Interview with Author/Illustrator Alex T. Smith

Unfortunately, Alex and I encountered a few communication glitches, lost emails floating out in the cyber world, and it delayed our interview. My apologies. In trading emails, Alex and I commented on how exciting it is to meet and talk about craft and books and art with like-minded individuals from so far away! It truly is a gift! So let's get started!



Alex T. Smith considered a career in space travel but lucky for us his eavesdropping and people watching skills got the better of him, and he put his eye for the details down on paper. He graduated in 2006 from Coventry University with a 1st Class Hons degree in Illustration. Eliot Jones, Midnight Superhero (Scholastic UK), written by Anne Cottringer, was his debut book and it won the Coventry Inspiration Book Award, and was long-listed for the Greenaway Medal in 2009. 



Since then, he’s gone on to write as well as illustrate the stories Home (Scholastic UK) and Bella & Monty (Hodder Children’s Books). He lives in York with his wife and four naughty doggies (used to be three, but they just adopted their fourth -- a homeless Chihuahua). It’s an honor to have him here. Welcome, Alex!


Can you take us back a few years and share your path to publication?

As a child I wanted to be one of three things - a chef, an illustrator or a rabbit! ( I thought that was something you could do as a job and would spend ages playing in a 'warren' I would make behind an armchair!) I've always loved drawing and writing and was always being either read to or reading myself. I was very lucky to have a grandfather (Sid) who lived just around the corner and as well as being Head of English at a large high school, was also a writer. He wrote plays and articles, and when he retired he started writing stories for me - one everyday for several years. I would come home from school and find them in our house - he'd leave them for me when he came to fetch our dog and take her back to his house so she'd have some company! You can read more about him on my post Grandad Sid and one of his stories that I illustrated Grandad Sid's Little Book of Stories: Joseph's Adventure. 

As I got older I got really interested in design for theatre and film and worked as a production assistant, then as a designer for a local theatre company who specialized in large outdoor spectacular performances. It really was a hard choice to make whether to study theatrical design or illustration, but I went for illustration. It had been a childhood dream to write and illustrate books for children, and I'm very lucky to have achieved it. I studied at Coventry University and won Highly Commended in the Macmillan Prize whilst in my second year and then 2nd place in my final year. I got my first job illustrating some baby books whilst I was hanging my degree show - very exciting indeed!


Congratulations on the publication of Foxy and Egg (Holiday House, Apr 2011). It reminds me a little of the classic fairy tale Little Red Hiding Hood. What was the inspiration behind this book? Did the characters come first or the plot/situation?

Thank you. I love the story of Little Red Riding Hood and had never thought that Egg could be a version of that! 

If you missed my review of Alex's book you can read it from the post A Foxy New Picture Book.

The idea come in my final year at uni. Our final project was to produce a short animation. I'd never done that before and, to begin, I was stuck as to what my film should be about. I was sitting on a train going to visit my girlfriend (now wife) at her university and inspiration struck! I knew I wanted to do something a bit Film Noir-ish, but also funny, and this little naughty fox and and egg wandered onto my sketchbook and the story arrived from there. When I was taken on by my agent they asked me for some stories to submit to some publishers who were interested in working with me so I expanded my original idea and it was accepted byHodder Children's Books ( one of my UK publishers). My editor there helped me to expand it further into the book it is now!

The inspiration really comes from one of my favourite movies - Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. I wanted the book to feel a bit cinematic and odd and I love the situation in that film of two strange people in a creepy old house together. (Foxy's outfit is a copy of Baby Jane Hudson's by the way!)


Did you know the ending of the story before you put pen to paper? Or did it evolve through revising? Can you talk a little about your revision process? 

This is going to be hard to answer without giving the surprise ending away! But yes, I knew the ending from the beginning. 
SPOILER ALERT!
I knew that I wanted to have something unusual to pop out of the egg and for Foxy to be taught a bit of a lesson. In terms of revisions, it was quite an organic process. The original story for my Uni project was very short. It had to be something easy to animate and work as a silent movie ( I didn't want to animate speech - too hard!) When I started thinking about it as a book, I just added a few situations here and there - giving the story more of a sense of place and thinking about how extra bits of the story could be told illustratively through details in the background etc. 
Once the book had been signed up, my editor Emma helped to shape it and suggested a few things such as the egg and spoon race - an idea I thought was very funny and added in straight away!

