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Hot Junk to Get

  • VINTAGE EYEWEAR
    Well, you can go get glasses at the local Lenscrafters, OR you can hunt down some spectacular vintage hand cut frames at your local antique shop and have them fitted with your prescription lenses. Or maybe---do both. I have some very normal, "don'-t-cause trouble" frames, and some "in-your-face" frames I like to wear when I am feeling "con cohones" and have had a drink or two. Better to buy "new old stock", if you are going to invest much in the lenses. It is not good to throw money into old frames in bad shape that will fall off your head or lose an arm and need that proverbial piece of masking tape to keep them together. Unless that is the look you crave--the look of half the boys in my nerdy seventh grade class circa 1965. If so, I have an old briefcase and a pocket pen holder I would like to sell you. I'll throw in the slide rule.
  • Lawn art and ashtrays
    Back when guys stayed home more, listened to the radio and do other things at the same time, they probably labored over homemade lawn art, standing ashtray holders, and door stops. Usually they were made out of plywood, then painted. Look for slightly crackled paint. Many of the best of these were old comic strip characters like Jiggs and Maggie, or the ocasional Disney character. Black cats are plentiful. Also Butlers. You do not have to smoke to appreciate them.
  • old silhouettes
    Many of these come from the 20's and 30's. You can often guess the age of the piece by the dress of the person whose portrait it is. Hung together on a wall, they have a wonderful impact.
  • Old cookbooks by local groups: i.e. Grange cookbooks, church cookbooks, college cookbooks, etc.
  • Tacky Souvenirs from old site seeing locales

Answer for Mr. Peanut

Aw, shucks

What's wrong with this picture?

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This evening I was enjoying my weekly indulgence: the Sunday New York Times Book Review, the Sunday Magazine, Arts and Leisure, and the Sunday Styles section. I would be lying if I said I read the Sunday Times cover to cover every week. Sometimes I will read a little something in almost every section, but more often than not, I only glance while I manage to read the Book Review, Arts and Leisure, Sunday Styles, and the magazine (in that order).

So tonight I got to the paper late.

It was a good thing. Had I read the Styles section earlier my whole day would have been ruined.

On page 14 was a full page advertisement by the NY Times Store: "Introducing Callaway Classics. Fine Art prints from your favorite children's books." The page had art by Jeffry Fulvimari and Loren Long from the first two children's book of "she who will not be named," (hereto referred to as "The M Word") It also had some art by David Kirk for two of his books, including Miss Spider's Tea Party: Miss Spider's Web of Friends. At the bottom of the page was art by art by Fred Marcellino for two Puss in Boots books by Charles Perrault. Here is a link to the store section to learn more. It seems I cannot link to an actual page in the paper if it is just an ad.

(BTW, the art pictured here is a piece by Loren Long for that book by the M Word. I like to think that the man and boy are looking into the wind which is blowing away all the money Loren Long SHOULD have made on that book.)

First of all: I CHALLENGE YOU TO FIND ME ONE PERSON ON THE FACE OF THE EARTH, ASIDE FROM HER OWN KIDS, HER HUSBAND, AND HERSELF, WHOSE FAVORITE CHILDREN'S BOOK IS ONE BY THE "M WORD".

Second: selling high quality prints of original art is certainly not a bad thing. And it is especially nice to sell prints from children's books. I sell prints myself from Tex and Sugar. But why is it that only Fred Marcellino seems to own the copyright to his own art? And why is there a head shot of ONLY of the M Word, and not the artists, and why is "M" written on the prints, as though she had a single, damn thing to do with the talent that went into creating the art!?! And who does the money go to , anyway? Are Loren Long or Jeffrey Fulvimari seeing a good portion of the proceeds from their own artwork made into prints? I want to know the answer to this. Or is this going into the coffers of the M Word again and her so-called charity?

One reason for the artists NOT owning their own art copyrights is clear on the celebrity books side: When it comes to celebrity books, it is often the case that artists get stuck with a "WORK FOR HIRE" contract. WFH means that they will do the illustration for a one time fee, relinquish all rights, and never receive another penny, ever again. Furthermore, their art can be used for anything on the face of the earth, i.e. lunch boxes, pocketbooks, boxer shorts and sippy cups, and they will not profit from that. Period.

