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Indie Spotlight: An Unlikely Story Bookstore & Cafe, Plainville MA

Good news! A new and thriving small bookstore, founded by children’s author Jeff Kinney,  whose store’s mission statement is “To enrich our community with great books, healthy food and inspiring conversations.”  We’re speaking today with General Manager Deb Sundin.

MUF: It’s interesting and “unlikely” that a very busy and successful children’s author would take on the task of founding a bookstore. Can you tell us the whys and hows of that story?
Deb: Long before he became a famous children’s author, Jeff Kinney and his wife Julie decided to settle in the small town of Plainville, Massachusetts(population 8000 plus) after they graduated from college, and Jeff wrote his first Wimpy the Kid book there. In the middle of the town stood the grand old Falks Market, established in 1856 and once the town center, but it had been sold by the owner, Meryl Falk, almost 20 years before. Like many of the townspeople, Jeff and Julie would pass by that abandoned building and wish someone would buy it and do something with it. Finally Jeff and Julie did buy it, still not knowing what they would do with it. At last Jeff decided Plainville’s town center should have a bookstore and a café to help bring it back to life, so he combined the two and opened An Unlikely Story Bookstore & Café in 2015. Unlikely Story has three levels with an event space occupying the second floor, and the top floor being developed into Jeff’s Wimpy Kid Studio.
MUF: Describe the atmosphere you try to create in your shop. What would you want a 9 to 12 year old to experience when they visit?
Deb: We aim for an atmosphere that is very warm and friendly and whimsical There are flying books hanging from the ceiling plus a Quidditch game with snitch. Our staff is very friendly, We want people to feel like they are visiting an old friend and I believe they do.
MUF: How do you decide what books to carry in your shop?
Deb:
We have a book buyer who works with 5 or 6 major book representatives plus independent small publishers’ reps.. She also consults us, reads reviews and galley proofs of upcoming books, and considers customer feedback. Naturally we carry a lot of Wimpy Kid books, and these attract visitors to the store from all over New England and the country, and beyond.
MUF: As middle-grade authors, we’d love to know what titles you find yourself recommending most often to or for this age group?
Deb: We like Australian author Andy Griffiths (sometimes called the Jeff Kinney of Australia )
and his series The Thirteen Story Treehouse, A Handful of Stars by Cynthia Lord, The Key to Extraordinary by Natalie Llyod, Swim That Rock by John Roccos, and The Way Home Looks Now by Wendy Wang-Long Shang.

MUF: Any activities or author visits of interest to middle-graders coming up?
Deb
: Yes, today at 5 Jeff Kinney will introduce the newest book in his Wimpy Kid series, The Getaway. Tomorrow best-selling author and journalist Peter Zeutlin will be here to sign his new book, Rescued: What Second –chance Dogs Teach Us About Living with Purpose, Loving with Abandon, and Finding Joy in the Little Things. On Dec. 9 the Writers’ Loft, a group of local writers,  will hold their annual Holiday bBook Bazaar in our event space.  Then on December 12, Jeff Kinney will appear again to sign books. In the week between Christmas and New Years we’ll have craft activities for both younger and older kids.

MUF: If a family visits An Unlikely Story, is your café a good place for a family snack or meal after browsing? Other places in the neighborhood? And if they can stay a little longer, are there other sights and activities nearby that they shouldn’t miss?
Deb
: Yes our café would be fine for this. There is also a small diner in the neighborhood and a gluten-free restaurant. I’d recommend the Fuller Craft Museum in Boston. Providence is closer to us than Boston and a nice size city to get around in. It has a wonderful children’s museum.
MUF: Thank you, Deb, for taking time in this busy bookstore season to talk to us about An Unlikely Story.  Readers, have you visited yet?

STEM TUESDAY: Zoology – Interview with Author Patricia Newman and Giveaway

Welcome to STEM Tuesday: Author Interview & Book Giveaway, a repeating feature for the fourth Tuesday of every month. Go Science-Tech-Engineering-Math! 

 

Our inaugural interview is with author Patricia Newman who wrote this month’s featured book, Zoo Scientists to the Rescue.