The book is a perfect blend of text and art. The illustrations complete the story. When do you start the illustrations for a book? After a first draft? The final draft? While you’re in the brainstorming stage? 

Really when it comes to my books everything comes together at once. Sometimes I might start with a little sketch of a character or a situation and the story comes from that or sometimes it's the other way around - a plot idea followed by a character sketch. It's difficult for me to separate the two as I see the story play out in my head as a film.

When I'm writing I might do some tiny doodles about how it would work as a book spread to help me keep track of my ideas. I really get going with the pictures when the text is complete. I'm always very keen on the idea that if you can say something with pictures then go for it. So usually, once the roughs are complete, I meet with my editor and my designer and we see if there are any text areas we can cut and let the pictures do the talking. Then I start the final artwork.
Did you always know you wanted to be a writer and an artist? 

Yes, always. I've always loved books and luckily came from a very bookish family. I've also always loved drawing. I can remember the very first picture I drew - I was very very young and I was sitting at the dining table on my mum's lap and I drew a teddy bear. It was really just a couple of very wobbly circles and a bit of scribble but I knew it was a teddy bear and told my mum exactly what was going on in my picture. From then on I was hooked and have had a pencil in my hand pretty much all the time since then!
What or who has influenced your creativity and career?

Lots of people. Grandad Sid as I mentioned earlier, but also my other grandparents who came, literally, from every corner of the UK and Ireland. They brought with them all sorts of stories and I loved listening to them when we gathered together for parties. I only have one grandparent left - Betty - and she is a great source of inspiration as she always has a funny or interesting story to tell. She's forever talking to people she meets in the street and finding out all about them!

Other people who inspire and influence me are my wife, my parents ( who have both worked as teachers) and especially my niece and two nephews. They are such fun to be with, and I don't think they see me as an adult - I'm just one of them so I get to hear all their plans and ideas which are a great resource to call upon when I'm stuck for ideas! They are also my best critics and aren't afraid to tell me when they don't like something! They can be quite blunt!

I had great art teachers at school - Mr Warner and Mrs Goodwin in particular - who both encouraged me endlessly and supported me to do whatever I wanted to do creatively even if my ideas were a bit strange ( a series of large pink and white paintings featuring a glamorous white parisian cat being on of them!)

In terms of other artists who inspire me: Mary Blair, Hilary Knight (one of my favourite books is Eloise)Mirolav Sasek, Lauren Child, Edward Gorey and lots, lots more!


What part of the creative process do you find most challenging and why? Can you share any tips or advice that helps you over the hurdles?

It can be quite challenging to turn an idea into a something commercial. I would say that that is probably the hardest bit of what is a really fun job. A book has to be appealing to children and their parents but also to buyers for the bookstores and sit comfortably, but not get lost, amongst the other books they sell. It can be a bit difficult to trim and shape bits of a story that you think are great, to make it more marketable. But It's all for a good reason - as an author and an illustrator - you want people to buy and enjoy your books so it's a necessary part of the process, and I think the way to deal with it is to think of the final outcome. Also deadlines - they can be an issue sometimes!!

Tell us (or show us) about where you work and what a typical “work” day looks like?

I'd love to show you, but I'm actually just starting the process of moving my studio upstairs ( I work from home). We'd like to have our dining room back so I'm packing up and moving up stairs. 

