House of Dreams: The Life of L. M. Montgomery

House of Dreams: The Life of L. M. Montgomery | Avery and Augustine
House of Dreams: The Life of L. M. Montgomery | Avery and Augustine

“Lucy Maud Montgomery—‘call me Maud without an e,’ she would insist, discarding the use of Lucy altogether—grew up proud of her long, deep roots in the history of a Prince Edward Island.”

Reading this illuminating and insightful biography about Lucy Maud Montgomery and the parallels of her life and the characters she wrote about —  early, unexpected sadness, the splendors of a delicious imagination and rich inner life, and her pen always at the ready.  I’m absolutely loving it and am finding it hard to tear myself away from it.  But slower days and a slower schedule mean time for more reading, for which I’m glad.

House of Dreams: The Life of L. M. Montgomery was written by Liz Rosenberg, illustrated by Julie Morstad and published by Candlewick Press.

Literary Eats

Literary Eats | Avery and Augustine

These were some of the literary snacks we brought to Avery’s class to celebrate some of the books that were read throughout the year:

—Charlie and the Chocolate Factory — Wonka bars with golden tickets hidden in five of them (golden ticket finders each won a book of their choice to take home)

—The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe — plain and rose-flavored Turkish delight

 —BFG — frobscottle — two kinds (first version: limeade, lime sparkling water and strawberry sparkling water and second version: lemonade and strawberry sparkling water)

PS. I’m sharing photos of the picture books we’re reading aloud during the summer on Instagram stories and saving them on my Instagram page in Highlights section under #bookaday in case anyone’s interested.  Happy summer, all!

The Story Girl and The Golden Road

The Story Girl and The Golden Road | Avery and Augustine

“I do like a road, because you can be always wondering what is at the end of it.”

We’re settling into the slowness of summer and are setting aside stacks for reading.  The Story Girl and The Golden Road by Lucy Maud Montgomery are two books of hers that we haven’t read yet.  Really looking forward to them.  What’s on deck for summer reading for you all?

The loveliest cover art by Elly MacKay and published by Tundra Books.

Q & A with Dave Eggers

The Lifters + Q & A with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine

If you haven’t read The Lifters yet, it’s Dave Eggers’ most recent middle grade novel for readers ages 9 to 12.  It's a suspenseful tale that walks the line between magic and real and was inspired by the hills north of San Francisco.  It's about community, finding a sense of purpose and being a part of something much bigger than yourself.  It’s about being a force of change.  And it’s a whip-smart page turner full of peculiar names, clueless adults, enormous, strange sinkholes, endless underground tunnels and some fantastically funny moments.

In the last couple of weeks, following our interview with Dave, we held a special Q&A session with him.  Readers were invited to submit questions and his answers were posted on @the_lifters_by_dave_eggers.  We’re also sharing them below.  

 

@motherofreaders: What idea are you dying to write about, but you haven’t been brave enough to pursue? Do you have any advice for young writers on how they can find the confidence to write their ideas down, even when they seem too different?

DAVE EGGERS: I’ll answer the second part. Confidence is so key with young writers, and that really comes from the elders around them giving them encouragement for whatever they write as very young writers. We can scare young writers off very quickly by being too quick to judge their first drafts, or their very first attempts at creative or expository writing. If we celebrate those first attempts, and then coach them to a second and third draft, you can make any young writer confident and even joyful in their writing. But you have to encourage those early tries without judgment of their subject matter (because anything is appropriate for a beginner), grammar (they will get there), or form (a creative writer is creative with form).

@ddyowell: We love This Bridge and Her Right Foot. Q 1: You’ve been in publishing for some time now. What trends (for better or worse) are you noticing in kidlit publishing? Q2: From your work with students in writing and literacy, do you notice any critical piece(es) of literacy instruction missing in a lot of classrooms?

DAVE EGGERS: I think this is really the best time ever to be a young reader. There now are more books for kids written each year than any time in history. That’s a fact. So the environment is very rich, and the writers working in the form are very talented. Young people have a lot of choices now, and choice is key. We have to give kids power over what they read. Parents of young boys, for example, have to accept that they might choose comics until they’re teenagers. But that’s okay. It really is. The first book I really chose and read for pleasure was Dune, when I was 14. It floored me. The worst case scenario is if someone had told me that that book wasn’t literary enough or appropriate for my age, etc. It would have sapped me of agency and choice. So the classrooms I’ve seen where the kids read exceptionally well are those where the teachers have filled the room with books and present them almost as if they were selling them — with the covers turned out, with recommendations written by other students, etc, making every book seem irresistible.

@thecuriousreader: How much do you love that cover by @terryfanillustration & @ericfanillustration ?! (Real question! The book practically GLOWS.)

DAVE EGGERS: It does glow, doesn’t it? The Fans are extraordinary.

@live_read_write: I have two questions for Dave: 1) Are the hills that inspired the story the Marin Headlands? 2) What are some of your favorite narrative nonfiction books for children?

DAVE EGGERS: 1. The hills, yes, are the headlands, and also the Berkeley hills, Pt. Reyes, Petaluma — basically much of Northern California, the topography of which continues to astound me. 2) I’ve read about 100 of the “Who Was?” books with my kids and I think that series is fantastic. I loved Gombrich’s A Little History of the World. Justin Greenwood and Jonathan Hennessey's book about Hamilton is so good.

@danpaley23: How do you know when you have an idea? There are so many that must come to you. How do you decide to pursue the ones you do?