Patricia Newman writes middle-grade nonfiction that inspires kids to seek connections between science, literacy, and the environment. The recipient of the Green Earth Book Award and a finalist for the AAAS/Subaru Science Books and Films Award, her books have received starred reviews, been honored as Junior Library Guild Selections, and included on Bank Street College’s Best Books lists.

Zoo Scientists to the Rescue is photo-illustrated by Annie Crawley. Newman (center) and Crawley (left) traveled to the zoos featured in the book, including Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo where Maku the black rhino (right) resides.

Mary Kay Carson: Tell us a bit about Zoo Scientists to the Rescue and how you came to write it.

Patricia Newman: Zoo Scientists to the Rescue began as a comment from my niece, Mia, whose fifth-grade class was tasked with writing a persuasive essay about zoos, either for or against. The trouble was the teacher gave her students almost all anti-zoo material, so guess which way their essays leaned? I’ve been involved with zoos most of my adult life and I raised a zookeeper, so I knew there was more to the story than the material my niece had received. In Zoo Scientists to the Rescue I had several goals:  share some of the ground-breaking research that zoo scientists are doing to save endangered species, inspire kids to help them, and excite kids about a possible career in science.

MKC: It sounds like you spent some quality time behind-the-scenes at zoos with the featured scientists. Do you have a favorite moment or happening you’d like to share?

PN: Photographer Annie Crawley and I visited the three zoos in the book’s pages—Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington, D.C., the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, and the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo in Colorado Springs. We spent some fabulous time behind-the-scenes with both the scientists and the animals. We got up close and personal with Maku the rhino—close enough that he charged Annie while shooting his portrait for the cover. We also drove through a blizzard to meet with the black-footed ferret scientists. At the zoo, we donned booties and surgical caps to visit the BFF breeding area. And we waded through drifts several feet deep to observe BFFs at boot camp–a training facility to get them ready for release into the wild. Through it all, my audio recorder whirred and Annie’s shutter clicked. Annie is also a brilliant filmmaker, and had the presence of mind to shoot video while we conducted our research. In addition to our trailer, videos featuring our interviews with Jeff Baughman at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo’s BFF breeding center and Rachel Santymire’s lab at the Lincoln Park Zoo are now available on YouTube. Annie and I love the way these resources broaden the reading experience.

MKC: Why do you choose to write STEM books? 

PN: When I was a kid, my best learning happened when I could make connections to the world. I graduated with a B.S. from Cornell University in the social sciences, but my writing focuses more on environmental nonfiction. I think the thing that attracts me to science is the process of discovery. The scientists I interview have fascinating stories that I hope will inspire kids to think science is cool or encourage their parents to buy deforestation-free palm oil products to protect orangutans or instigate a Ditch the Straw Campaign in their community to reduce single-use plastic. While every author wants to tell a great story, I also want to empower kids to make a difference.

MKC: For readers who loved Zoo Scientists to the Rescue, what other middle-grade books would you suggest—nonfiction and/or fiction?

PN: For fiction, I love Carl Hiaasen’s Hoot and Eliot Schrefer’s ape quartet (of which three have been published) Endangered, Threatened, and Rescued. For nonfiction, I love Sandra Markle’s The Great Monkey Rescue: Saving the Golden Lion Tamarins and Cindy Trumbore and Susan Roth’s Parrots Over Puerto Rico.

MKC: Could you give us a peek into your process by sharing where you are right now on a current project and how you’re tackling it?

PN: My newest STEM title will release in the fall of 2018. Called Eavesdropping on Elephants: How Listening Helps Conservation, the book follows scientists from Cornell University’s Elephant Listening Project as they listen to the forest elephants of central Africa. Forest elephants are different from the more familiar African savanna elephants and Asian elephants and the dense vegetation of their rainforest home makes them nearly impossible to follow. But these scientists have opened a whole new world on the study—and conservation—of this endangered species. My editor and I have just finished the first revision pass—I call it the reorganization phase. We move entire paragraphs from the end to the beginning, we check to be sure concepts are developed throughout the manuscript and don’t just pop up in isolated places, and we clarify some complex scientific concepts for young readers. In this book, it’s the physics of sound. The next pass will involve more line edits and polishing. And there’s a multi-media surprise in store for readers of this book. But I won’t say more than that!

