.com/StoryMonsters Follow us on Twitter! @StoryMonsters StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 3 Cover Feature Story Caroll Spinney Brings Decades of Sunny Days to Sesame Street by Melissa Fales Like most icons of American culture, Big Bird is instantly recognizable. However, the face of Caroll Spinney, the puppeteer who has been tucked inside the 8 foot-tall, yellow-feathered suit for much of the last 46 years remains largely unfamiliar. “People have often asked me if it bothers me that my character is famous but I’m not,” Spinney says. “Actually, it’s kind of nice because I can choose who I reveal myself to. It’s kind of like ‘I’ve Got a Secret.’ Although with I Am Big Bird, I’m starting to get recognized in the airport now.” 4 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com I Am Big Bird: The Caroll Spinney Story is the recent Copper Pot Pictures documentary of the now 81-year-old Spinney, delving behind the scenes into his portrayal of the beloved Sesame Street character. “It’s funny, but it’s also a tear-jerker,” warns Spinney. Many of the clips are family videos taken by Spinney’s wife, Debra. “She’s a great cinematographer,” says Spinney. “There’s some good stuff in there.” The film has inspired its viewers, and Spinney himself, to reflect on the role Big Bird has played in the lives of generations of children. Born in Waltham, Massachusetts, Spinney’s childhood was far from idyllic. His slight build, androgynous first name, and interest in puppets didn’t win him any popularity contests as a child. “I was definitely not cool,” he says. In 1957, after serving in the U.S. Air Force, Spinney headed to California to try to land a job as an animator for Disney. The low pay was just one of the reasons Spinney decided to turn the job down. “You don’t hear any applause with animation,” he says. “You spend a week working to create 2.5 seconds on the screen.” 1 “We had a lot of doubters who didn’t believe that television could be a teaching tool. I think we proved them wrong.” Spinney returned to Boston where he produced animated films until he got a job on TV’s Bozo the Clown playing Grandma Nellie, Mr. Lion and Kookie, the boxing kangaroo. “I was making decent money, but I wanted to do something more,” he explains. “I had the feeling there was something else for me.” In 1969, Spinney performed at the Puppeteers of America puppet festival in Salt Lake City where a man named Jim Henson was in the audience, scouting for Sesame Street. “He was specifically looking for someone to play Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch,” says Spinney. “It pays to be in the right place at the right time.” Spinney is quick to gush about Henson, his longtime friend. “He’s probably the only genius I’ve ever had a chance to know,” says Spinney. “He would have 12 huge, great ideas going on in his head all at the same time. He had a great ability to focus on exactly what he wanted to achieve.” Henson’s initial vision for Big Bird, however, clashed with Spinney’s take on the character. Henson saw him as a goofy grown-up, while Spinney imagined him as a six-year-old kid inside a large avian frame. “At first, Big Bird was a real yokel,” says Spinney. “I made him very human and just a little less smart than the kids who were watching at home. He was learning the letters of the alphabet right along with them.” According to Spinney, Sesame Street was created as an experiment. “It was designed to reflect society as it had evolved and reach inner-city kids,” said Spinney. “The street scene was very gritty and very real. That’s why those elements of fantasy were so important.” Sesame Street was the first educational children’s show. “We had a lot of doubters who didn’t believe that television could be a teaching tool,” Spinney says. “I think we proved them wrong.” 2 1) Archival photo of Caroll Spinney puppeteering Big Bird. Photo courtesy of Robert Furhing. 2) Archival photo of Caroll Spinney and Snuffleupagus on the set of Sesame Street. Photo courtesy of Debra Spinney. 3) Archival photo of Caroll Spinney and Jim Henson. Photo courtesy of Debra Spinney. 3 Cover Feature Story For Spinney, one of the most noteworthy Sesame Street episodes addressed the real-life death of Will Lee, who portrayed store owner, Mr. Hooper. “That was the greatest scene we ever did,” Spinney says. “We approached it very honestly, but delicately, in a way that children would understand. We were very careful not to abuse the trust that parents placed in us.” Spinney said he’s heard from many fans touched by that episode. “One said his father had passed away a week earlier and that the show helped him deal with the loss,” says Spinney. “Those types of stories mean the most to me, hearing from children who felt a personal connection to what we were doing.” Over the years, Spinney has received countless letters from Sesame Street fans sharing how much they identify with Big Bird. He particularly treasures one from the early years, written by a Saskatchewan mother whose son felt left out when his older siblings went to school and he had no one to play with. In the letter, the mother recalled finding her young son crying by the television. When she asked him why, he said, “Because Big Bird is just like me.” He had been watching an episode where Big Bird couldn’t find anyone to play with him. “I was very touched,” said Spinney. “It was one of the first times I sensed that what we were doing on Sesame Street had the potential to resonate with children all over the world.” Unlike the affable, optimistic Big Bird, Spinney’s other Sesame Street character, Oscar the Grouch, is gruff and curmudgeonly. Spinney said many questioned why a grouch would be featured on a children’s show. “Even I used to question if it was a good idea,” admits Spinney. However, Spinney heard from one woman who told him that Oscar the Grouch changed her life. She grew up in an extremely strict home and wasn’t allowed to watch any television, not even Sesame Street. One day, at age 12, she found herself alone in the house and made a beeline to the TV. The first thing she ever saw on a television screen was Oscar the Grouch saying “no” to an adult character. “She told me, ‘I didn’t even know you could say no to a grown-up,’” Spinney recalls. “She said when the adults returned home that day, there was a different girl waiting for them. It’s not that she turned into a terrible person, she just learned that she could stand up for herself.” Hearing these personal revelations about the impact he’s had on so many lives motivates Spinney to continue breathing life into Big Bird and Oscar. He has no plans to retire anytime soon. This Emmy Award winning and National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ Lifetime Achievement recipient seems truly humbled and honored to have earned so many accolades and made so many friends while doing something he clearly loves to do. “I’m lucky to have had a job I enjoy so much for so long,” he says. “I suppose I could’ve gotten a better job in terms of money, but money would never have been as much of a reward to me as knowing that my characters have made a positive difference in people’s lives.” For more information about Caroll Spinney, visit www.carollspinney.net. To learn more about I Am Big Bird: The Caroll Spinney Story, visit www.iambigbird.com. “I suppose I could’ve gotten a better job in terms of money, but money would never have been as much of a reward to me as knowing that my characters have made a positive difference in people’s lives.” 6 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 7 Feature Story Michaela DePrince Inspires Hope in Taking Flight by Rachel Koestler-Grack Somewhere in the Sierra Leone, Africa, a little girl twirls in a murky puddle. Orphaned at three years old and abandoned in a crude orphanage, Mabinty Bangura has nothing but the crumpled page of a magazine, which she tightly grips in her tiny brown fingers. She stares at the glossy image of a ballerina, dressed in a glittering, pink tutu and balancing on the tips of her satin slippers. “Someday, I will dance on my toes like this lady,” she says. “I will be happy, too!” Young Mabinty was surrounded by death and violence, trapped in the middle of a brutal civil war with no family to claim her. Born with vitiligo, a condition that made her skin appear spotted like a leopard, she had been called “ugly” and even told that no one would want her. Dancing in the rain 8 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com that day, she dreamed of a life very different from the one she knew. A miracle followed by years of hard work and determination sculpted her dream into a reality. At age four, Mabinty was adopted by Elaine and Charles DePrince, and she started a new life in America as Michaela Mabinty DePrince. think of all of the time and effort I had already put into my dream. I would think of all the time, effort and money my parents had put into allowing me to have my dream. All this love, passion and effort would go down the drain if I gave up, so I would try to ignore the pain caused by these obstacles and just keep going.” Michaela had an amazing support system in her family. They encouraged her to stay focused on her aspirations. “I