Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 2

Icons Used in This Book 3

Beyond the Book 3

Where to Go from Here 4

Part 1: the Abcs of Writing for Children 5

Chapter 1: Exploring the Basics of Writing Children’s Books 7

Knowing Your Format, Genre, and Audience 8

Getting into a Good Writing Zone 8

Transforming Yourself into a Storyteller 9

Polishing Your Gem and Getting It Ready to Send 10

Selling Your Story 11

Promoting Your Book 11

Improving Your Chances of Getting Published 12

Chapter 2: Delving into Children’s Book Formats 15

Dissecting the Anatomy of a Book 16

Grouping Types of Children’s Books 17

Illustrated Books for All Ages 18

Baby-friendly board books 19

Picture books for toddlers 20

Other books that have pictures 24

Working through Wordy Books 30

Early readers 30

First chapter books 32

Middle-grade books 34

Young adult books 36

Chapter 3: Exploring the Genres 39

Going Out of This World 40

Science fiction 40

Fantasy 40

Graphic novels and manga 42

Horror and ghost stories 42

Getting in on the Action (and History) 43

Action/adventure 43

True stories 44

Historical fiction 45

Mysteries 46

Writing About Real People 48

Biography/memoir 48

Lgbtqia 49

Gender-oriented series books 51

Friendship 53

School issues 54

Developmental milestones and first experiences 55

Prose poetry 56

Romance 57

Giving Stories a Message 57

Learning/educational 57

Religion 60

Aspirational and inspirational 60

Diversity 61

Family issues 62

Pets and animals 63

Cultural issues 64

Addiction, abuse, and mental illness 65

Keeping Them Laughing with Humor 67

Quirky characters 67

Parody, satire, and jokes 67

Slapstick and gross 68

Dark humor 68

Wordplay 68

Chapter 4: Understanding the Children’s Book Market 71

Getting Insight into Book Buyers’ Needs 74

For chain and big-box bookstores 74

For independent bookstores 76

Recognizing What Reviewers Offer 78

Discovering What Librarians Add to the Mix 79

Taking a Look at How Teachers Use Books in Their Classrooms 84

Considering Parents’ Perspectives 86

Thinking Like a Kid 86

Going after what kids like — regardless of Mom and Dad 87

Knowing what kids don’t like 88

Part 2: Immersing Yourself in The Writing Process 89

Chapter 5: Setting Up for Success: Finding the Time and Space to Write 91

Finding Time to Write 92

Figuring out when you’re most productive 92

Sticking to a writing schedule 93

Evaluating your commitment 93

Optimizing Your Writing Environment 94

Locating your special writing spot 94

Keeping helpful references handy 95

Cutting down on clutter and getting organized 96

Preventing and dealing with interruptions 98

Chapter 6: Starting with a Great Idea 101

Once Upon a Time: Coming Up with an Idea 101

Relying on specific ideas rather than big ones 102

Tapping into your own experiences 103

Digging through childhood mementos 105

Drawing from other children’s experiences 106

Pulling ideas from the world around you 106

Stumped? Break through with Brainstorming 107

Doing it all by yourself 108

Giving free association a whirl 109

Taking up journaling 109

Buddying up to the buddy system 111

Asking the advice of classmates and writing professionals 112

Seeking help from your audience 113

Going to the source 115

Checking the “best of” book lists 116

Fighting Writer’s Block 117

Chapter 7: Researching Your Audience and Subject 119

Hanging Out with Kids 120

Going back to school 120

Becoming a storyteller 122

Borrowing a friend’s child for a day 125

Dipping into Popular Culture 127

Watching kids’ TV shows and movies 127

Playing kid-focused digital games 128

Reading parenting and family magazines and blogs 129

Perusing pop culture magazines and blogs 130

Surfing the web 130

Browsing bookstores 131

Visiting children’s stores online or in person 132

Studying kids’ fashion trends 133

Eavesdropping where kids hang out 133

Researching Your Nonfiction Topic 134

Outlining the research process 134

Getting around locally 136

Going far afield 136

Visiting the web — a lot 137

Part 3: Creating a Spellbinding Story 139