Every single illustrator I know has, at some point in his or her career, done work for hire for one client or another. We all frown upon it, and many of us have reached a point where we say "NO MAS" (myself included), but some of us still have to do it because it is one of the evils of being an illustrator and making a living at it. To those who decry the practice altogether, mock the artists who do work this way, and adopt a "holier than thou" attitude, I say, "A POX ON YOU!" Because sometimes rent does have to be paid and food has to be bought.

But to those celebrities who work with illustrators on a work for hire fee basis, and then take that art and their millions in sales and royalties sharing nothing at all with the lowly artists, I say, "A PLAGUE ON YOU!" because, really, it is a crying shame.

Take the M Word, for example. She even had the gall to ONLY PUT HER FREAKIN' NAME ON THE COVERS of her books. That has to be the biggest example of total celebrity arrogance that I have ever seen. And do you think this once working class chick would have the decency to spread the wealth a little? Noooooo.

I would like to hear from John Lithgow, Katie Couric, Jay Leno, Jerry Seinfeld, and Joy Behar, just to name a small few. Do any of you share the royalties to your book sales, or are you taking advantage of the illustrators by making them do "work for hire?" Aren't the millions you make enough to put some extra dough into the bank accounts of hard working, underpaid illustrators? And if you happen to think that being associated with you is reward enough, think again. It ain't.

Please feel free, if you are a celebrity author to respond with the shameful or not so shameful truth in my comments section. Tell me I am wrong. Tell me you actually gave a share of the royalties to the illustrator who brought life to your stab at creating a children's book. Prove me wrong.

As for M word, with only your own single, pretentious name on your books' covers.....well, you need not respond.

Fr more about celebrity authors please go over to MotherReader and read all her posts about BACA--Bloggers Against Celebrity Authors.


Get into the spooky spirit

OK, so you really want to go "trick or treating," but you can't or don't have time for it, or you have a pressing deadline, or perhaps doing it for years and years with your kids has sucked the charm and the novelty right out of it. Maybe it's even worse. Maybe you would rather have root canal work done than go out begging for goodies all over your neighborhood with a gaggle of overtired, hyper-sugared, cold and damp kids. You wouldn't be the first, ya know, to use that old dentist excuse.....

Speaking for myself, I had a lot of trouble giving up that tradition when I was young. Halloween was my favorite holiday and I went out from door to door until I was 17 and someone said to me, "aren't you a little old for this?" Of course, years of chasing my kids around all over the place (in my day we went out for HOURS all by ourselves, with NO adults along for the walk) and making costumes that never seem to fit the way they were supposed to (how did my grandmother manage to do that year after year and not complain?), has sort of gotten Halloween out of my system. Bah, humbugs and spiders!

Not to worry. I think I have found the best way to relive my youth, have fun, and not be tempted by candy. How about this for a no muss, no fuss cyber Halloween?

Showletter

Thinking Blogger, so I'd better get thinkin' again!

Roz Fulcher has very kindly given me a "Thinking Blogger Award."Thinkingblog
While I do actually try to "think" when I post, instead of just sounding like what I think is called a "Cheese Sandwich Blog ("Today I ate a cheese sandwich..."), I am not dong much thinking lately, having decided that my muse must has gone off on vacation, probably to the south of France. I suspect the muse is actually hanging out with Aline and Robert Crumb, because I wish I could and I can't (although I did have the knock-me -over-with-a-feather pleasure of having Miss Kominsky Crumb actually comment on one of my posts in which I gushed relentlessly about her incredible talent for wonderful humor and funky art).

But I digress. I am supposed to be thinking, instead of just rehashing old posts. So I am going to have to fire up the old brain and do some writing, muse be damned.

Thank you, Roz, for lighting the proverbial fire under the proverbial tush and making me less lazy and unproductive.