More about Zoo Scientists to the Rescue:

Win a copy of Zoo Scientists to the Rescue! Enter the giveaway by leaving a comment below. The randomly-chosen winner will be contacted via email and asked to provide a mailing address (within the U.S. only) to receive the book. Good luck!

Your host this week is Mary Kay Carson, author of Mission to Pluto and other nonfiction books for kids.

 

Debut Author Explores Middle School Friendships and Discusses Favorite Holiday Books

I’m so happy to warmly welcome debut author Laney Nielson to the Mixed Up Files. Her new book Peppermint Cocoa Crushes, chronicles seventh grade Sasha’s determination to create a prize-winning dance routine at her school’s holiday variety show competition, as well at her misguided attempts to get her crush to like her back. The story realistically depicts many different sorts of middle school crushes, including an obligatory crush and a same sex crush, as well as the stress of de-intensifying a friendship. Laney is a former classroom teacher with a Masters in Education. She is a past recipient of the Cynthia Leitich Smith Mentorship and active member of SCBWI North Texas.

Sasha loves dancing and is preparing intensely for the Holiday Spectacular. Were you are dancer when you were younger or was this something you had to research?

Although I’ve always loved to dance around the living room, I am definitely not a dancer. In fact, in eighth grade I took tap dancing for my P. E. class and earned a whopping D+. I can still remember the agony of trying to shuffle my way to Buffalo during the final routine. It would make for a funny scene in a tween novel, but at the time it was the longest two minutes of my life and pure humiliation. So in writing about Sasha’s passion, I definitely needed to do my research. I read about different techniques and watched lots of videos. I also observed my younger daughter’s dance class and her wonderful teacher answered my questions. I’ve always loved dance recitals (as an audience member). So the research was fun!

Most of the main characters in Peppermint Cocoa Crushes are passionate about their extracurricular activities. Do you think this is an important part of the middle school experience? Did you have a passion as a tween?

I think the tween years are a great time to develop a passion or discover a new interest. In Pumpkin Spice Secrets (your delightful Swirl novel!), Maddie builds up her public speaking skills through a school project and discovers she likes debate. This helps her in other areas of her life (especially with her best friend). I love the culminating scene when she finds her voice and speaks up for herself! It’s so important for young people to feel like they can express themselves. In Peppermint Cocoa Crushes, Sasha expresses herself through dance and her community service projects. There are a number of things that are not going well in her life, but her extracurricular activities give her a sense of identity and security.

Middle school can also be a time when your interests shift. In Peppermint Cocoa Crushes, Karly, Sasha’s best friend realizes she wants to spend more time on Quiz Bowl and other academic pursuits. At first it’s hard for Sasha to accept her friend’s new interests and goals. Middle school is all about making connections through shared experiences. So it’s painful when you feel a friend drift away.

When I was in middle school, my best friend was a cellist. (She now plays for the Saint Louis Symphony.) She practiced multiple hours a day and attended Pre-College Julliard every Saturday. I was so proud of her. (I still am!) But compared to the kind of passion and dedication she displayed, I was a bit of a slacker. I liked to do lots of things but there was nothing I was willing to spend hours practicing. Unless you count reading, of course!

I love how your characters live in a variety of family structures. Sasha lives with her single mom. Another character lives with his grandparents. Did you consciously try to mix things up like this?

In writing realistic fiction, I want to reflect the world where our readers live. Otherwise it’s not realistic! So yes, it was a conscious decision to show different family structures. Kids who are being raised by single parents or grandparents or any of the many ways we come together to do family, deserve to see their families represented in books. This story focuses on Sasha who is trying to adjust to her new family structure, which has brought new financial stresses and realities. I think lots of kids understand how that feels.

Without giving too much away, your novel features a same-sex crush in a very naturalistic way. When Barbara Dee’s Star Crossed first came out (featuring two middle schoolgirls in crush with each other), she received a warm reception as well as some pushback. Have you received any censorship or pushback as well?

When I was writing Peppermint Cocoa Crushes, I was encouraged by the warm reception Barbara Dee’s Star Crossed was receiving. I haven’t read it yet, but it is in my TBR pile. I’m looking forward to it! As for pushback on depicting same-sex crushes for tween readers? I know it’s out there, which concerns me. My job as a writer of realistic fiction is to write a story that will resonate with contemporary readers. I hate to state the obvious here, but middle schoolers experience crushes whatever their sexual orientation. There are lots of middle grade books that showcase heterosexual crushes, but very few with same-sex crushes. I hope that’s starting to change.

