Authors who visit awesome schools!

I have had the good fortune to visit many hundreds of schools over the last years. Being able to meet so many of my readers is one of the best things about being an author.

This past Wednesday’s visit to Ramer Wood Public School was awesome. The night before the visit, teacher-librarian extraordinaire Deborah Jestin, emailed me detailed driving directions to her school, and she gave me emergency contact phone numbers.

As soon as I pulled up, I knew exactly which door to enter because it was decorated with a giant door-sized welcome sign. When I got in, there was big display about my books outside of the library, and a banner above the speaker’s pit inside the library.

Deb invited a local journalist who took photos and sat in on my talks, and everything that I had asked for — a table, chair, globe and bottle of water — was in place.

Deb also borrowed a bunch of my books from the Markham Public Library so I could autograph them. What a great idea! She also gathered up as many books of mine as she could from her own school, and I signed those as well.

When the students filed in for the first session, I was immediately impressed because their teacher and Deb had obviously familiarized them with my writing and also my biography. The students were attentive and enthusiastic and their questions were well thought out. The teachers sat in on the talks and they listened as attentively as their students. That in itself is such great patterning!

After the last session, Deb asked me to sit in the audience. I did, and a group of students gathered in the presentation pit. They each had a letter from my name and they arranged themselves to spell it out. And then they each read what their letter stood for. It was lovely!

Deb had forgotten to bring in the invoice I had emailed the night before, and I hadn’t brought a paper copy of it, but this wasn’t enough to stop her from paying me before I left. We tallied it up anew and she had the office cut the cheque.

It’s the small attentive details that all add up to a wonderful visit. And the people who benefit the most are the students themselves. Thank you, Deborah!

Authors who visit

How does a brand new author get experience? Ten years ago, I was petrified at the thought of doing school visits. I had the notion that a visit was supposed to be a reading. Ie — standing up in front of kids and actually reading. This works with picture books, and ten years ago, I only had two picture books published — no novels.

Then Barbara Haworth Attard suggested that I sit in on one of her school presentations. What an eye-opener that was! She interacted with the students and shared samples of various drafts of her work. She told them about how she did her research and where she got her ideas. I think she may have done a very brief reading. The kids were enthralled and so was I.

I totally revamped the way that I did presentations. They became more fun for me and they also were more entertaining for the students. The change came just in time too, because my first novel, The Hunger, came out the next year. Between 1999 and 2003, I had three YA novels published, so all at once I began doing a lot of presentations to older elementary students and high school students. I absolutely love presenting to this age group.

When writing a story, the author must help the reader step into the shoes of the main character. When doing a school presentation, the author must step into the shoes of each person in the audience. It takes practice and it takes honing, but boy is it worth it.

I will do a brief reading from one of my books if requested. I have a favourite scene from each of my older three YAs. I’m hoping to find the perfect scene from Daughter of War. If you’ve read it and have an opinion about this, let me know.

Daughter of War and what really happened during the Armenian Genocide

In my just-released novel, Daughter of War, Kevork survives the deportations into the desert because he is adopted by an Arab clan. He is tattooed with distinctive blue dots. Later on, this distinctive tattoo helps him blend in while he is doing underground relief work to help save other Armenians.

Both Marta and Mariam survive by being taken in to Turkish homes and living as Muslim women.

Here is an online exhibit with some stunning photographs about some of the real people behind the story of Daughter of War.

Aram’s choice play info

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Contact: Cat Heaven, producer

Tel: 905-877-3422 (Studio)

Website: www.georgetownlittletheatre.ca


GEORGETOWN LITTLE THEATRE YOUTH GROUP BRINGS LOCAL HISTORY TO THE STAGE

Story of The Georgetown Boys performed by Halton area youth


From May 1 to May 10, 2008, the Georgetown Little Theatre Youth Company (GLTYC) will be staging an original production called The Georgetown Boys.


The GLTYC is proud to present this original theatrical production based upon the stories written by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch and adapted for the stage by Sam Hancock. The two-week run of the production will take place at the GLT studio in Stewarttown from May 1 to 10, 2008, with a special one-night-only Gala Performance at the John Elliot Theatre on May 14, 2008.


This production is indicative of the growth of the Youth Company over the past five years. The young cast and crew are thrilled to be a part of this unique event.


Based on two books by award-winning author Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch, Aram’s Choice (available in stores now) and Call Me Aram (to be released in fall 2008), The Georgetown Boys was adapted for the stage and directed by local Georgetown resident, Sam Hancock. Sam has directed many productions since graduating from Guelph University’s theatre program. Sam’s plays have won audience awards and have been staged in Toronto, New York and San Francisco.


Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch is the author of many books for children, including Silver Threads and Enough as well as her YA novels, Hope’s War, The Hunger and Nobody’s Child, which was nominated for the Red Maple Award, the Alberta Rocky Mountain Book Award, and the B.C. Stellar Award. Daughter of War, which continues the story of Nobody’s Child and The Hunger, will be newly launched at this time.


