Saturday, September 12, 2020
Piboidmo Day 25 Go Shopping Like Pam Calvert
by Pam Calvert So, today youâre supposed to be eating lots of turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, dressing, pies (emphasis on the plural here)â¦AND talking (not fighting) with your relatives. Enjoying your day! But stillâ¦it IS Picture Book Idea Month and so youâre also supposed to be thinking of a blockbuster picture book idea today as well. But Iâm not thinking about today. No. Iâm thinking about tomorrow. BLACK FRIDAY! Mwahahahaaaa! And in honor of Black Friday, Iâm going to veer off from the normal âhow I get my ideasâ blog post to a more material slantâ"something all picture book writers should have sitting with them when theyâre about to brainstorm. Something you should ask for Christmas so you can weave all those good ideas into editor-loving stories. Itâs something I bought myself (SPLURGED on) several years ago and it helped me brainstorm two of my upcoming picture books. Itâs called the Magna Storyboard Pad (pictured). Notice it has three areas where you can draw and lines for writing. âBut WAIT!â you say. âIâM NOT AN ILLUSTRATOR!â Well, Iâm not either, but if youâre going to be a picture book author, you better be visualizing your story even before you start writing. This pad forces you to think in pictures. A lot of times, itâs easy for me to get swept away by my words when I should be visualizing my story first. And since I bought this pad, thinking in pictures has never been easier. And another secret? No one has to see your pictures! But Iâll show you some of mine so youâll feel better about your artistic talent (because itâs gotta be better). When I started on the sequel to my math adventure, MULTIPLYING MENACE, my editor told me I needed to meld one of my contracted stories with an earlier version of the sequel, MULTIPLYING MENACE DIVIDES. The contracted story was entitled, THE FROG PRINCE IN FRACTIONLAND. That meant I had to apply frogs throughout my original (that didnât even have a frog in the background.) And I had to apply fractions throughout. This required pictures. Oh yeah, and I needed another villain. Panicking, I grabbed my math books, desperately searching for an idea. But then I remembered the storyboard pads. I hadnât used them (even though it was at the top of my things to do list). I started with the new villain⦠Her name was Diva Divine in a feeble attempt to use a play on words with division. Of course, through revision her name ended up being Matilda, but this is what she ended up looking like in the book: Thereâs quite a bit of resemblance and I never had a talk with the illustrator, Wayne Geehan, about the witch. He suspected what sheâd be like from her actions. But without my visualization on paper, her character may not have come out so well. Now, the witch was the easy part. So much fun. I had her reading In Stye magazine and wearing Jimmy Ooze shoes (umâ¦that never made it in the bookâ¦ha!). The next part was thinking in fractions. So, I plotted out every element. Hereâs one page example when I had to show how the division magic worked with dividing twelve kittens. I brainstormed some ways I could show this on the storyboard paper: Not only did I brainstorm dividing the kittens into frogs, but I had to divide things by fractions, which makes a larger number. In the storyboard picture I used frogs, but they ended up being pigs. Hereâs the finished page of the kittens. After I completed this story, I was hooked! I would never again brainstorm without my storypad. Hereâs another example using my newest PRINCESS PEEPERS book entitled, PRINCESS PEEPERS PICKS A PET. These are the initial thoughts. Notice, Iâm terrible at illustrating, but the ideas flow much more freely when I use it, and I can tell if my story would lend itself well to illustration. You need at least sixteen different scene changes for a picture book. Here is Peepers trying to find a pet for the pet show: Sheâs frustrated because she canât find anything (thatâs a frog on her head!) In the finished book, she does find the frog and it looks like this: Before I leave you with your Black Friday find, Iâll show you my newest picture book idea brainstorm. HAPPY THANKSGIVING! Pam Calvert has written picture books and stories for over ten years. Her picture books include MULTIPLYING MENACE: THE REVENGE OF RUMPELSTILTSKIN and PRINCESS PEEPERS, a Scholastic Book Clubs selection and listed as a Texas Mockingbird picture book pick. Her newest picture books will be out in the spring of 2011 entitled, MULTIPLYING MENACE DIVIDES and PRINCESS PEEPERS PICKS A PET. Sheâs writing new picture books as well as longer stories from her home in Houston, Texas.
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