There’s another aspect of this I wanted to explore and that is how to be a supportive friend. Sasha doesn’t know how to respond to Kevin when he admits he likes Ryan. Later her older (and wiser) sister tells her—this is not about you, this is something important about Kevin, about who he is. It’s so basic and yet so often when someone shares something about who they are, we don’t react in a way that honors or validates them. Instead we think about what it means for us. But it’s not about us!

And so I circle back to those adults who have concerns about middle grade books that depict same-sex relationships. It’s not about us, and our adult discomfort. It’s about young people who deserve books that reflect their feelings and experiences.

On that note, I’ve got to give a shout out to the Andi Mack show on the Disney Channel for depicting a tween character coming out this fall. It was a pitch perfect scene. The friend’s response was supportive and sweet— truly T.V. worth watching. We need more!

Encouraging girls to go into STEM is definitely a huge trend. I was intrigued that while Sasha’s mother wanted to her to go in this direction, she did not. Have you experienced a similar tension?

I’m so excited about the work that’s being done to encourage girls to go into STEM. There are some excellent books out there too, including The Friendship Code from the “Girls Who Code” series by our fellow Swirl author—Stacia Deutsch. And I noticed that you all at the Mixed Up Files have launched STEM Tuesdays. Very exciting!

That being said this is not the direction Sasha wants to go in. Could that change, of course! But the roots of this mother-daughter conflict are definitely based in a real life exchange with my own daughters. A couple of years ago, I pitched the idea of enrolling in a coding class to them. I had just watched a video on girls and coding and I was so excited about the possibilities. “Think of what you can create,” I said. “You will have the power to write the future,” I added, laying it on a bit thick. Both my daughters are extremely creative, but they made it quite clear this was not how they wanted to create.

So as for Sasha and her mom, I understand both sides of that tension. I think most parents do. And of course the world needs all of us—the engineers and the storytellers, the doctors and the dancers.

Peppermint Cocoa Crushes is set during the holiday season. Do you have any favorite middle grade holiday books?

Growing up, I loved Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, especially the opening scene. Jo, Meg, and Amy are lamenting a Christmas without gifts while Beth reminds them to be grateful for what they do have. When Mrs. March comes home, they sit by the fire as she reads a letter from Father. And then the next day, they share their breakfast with a family in greater need. It captures the season so perfectly—there’s anticipation, disappointment, joy, sorrow and true generosity.

This year, I fell in love with another group of siblings. Set in the days leading up to Christmas, Karina Yan Glaser’s The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street tells the story of five siblings who band together to convince their landlord to let them stay in the only home they’ve ever known—a brownstone in Harlem. Each character is uniquely lovable and their attempts to save their home are spirited and endearing. At the heart of this story is what the season is all about—family and community and our humanity.

Another 2017 holiday story, I recommend for tween readers is Jenny Lundquist’s The Wondrous World of Violet Barnaby. When Violet finds a letter from her mother who died a year and a half earlier, she is given a Christmas to-do list that carries her through the ups and downs of a challenging holiday season. Violet faces the heartache of missing her mom while trying to adjust to a stepmother, stepsiblings and a new home. Nothing is easy, but there’s a lot of heart here and in the end Violet feels the love of her “second chance” family.

Hillary, thanks so much for having me on the Mixed Up Files. I’ve been a long time reader. So this was a real pleasure. And I’ve been a long time fan of your books. So it was a double pleasure!

Hillary Homzie is the author of the forthcoming Ellie May chapter book series (Charlesbridge Fall 2018), as well as Pumpkin Spice Secrets (Sky Pony/Swirl, October 2017), Queen of Likes (Simon & Schuster MIX 2016), The Hot List (Simon & Schuster MIX 2011) and Things Are Gonna Be Ugly (Simon & Schuster, 2009) as well as the Alien Clones From Outer Space (Simon & Schuster Aladdin 2002) chapter book series. She can be found at hillaryhomzie.com and on her Facebook page.