knew that being a black ballerina would be a difficult goal to achieve,” says Michaela’s mother, Elaine. “So I told her that she would need to work ten times as hard as the white girls just to gain credibility as a ballerina. She needed to commit to that hard work if she wanted to make it happen, and she did.” Michaela was number eight of eleven children, nine of whom were adopted. But she would never be identified by a number, as she had been at the orphanage in Africa. Instead, her American family encouraged her to carve out her own identity, by pursuing her passion for ballet. Michaela started dance lessons in 1999, the same year she arrived in the United States. She attended the Red Rock School for Dance Education in Philadelphia and soon noticed that few AfricanAmerican ballerinas danced in classical ballet. She heard the parents of classmates make comments such as, “Black women are just too athletic for ballet. They are too muscular.” Many African-American ballerinas ended up dancing modern or jazz rather than the classic story ballets Michaela loved. She began questioning whether her skin color would prevent her from achieving her dream. Over the years of training, she struggled to overcome these feelings. “Whenever I experience moments of doubt, I remind myself that the doubt is temporary, so I shouldn’t base my decisions on a temporary feeling or setback,” she explains. “I would In 2006 at age 10, she won the Hope Award at the Young America Grand Prix (YAGP) competition in Philadelphia for her portrayal of Gamzatti, the Indian princess from the ballet La Bayadère. For her outstanding performance as Esmeralda, the poor, love-stricken gypsy girl from La Esmeralda at the 2009 YAGP, Michaela received the Youth Grand Prix Award, the top award for her age division, as well as the National Training Scholarship Award, which offered a full scholarship for the American Ballet Theatre’s (ABT) summer intensive program in New York City. At the 2010 YAGP finals in New York City, Michaela won a full, year-round scholarship to study at the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School of Ballet at ABT. During 2010, Michaela was one of six dancers filmed for First Position, a documentary which follows the ballerinas while they train and prepare for the YAGP finals. Although the film forced her to recall painful memories of her early childhood, Michaela saw the documentary as a chance to show the world that African-American girls could be ballerinas, too. After the release of First Position in 2011, Michaela was flooded with more opportunities to be a role model and an activist against racial bias in ballet. She was featured in magazines such as Marie Claire and Teen Vogue and appeared on Good Morning America and Nightline. In April of StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 9 Feature Story Michaela’s journey has only begun, and she has “Ask yourself, ‘What do I want greater dreams to achieve. One day, she’d like to open a ballet school in Sierra Leone. “I think that out of this life?’ Then go after this will bring hope to the children of Sierra Leone,” she explains, “because it would liberate them from a it with all your might.” life of drudgery.” Meanwhile, she works with organizations that raise funds on behalf of the children 2012, she performed on Dancing with the Stars as a of Sierra Leone, and she sponsors a 12-year-old spotlight guest. “Dancing with the Stars was exciting child from her native tribe through ChildFund International. “The money I contribute assures that to me because it was my first public recognition as she gets her immunizations, proper nutrition, and a ballerina—a black ballerina!” Michaela says. “It was the first opportunity I had to reach out to all of an education,” says Michaela. “It’s a small first step the little black girls who had dreams of dancing bal- for a young ballerina like me to take. Bigger steps will follow.” In ballet, her ultimate goal is to become let, too. This is what made it so important to me.” a Prima ballerina assoluta, a rare honor awarded During 2012 and 2013, Michaela toured with to the most notable and exceptional female balthe Dance Theatre of Harlem, a neo-classical, pri- let dancers of their generation. “I know this is a marily ethnic ballet company. In 2013, she joined big dream, but I figure I might as well reach for the the Dutch National Ballet in Amsterdam, one of the stars,” says Michaela. “Even if I fall, I’ll at least reach top classical companies in the world, where she is the moon.” the only dancer of African origin. Her accomplishTo learn more about Michaela DePrince and ments sparked a desire to share something with her book, Taking Flight, visit her website others. “I didn’t have anything material to share, at www.michaeladeprince.com. other than a closet full of tutus,” Michaela says in her memoir, Taking Flight: From War Orphan to Star Ballerina, “but I did have a lot of passion, drive, persistence, and hope—especially hope.” As a way to give hope to others, Michaela, with the help of her mother, wrote Taking Flight in 2014. Her book was recently awarded the grand prize in Five Star Publication’s 2015 Purple Dragonfly Book Awards in the biography/autobiography/memoir category. By sharing her story, Michaela inspires others to let nothing stand in the way of their dreams. If people have endured a past marred by abuse and misfortune, Michaela encourages them to leave it behind them and move forward. “As far as I know, we have one life to live,” she says. “And wallowing is a waste of the precious time we have on this earth.” Michaela dreamed of dancing classical ballet, and she never gave up until she achieved her goal. “Ask yourself, ‘What do I want out of this life?’” says Michaela. “Then go after it with all your might.” 10 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com Michaela and her mother, Elaine. Photo by Jade Young A future book illustrator? We think so! First-grader Landon Oldham did a wonderful job coloring the pages of his Story Monster and Friends: Creatures to Color from Five Star Land coloring book. Keep up the great work, Landon! StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 11 Feature Story Sebastian A. Jones Instills Positive Messages in Young Minds by Melissa Fales Whether he’s writing comics, managing the company he founded or being a dad, Sebastian A. Jones is on a personal mission to “obliterate mediocrity” and make the world a better place. That zeal is evident in his latest ventures, publishing children’s books under the Stranger Kids division of his Stranger Comics brand and partnering with actress Garcelle Beauvais to co-author a series of children’s books, including I Am Mixed and I Am Living in 2 Homes. “That phrase, ‘I am’ is so powerful,” says Jones. “We wanted to encourage kids to take 12 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com ownership of their lives, even if they’re dealing with difficult situations. I Am is a way to celebrate who you are. It’s a celebration of self.” Jones moved to America from England at age 18. A true music aficionado, he founded his own record label at the age of 20. “With MVP Records, we had great blues and jazz and old soul music,” he explains. “The good stuff.” Jones’ first taste of writing was coming up with liner notes for the albums. “I enjoyed that creative process,” he says. But as the Internet grew in popularity, the success of MVP Records faded. “Essentially, all the rare, eclectic tunes I had collected were available for download with the touch of a button.” With I Am Mixed, Jones and Beauvais give parents an opportunity to talk about race in a simple and fun way. “Kids have questions about everything,” says Jones. “They want to know why the sky is blue and why leaves are green. Of course they have questions about race. Too many parents don’t know how to respond when a child asks why is so-and-so a different color than me. It’s an innocent, wonderful question. We wanted the book to respond to that innocent curiosity and to broach the subject from a sense of wonder about the world.” Undaunted, he began writing fantasy stories. Unable to find the right people to publish his work, Jones started his own company, Stranger Comics. “I did it to protect my vision,” he explains. While being the president of the company allows Jones artistic freedom as a writer, this dichotomy comes with added pressure. “Now I have to wear those two hats,” he says. “I’m pulled in a direction that I feel is my calling and my destiny, that is to be writing, but at the same time, I’m running a company and need to make sure I can survive so I can continue to create. When you’re running an independent company, your success or your failure rests on you. That can be overwhelming.” Jones admits he had purely personal reasons for starting the Stranger Kids division. “I’m a dad,” he says. “I wanted to do kids’ books.” The I Am series grew from a chance encounter at a playground when Jones and Beauvais chatted while their children played together. “When I mentioned I was doing publishing, her eyes lit up,” says Jones. “She had this idea for a kids’ book for children of mixed heritage. I am mixed, my son is mixed, and I hadn’t seen any books