And now I also would like to give the Thinking Blogger Award to six other people (it's supposed to be five, but I am giving it to someone who has already gotten it) whose blogs I enjoy, and who make me think:

Hip Writer Mama--who inspired me to actually share my long journey to publication, and who sincerely feels a determination to inspire others to keep working towards their dreams. Edited to add: And I see she has already been given one, but she gets another, too.

Whateverings--because Paula Becker amazes me with her wonderfully fresh sketches, vignettes, and ability to render in a serious and lighthearted way with equal talent, and to bop back and forth between the two with the greatest of ease.

Lectitans--Because there is a quiet urgency and seriousness when I read Kimberly's blog. Oh, my. I see she already has the award. Still, I give it again.

Bottom Shelf Books--because Minh Le always has a very interesting take on books and manages to provide a slant I didn't think of.

DEVAS T. RANTS AND RAVES--Because I am never sure what to expect from Don Tate, and I find him honest and direct in the nicest way.

Chat Rabbit--because Liz makes me think about and embrace the important relationship of STUFF to ART. Many people don't get the significance of junk, collecting it, and how it molds what we do as artists. Liz does. She also makes me want to get more of it, which may or may not be a good thing.

No more Miss Snark? Oy. What a dreary day for the blogosphere.

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Yup, I just read it here.

Miss Snark is closing shop on her blog. Well, I guess the blog will be "up" but she will be absent.

I am still barely getting over not having Imus around. Now I have to give up my Snark addiction, too? Where's the justice in this world?

Damn.

I'm Steppin' out!

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With gratitude to R. Crumb's eternal tribute to truckin'.....I am steppin' out. Steppin' out about as much as I can, anyway, while being confined to my studio.

I'm on tour this week. Blog tour, that is. And it is a genuine thrill to be making the rounds of these blogs and being interviewed by these great people:

Monday: With Dotti Enderle
Tuesday: With Elizabeth Dulemba
Wednesday: With Ruth McNally Barshaw
Thursday: With Kim Norman
Friday: With Karen Lee

This is what is so nice about being "interviewed:"

It makes me stop and think about where I have been for 35 years of adulthood and where I would like to be going in the future.

It makes me appreciate the journey of being an artist who has worked many different venues, but has always spoken the same language.

It brings out the willing mentor in me who wants to give motherly advice to other people trying to travel the same road. Thanks to all my great question-asking interviewers for making me think and reflect!

Edited to add:

Actually, I really am stepping out this week. I'll be making a presentation at the Needham Public Library tomorrow, Thursday, May 17th, at 3:30 pm. I'll be showing pictures, sharing artwork, bringing dolls, and reading Tex and Sugar, too! So if you live anywhere in the area, stop by and say hello! This presentation is for kids and adults of ALL Ages!!!

AND DO NOT FORGET:

About 8 months ago I mentioned on this blog that we were planning a big publishing party to celebrate Tex and Sugar's arrival on the scene. We set the date for JUNE 16th.

Well, here we are and that date is just around the corner.

The invitations have been ordered, but in typical fashion, I am still trying to get my work done, before I send them out.

So PLEASE mark the date to join us at the DUDE Ranch in Needham!

The dress will be cowboy and cowgirl casual!

And the barbeque stations and Tex Mex cuisine will be cookin' with steam. Plenty of food and drink for all. Families welcome!

You can email me directly, or send me your address and I will pop the invite in the mail.

Hope to see you all then, pardners!!!

Just a few things....

Right now I am buried with school visits, book promos, trying to finish overdue artwork for a book and, the most difficult of all, trying to keep a kid from doing a nose dive in school. Honestly, I could do ten books in one week more easily than get one of my kids to put nose to grindstone when it comes to homework...

But that is a whine and I try my darnedest NOT to whine on my blog....

So I thought I would just link to a few more discussions of the "review" ilk that are very much worth reading.

First at lectitans, Kimberly askes: What is the purpose of a book review? I wish there were more answers to this in the comments section. We know that everyone has the right to review anything they pretty darn please. But what is the purpose of it all? If I weren't so flat out I might stop and write a few thousand words on the subject (although, if you REALLY want to hear me go on and on and on about a topic, ad nauseum, ask me about my take on the whole Don Imus ridiculous sequence of events).