Chapter 8: Creating Compelling Characters 141

The Secret Formula for an Exceptional Main Character 142

Defining your main character’s driving desire 142

Show, don’t tell: Fleshing out your main character 143

Getting to Know Your Characters through Dialogue 144

Compiling a Character Bible 147

Surveying a sample character bible 148

Creating consistency 150

Writing Stories with Two or More Main Characters 151

Choosing Supporting Characters 152

Calling All Character Arcs 154

Character Don’ts — and How to Avoid Them 157

Steer clear of stereotypes 157

Don’t tell us everything 158

Toss out passivity and indefinites 160

Don’t rely on backstory or flashbacks 161

Developing Characters through Writing Exercises 162

Describe your first best friend 162

Borrow your favorite children’s book characters 163

Revisit a painful or joyful experience from your childhood 163

Chapter 9: The Plot Thickens: Conflict, Climax, and Resolution 165

Plot: It’s All about Action 166

Centering on the Story 167

Giving Your Story a Beginning, Middle, and End 168

Propelling Your Story with Drama and Pacing 168

Drama: A reason to turn the page 169

Pacing: How you keep the pages turning 169

Outlining to Structure Your Plot 170

Creating a step sheet 171

Fleshing out your outline 172

Knowing when to circumvent an outline 175

Preventing Plot Problems 176

Writing Your First Draft 176

Chapter 10: Can We Talk? Writing Effective Dialogue 179

The Fundamentals of Good Dialogue 180

Dialogue has a function 180

Dialogue has drama 182

Listening to Real-World Dialogue 184

How kids talk 184

How grown-ups talk 185

Adding a Speech Section to Your Character Bible 186

Testing! Testing! Reading Dialogue Out Loud 187

Avoiding Common Dialogue Mistakes 188

Failing to have conflict or tension 188

Repeating information: Showing versus telling 189

Describing dialogue 189

Using too many speaker references and attributions 190

Creating heavy-handed and unrealistic dialogue 191

Filling space with unnecessary dialogue 191

Improving Dialogue by Using Writing Exercises 192

Talking on paper 193

Introducing your first best friend to the love of your life 193

Chapter 11: Setting the Scene 195

Giving Context to Your Story and Its Characters with Scenery 195

Creating a Context Bible 196

Knowing When to Include Scenery and Context 197

When place figures prominently 198

When place plays an important role 199

When description of place doesn’t interrupt flow of action 200

When you must mention an exotic locale 200

When you mention a specific place at the beginning 201

When you use place to transition to a new scene 201

Providing the Right Amount of Setting 202

Engaging Your Readers’ Senses 203

Knowing When Not to Make a Scene 204

Exercising Your Nose through Smellography 204

Chapter 12: Finding Your Voice: Point of View and Tone 207

Building a Solid Point of View 208

Reviewing POV options 208

Picking your POV 209

Matching tense with POV 211

Having Fun with Words through Wordplay, Rhyming, and Rhythm 212

Engaging in wordplay 212

Taking different approaches to rhyming 214

Keeping your story moving with rhythm 215

Using Humor to Your Advantage 216

Figuring out what kids consider funny 217

Turning to the outrageous and the gross 220

The Mojo of Good Writing: Exploring Voice, Style, and Tone 221

Finding your story’s voice 222

Writing with style 223

Taking the right tone 223

Knowing When You Need a Voice Makeover 224

Helping Your Voice Emerge by Playing Pretend 225

Pretend to be someone (or something) else 225

Chapter 13: Writing Creative Nonfiction Books 227

The Nonfiction Children’s Book World at a Glance 228

Writing Toward a Nonfiction Masterpiece 229

Choosing a Great Nonfiction Topic 231

Looking at topics that get kids’ attention 232

Finding topics that interest you 233

Branching out into the real world 233

Testing Your Topic 235

Outlining Your Creative Nonfiction 236

Starting simple 236

Fleshing out your ideas 237

Enhancing your outline by using visual aids 238

Common Creative Nonfiction Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them) 239

