I've just sent in the manuscript for the next book in The Birchbark House series. Title: Chickadee. I am still working on the art and drawing horses at last because my family (Omakayas, the twins Makoons and Chickadee, Animikiins, and all of the others) have moved onto the Great Plains. I realized that for the sake of this book series we had to move there around 1866. This is a fascinating year for all sorts of reasons, but for the main character, Chickadee, it is a year of unusual adventure. Some odd things happen to Chickadee. He challenges a man named Skunk. He is kidnapped by two brutish louts who want a servant. He learns to cook a wretched concoction called bouyah. Chickadee runs away from well meaning but heartless missionaries. He learns to survive completely alone in the woods helped by his namesake, the chickadee, who teaches him a song that can heal. There is lots more, including a visit to Saint Paul, the first city he has ever seen, and composed at the time of shacks, pubs, treeless mansions, and lots of trading companies. This book has been on my mind for a long time, and during this endless winter I've finally had time to compose it -- so at last. As I mentioned, I am still working on the drawings. I take photographs of my family and use them in the compositions. I draw objects from my collections. I make people up. All in all, this is a pretty good job to have. I recommend it for those who like to live in their pajamas.
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Comments
local libraries with their summer reading programs. We are presenting story and reading journals (so they can work on their own stories) and weekly challenges to help them along. Along with reading the books and collecting stories we are suggesting that the
children get to know authors as real people: research them, send them letters! Where can children send you letters? And importantly do you have a estimated release date? The girls will want to know this. And please consider Northern Michigan for your book
tour, we'd be happy to help host you and connect you with our amazing community of book lovers! Let us know how we can help! Amy (info@booksforwallsproject.org)
drawing!
here at home with my own daughters -- happily booked.
in Minnesota. Next year there will be a 100 year anniversary. And you are bringing the ojibwe fairly near to where the Dakota struggle was taking place in this new book. One wonders if there be any mentioning of it, and so, if this in any way will be a controversial
story? Just by coincident. Maybe a book like this can be something, just a little bit something, that will create understanding for nature and living near it. Thinking about the tar issue, of course.
planning in this series? Also, I have adored your books since a professor of mine put Tracks on her syllabus and I am slowly but surely working my way through your works. I'm really impressed and grateful that you're able to write such amazing books on such
a fast schedule...I'm so glad I'll get to read them all!
when i try to remember when I discovered wonderful world of books.