DAVE EGGERS: Such a good question. I tend to write any idea down, and many don’t really go further than that. But some ideas… I was about to say ‘fester’ but that’s not the word. They stick to the bones. They keep gnawing at you. Then sometimes they’re helped along by some other force, like a wind at their back. You write down “Story about mailperson named Riley," and the next day you happen to get talking to someone who used to be a mailperson, and that talk gives that initial idea layers and momentum. At any given point, I might have an unruly number of ideas in various boxes and drawers, and it’s when a combination of coincidences, unforeseen forces, research and luck that brings one of those ideas to the fore and it becomes The Next Thing.

the lifters and an interview with dave eggers

The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine

Today I’m interviewing Dave Eggers about his newest book, a middle grade novel called The Lifters.  Ten years in the making and inspired by the hills north of San Francisco, it’s a suspenseful story that walks the line between magic and real.  In his interview, we chat about creativity, his work with 826 Valencia and of course books and writing.  Without further ado…

What inspired The Lifters?

First it was the hills just north of San Francisco. About ten years ago, walking there with my then-infant daughter, it struck me that the hills could be hollow, and there could be worlds inside. That was the initial impetus. After that, every year or so some new layer would arrive and add itself to the story — an imploding society, a strong young leader named Catalina Catalan, a hero-in-waiting named Granite Flowerpetal. 

What is your hope for the story?  What do you want kids to see, think about or come away with after reading it?

I hope they see themselves as able to do heroic things.

What’s a typical day like for you?

Far too much time spent sitting, writing in a yellow chair in my garage.

What are some of your favorite children’s books, past and present?

All of Sendak of course. Dahlov Ipcar’s The Cat at Night. Blueberries for Sal. Mr. Popper’s Penguins. In terms of new books, I love Mac Barnett’s work, and Jory John’s, and Aaron Renier’s. And Kate DiCamillo, I think, is a towering master of the chapter book for young people.

What do you see as some of the best ways to foster creativity in children?

It’s not so hard. Give them time and encouragement. I guess that’s not so easy always. But the time has to come first. Quiet, uninterrupted time to think, write, create, be ludicrous. Then, once they create something ludicrous — because very often it is — that weirdness has to be validated, not squashed. There’s no easier way to discourage a young creative person by telling them, the first time they create, that what they’ve created is not appropriate in some way. It’s all appropriate. We have to let kids, who are all inherently weird, express that weirdness.

What are some of your most memorable experiences working with children at 826 Valencia?

They’re all memorable. Honestly, every single one. A few weeks ago I met a young girl, who was 7, and she was tasked with writing a poem about herself and then recording it in one of our podcast studios. She was so shy at the start! There was another student, much less shy, at the table, and she and I encouraged her for an hour as she wrote, revised, and practiced, and by the time she recorded her work, she was so confident she was bursting. It just doesn’t take that much in many cases to bring out someone’s voice.

When you think about all of the young people who have walked through the doors of 826 Valencia, what have been some of their greatest needs?

Obviously the English-language learners have high needs. If they’re just learning the language and are mainstreamed in their school, it can be like being dumped in the middle of the ocean and made to swim. But they can get there, honestly in a few years of dedicated work and one-on-one attention. I just talked to a young woman who arrived from Guatemala three years ago, at age 14, with no English whatsoever. She learned, thrived, and is on her way to UC Berkeley. We gave her a scholarship to help her with expenses and such, but she’s a force to be reckoned with already. Very often we’re just clearing the path a bit for young people on their way.

When mentoring young people today, what are the best ways we can invest in their lives?

Give support, time and money to organizations that provide one-on-one attention to students, and which make teachers’ lives a bit easier.

What are five books you feel every person should read before they graduate high school?

I’ll name five here, but I think there are probably 50 that I would recommend, with that list being curated a bit for any given student: Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman; Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison; Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie; Oh Pioneers! by Willa Cather, and The House of Broken Angels by Luis Alberto Urrea. The books that meant the most to me in high school, in large part because my teachers taught them so well, were Catch-22, Macbeth, and Huckleberry Finn, so I’d add those, too.

What advice would you give to writers looking to get their work published?

There has never been a better time to be an aspiring writer. There are more print journals, more online magazines, more forums in general, for writers, than at any time in history. But when you submit your work, be mindful that there are humans on the other end of the process. Too often, at McSweeney’s, people who submit to us think of the (very few—four, in fact) staffers at McSweeney’s as a kind of reading-and-publishing service they’re entitled to, as opposed to a small group of hardworking people who love books. So when you send your work out, be kind, be patient and be human.

We absolutely loved This Bridge Will Not Be Gray, Her Right Foot and we’re looking forward to the publication of What Can a Citizen Do?  Will we see any more middle grade or picture books from you in the near future?

There are some more in the pipeline, for sure. After Citizen, Shawn Harris and I are working on the story of how a city grows from a trading post in the wilderness to a modern metropolis. It’s something I’ve been a bit obsessed with for years—a time-lapse look at where societies come from. 

Many thanks to Dave for such thoughtful answers and for sharing about his work.  Read more on his site about his initiatives, projects and body of work as a writer, journalist, artist, philanthropist, editor and founder of McSweeney’s.

I’m also sharing some photos of the time I visited 826 Valencia back in 2003.  They were taken with one of Canon's first digital SLRs, so please excuse the noise. ;)

The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine
The Lifters and an Interview with Dave Eggers | Avery and Augustine