Writing Exercises for Creative Nonfiction 240

Pretend you’re a newspaper reporter 240

Create a funny five-step procedure to wash a dog 241

More short exercises to get you writing 241

Part 4: Making Your Story Sparkle 245

Chapter 14: Editing, Revising, and Formatting Your Way to a Happy Ending 247

Your Revising Checklist: Getting Major Story Elements in Order 248

Theme 249

Characters 249

Plot 250

Pacing and drama 251

Setting and context 252

Point of view 252

Fine-Tuning Your Text: Editing Important Areas 253

Strengthening your opening 254

Keeping your dialogue tight and on target 254

Transitioning effectively 255

Trimming wordiness 256

Keeping your chronologies in order 257

Formatting Basics: First Impressions Matter 257

Including the proper information on the first page 258

Following other children’s book formatting conventions 258

Not to Put Too Fine a Point on It: Checking Basic Grammar and Style 261

Punctuation 261

Style 262

Miscellaneous 263

Hiring Help: Working with an Editor or Editorial Service 265

Finding a good editor or editorial service 266

Asking the right questions 268

Digital versus hard-copy editing 269

Chapter 15: Creating Pictures from Your Words: The World of Illustrations 271

To Illustrate or Not to Illustrate 272

Recognizing Why You Shouldn’t Hire an Illustrator 272

Following the Hand-Drawn Illustration Process with Artist Tim Bowers 274

Starting with black-and-white pencil sketches 275

Moving on to finished pencils 276

Creating color art 276

Capturing the right cover image 277

Exploring the Digital Art Process with Author/Illustrator Barney Saltzberg 279

Interior art 280

Cover art 281

Getting Your Art Seen by the Right Folks 283

Considering some solid options 283

Preparing a book dummy 285

Handling Art When You’re Self-Publishing (and Not an Artist) 286

Chapter 16: Finding and Incorporating Feedback 291

Deciding When to Seek Feedback 292

Getting Help from Friends and Relatives (or Not) 294

Delving into the pros and cons of friendly advice 295

Having a friend in the business 295

Calling on Topic Experts: Beta and Sensitivity Readers 296

Attending Conferences or Retreats 297

Exploring the conference scene 297

Getting away with retreats 300

Participating in a Workshop 301

Working with a Writing (or Illustrating) Group 302

Finding the right group 302

Starting your own group 304

Sifting through the feedback you receive 305

What Feedback Should You Expect During the Publishing Process? 309

Part 5: Getting Published and Promoting Your Book 311

Chapter 17: The Traditional Route: Signing with an Agent or Publisher 313

Identifying the Right Publisher 314

Gathering information from the marketplace 314

Perusing writer’s guides and directories 316

Drafting Query Letters and Proposals 316

Perfecting the query letter 317

Drafting a great book proposal 320

Joining Forces: Working with an Agent 322

Finding and approaching your ideal agent 322

Managing multiple agent submissions 323

Understanding typical agency agreements 324

Terminating your agency relationship 327

Copyright: Protecting Your Work 329

Success! Reviewing Your Publishing Contract 330

Surveying the two types of publishing agreements 330

Getting what you want in the contract 331

Dealing with Rejection 334

Chapter 18: Considering Hybrid Publishing 339

The Good and the Bad about Hybrid Publishing 340

The good about hybrid publishing 340

The bad about hybrid publishers 341

Vanity presses: Don’t say we didn’t warn you 342

Identifying the Right Hybrid Publisher for Your Book 344

Doing your research and asking around 344

Confirming some important criteria 345

Approaching a hybrid publisher 346

Getting the Biggest Bang for Your Hybrid Buck 346

Fees and payments 347

What about distribution and marketing? 347

Chapter 19: So You Want to Self-Publish? 351

Weighing the Pros and Cons of Self-Publishing 352

Exploring Your Self-Publishing Options 354

The print route 355

The digital route 358

Setting a Price for Your Publication 359

Distributing Your Self-Published Book 360

Getting in the door at traditional bookstores 360

Persuading online booksellers 361

Considering other places to sell your book 362

Chapter 20: Donning Your Publicity Cap 363

Understanding How Your Publisher Promotes Your Book 364

Publicizing Your Own Book 364

Focusing on the digital components 365

Touching on the traditional components 369

Promoting Your Work in Person 373

Planning a publicity tour 373

Joining the signing and reading circuit 373

Hiring a Publicist 374

Discovering what a publicist can do 374

Finding the right publicist 377

Getting the most for your money 378

Chapter 21: Getting Savvy with Social Media 379

Influencing the Influencers 380

The basics of influencing others 380

Understanding the different kinds of online influencers 381

Figuring out where online your influencers live 382

Knowing Where to Create a Social Media Presence 382

Blogs 383

Podcasts 383

Goodreads website 384

Facebook 384

Twitter 385

Instagram 385

YouTube 385

TikTok 385

#BookTok 386

Pinterest 386

Making a Splash: Launching a Social Media Campaign 389

Reviewing the ABCs of a social media campaign 389

Getting noticed on social media 390

Surveying the unwritten rules of social media marketing 391

Applying search engine optimization 392

Measuring the Effectiveness of Your Campaign 393

Part 6: the Part of Tens 395

Chapter 22: More Than Ten Great Sources for Timeless Storylines 397

Tales of Yore: Fairy and Folk Tales, Fables, and the Like 398

Mythology and Mythological Heroes 399

Nursery Rhymes 399

Bible and Religious Stories 399

Family Issues and Changes 400

Sibling Issues 400

First Experiences 400

Common Childhood Fantasies 400

Friendship and Social Issues 401

Growing Pains (Emotional and Behavioral) 401

Bodies and the Brain: Their Functions and Changes 401

History Makers and History in the Making 402

Nature, Science, Technology 402

Chapter 23: Ten Children’s-Author Recognitions to Dream About 403

Newbery Medal 403

Caldecott Medal 403

Coretta Scott King Book Award 404

Printz Award 404

Pura Belpré Award 404

Theodor Seuss Geisel Award 404

ALA Quick Pick & ALA Notable Books for Children 404

Stonewall Book Award 405

Robert F Sibert Informational Book Medal 405

State and Local Book Awards 405

Index 407

Writing Childrens Books For Dummies

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    £16.19

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Lisa Rojany, Peter Economy

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      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Writing Childrens Books For Dummies by Lisa Rojany

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 30/06/2022
      ISBN13: 9781119870012, 978-1119870012
      ISBN10: 1119870011