about it from a child’s perspective. It was very serendipitous. It struck a chord with me on a visceral level.” According to Jones, he knows what it’s like to feel on the fringe of society. “Being mixed and coming from England gives me a different perspective,” he explains. “Growing up, I could fit in everywhere, but I never felt like I belonged anywhere.” While that was awkward for him when he was younger, now at age 41, Jones said he’s found his niche. “I came to feel that I belonged with my friends and my family, not necessarily with any one cultural group.” Jones said they intentionally chose the word “mixed” over terms such as “multi-cultural” or “multiracial” due to their target audience. “I understand how sensitive people can be about race and why some adults may choose to use those other words,” Jones explains. “We picked the word ‘mixed’ for the book because kids know what the word ‘mixed’ means. It’s a simple way to describe what can be a complex issue.” Jones says the concept behind I Am Mixed extends beyond skin color and hair texture. The idea can apply to almost anyone, from that girl who likes to play in the mud and dirt but sometimes likes to wear a pretty dress, to a music fan who feels “a little bit country and a little bit rock n’ roll.” He also says people can be mixed in many ways. “We’ve all experienced a mixture of emotions,” he adds. “We’ve all felt conflicted, or happy and sad at the same time.” “Isn’t it great that we’re all different? Isn’t it rad that there are so many interesting cultures out there? And most importantly, aren’t you glad you’re you?” Like I Am Mixed, I Am Living in 2 Homes is about affirmation and celebration of the positive things in a child’s life. “Everybody knows somebody who has been through a divorce,” says Jones. “Yes, it’s a tough thing for parents to talk about, but studies show that kids want and need to talk about it. Parents may have strong emotions, or even guilt about a failed marriage, but it’s important to have that conversation with children. You especially want to make sure that they don’t feel they are to blame.” StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 13 In addition to the positive message of the stories, each book in the I Am series includes an activity section to help parents continue the conversation. “Ideally, these questions are just the beginning,” he says. “Parents can use them to get the dialog started and take it from there.” This summer brings two big releases for Jones. An animated version of his graphic novel, The Untamed, will be released in July. “I’m super excited,” he says. “It’s a vengeance-redemption-salvation type of story. Whatever I do in the field, whether I’m writing for children or adults, I always have some kind of underlying moral theme.” The latest book in the I Am series, I Am Awesome, is due out this August. “It’s about how to be a good friend and how to be brave,” said Jones. “It’s written from an imagination standpoint. When the kids are pretending to be superheroes, the illustrations show them as superheroes. I love it.” Jones says children’s books have a unique power to instill positive messages into young minds and hearts. 14 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com While it may be difficult to sway an adult’s opinion on topics such as race, religion or politics, Jones says there’s a small window of time when a child is forming his or her own thoughts. “That’s when a book can really grab a kid and make an impression on them that will stay with them throughout their whole lives,” he explains. “That’s what the I Am series is all about, helping kids feel good about themselves and keeping them open to all of the wonderful possibilities that are out there for them. The point is, ‘Isn’t it great that we’re all different? Isn’t it rad that there are so many interesting cultures out there? And most importantly, aren’t you glad you’re you?’” You can follow Jones on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, learn more about Stranger Comics and Stranger Kids at www.strangercomics.com and purchase the I Am books through Amazon or Barnes and Noble. The I Am series also has its own Facebook page. Kids Can Publish! Colors by Jessica King, age 8 A pop of color is good for anything. A hat, or a shirt, or a spicy chicken wing. That’s why tie-dye is the best invention. ‘Cause color can make you happy, even at detention. A little more colors are better than one. The number of colors you can use is a ton! Without colors this world would be bland. So that’s why we thank colors all over the land. Kids Can Publish has joined Story Monsters Ink! Teachers can now submit their students’ written works, such as poems, articles, stories, book reviews, etc. to Kids Can Publish for online print consideration. This means that if your teacher thinks your work is exceptional for your grade level,we might publish it in Story Monsters Ink! Visit www.StoryMonstersInk.com and click on “Kids Can Publish” for instructions on how to submit your work! StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 15 Feature Story Barbara Bottner Loves What She Does! (and we do, too) by Melissa Fales The heroine of Barbara Bottner’s book, Miss Brooks Loves Books! (and I don’t) is Missy, a stubborn, difficult child who nonetheless appeals to children and adults alike. Miss Brooks Loves Books! (and I don’t) was a New York Times bestseller and has a sequel titled Miss Brooks’ Story Nook (where tales are told and ogres are welcome!). “I like ornery characters,” says Bottner. “I love the idea of sassy, ornery girls. I like to lead the charge on that. I’m of a certain generation of women who were taught to be obedient. My generation was the first to veer away from the prescribed notions of how women should live—that they should always behave and be quiet and agreeable. You’re all welcome, by the way.” Initially, Bottner pursued a career as an artist. “I had absolutely no intention of writing books,” she says. She went to Paris to study painting, designed sets for off-Broadway productions and even joined the acting troupe Theater Genesis where she acted with Sam Shepard. Bottner says her eclectic past isn’t all that unusual for those who came of age when she did. “I’m a product of my generation,” she explains. “Every day, we reinvented ourselves. I think the fact that we failed at a lot of things only helped us. A lot of us, myself included, kept experimenting until we found where we fit in.” As a “completely unprepared” kindergarten teacher in Harlem, New York, Bottner developed her own style of teaching her students to read. Relying heavily on that technique, she started drawing 16 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com storyboards for Sesame Street and The Electric Company. “After that, it seemed like the next step was to go into children’s books,” she recalls. While looking for jobs as a children’s book illustrator, Bottner was surprised when editors suggested that she write her own stories to accompany her artwork. “Now, I realize that it was because I wasn’t a slamdunk, technically fabulous illustrator,” she says. “They thought that it would make my work more competitive.” Once she crossed over into writing, Bottner said it was as if a switch went off in her head, and she was almost exclusively interested in the craft. “It was as though I’d forfeited the other side of my brain,” she says. Since then, she’s explored many avenues of writing, including movies, television and even song lyrics for Jim Henson’s Muppets. No matter where she’s dabbled, Bottner has kept one foot firmly planted in children’s literature. “I’d get excited by other things, and I’d leave for a while,” she says. “For me, it was so completely unexpected that I would be a writer, I wanted to do it all. Let me try writing for Cosmo. Let me try this other thing. What else can I do? Exploring was irresistible.” Bottner insists she remains “extremely opinionated” when it comes to art. “I thought Maggie Smith did a bang-up job illustrating Feet Go to Sleep,” she says, referencing her latest book. It’s about a girl 1 who is too excited to sleep after a fun day at “I feel incredibly blessed that I’m still jazzed every single day to be doing what I’m doing.” the beach. “I was thinking about yoga and how it can help relax our bodies,” Bottner explains. “I was inspired by yoga techniques, but I wanted to include them in a way kids could use, through a story, not a manual.” Bottner says her collaborations with illustrator Michael Emberley on the Miss Brooks books and An Annoying ABC have been “dynamic” and that fans can look forward to two more books currently in the works from this duo. In 1973, having written exactly one picture book, What Would You Do With a Giant?, Bottner found herself standing in front of a class at Parson’s School of Design. An acquaintance had suggested she’d be a good teacher there, and needing money, Bottner decided to give it a whirl. On a whim, she met with the dean and was hired on the spot. “I don’t know if it was purely due to my personality or if he liked the book,” she says. “I do know that I didn’t have a clue about what I was doing. The amazing thing is that I now know I was meant to be a teacher.” She was later awarded a “Distinguished Teaching Award” from Parson’s New School of Social Research. For Bottner, teaching others how to write children’s books has been a true turning point in her life and in her career. “The teaching process has been an amazing gift for me,” she says. “It also provides a good balance to the self-centeredness that some artists have. You can’t teach and not be generous. You can’t lack generosity of spirit. You’re teaching your competition.” Bottner said she insists that her students dig deep and get real about their experiences. “I always tell my 2 students to go where the screaming is the loudest,” she said. “I just don’t think you’re driven to be a writer if everything has always fallen into place for you. Then you have nothing to write about. There’s nothing there to explore.” Having written over 40 books in addition to her work in other genres, Bottner says the challenge of writing still delights her on a daily basis. “It’s fun, but it can also be hard, competitive, demanding and disappointing,” she said. “The more you know about writing, the less you know at the very same time. It’s not for everyone. Someone once gave me this advice about working in the theater: ‘If you cannot do it, don’t do it, but if you have to do it, do it.’ I think that applies to writing, too. Personally, I couldn’t not do this.” Currently, Bottner is working on a novel. “It’s a very serious, free-verse, young adult book,” she explains. “It came as a complete surprise, but here it is.” That element of surprise is one of the reasons Bottner retains such an enthusiasm for writing, and says she’s continually being challenged, elated and rewarded. “Doing this kind of work is a gift. I get to live and work in a state of excitement. A lot of people my age don’t know what to do with themselves. I feel incredibly blessed that I’m still jazzed every single day to be doing what I’m doing.” For more information on Barbara Bottner and her books, visit www.barbarabottnerbooks.com. Bottner got her first taste of that reality when her former student, Laura Numeroff, author of If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, informed Bottner that she had not one, but four book deals. “I didn’t have any,” says Bottner. “I thought … wow, now my ego has to deal with this.” Since then, Bottner has watched proudly as other former students have emerged in the field, including Bruce Degen, illustrator of The Magic School Bus series; Robin Preiss Glasser, illustrator of the Fancy Nancy series; and Peggy Rathmann, author and illustrator of Goodnight, Gorilla. “It goes on and on and on,” Bottner said. “It’s been great for me personally, and for my career. Working with them has made me a better writer.” StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 17 Feature Story Dr. Stephanie Cox Encourages Healthy Habits in My Doctor and Me ABC by Melissa Fales It’s no surprise that Dr. Stephanie Stitt Cox pursued a career in medicine. She grew up in Fort Dodge, Iowa, where her grandfather, Dr. Paul Stitt, and her father, Dr. Michael Stitt, were both family physicians and her mother, Carole Stitt, served as her father’s nurse. “We always had people calling our house for medical advice,” Cox says. “We’d run into people out in the community and it wouldn’t be unusual for my dad to check out someone’s rash in the freezer section of the grocery store.” Now, with nearly 13 years under her belt as a thirdgeneration family physician, Cox has authored a children’s book called My Doctor and Me ABC. “As a physician, my goal is to help people live the healthiest lives they can, and focusing on an active lifestyle and healthy habits is a big part of that,” she explains. “My hope with writing this book was to get kids interested in their health care at an early age and get them on the path to lifelong good health.” Cox was inspired at a young age to follow her family’s footsteps. “For as long as I can remember, I always knew I wanted to be a doctor,” she says. “Witnessing the wonderful impact my parents and grandfather had on the health of the community fueled my drive to go into family medicine. I wanted to make a positive impact, just like they did.” Cox attended the University of Iowa in Iowa City for both her undergraduate degree and medical school and remains a die-hard Hawkeye fan. She completed her residency at Waukesha Family Medicine Residency in Waukesha, Wisconsin. While Cox was inspired by her family to enter the medical field, she was never pressured to do so. “My parents never pushed me or my sisters into medicine,” she says. “They wanted us to do whatever made us happy, to forge the path we wanted to forge. We all went into medicine in some form anyway.” Cox’s parents recently retired together after 40 years in medicine, leaving Cox to carry on the family tradition 18 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com along with her three sisters—a veterinarian, a nurse in a cardiothoracic ICU and another family physician. For nearly three years, Cox has been practicing at the Iowa Clinic in Des Moines. “The best part of being a family physician is having the opportunity to get to know several generations of the same family,” she says. “I’ve been fortunate to get to know up to four generations of the same family, taking care of the kids, parents, grandparents and great-grandparents. Watching these families grow and expand over time is a unique and special experience.” According to Cox, the idea for My Doctor and Me ABC just popped into her head one day. “It evolved over time,” she says. “It took about two years to get it to the version you see today.” Cox said she wrote it hoping to appeal to the two different kinds of pediatric patients she typically sees. “Some kids enjoy coming to the office and are very inquisitive about what we do, but many others think of it as a very scary event,” she explains. “I wanted the book to help both types of children.” ever since they were tiny tots, and reading together is something we’ve always enjoyed,” she says. “I want other parents to be able to share that with their kids.” My Doctor and Me ABC is designed to engage preschool and early elementary age children, but Cox said she purposely included medical terminology that would also keep the interest of slightly older children. The book includes a medically themed rhyme for each letter of the alphabet. “Writing the rhymes was a fun process, but it was also very challenging,” said Cox. “I first had to come up with medical terms that would be important to a child, and then come up with an appropriate and hopefully witty and amusing rhyme.” She kept paper and a pen by her bedside because sometimes she’d wake up in the middle of the night with a rhyme in her head that she didn’t want to forget. Cox offers her young readers a healthy-living tip for each of the 26 letters in the alphabet. The “L is for Lungs” page contains Cox’s most emphatic advice for children. “Getting kids to say ‘no’ to smoking and helping people quit smoking is very important to me,” she said. The “S is for Sunscreen” page is another personal favorite for Cox, as it is a particularly accurate reflection of her daily life as a mom of three. “Yes, that’s me chasing after the children with the big bottle of sunscreen, even on a cloudy day,” she says. Cox said she hopes My Doctor and Me ABC serves as a fun way to help children understand the importance of a healthy lifestyle. “I feel like if we can get kids on a healthy path early on, then they will grow up to be healthy adults and have their own healthy children,” she says. Additionally, Cox says she wrote the book in an effort to encourage children and parents to read together. Reading has always been a favorite pastime for Cox and her own children, sons Connor and Aidan and daughter Lydia. “We have spent hours upon hours reading Cox’s children willingly served as her guinea pigs while she was writing the book. “My now 10-year-old laughed out loud at the rhyme for Q, and I thought ‘That is my target audience,’” she says. “That adorable giggle was the exact response I hoped I’d get.” Her children were delighted to find references to themselves within the book. For example, illustrator Emily Burger made the little girl on the “A is for Abdomen” page look like Cox’s daughter. On the “F is for Fracture” page, the names on the cast are those of Cox’s and Burger’s children. “The doctor, of course, looks like me,” explains Cox. “Now I can never change my hairstyle.” The book matter-of-factly includes common experiences children will have at the doctor’s office, such as having their blood pressure taken, their height and weight recorded and their vision tested. “I thought the fun rhymes would make these things seem routine and less intimidating,” she says. Throughout the book, Cox tried to keep her target audience in mind. “I tried to see medicine through the eyes of a child and to visualize what would be important to them.” For example, Cox says she put special thought into the “I is for Immunizations” page, knowing that most children are anxious about receiving shots. “I thought making that rhyme superhero-themed would help kids understand that the purpose of vaccines is to help make their bodies strong and able to fight