FOWL WITH PEARLS - Michael Sowa

My new studio is a bit smaller than where I am now but will be cosy and nice to work in - I hope. It will over look our garden and, most importantly, our neighbours' gardens so I can be nice and nosy. I have two desks - a big glass one which works as a lightbox and is my painting drawing desk, and I have a smaller desk with my computer and scanner on it. The current studio has a nice victorian iron fireplace which is home to some fairy lights making it look like a nice warm fire ( this fools my dogs!) and on the mantel piece is this Michael Sowa print and a collection of old postcards and photographs of people I don't know that I've picked up at flea markets. I'll be recreating this with the fireplace upstairs. I also have pinboards full of to-do lists and inspiration. Once I'm all moved into my new studio, I'll post some photos onto my blog.

We can't wait!

As for my typical work day I try to keep regularish hours as it can be easy to work all the time when you work from home and never rest or relax. ( having said that in the evenings I sit in front of the TV doodling in my sketchbook but that's for fun!) So I get up at the same time as my wife and work the same hours she does at her office. I'm usually working on several projects at once so I split my week up accordingly. I work on one book for two days a week, and another for the next two, then spend Friday working on anything else that needs doing - corrections, writing or any editorial jobs that come in. I try to fit replying to emails around that really.

My dogs feel the constant need to 'help' me. I tend to have to sit perched on the edge of my office seat so that one Chihuahua can lie in comfort behind my back and another on my lap. The big Chihuahua is usually at my feet or riffling through my waste paper basket and our elderly Yorkshire Terrier likes to sleep on my armchair. She snores....

I can relate. I have a snoring Shih-Tzu curled at my feet while I write :)

When my wife comes home I usually cook dinner and try to switch my brain off from work mode ( not always easy!)


You’re agented with Arena Illustration, one of the most well known illustration agencies in the UK. How did you find each other? And what is that working relationship like?

Great! Really, great. The team at Arena are some of the loveliest bunch of people you could meet. Funny, fun, supportive and always on hand with great advice. They make my life easier by letting me get on with drawing and writing, whilst they deal with contracts and clients, and getting me the best jobs to work on.

I met them just as I left uni. I was working on some baby books with Campbell Books and I mentioned to the art director that I didn't have an agent and did she think I should try and get one? I wasn't really sure at that stage what agents did. She told me that her friend ran Arena and she put me in touch with them. I went to see them with my portfolio and I instantly liked them even though I was really nervous. I knew of Arena and they had lots of artists on their books that I really liked. We had a nice chat and I left my portfolio with them as requested and just expected it to be posted back to me the next day or something. I didn't hear from them for a couple of weeks until they rang me to say they had got me a job illustrating an American school book and said they had an appointment to see the editor and art director at Scholastic 
(who gave me my first proper book deal a few months later). I haven't looked back since.

There's only four people at Arena so you quickly develop a close relationship with them. It's nice to know you have a group of people supporting you and looking out for your interests. The world of publishing can be a bit of maze so it's good to be guided by people you trust.



If you can, please tell us about what you're working on now?

Lots of things! I've just put the finishing touches to a new picture book called Ella ( a couple of sneaky peeks can be found on my blog) and have completed the third title in my young fiction series Claude. Now I'm working on a couple of editorial jobs for a women's magazine, a great young fiction series for girls written by Karen McCombie, a baby book for a Swiss publisher and, very exciting, am just about to start on a sequel to Foxy and Egg, called ( although this might change) DANCING WITH DANGER... 
Tell us 3 things you can’t live without.

1. My dogs even though they are really naughty!
2. Cake. It's my favourite food ever. (Especially Victoria Sandwich cake)
3. My Moleskine sketchbooks and the brightly coloured mechanical pencils from a shop in the UK called Paperchase.


To learn more about Alex T. Smith, follow him on his blog or to see more of his portfolio visitArena Illustration.
Did anyone pick out the British spelling of words in this interview? I found four words, how about you?

Thanks, Alex!! I can't wait to see what Foxy and Egg get into next! And the release ofElla (Scholastic, 2012).

Writing Advice



Some of the best writing advice I've ever heard or read came in today's post at Cynsations. Award winning and New York Times Bestselling author Cynthia Leitich Smith interviewed Egmont USA Publisher Elizabeth Law and Author Allen Zadoff. Allen's latest novel My Life, The Theatre, and Other Tragedies (Egmont, 2011) is now available but you may remember his novel Food, Girls, and Other Things I Can't Have (Egmont, 2009). It won the 2010 Sid Fleischman Humor Award. 