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      About This Book 1

      Foolish Assumptions 2

      Icons Used in This Book 3

      Beyond the Book 3

      Where to Go from Here 4

      Part 1: the Abcs of Writing for Children 5

      Chapter 1: Exploring the Basics of Writing Children’s Books 7

      Knowing Your Format, Genre, and Audience 8

      Getting into a Good Writing Zone 8

      Transforming Yourself into a Storyteller 9

      Polishing Your Gem and Getting It Ready to Send 10

      Selling Your Story 11

      Promoting Your Book 11

      Improving Your Chances of Getting Published 12

      Chapter 2: Delving into Children’s Book Formats 15

      Dissecting the Anatomy of a Book 16

      Grouping Types of Children’s Books 17

      Illustrated Books for All Ages 18

      Baby-friendly board books 19

      Picture books for toddlers 20

      Other books that have pictures 24

      Working through Wordy Books 30

      Early readers 30

      First chapter books 32

      Middle-grade books 34

      Young adult books 36

      Chapter 3: Exploring the Genres 39

      Going Out of This World 40

      Science fiction 40

      Fantasy 40

      Graphic novels and manga 42

      Horror and ghost stories 42

      Getting in on the Action (and History) 43

      Action/adventure 43

      True stories 44

      Historical fiction 45

      Mysteries 46

      Writing About Real People 48

      Biography/memoir 48

      Lgbtqia 49

      Gender-oriented series books 51

      Friendship 53

      School issues 54

      Developmental milestones and first experiences 55

      Prose poetry 56

      Romance 57

      Giving Stories a Message 57

      Learning/educational 57

      Religion 60

      Aspirational and inspirational 60

      Diversity 61

      Family issues 62

      Pets and animals 63

      Cultural issues 64

      Addiction, abuse, and mental illness 65

      Keeping Them Laughing with Humor 67

      Quirky characters 67

      Parody, satire, and jokes 67

      Slapstick and gross 68

      Dark humor 68

      Wordplay 68

      Chapter 4: Understanding the Children’s Book Market 71

      Getting Insight into Book Buyers’ Needs 74

      For chain and big-box bookstores 74

      For independent bookstores 76

      Recognizing What Reviewers Offer 78

      Discovering What Librarians Add to the Mix 79

      Taking a Look at How Teachers Use Books in Their Classrooms 84

      Considering Parents’ Perspectives 86

      Thinking Like a Kid 86

      Going after what kids like — regardless of Mom and Dad 87

      Knowing what kids don’t like 88

      Part 2: Immersing Yourself in The Writing Process 89

      Chapter 5: Setting Up for Success: Finding the Time and Space to Write 91

      Finding Time to Write 92

      Figuring out when you’re most productive 92

      Sticking to a writing schedule 93

      Evaluating your commitment 93

      Optimizing Your Writing Environment 94

      Locating your special writing spot 94

      Keeping helpful references handy 95

      Cutting down on clutter and getting organized 96

      Preventing and dealing with interruptions 98

      Chapter 6: Starting with a Great Idea 101

      Once Upon a Time: Coming Up with an Idea 101

      Relying on specific ideas rather than big ones 102

      Tapping into your own experiences 103

      Digging through childhood mementos 105

      Drawing from other children’s experiences 106

      Pulling ideas from the world around you 106

      Stumped? Break through with Brainstorming 107

      Doing it all by yourself 108

      Giving free association a whirl 109

      Taking up journaling 109

      Buddying up to the buddy system 111

      Asking the advice of classmates and writing professionals 112

      Seeking help from your audience 113

      Going to the source 115

      Checking the “best of” book lists 116

      Fighting Writer’s Block 117

      Chapter 7: Researching Your Audience and Subject 119

      Hanging Out with Kids 120

      Going back to school 120

      Becoming a storyteller 122

      Borrowing a friend’s child for a day 125

      Dipping into Popular Culture 127

      Watching kids’ TV shows and movies 127

      Playing kid-focused digital games 128

      Reading parenting and family magazines and blogs 129

      Perusing pop culture magazines and blogs 130

      Surfing the web 130

      Browsing bookstores 131

      Visiting children’s stores online or in person 132

      Studying kids’ fashion trends 133

      Eavesdropping where kids hang out 133

      Researching Your Nonfiction Topic 134

      Outlining the research process 134

      Getting around locally 136

      Going far afield 136