disease.” Cox says she’s been delighted by the response to the book, especially from her own patients. “I’ve had parents who’ve had My Doctor and Me ABC on their Kindle or iPad and were reading it to their kids when I came into the exam room,” she says. “That’s been a really neat experience for me.” Looking ahead, Cox hinted at some ideas she has for a possible second book. “Adults also don’t like to come to the doctor, so maybe I could help out with that, too.” My Doctor and Me ABC is available on Amazon in a paperback version and as an e-book. StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 19 Activity Page Coloring Fun! © 2015 Mark Watson and Pablo Michau - Milo’s Journey: The Colouring Book 20 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 21 Feature Story Meet Story Monster at the Payson Book Festival on July 25 Story Monster loves to travel, and this month, children can meet him in the cool pines at the Payson Book Festival on July 25 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Gila Community College Payson campus, located at 201 N. Mud Springs Road. This is Payson’s first book festival, and readers of all ages are encouraged to attend and visit with 50 Arizona authors. It takes a community of readers, writers and volunteers to launch a successful book festival. Five Star Publications, Inc. is proud to be one of the sponsors of this newest book festival in Arizona and will have several tables with a variety of authors, including Conrad J. Storad, the awardwinning author and editor of more than 50 science and nature books. He writes the popular “Conrad’s Classroom” column in Story Monsters Ink and will present story time sessions, as well as conduct a Young Writer’s Workshop for children ages 9-12. Arizona Professional Writers (APW), formerly known as Arizona Press Women, is partnering with Gila Community College to present this one-day event, which will take place from in several areas of the small campus, nestled in scenic mountains of central Arizona. This family-oriented festival is offered to the public free of charge. A portion of the book festival proceeds will Photo by Linda F. Radke 22 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com benefit scholarship funds of these two non-profit groups. “We invite people from throughout Arizona to escape the sizzling summer temperatures of the desert areas and attend this new event as an enjoyable day-trip,” says Connie Cockrell, chair of the Payson Book Festival planning committee. “Our book festival offers families and individual readers a day of fun. Authors representing a wide variety of genres in both fiction and non-fiction will sign books. In addition, there will be a full schedule of author presentations and workshops. Families also can enjoy local food, entertainment and door prizes.” Due to budget cuts, a growing number of schools cannot afford to sponsor author visits, so many children have never met an author in person. “Our goal is to promote literacy and showcase Arizona authors,” adds Carol Osman Brown, director of the Rim Country District of APW, a statewide non-profit organization. “We want to foster a love of reading by providing a friendly environment that encourages personal interaction between Arizona authors and readers of all ages.” Research shows that children who are solid readers perform better in school and become lifelong learners. Yet many lack the motivation to read because they don’t see their parents reading for pleasure. Often there are no books, magazines or newspapers in the home. Many parents report they are too busy to read to their children. These factors can severely hinder a child’s success in school. in Forbes (5/13/2014). He notes that middle school students (6th graders in particular) are reading the most but reading decreases among high school students. Shapiro writes, “When these kids become adolescents, they attempt to directly emulate their adult role models. If adults don’t read books, then trying to act like an adult means not reading books.” As a father, he requires 30 minutes of reading as a prerequisite to video game time. He also models good reading behaviors. “In my household, being an adult means feeling comfortable with books,” Shapiro explains. “Maturity means having excessive familiarity with the longform written word.” When children accompany their parents or grandparents to a book festival, they see people getting excited about books and meeting authors. Teens can talk to authors in a relaxed setting and perhaps realize that they are interesting people who want to share stories with readers. And maybe these youths will be inspired to write a book or article of their own. Sponsors are welcome to help support the Payson Book Festival. For more information, visit www.paysonbookfestival.org or its Facebook page. For questions, call 928-4689269 or email info@paysonbookfestival.org. Parents cheer on small children to learn to read picture books as quickly as possible, but when they learn to read independently, parents tend to be less involved. According to Lisa Holton, former president of Scholastic Book Fairs, as kids get older, the role parents play changes. “We found that not only do parents need to be reading role models, but that they must play a key role in helping their older children select books that capture their imagination and interest.” Author Jordan Shapiro wrote an interesting article titled, “Kids Don’t Read Books Because Parents Don’t Read Books” which appeared StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 23 Purple Dragonfly Book Award Winners Congratulations to our 2015 Purple Dragonfly Book Award winners! The following are the grand prize and first-place winners. For a complete list of winners, including second-place and honorable mentions, visit www.DragonflyBookAwards.com Grand Prize Winner: Taking Flight: From War Orphan to Star Ballerina by Michaela and Elaine DePrince Activity Books: My Very Own Bucket Filling from A to Z Coloring Book by Carol McCloud and Caryn Butzke; illustrated by Glenn Zimmer Activity Kit: Nickerbacher, The Funniest Dragon by Terry John Barto, illustrated by Kim Sponaugle Animals/Pets: CougaMongaMingaMan Meets Maggie by Nancy Scalabroni, illustrated by Terri Kelleher Arts/Music: When the Sun Goes Down by Nannette Nocon, illustrated by John Kastner Best Cover Design (tie): Gollywood Here I Come! by Terry John Barto, illustrated by Mattia Cerato; The Eel Hunt by Jennifer Somervell, illustrated by Margery Fern Best Illustrations (tie): A Colorful Journey Through the Land of Talking Letters by Mary Jo Nyssen, illustrated by Mike Motz; Nickerbacher, The Funniest Dragon by Terry John Barto, illustrated by Kim Sponaugle Best Interior Design: The Eel Hunt by Jennifer Somervell, illustrated by Margery Fern Board Books: The Lucky Chipmunk by Sirui Li, illustrated by YingMing Zhao Chapter Books: Muddy Madeleine Meets an Arach-A-Doo by Amanda Stone Norton, illustrated by Veronica V. Jones 24 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com Charity/Making a Difference: Wilson & Bella’s Christmas Wish! by Susan Castriota Children’s Nonfiction: Hey, Baby, Look! by Kate Shannon, illustrated by Morgan Owens Cultural Diversity: The Eel Hunt by Jennifer Somervell, illustrated by Margery Fern Educational/Instructional: Super Smart Sugar by Barbara Freeman, illustrated by Caitlin Welsh Family Matters (tie): It’s This Monkey’s Business by Debra Mares, illustrated by Taylor Christensen; Just Because by Chiquita Camille Payne, illustrated by Jerry Craft; Sugar: A Princess Pit Bull Finds Her Family by Barbara Freeman, illustrated by Caitlin Welsh; That Mama is a Grouch by Sherry Ellis, illustrated by Don Berry General: CougaMongaMingaMan Meets Maggie by Nancy Scalabroni, illustrated by Terri Kelleher Green Books/Environmental: The Rain Forest Dance by Sandra Fernandez-Achenbach Growing Pains: Your Awesome Brain by Edwin Lee, M.D., F.A.C.E and Jim Huth, illustrated by Bryan Burright Health: Your Awesome Brain by Edwin Lee, M.D., F.A.C.E and Jim Huth, illustrated by Bryan Burright Historical Fiction: Powder Monkey by Donna M. McDine, illustrated by K.C. Snider Middle Grade Fiction (tie): A Place to Call Home: Toby’s Tale by G.A. Whitmore; The Gift of Sunderland by J.E. Rogers, illustrated by Guy Atherfold; The Gift of Sunderland (ebook) by J.E. Rogers, illustrated by Guy Atherfold Scared Little Sheltie by Linda Greiner, illustrated by Morgan Spicer; The Dandelion Seed’s Big Dream by Joseph Anthony, illustrated by Chris Arbo; The Great Danbury State Fair by Theresa Buzaid, illustrated by Steve Dasgupta Picture Books 5 & Younger (tie): Eden and Her Happy by Tracy Schlepphorst; If I Could Reach the Sky by Abbe Reichman, illustrated by Charles Berton; It’s a Piece of Cake by Laurie Lunsford, illustrated by Brittani Gothard; Noisy Bird SingAlong by John Himmelman; The Adventures of Paka The Lion Cub by Mary N. Keown, illustrated by Yvonne L. Martin Poetry: Angels, Angels, Everywhere by Michelle Beber, illustrated by Susan Shorter Picture Books 6 & Older (tie): An Amazing Circus of Phonograms: Act 1 by Mary Jo Nyssen, illustrated by Mike Motz; Explorations of Commander Josh Book One: In Space by Donna LeBlanc, illustrated by Anton