Here are a couple of the highlights for me. But you really need to read the entire interview. Trust me. It's worth interrupting your writing time. Also, there is an opportunity for a 30 page critique and phone call with Elizabeth Law to be won! Don't miss out! 

Not to mention, Allen and Liz are just plain hilarious together. A working relationship to admire. Another reason why it's important to find that "right" editor. The one that clicks with you. The one that can't get your story out of their head.



Allen said, "Don’t try to write like other people. Let go of the idea you have to be literary or make words dance like Cormac McCarthy. Just write like you. Your job is learning how to do that."

Additionally, his take on how he processes an editorial revision letter, he calls them "notes", is a thought-process every writer should embrace whether you're gleaming feedback from an editor, agent or someone in your critique group. 

Liz said, "Allen hadn't approached my edits like a checklist, he had taken what I said and then gone much further." 

Isn't that what we should all be doing when we receive feedback? Taking the manuscript to a whole other level. How do you do that? Go read the interview. The clues are there!  

My Beautiful Little Ella,



You are JOY. When someone tries to define the word they can see your smiling face. Your daddy and I believe it’s because, in those first few days of your life, you got to sit in the lap of Jesus and let him hold you while we couldn’t. I believe that you have a special angel who walks you through life and God has allowed you a perspective that only He can give. The rest of us see so much bad in this world, but not you my little girl, you only see the happy things. I thought of this today when you were getting a shot (ironically a meningitis vaccine) and you only flinched. A few hours earlier Jonathan got shots and he cried and carried on, but not you, you are strong in the face of anything. We’ve heard it said that so little can affect you after all that you have already been through in your 5 short years, but either way, it is a blessing. I often read about special needs children who can’t find comfort, and I’m so grateful for the unending joy that you have every day…it’s often you who will get me through the rough times, instead of me helping you. Well, maybe we help each other. You are beautiful, yes on the inside, but that shines right through to your outside. People often say that you resemble me as a child, so maybe I was cute too, but there is something so special about you to everyone you meet. I hear the phrases “look at those curls!”, “you have the most beautiful eyes”, and “wow, you are just so pretty” on a daily basis. Sometimes it is funny how many people will stop us and comment on you, but we know that it’s God shining through you. It’s funny that your head actually measures very small (they call it microcephaly) but no one would know for the head full of beautiful curls on your head…see, God really does take care of the little things. You challenge me. I have never looked at my faith the same since the day you were born. It’s funny, but I have often felt that I don’t deserve you. That someone could have done better or would be more equipped to handle all of the challenges, but then I realize that God made me so specifically to be your mother. Oh Ella, had I known that I would get a gift like you it could have changed who I was in life, but God knew all of this and here we are…you and me. It’s not easy. Most days are just our “normal” but there is at least a few times in a week that I realize my life is so different from so many people around me. My life consists of the words: therapy, brain development, seizures, wheelchair, handicapped accessible, aspiration, and all of the terminology that I never knew I never wanted to know…proprioceptive…and I say those words a lot. I have been asked at least once or twice if I’m a nurse because of the lingo that I can speak when talking about you, but I just laugh, since I barely went to college. You are a gift. A true gift for more reasons than I can list, because I think I don’t even know most of the reasons yet. You have caused me to admire and love your father more than I thought possible. Do you know how much that man loves you? He has prayed for you without ceasing and he believes in you (he also never gets mad at you or disciplines you, even when you are totally misbehaving!) You will make your brothers stop and think about everything in a different light than their friends, and I hope that they are better men for being your brothers. Mostly you are just love. You make my ability to love increase in ways I didn’t think were possible. You have the knack for causing random people to fall in love with you without saying a word. You are my perfection in this imperfect and sinful world. Oh, you have a sin nature; don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. We do pray that one day you will come to know who God is in your life here on Earth and that you will have the realization that you are a sinner, in need of a Savior. That you will know how important the life, and death, of Jesus were for all of us…and that you will accept His free gift. We want so much for you sweet child. For now, we will enjoy every day that God has given us as your parents, and pray that we do the very best that God has called us to do.