In 1923, 110 young Armenian boys, aged 8-12, were brought to Canada to live on Cedar Vale Farm in Georgetown where they were trained in farming with the aim of becoming Canadian farmers. The Georgetown Boys documents a significant moment in the history of Georgetown and Canada. It was “Canada’s noble experiment” – Canada’s first international humanitarian effort. Many of these orphans grew up and settled in Southern Ontario, reuniting with their friends as often as they could, forming a tight-knit community that continues to this day among their descendants.


The Georgetown Little Theatre is proud to support the efforts of the Youth Company. There are 24 performers in this production with as many, if not more, adult and youth volunteers helping backstage. Organizing and rallying this large troupe of theatre artists is Cat Heaven, Sue Bryan and Kay d’Entremont who have been the guiding force behind the GLTYC since it’s inception in 2003. Each year the company produces a fall one-act play festival, with plays written and directed by Youth Company members, and one full-length production each spring. Past spring productions have included “The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe”, “The Insect Play”, “Dark of the Moon” and “Midsummer’s Night Dream.”


The performances will take place at the Georgetown Little Theatre in Stewarttown, Ontario. To purchase tickets, please call 905-977-3422. Tickets are $10.


The GLT Studio is located at 32 Stewarttown Road, Georgetown, Ontario:


Performance Dates and Times


Thursday, May 1 – 8:00pm

Friday, May 2 – 8:00pm

Saturday, May 3 – 2:00pm

Sunday, May 4 – 2:00pm


Wednesday, May 7, 8:00pm

Thursday, May 8, 8:00pm

Friday, May 9, 8:00pm

Saturday, May 10, 2:00pm

Saturday, May 10, 8:00pm


For information on the Gala Performance on May 14, 2008, at the John Elliot Theatre,

please leave a message at 905-877-3422.

For kids who write

Call for Submissions
Become a Published Young Author or Illustrator!
Launch Pad: Where Young Authors and Illustrators Take Off! is a new online magazine devoted to publishing fiction, nonfiction, poetry, book reviews, and artwork by children ages 6-12. The editor is pleased to announce the publication of the first online issue (January/February 2008) openly accessible from the Launch Pad web site. We still have space in all of our upcoming 2008 issues, and invite young authors and artists to submit material about the following themes:
The Ocean
Summer Vacation
Sports
Mysteries
Please visit http://www.launchpadmag.com to read the magazine and review our submission guidelines! We do not charge parents or children any publication or submission fees.
Printable handouts:
Email submissions and queries to: editor@launchpadmag.com

Call Me Aram

Call Me Aram will be published in the fall of 2008. Here’s the cover:
Aram Davidian, like his fellow orphaned Armenian refugees, is delighted with his new home on a farm in Georgetown, Ontario. But despite the excitement his new surroundings, Aram worries about his young friend Mgerdich, who was injured on the long trip to Canada and is recovering in France. And what is more worrying is that he and the other boys have been assigned new English names. How will their extended families find them one day if all the boys have new identities? Even when their translator assures them that their hosts want only the best for the boys, Aram cannot accept the name David Adams. When Mgerdich finally arrives at the farm, a relieved Aram finds the courage to lead the boys in a gentle revolt. Together, they must find a way to convince the Canadians adults that the boys, as grateful as they are for their new lives, they cannot forget their old ones. They must keep their names.

More on the Order of Princess Olha

Here.

President of Ukraine honours local author

Elizabeth Yates
Brantford Expositor – 24 May 2008 

City author Marsha Skrypuch hopes to snatch a few words with Ukrainian president Victor Yushchenko when he gives her a state honour at a ceremony in Toronto on Wednesday.Skrypuch will receive the Order of Princess Olha, Class III: the highest honour the country bestows on foreign citizens. The medal recognizes her books about the 1932-1933 Ukrainian famine, which killed up to 10 million people. The award comes on the 75th anniversary of what Ukrainians call Holodomor: meaning death by hunger.

Since her award was announced in February, Skrypuch has been waiting to hear when the honour would be bestowed. The date is now confirmed for a 9:30 a.m. reception at the Old Mill Inn and Spa.

About 600 people, mostly from the Ukrainian community, are expected to attend, says Skrypuch, who will be accompanied by her husband, Dr. Orest Skrypuch, and other family members.

Meeting Yushchenko – on his first visit to Canada – will be a thrill. She wants to tell him how much she admires the reforms he has brought to the country where her paternal grandfather was born. “He’s my hero,” she says, citing Yushchenko’s role in the 2004-2005 Orange Revolution, which introduced free elections to Ukraine.

Yushchenko also helped draw attention to the famine and to the fate of Ukrainians during the Holocaust.

“His father was an Auschwitz survivor,” says Skrypuch. “People don’t realize that Ukrainians and Poles died along with the Jews.

“He’s a symbol of all that being acknowledged.”

A writer of award-winning books for children and young adults, Skrypuch has carved a significant career crafting fiction from the facts of historic atrocities.

In 2000, she wrote Enough, a picture book based on a folktale about a young girl’s attempts to save her village from starvation during the Ukrainian famine. The Holodomor also inspired her story called The Rings, published in Kobzar’s Children, a 2006 anthology of Ukrainian-Canadian writings which she also edited.