Servetnik; Gollywood Here I Come! by Terry John Barto, illustrated by Mattia Cerato; Queen Vernita Visits Baja Quail by Dawn Menge, illustrated by Pamela Snyder; Sashi: The School Issues: The Lonely Loon by Margaret Ball Ottman Science Fiction/Fantasy/Paranormal: The Visitor’s Choice by Alexander Davidson Spiritual/Religious (tie): If Jesus Lived Inside My Heart by Jill Roman Lord, illustrated by Amy Wummer; Pancakes with Papa: Five Ways to Remember by Dena Albergo Jayson, illustrated by Rainer M. Osinger Young Adult Fiction: A Place to Call Home: Toby’s Tale by G.A. Whitmore StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 25 Monster Review Trouble in Zombie-Town: The Mystery of Herobrine, An Unofficial Minecrafter’s Adventure by Joshua Bloomfield, age 11 Publisher: Sky Pony Press Author: Mark Cheverton Description: Gameknight999 was sucked into the world of Minecraft when one of his father’s inventions went haywire. Trapped inside the game, the former griefer learned the error of his ways. He transformed into a heroic warrior and defeated powerful endermen, ghasts and dragons to save the world of Minecraft and his NPC friends that live in it. Gameknight swore that he’d never go inside Minecraft again. But when his little sister, Monet113, accidentally enters the game herself, the User-that-is-not-a-user has no choice but to return to a digital world where very real danger lies around every corner. With the help of some old friends such as Crafter, Hunter and Stitcher, as well as a few unexpected new ones, Gameknight will journey deep into a zombie village and face Xa-Tul, the powerful zombie king crafted by a shadowy figure with bright glowing eyes and a hatred for Gameknight999. To save his sister, Gameknight will have to learn a few new tricks if he has any chance of defeating this monstrous creature. While it is a good book, it can get a bit dark and scary, with several characters almost killed. Despite not being accurate to actual minecraft, the world is interesting, fun and cool, but also a living nightmare to live in. The good guys are nice, while the bad guys are nightmare-worthy. The character descriptions were realistic, believable and interesting. I did not have a favorite character, because they were all amazing to read about. It is part of the second Gameknight999 adventures series; there’s a trilogy before this book. The plot was crazy at moments but overall strong, cool and interesting. Due to the themes, I would split this into three age groups: BRAVE KIDS: 8+; DON’T SCARE EASY KIDS: 10+; EASY TO SCARE KIDS: 13+ I fall into the easy-to-scare kid range, so I got a bit scared and hope the sequel is less dark and has less violence. Dear Mom by Darleen Wohlfeil Dear Mom, written by the accomplished Canadian writer and musician Peter Wilson, is a gentle lesson in reflection. Life can often pick up speed, and we find ourselves scrambling to keep up. All the while, a growing list of I would have, could have, should have, develops in the back of our minds. So often the cares at hand can push special moments 26 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com aside, and heartfelt fires dim to low glowing embers. Wilson is known for his works, in literature and lyric, that capture the heart and mood of relationship. Dear Mom is a moving reflection long overdue, and illustrations by Carol Matsuyama complement each thought with great visuals that capture the past, bringing each memory to new life. Wilson and Matsuyama have given us a perfect little gift to remind that special someone how much she’s loved. And it just might shorten up that mental guilt list! I guarantee it’s a winner all the way around. Daddy’s Little Girl by Darleen Wohlfeil Daddy’s Little Girl is yet another laurel to be placed in the crown of victory for Peter Wilson. Known for his many songs and stories on relationships, he brings us another tender promise of life’s truest treasure. This is a perfect gift for any new daddy to be. Tossed about with the sudden reality of the necessary changes and demands a child will bring can be overwhelming. This heartfelt book brings a whisper of peace, a peek into the joys and the reminder of love’s lasting ability to carry us through. Carol Matsuyama’s artful illustrations cap it off perfectly, leaving us to close its pages with a warm, fuzzy feeling. The Hired Girl by Jennifer Bisignano Fourteen-year-old Joan Skraggs, just like the heroines in her beloved novels, yearns for real life and true love. But what hope is there for adventure, beauty or art on a hardscrabble farm in Pennsylvania where the work never ends? Over the summer of 1911, Joan pours her heart out into her diary as she seeks a new, better life for herself—because maybe, just maybe, a hired girl cleaning and cooking for six dollars a week can become what a farm girl could only dream of—a woman with a future. Inspired by her own grandmother’s journal, Newbery Medalist Laura Amy Schlitz relates Joan’s journey from the muck of the chicken coop to the comforts of a society household in Baltimore, taking readers on an exploration of feminism and housework; religion and literature; love and loyalty; cats, hats and bunions. I’ve been told that you can tell an amazing piece of literature when you invest your heart in the main character. That is what happened when I read this novel. From the beginning of the story, I cared for Joan (forgetting often that this was a work of fiction). The novel is written from her perspective, as she is recording the moments of her life in a diary. Joan is an avid learner and loves books but struggles to find herself by working on a farm. She is disheartened when her father tells her that the path to knowledge is not for her. She goes on strike and refuses to cook the meals for her family and then later sets off on her own. When Joan enters the next chapter of her life, she is a naïve, 14-year-old girl who considers herself educated but learns lessons that you cannot find in the text of a book. She is hired by a Jewish family and is paired with a stoic girl named Malka who runs the home. When Joan applies for the position, she not only changes her name, but also her views on religion, love and friendship. This novel is set in the early 1900’s, but the familiarity of challenges a young girl faces still holds true. This is a book I will definitely read more than once. Become a Monster Reviewer! Story Monsters Ink publishes book reviews written by adults and children. Authors of printed reviews receive a free Story Monsters T-Shirt for their first published review. Reviewers with five printed reviews get to choose a free book from the Little Five Star bookstore, www.LittleFiveStar.com. Youth reviewers will need a parent or guardian’s permission slip submitted along with their reviews. To obtain a permission slip or formore information, email Cristy@FiveStarPublications.com. StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 27 nd aF . Ra dke Science & Nature : by Photo Li Protect the Pollinators! by Conrad J. Storad Our planet has problems. The climate really is changing, despite the protests from “science deniers” who say that nothing is wrong. Scientists who study animals and plants and other living things have plenty of evidence. New evidence piles up by the day. Frogs and amphibians around the world are getting sick and dying. So are many kinds of bats. And the scariest of all, colonies of honey bees are falling apart and dying as well. Some people might say: So what? Who cares if there are a few less slimy frogs, scary bats or bugs and bees and creepy crawlers? We should care. Everyone should care! Consider this quote: “If the bees disappeared from the Earth, man would have no more than four years left to live. No more bees, no more pollination … no more men!” The words are not dialog from a bad science fiction movie. The quote is actually attributed to Albert Einstein, one of 28 humanity’s most acclaimed scientists. There’s only one problem. Einstein never said it. At least no source can be found, according to science writer Kirsten S. Traynor in her new essay, “Stung: In Search of Honey Bees.” Traynor says that enterprising European beekeepers protesting cheap honey imports probably invented the catchy slogan in 1994. It added weight to their claim that beekeepers were being driven out of the business. Despite the invented quote, Traynor says the concept is basically true. Beekeepers are disappearing. And so are honey bees and other creatures we know as pollinators. Spicebush Swallowtail on a thistle. Luna moth. The U.S. Department of Agriculture designated June 15-21 of this year as National Pollinator Week. The world’s most important pollinators include birds, bees, beetles, butterflies and bats. Plenty of small mammals also play a role in the process. Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com Zebra Longwing butterfly. What is pollination? It is one of Nature’s most important processes. It is a vital stage in the life cycle of all flowering plants. Bees and other pollinators move pollen from inside one flower and carry it to another flower of the same type. This leads to fertilization. The end result can be vegetables and fruits and grains of all kinds that humans and other animals use as food. Scientists say that more than 80 percent of all flowering plants need the help of a pollinator. It is the single bee or bird or beetle or butterfly that actually moves the heavy pollen grains from one plant to another. The wind is not strong enough to do the job in most cases. More than 200,000 kinds of bees, beetles, butterflies, wasps, ants and moths do most of the hard work. The majority of pollinators are insects. Parasites and diseases are wiping outpollinators. So are pesticides and other human made chemicals that were designed to kill only “bad” bugs. This is not good. The work of pollinators ensures good crop harvests. Pollinators contribute to healthy plants and forests everywhere. Humans are supposed to be the smartest creatures on the planet. Sometimes we need a scary nudge now and then to get moving in the right direction. Earth needs its pollinators. Things kids can do to help pollinators: Be nice to pollinators. Most birds and bugs are small and fragile. Be gentle and quiet when they are near. Look, but don’t touch! Hummingbirds, butterflies, birds, bees and beetles won’t hurt you. Leave them alone and they will leave you alone. Bee approaching a cactus flower. Photos 1 and 2 by Tim Kristof, Ranger - Lost Dutchman State Park, Apache Junction, Arizona. Photos 3 and 4 by Conrad J. Storad (taken at Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona). Resources to learn more about pollinators: WEBSITES: • Pollinator Partnership www.pollinator.org • Ask A Biologist – Arizona State University askabiologist.asu.edu • USDA – Forest Service www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/pollinators BOOKS AND ARTICLES: • “Stung: In Search of Honey Bees” by Kirsten S. Traynor www.inkshares.com/projects/stung-insearch-of-honey-bees Don’t use poison sprays. Bug your family to stop using poison sprays in the house or garden. The poison kills bad bugs, but it can kill pollinators, too. • Arizona Agriculture: Bee’s Amazing Adventure by Bonnie Apperson Jacobs and Terri Mainwaring, in cooperation with The University of Arizona College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Cooperative Extension and Maricopa County Farm Bureau www.ArizonaAgricultureBook.com “Bee” an expert! Plant some flowers. Read about pollinators. Teach your friends and family about these important creatures. • The Forgotten Pollinators by Stephen L. Buchmann and Gary Paul Nabhan www.islandpress.org/forgotten-pollinators Get involved! Join the Pollinator Partnership. Check it out at www.pollinator.org. StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 29 Spring Reading Guide Ten Zany Birds by Sherry Ellis Ten zany birds have a tree party, until one by one they find other things to do. It’s a zany countdown—which bird will stick around? Ten Zany Birds is a fun, beautifully illustrated picture book. As parents and teachers read, children are introduced to counting and basic subtraction skills. Whenever a bird leaves, the number of striped, spotted and polka-dotted birds changes, teaching the application of simple classification rules. Whimsical and entertaining, Sherry Ellis’s tale of ten silly, distractible, little birds is an excellent choice for both pre-reader storybook time and early readers. http://tinyurl.com/naje3ts Posie Pixie and the Pancakes by Sarah Hill Posie Pixie and the Pancakes is the last book in this first super set from the wondrous, award-winning Whimsy Wood series for 5-8 year olds. Posie Pixie has been on so many exciting adventures already! She’s hunted for a new Autumn home, hosted a fireworks party and had her plans scuppered by a sudden snowstorm! Book seven is just as jampacked with fun, frivolities, nature and necessary whimsy as the previous delightful six books from this enchanting series. “If you haven’t read these adorable stories yet, you don’t know what you’re missing!” – the Homeschool Mom Blog http://tinyurl.com/mfl6q3h The Betrayal by Andrea S. Adams Lacey Addison thought that she had found the key to her happiness. She had the perfect boyfriend, the perfect job and the perfect life. That is, until she walked in. Like a tornado destroying everything in its path, Alicia O’Malley waltzes into Lacey’s life and almost instantly, her perfect world is shattered. Suddenly, Lacey is pulled into a web of art thefts, ancient legends and an old brotherhood that flips all she knows on her ear. Can she put aside her feelings of betrayal long enough to unravel the mysteries and save her relationship before her world crashes in around her? http://tinyurl.com/nvtp6wc Just Because Chiquita Camille Payne Just Because is a short picture book written in poetic form by Chiquita Camille Payne, Illustrated by award-winning illustrator, Jerry Craft and published by Mama’s Boyz, Inc. Just Because tells the story of a young mother who takes her inquisitive son on a poetic journey of the importance of family, traditions and how families get together for special occasions for no reason at all and that the greatest love is family ... just because! First-place winner, 2015 Purple Dragonfly Book Awards. http://tinyurl.com/nnm2z8u 30 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com Spring Reading Guide Tickety Boo at the Zoo: The Animal Game by Lucy Bermingham Come along and join Tickety Boo, the rare blue cockatoo, on a trip to the zoo! Using fun, engaging rhyming schemes, she presents clues to help children identify each of the animals they will encounter on their adventure. Vivid full-color illustrations will reveal the correct answers to each “Who am I?” This smart and entertaining book will teach your child fun facts about the diversity of the animal kingdom, and some new vocabulary along the way. Published by Authorhouse. Available at: authorhouse.com, amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com ISBN 978-14969-7044-2, http://tinyurl.com/mfl6q3h A Whirlwind of Discovery by Darleen Wohlfeil Baseball season was winding down, and all-stars and championships filled the hearts and minds of kids and adults alike. Jackson had high hopes of his team leading the victory when suddenly the air shifted, hope fell and loss darkened his emotions. Overwhelmed, his thoughts swirled until he and his grandma were caught up into a whirlwind of discovery, landing them in the most amazing adventure of all. In an unknown land of time forgotten, incredible creatures and wounded people, Jackson is challenged in depths he didn’t know he had. Could he make a difference? He’s just a kid! Yet, the future of this powerful place is in his hands. http://tinyurl.com/kg95qt5 Buttermilk by Fat Hendrick Farmer Floyd’s prize cow is suddenly giving him wonderful, delicious, savory ... butter? Does the mysterious guitar-playing tenant from Tupelo have anything to do with this? Find out in this new, award-winning book from master storyteller Fat Hendrick! Two 2015 Finalist Indie Book Awards, Second-place winner, 2014 Royal Dragonfly Awards, 2014 Story Monster Approved! Honorable Mention, 2015 Purple Dragonfly Awards, 2015 Feathered Quill Book Awards Best Animal - Children’s/YA and the Feathered Quill “We Love Animals!” Award. 2015 Feathered Quill Third-place Debut Author award. Like us on Facebook and post the comment “5 Star Contest” on our page to enter to win a free 1st edition copy of Buttermilk. www.facebook.com/fathendrick What if I Were Bigger Than My Bully? by Cat Blount “What if you were bigger than BJ?” is the question that initiated the change in Jed’s circumstances forever. Jed, a young boy, bullied each day at school, goes through a whirlwind of scenarios and emotions as he mentally orchestrates his revenge on BJ, his bully. Has Jed been pushed too far? Is he more like his bully than he realizes? What if I Were Bigger Than My Bully? is a story that speaks to the bullied, the bystander, all parents, schools and to the bully. An original work from Cat Blount’s organic stories. Packed with colorful illustrations. www.catblog.catblountstories.com StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 31 Spring Reading Guide Parents for Sale by Dr. Nicole Audet The Clark parent threatens to sell their dog, since twins Luke and Lucy don’t take care of her as promised. When their parents’ car is out of sight, Luke paints white letters on a sign: “Parents for Sale.” When the twins sell their parents to fairy orphan, she transforms into a witch who wishes to eat them in a stew. How will the twins save their parents? Through this book, Dr. Audet hopes to teach kids about the value of family, as well as the work of owning a pet. www.nicoleaudet.com Purchase at www.authorhouse.com. Three Little Shrimp by J. Steven Spires One day, a troop of shrimp swim off to the sea. On their way, three little shrimp, mesmerized by the wonders they see, decide to swim away from the safety of the troop to explore their surroundings. Unseen predators lurk in the shadows of the water. Without the protection of the troop, the three little shrimp may become the next meal for a hungry predator. Despite their best efforts, the predators are unable to catch the shrimp, who do not even realize they are being hunted. As the day comes to a close, the trio rejoins their troop and together they swim to the sea