My Sweet Jonathan,



You are my baby, and for now, you are my last. You are a joy and your smiles brighten even the middle of the night. I have loved trying to figure you out and try to get to know you better. I remember being pregnant with you and being so scared not to be able to love you as much as I thought I should...it's amazing how God just makes our hearts bigger. You are already so much of a challenge...you have mastered crawling and cruising and now you are trying to stand on your own...I'm afraid it won't be long before you are walking, and then you are no longer a baby. 9 months have flown by. I can remember every bit of your birth and how much I already loved you when I saw you. You had the greatest pouty lips and a sweet cry...and you were mine. I have loved snuggling you and learning how to make you laugh. You have a GREAT laugh. You seem serious a lot of the time, like your brother was, but when you think something is funny you really let it show. I look forward to getting to know you better and seeing what kind of a man God has created you to be. You were a perfect way to wrap up our babies.

My Dearest William,



You are my buddy. We go almost everywhere together and have our routine down during the week. Speaking of routines, you hate it when one is changed. You like to go the same way to all of your familiar places and you like it when everything is where it should be...except your toys. You are so adventurous. I love to watch your excitement with anything new. One thing you really hate is loud noises. You've never like lawn equipment, anything being blown up or anyone to talks or laughs too loud. You seem to hear everything, except us calling your name. Most people would say that you are a good boy, and you are, but you have a tendency to want to do things your way and in your time. Daddy and I work very hard at teaching you why you need to obey and what role God plays in teaching us obedience and submission. You learn most things very quickly, but I think this one may take a while. We pray that you learn the easy way and not the hard way. You have loved learning who God is already. You love to read the bible, you love the stories, and you have even memorized some scripture. Daddy has taught you John 3:16 and Matthew 5:8...and he's working on a new one, he wants to make sure that you hide God's word in your heart, even at your age...so that you will always know truth. I pray that you grow to be a man like your father. May you be gentle and kind, giving and a good steward with your time and resources...may you love people, but know that God and your family come first and second. You are so curious. You ask a MILLION questions. Even your teachers at school and church notice that you are smart and you want to know everything, about everything, and why! You are a joy for me. You are so much like our first child because you are getting to do so much first for us. We love watching you grow up to be a young boy. We pray that you will be a leader for Ella and Jonathan, may you always love them and take care of them. We pray that you and Jonathan will be close friends and always be able to count on each other. May you always cherish Ella and learn from the life that God designed for her. You are such a wonderful 3-year-old and I look forward to watching you develop into a wonderful young man.

Life Makes the Writing Life Hard

So it's been a little crazy at our house lately. Actually a lot lately. It really hasn't slowed down since the beginning of 2011. 

Husband's work has been out-of-control busy like on-call 24/7. He's always on-call 24/7 but in the past it hasn't really been that bad. There have been sporadic busy times when things get crazy for a week, but then things slow down and life is good. Not that life hasn't been good, but it's been super hectic with his work and that in turn ends up affecting us all. Wife, kids, dogs. Of course, we adjust and adapt and we rearrange the schedule and make it all work, but in the process a few things get dropped. 
 
On top of that, it was an unusually busy spring with writing events. All good, let me tell you! All good. But it does add another layer of business to our schedule. Then the kids were sick. A lot sick this spring. Yuck! Never fun! And I had house guests for a month, my mom and her beau, which was a blessing, but it definitely made it challenging to write and concentrate when I'm used to just listening to the dog snore. Instead, every few minutes, I heard, "Not another prisoner! Dang you! You'd better not go out, again!" My mom and beau are card sharks. They played every morning, for hours, while they sipped their coffee.

So what is it I'm trying to say here? Life makes the writing life hard.

Life gets crazy sometimes. It doesn't always stick to our schedules. And it doesn't like routines. LIfe has no routine. We must try and find organization and routine in amongst the chaos and craziness. And sometimes we have to relax our reigns on routines and adjust and adapt and rearrange the schedule to make our writing life work. 
 