      Visiting the web — a lot 137

      Part 3: Creating a Spellbinding Story 139

      Chapter 8: Creating Compelling Characters 141

      The Secret Formula for an Exceptional Main Character 142

      Defining your main character’s driving desire 142

      Show, don’t tell: Fleshing out your main character 143

      Getting to Know Your Characters through Dialogue 144

      Compiling a Character Bible 147

      Surveying a sample character bible 148

      Creating consistency 150

      Writing Stories with Two or More Main Characters 151

      Choosing Supporting Characters 152

      Calling All Character Arcs 154

      Character Don’ts — and How to Avoid Them 157

      Steer clear of stereotypes 157

      Don’t tell us everything 158

      Toss out passivity and indefinites 160

      Don’t rely on backstory or flashbacks 161

      Developing Characters through Writing Exercises 162

      Describe your first best friend 162

      Borrow your favorite children’s book characters 163

      Revisit a painful or joyful experience from your childhood 163

      Chapter 9: The Plot Thickens: Conflict, Climax, and Resolution 165

      Plot: It’s All about Action 166

      Centering on the Story 167

      Giving Your Story a Beginning, Middle, and End 168

      Propelling Your Story with Drama and Pacing 168

      Drama: A reason to turn the page 169

      Pacing: How you keep the pages turning 169

      Outlining to Structure Your Plot 170

      Creating a step sheet 171

      Fleshing out your outline 172

      Knowing when to circumvent an outline 175

      Preventing Plot Problems 176

      Writing Your First Draft 176

      Chapter 10: Can We Talk? Writing Effective Dialogue 179

      The Fundamentals of Good Dialogue 180

      Dialogue has a function 180

      Dialogue has drama 182

      Listening to Real-World Dialogue 184

      How kids talk 184

      How grown-ups talk 185

      Adding a Speech Section to Your Character Bible 186

      Testing! Testing! Reading Dialogue Out Loud 187

      Avoiding Common Dialogue Mistakes 188

      Failing to have conflict or tension 188

      Repeating information: Showing versus telling 189

      Describing dialogue 189

      Using too many speaker references and attributions 190

      Creating heavy-handed and unrealistic dialogue 191

      Filling space with unnecessary dialogue 191

      Improving Dialogue by Using Writing Exercises 192

      Talking on paper 193

      Introducing your first best friend to the love of your life 193

      Chapter 11: Setting the Scene 195

      Giving Context to Your Story and Its Characters with Scenery 195

      Creating a Context Bible 196

      Knowing When to Include Scenery and Context 197

      When place figures prominently 198

      When place plays an important role 199

      When description of place doesn’t interrupt flow of action 200

      When you must mention an exotic locale 200

      When you mention a specific place at the beginning 201

      When you use place to transition to a new scene 201

      Providing the Right Amount of Setting 202

      Engaging Your Readers’ Senses 203

      Knowing When Not to Make a Scene 204

      Exercising Your Nose through Smellography 204

      Chapter 12: Finding Your Voice: Point of View and Tone 207

      Building a Solid Point of View 208

      Reviewing POV options 208

      Picking your POV 209

      Matching tense with POV 211

      Having Fun with Words through Wordplay, Rhyming, and Rhythm 212

      Engaging in wordplay 212

      Taking different approaches to rhyming 214

      Keeping your story moving with rhythm 215

      Using Humor to Your Advantage 216

      Figuring out what kids consider funny 217

      Turning to the outrageous and the gross 220

      The Mojo of Good Writing: Exploring Voice, Style, and Tone 221

      Finding your story’s voice 222

      Writing with style 223

      Taking the right tone 223

      Knowing When You Need a Voice Makeover 224

      Helping Your Voice Emerge by Playing Pretend 225

      Pretend to be someone (or something) else 225

      Chapter 13: Writing Creative Nonfiction Books 227

      The Nonfiction Children’s Book World at a Glance 228

      Writing Toward a Nonfiction Masterpiece 229

      Choosing a Great Nonfiction Topic 231

      Looking at topics that get kids’ attention 232

      Finding topics that interest you 233

      Branching out into the real world 233

      Testing Your Topic 235

      Outlining Your Creative Nonfiction 236

      Starting simple 236

      Fleshing out your ideas 237

      Enhancing your outline by using visual aids 238

      Common Creative Nonfiction Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them) 239