bottom to sleep soundly on their sea beds. www.jstevenspires.com Peewee the Ladybug and the Jamaica Freedom Jamboree by Dr. Annmarie Monica Edwards What does freedom mean to you? Peewee the Ladybug and eight animals take on the dangerous and extraordinary task of celebrating the 150th anniversary of the Jamaica Morant Bay Rebellion—one that will threaten their lives and change how they think about trust, history and community. This tale of courage and celebration will take your whole family on an exciting journey. http://tinyurl.com/mx2xlfz Join Peewee in celebrating this special anniversary by writing two paragraphs about what freedom means to you. The first prize winner will receive an $25 Amazon gift card. The next 10 winners will each receive a bookmark. For more information, visit www.peeweetheladybug.blogspot.com. 32 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com Spring Reading Guide Koolura and the Mystery at Camp Saddleback by Michael L. Thal Koolura has the ability to teleport, levitate, heal and even fly. But at Camp Saddleback, she wakes up drained and powerless. Who or what has stolen Koolura’s psychic powers? As Koolura searches for the truth about her power loss, she and the Chumash Girls have to deal with pranksters ruining their cabin and destroying their summer. The campers plan revenge, but problems escalate as lives are threatened. Will Koolura and the Chumash Girls solve the mystery at Camp Saddleback? http://tinyurl.com/mfl6q3h Sara to the Rescue by Susana Sánchez The adventure begins when Sara is waiting for the school bus and a whale shark arrives and takes her to the bottom of the sea instead! She finds out that the marine animals are threatened by an unexpected creature … a Garbage Monster! Discover what Sara has to do to rescue her friend and save the ocean. Fiction-Adventure/ Chapter Book, Ages 5-9. Available at Amazon.com. Ockleberries to the Rescue by Mandy Eve-Barnett Follow the adventures of two magical woodland sprites, Crispin and Tansy, as they go to the aid of their forest animal friends. Each chapter is a delightful story for bedtime reading or for independent readers who love the animal kingdom. Which animal is your favorite? Are they in the story? Will Crispin find the secret cave? Where did the squirrel twins hide? What did the beaver find in the tree? Are the fairies able to help Crispin cure Tansy? Find out the answers and learn facts about the animals, too! www.dreamwritepublishing.ca/products/ockleberries-rescue To be listed here, contact Cristy Bertini at Cristy@FiveStarPublications.com for submission guidelines. StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 33 Monster Munchies Perfect Pork Burgers Fire up the grill! The 4th of July holiday will send barbeques a blazin’ and our friends at the Food Network can always be counted on to add a delicious twist to a classic favorite. Ingredients Directions 5 slices bacon Pulse the bacon and garlic in a food processor until coarsely ground. 1 clove garlic, minced Combine the ground pork, 1 teaspoon salt, 1/4 teaspoon pepper and the sage in a large bowl. Add the bacon mixture and gently mix with your hands. Gently form the meat into 4 balls, then lightly press into 4-inch-wide, 1-inch-thick patties. Make a 2-inch-wide indentation in the center of each with your thumb to prevent the burgers from bulging when grilled. 1 pound ground pork Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper 1/4 teaspoon dried rubbed sage Freshly ground pepper 4 potato buns, split Unsalted butter, softened, for spreading Prepared coleslaw, for topping Preheat a grill to medium high. Season the patties with pepper. Grill, undisturbed, until marked on the bottom, 5 to 6 minutes. Turn and grill until the other side is marked and the patties feel firm, 4 to 6 more minutes. Meanwhile, spread the cut sides of the buns with butter and toast on the grill. Serve the patties on the buns; top with coleslaw. Photograph by Kana Okada, Recipe courtesy of Food Network Magazine © 2015 Television Food Network, G.P. All Rights Reserved. 34 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com Juicy Jack’s Spanish Corner ¡Hola, Amigo! Numbers from 1 to 15: 1. uno (oo-no) 2. dos (dose) 3. tres (trace) 4. cuatro (kwat-ro) 5. cinco (sink-o) 6. seis (saze) 7. siete (see-yet-eh) 8. ocho (och-o) 9. nueve (new-eh-veh) 10. diez (dee-ace) 11. once (ohn-say) 12. doce (dos-say) 13. trece (treh-seh) 14. catorce (ca-TOR-say) 15. quince (KEEN-say) Practice with Juicy Jack: ¡Bienvenidos! Welcome to Juicy Jack’s Spanish Corner! Jack wants to know how old you are. Use this phrase to tell him. Use the numbers at the right to help you fill in your age: Tengo (your age) años. Now that you know how to tell someone how old you are, here is how you ask someone their age: ¿Cuántos años tienes? Use this short conversation as a guide to practice with your friends: Jack: Hola, amigo. ¿Cuántos años tienes? You: Tengo ______años. ¿Cuántos años tienes? Jack: Tengo nueve años. Adiós, amigo! You: Adiós, Jack! Translations: Buenos días = Good morning Adiós = Goodbye Amigo = Friend Leigh Carrasco is an educator and author of the wildly popular Juicy Jack Adventures series about a spunky guinea pig who travels to Peru with his human. www.juicyjackadventures.com. StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 35 Featured Business “Once upon a time…” These four words have captivated conceptual photographer and digital artist Söndra Nell Rymer since she was a little girl. She has worked in book and curriculum publishing for 20 years and continues her love of the arts, providing cover and inside art for children’s picture and YA books. Her passion is creating whimsical, enchanted imagery that communicates the story and evokes a fantasy world. While she uses vivid color for most of her art, she occasionally explores darker or gothic fantasy stories, which she portrays in a more mature visualization. Söndra is available for cover and inside book art as well as digital retouching art services. Contact Söndra at rymer@fairytalesimagery.com or visit www.fairytalesimagery.com. 36 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 37 Curriculum Page Let’s Review! Reading Comprehension: 1. In “Carroll Spinney Brings Decades of Sunny Days to Sesame Street,” Oscar the Grouch is described as “curmudgeonly.” Look up this definition in a dictionary. Explain why this adjective fits Oscar’s character. 2. Michaela DePrince sponsors a child through ChildFund International (www.childfund.org). Consider sponsoring a child as a classroom. Every month, each student contributes a small amount ($1 or less), and learns how a little giving can make a huge difference in the life of a child. Continue sponsoring the child each year with a new class of students, sharing the child’s history with them. 3. Discuss what it means to be “mixed,” as described in “Sebastian A. Jones Instills Positive Messages in Young Minds.” Have students discuss what makes their families special. 4. Ask students if they have ever been afraid to visit the doctor’s office. Read My Doctor and Me ABC to the class. Have students identify ways in which this story helps calm those fears. 5. “Bee-come” a classroom of pollinator promoters! Plant flowers in planters and place outside of the school. Have students take care of the flowers, and note when pollinators visit. True/False: 1. My Doctor and Me ABC is a book about visiting the doctor’s office and offers kids tips for healthy living. (True or False) 2. Television can be a teaching tool. (True or False) 3. African-American women are too athletic for ballet. (True or False) 38 Story Monsters Ink | JULY 2015 | StoryMonstersInk.com 4. Monster Reviewer Joshua Bloomfield thought the book Trouble in Zombie-Town: The Mystery of Herobrine, An Unofficial Minecrafter’s Adventure was a little scary at times. (True or False) 5. In Miss Brooks Loves Books! (and I don’t), Missy is a sweet and agreeable girl. (True or False) 6. Pollination is one of nature’s most important processes. (True or False) 7. The I Am series is a celebration of self. (True or False) 8. Kids who see their parents reading are less likely to read themselves. (True or False) Fill in the Blanks: 1. Carroll Spinney puppeteers ___________ and ___________ on Sesame Street. 2. Due to be released in August, Sebastian A. Jones’ next book is titled I Am ___________, a story about how to be a good friend and how to be brave. 3. “I like ___________ characters,” admits Barbara Bottner. 4. Michaela DePrince is a ___________. 5. In her poem “Colors,” Jessica King says that color can make you ___________. 6. This year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture declared June 15-21 National ___________ Week. 7. Children who are solid readers perform better in school and become lifelong ___________. 8. The world’s most important pollinators include ___________ and ___________. 1. Big Bird/Oscar the Grouch; 2. Awesome; 3. ornery; 4. ballerina; 5. happy; 6. Pollination; 7. learners; 8. two of the following: birds, bees, beetles, butterflies or bats Fill in the Blanks: 1. True; 2. True; 3. False; 4. True; 5. False; 6. True; 7. True; 8. False True/False: Answers StoryMonstersInk.com | JULY 2015 | Story Monsters Ink 39