It's not easy. 
We don't like change. 
We're habitual creatures. 
 
So there you go. I just gave you three excuses to use for why you can't change your routine. But you won't use one. Why?
 
Because I know you're not a quitter. If you were, you wouldn't still be reading this blog. So relax the reigns. Adjust. Adapt. And rearrange the schedule. Make your writing life work for you. Don't let the craziness of life drive your writing into seclusion. No hibernation allowed either. 
 
You're a survivor. A roll-with-the-punches kind of person. A get-up-after-life-has-knocked-you-down kind of person. 
 
Think of it this way...
 
It's harder not to write then it is to write.
 
So when life seems to be affecting your writing life try this: be flexible, have an open mind, try something new, just write and in my case, wear ear plugs.  
 
Hubby has been working from home for a month now.
On the phone. 
24/7.

Mother's Day

Mother's Day has been so special since my very first one. I remember a friend telling me that it didn't count unless I had already given birth to Ella, but I disagree. Anyone is a mother who has given birth to a child, adopted a child, lost a child or been a mother-figure to anyone along the way. It's not the child that makes you a mother, it's the heart of the woman. My first Mother's Day Ella was only 4 days old and had just spent her 3rd night in the NICU. Re-reading my posts from that day and she had gone from "critical" to "guarded"...oh, those emotions. A child I was afraid to love too deeply, for fear she would be gone at any moment. I hadn't even had a chance to hold her long enough to even know her...I was a mother, even if I couldn't touch or talk to my child. Now I'm a mother of three sweet and very different children. Ella, well, she's just Ella. I don't know how to put into words what being her mother has meant to me. She has taught me more about myself, Joe and my loving Savior that I ever thought one little person, who doesn't speak, could do. She's an earthly angel. Sent to bring so much joy and hope to my heart. It's a challenge to know what to do to be the best mother I can be for her, it's not easy and I'll never try to lessen what we go through, but I don't know any different, and for that I thank my Lord because He was gracious when He gave me her first. Will, oh my goodness I had no idea that a "healthy" and "typical" child could be SO much work!! I have often said that Ella is my easy kid...and Will makes this very obvious. There are many challenges to raising a special needs child, but to any mother raising a very typical boy...the challenges never stop, or slow down, or freeze, or obey, or just sit quietly for one minute so mommy can think...and he's pure love. He loves to hug and cuddle and tell me how much he loves me. God knew that following Ella I would need someone who would talk to me (and boy does this kid talk) and give me all of the things that my heart missed with Ella...he gives me so much verbal input...enough for both of them! Adding Jonathan has made us very complete as a family. He's mild mannered like Ella, talks a fair amount already (no real words yet, but he's trying to learn from his big brother) and working hard to keep up with Ella and Will by crawling everywhere and doing everything they do. He's active, but he's also fine to just relax...he's my baby and he always will be...and for that I'm grateful. He's a happy baby. Will adores him and has never asked for us to take him back. He wants to be the first to go in and talk to Jonathan when he wakes up and Joe and I have prayed consistently that they will be friends to each other. We know that God provided a buddy for Will through Jonathan, and we will be excited to watch them grow in knowledge of God together. They are my children. They will stretch me and challenge me in ways I can't even imagine yet, but wouldn't trade any of the rough days for not being a mommy. I don't think I ever realized in my early 20's that I was created for a job so perfectly. I have made a lot of mistakes in life, but my children prove to me that we have a loving God who will still grant us small miracles as we grow to help us grow even more.

Getting Stronger

Ella has been working with her new Physical Therapist to get stronger. They have been doing a lot of sitting for long times and lately they have been standing. Ella is making a lot of steady progress...we have had so many great therapists over the years and have been so blessed by the people who have loved on Ella and loved helping her progress.