      Writing Exercises for Creative Nonfiction 240

      Pretend you’re a newspaper reporter 240

      Create a funny five-step procedure to wash a dog 241

      More short exercises to get you writing 241

      Part 4: Making Your Story Sparkle 245

      Chapter 14: Editing, Revising, and Formatting Your Way to a Happy Ending 247

      Your Revising Checklist: Getting Major Story Elements in Order 248

      Theme 249

      Characters 249

      Plot 250

      Pacing and drama 251

      Setting and context 252

      Point of view 252

      Fine-Tuning Your Text: Editing Important Areas 253

      Strengthening your opening 254

      Keeping your dialogue tight and on target 254

      Transitioning effectively 255

      Trimming wordiness 256

      Keeping your chronologies in order 257

      Formatting Basics: First Impressions Matter 257

      Including the proper information on the first page 258

      Following other children’s book formatting conventions 258

      Not to Put Too Fine a Point on It: Checking Basic Grammar and Style 261

      Punctuation 261

      Style 262

      Miscellaneous 263

      Hiring Help: Working with an Editor or Editorial Service 265

      Finding a good editor or editorial service 266

      Asking the right questions 268

      Digital versus hard-copy editing 269

      Chapter 15: Creating Pictures from Your Words: The World of Illustrations 271

      To Illustrate or Not to Illustrate 272

      Recognizing Why You Shouldn’t Hire an Illustrator 272

      Following the Hand-Drawn Illustration Process with Artist Tim Bowers 274

      Starting with black-and-white pencil sketches 275

      Moving on to finished pencils 276

      Creating color art 276

      Capturing the right cover image 277

      Exploring the Digital Art Process with Author/Illustrator Barney Saltzberg 279

      Interior art 280

      Cover art 281

      Getting Your Art Seen by the Right Folks 283

      Considering some solid options 283

      Preparing a book dummy 285

      Handling Art When You’re Self-Publishing (and Not an Artist) 286

      Chapter 16: Finding and Incorporating Feedback 291

      Deciding When to Seek Feedback 292

      Getting Help from Friends and Relatives (or Not) 294

      Delving into the pros and cons of friendly advice 295

      Having a friend in the business 295

      Calling on Topic Experts: Beta and Sensitivity Readers 296

      Attending Conferences or Retreats 297

      Exploring the conference scene 297

      Getting away with retreats 300

      Participating in a Workshop 301

      Working with a Writing (or Illustrating) Group 302

      Finding the right group 302

      Starting your own group 304

      Sifting through the feedback you receive 305

      What Feedback Should You Expect During the Publishing Process? 309

      Part 5: Getting Published and Promoting Your Book 311

      Chapter 17: The Traditional Route: Signing with an Agent or Publisher 313

      Identifying the Right Publisher 314

      Gathering information from the marketplace 314

      Perusing writer’s guides and directories 316

      Drafting Query Letters and Proposals 316

      Perfecting the query letter 317

      Drafting a great book proposal 320

      Joining Forces: Working with an Agent 322

      Finding and approaching your ideal agent 322

      Managing multiple agent submissions 323

      Understanding typical agency agreements 324

      Terminating your agency relationship 327

      Copyright: Protecting Your Work 329

      Success! Reviewing Your Publishing Contract 330

      Surveying the two types of publishing agreements 330