Good News Cruise



I'm so thankful that Ella has gotten to participate in Children's Choir this year. It's hard to figure out where she should be "age-appropriate" and when it's best for her to be in a room with other special needs kids of different ages and abilities. Brandi Bassett has taken on the responsibility of taking care of Ella during choir and evening holding her during the performances...here are some pictures of both Ella and Will in "The Good News Cruise" from Sunday night.

Tea for Two...or more


SarahBeth has become one of Ella's closest friends and she wanted to come over and have a tea party...who am I to argue with that...so a teaparty was had on Monday and the boys tried to crash, but it was a success either way!

Crack a Smile

I've been told by my critique partners that the novel I'm working on right now has great humor in it.

"This line cracked me up." One partner said. And another one said "I couldn't stop chuckling in several places. I had a smile on my face throughout the entire chapter." Yay! Don't we love to hear those kinds of comments. The validation that some of the techniques we're using are working. 



After reading the chapter on "Hyperreality" from Donald Maass's Fire in Fiction: Passion, Purpose and Techniques to Make your Novel Great, I think I need to vamp up the humor even more. Take it over the top. Get crazy. Step into the shoes of my character and have a spaz attack. I like the thought of that. How fun does that sound?

Maass says "Every novel should, somewhere, at least make us crack a smile."  Don't you just love that line!

One of the things I'm already doing in the novel is my character has no problem slinging the insults. She's also sure of herself to a fault and at times sounds a little too ridiculous. It makes for several humorous situations. There are funny names and her voice reeks extreme. But what are some of the other techniques I could employ?

How about interjecting a little more hyperbole? Or how about changing an expected outcome to be unexpected? Maybe a little more slapstick? Or reversing the order of something fairly straightforward? How about escalating a ridiculous situation until it borders on the absurd? There are thousands of ways to be funny and I think it's time to experiment with a few more methods and see which ones will work in my manuscript.
 
So here's a challenge for you and me. Take an existing chapter or scene and write in some humor. Kids love exaggeration and silliness. Rewrite your chapter with humor in mind? Try several different techniques and see what happens. Deliberate misunderstandings? Funny voices? Insults? And remember we need to laugh at ourselves just as much as we need to laugh at others. If not, more so. 
 
I remember a time when my ex-husband left the 7-11 carrying two icy coke slurpees.  He had a huge grin on his face. He was already slurping the syrupy ice through the red straw. He was so enamored with his slurpee that he forgot he was walking, too. He didn't lift his foot far enough off the ground and caught his toe on one of those parking cement blocks that was next door to our car. He careened forward and disappeared from my view.  I grabbed the door handle and quickly hopped out of the idling car. I raced around to where I'd last seen him. There he was on the ground, elbows and arms outstretched in front of him. Chin touching the cement pavement. And in his hands were the two slurpees. I asked him if he was okay and he nodded and smiled. 
 
"I didn't spill a drop," he said. "Not a one."

He was so proud of himself. And I couldn't stop laughing. I buckled over as he lay on the ground and tilted his slurpee to his mouth and slurped. He looked hilarious with his cheeks sucked in, looking up from the ground. His blue eyes tickled mischief and he started to laugh, too, at the absurdity and awkwardness of the situation. It's one of my favorite memories we shared together.
 
What kind of situation can you create for your character that unleashes your humorous side? I'm sure you can come up with something. I double-dare you to try!

Is this thing on?!

I know...I can't keep up...I'm not even going to try to do this blog anymore, mostly so I don't feel guilty about NOT doing it. However, I think I'll give it a shot for the next 10 days and try to update and close out what's going on in our lives.

Why 10 days you ask? Well, baby girl...now BIG GIRL, Ella turns 5-years-old in just 10 days. I know, I'm with you...5?!!? Sounds crazy that we started this blog to keep family in the loop on our first pregnancy...and God knew I would need an outlet to talk about her. So, I'm going to update on all of us for the next few days and then wrap this all up on the celebration of Ella's birth.

For tonight, we are headed to watch Ella and Will perform in a church musical (pics to come) and Jonathan is staying home (with our beloved Kristie) since he has strep throat/rash.

Stay tuned as we end 5 years of blogging!