      Getting what you want in the contract 331

      Dealing with Rejection 334

      Chapter 18: Considering Hybrid Publishing 339

      The Good and the Bad about Hybrid Publishing 340

      The good about hybrid publishing 340

      The bad about hybrid publishers 341

      Vanity presses: Don’t say we didn’t warn you 342

      Identifying the Right Hybrid Publisher for Your Book 344

      Doing your research and asking around 344

      Confirming some important criteria 345

      Approaching a hybrid publisher 346

      Getting the Biggest Bang for Your Hybrid Buck 346

      Fees and payments 347

      What about distribution and marketing? 347

      Chapter 19: So You Want to Self-Publish? 351

      Weighing the Pros and Cons of Self-Publishing 352

      Exploring Your Self-Publishing Options 354

      The print route 355

      The digital route 358

      Setting a Price for Your Publication 359

      Distributing Your Self-Published Book 360

      Getting in the door at traditional bookstores 360

      Persuading online booksellers 361

      Considering other places to sell your book 362

      Chapter 20: Donning Your Publicity Cap 363

      Understanding How Your Publisher Promotes Your Book 364

      Publicizing Your Own Book 364

      Focusing on the digital components 365

      Touching on the traditional components 369

      Promoting Your Work in Person 373

      Planning a publicity tour 373

      Joining the signing and reading circuit 373

      Hiring a Publicist 374

      Discovering what a publicist can do 374

      Finding the right publicist 377

      Getting the most for your money 378

      Chapter 21: Getting Savvy with Social Media 379

      Influencing the Influencers 380

      The basics of influencing others 380

      Understanding the different kinds of online influencers 381

      Figuring out where online your influencers live 382

      Knowing Where to Create a Social Media Presence 382

      Blogs 383

      Podcasts 383

      Goodreads website 384

      Facebook 384

      Twitter 385

      Instagram 385

      YouTube 385

      TikTok 385

      #BookTok 386

      Pinterest 386

      Making a Splash: Launching a Social Media Campaign 389

      Reviewing the ABCs of a social media campaign 389

      Getting noticed on social media 390

      Surveying the unwritten rules of social media marketing 391

      Applying search engine optimization 392

      Measuring the Effectiveness of Your Campaign 393

      Part 6: the Part of Tens 395

      Chapter 22: More Than Ten Great Sources for Timeless Storylines 397

      Tales of Yore: Fairy and Folk Tales, Fables, and the Like 398

      Mythology and Mythological Heroes 399

      Nursery Rhymes 399

      Bible and Religious Stories 399

      Family Issues and Changes 400

      Sibling Issues 400

      First Experiences 400

      Common Childhood Fantasies 400

      Friendship and Social Issues 401

      Growing Pains (Emotional and Behavioral) 401

      Bodies and the Brain: Their Functions and Changes 401

      History Makers and History in the Making 402

      Nature, Science, Technology 402

      Chapter 23: Ten Children’s-Author Recognitions to Dream About 403

      Newbery Medal 403

      Caldecott Medal 403

      Coretta Scott King Book Award 404

      Printz Award 404

      Pura Belpré Award 404

      Theodor Seuss Geisel Award 404

      ALA Quick Pick & ALA Notable Books for Children 404

      Stonewall Book Award 405

      Robert F Sibert Informational Book Medal 405

      State and Local Book Awards 405

      Index 407

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