Then go over to David Lubar's blog and take a look at his post about what seems like a rather questionable review situation.
Thanks to A CHAIR, A FIREPLACE & A TEA COZY for the link.

On another topic, I will be hosting one stop of Dotti Enderle's blog tour next week so please stop by and hear what Dotti has to say.

FINALLY, MOST IMPORTANT RIGHT NOW, THIS MINUTE: if you have any great ideas about getting teenage boys to invest themselves in homework, PLEASE SEND THEM TO ME RIGHT AWAY.

And, if not, then send wine. Lots of wine.

Getting ready for Meme Monday

I have offered to answer questions posed by Mother Reader.

And I have every intention of doing that. But I want to answer thoughtfully and today is my middle son's seventeenth birthday. Since I love to answer questions, I will save it for later when I can take my time.

So it may be Meme Monday for me! But I do look forward to doing it.

Have to say this: I am very thankful for the positive spirit that is evident in the Kid Lit community.

Blogging for Dummies...meaning me.

Something happened to me in the last year or two. What happened is that I became a digital junkie. I know that everyone else on the planet has already been embracing this world for years, but my revelation came late, and hit me hard. Why the delay? I think it comes from being a former granola girl, locked in my all-natural brain somewhere, circa 1978. Back then I stored leftovers only in glass containers and cooked with honey instead of sugar, wheat flour instead of white. Now? Bring on the plastic wrapped Twinkies. Well, not that bad, but close....

Anyway, not long ago I had that "choir singing" moment when I actually saw the light--the light of my LCD, that is--- and said "I am home." I began buying digital cameras. Several, in fact. I got an ipod. I "needed" a laptop, so that when I went away for a weekend, I was never too far from the email. I learned some tricks on Photoshop to help me with my work. I EVEN STARTED BLOGGING. And the fifth Bones book in the chapter book series by David Adler, which I illustrate for Viking ? All done in Painter on my MAC! Hallelujah! Amen!

I've tried to impress my college student son sometimes with my computer know-how. He, of course, is unimpressed. Why? Because the real truth is that I am still a web/computer dummy. I barely know what I am doing half the time, even while I sometimes manage to do it.

Thanks to today's post by Pam Coughlin at Mother Reader, I was moved to confess my stupidity in the comments section. And then I noticed , miraculously, that Susan Thomsen over at Chicken Spaghetti had posted already, at the same time, kindly explaining what Poetry Friday is all about. That was another thing I generally felt clueless about. ( I tend to feel clueless about a lot of web stuff, that being only one of them). And I was afraid to ask.

But people are kind. They have readily offered up their vast knowledge. In the comments section of Mother Reader, enormously helpful Jennifer Schultz of the Kiddosphere @ Fauquier blog gave me an entire list of reading material to get educated. I am, sure she would not mind me pasting her list and comments below, in bold, so you can learn more too:

Buzz Marketing With Blogs for Dummies by Susannah Gardner

Blog: Understanding the Information Reformation That's Changing the World by Hugh Hewitt

The Everything Blogging Book by Aliza Sherman Risdahl

The Rough Guide to Blogging by Jonathan Yang

Naked Conversations: How Blogs Are Changing the Way Businesses Talk to Customers by Robert Scoble

The Corporate Blogging Book: Absolutely Everything You Need to Know To Get It Right by Debbie Weil

Not very useful, but funny:
The Lost Blogs: From Jesus to Jim Morrison, The Historically Inaccurate and Totally Fictitious Cyber Diaries of Everyone Worth Knowing by Paul Davidson

If you're using Blogger, Publishing a Blog With Blogger by Elizabeth Castro is very helpful.


And in the comments section of Chicken Spaghetti both Susan Thomsen, and Kelly Herold of Big A, Little A said very nice things to make my feelings of incompetence start to go away.

Today I did not have a productive work day in the snowy state of Massachusetts. But a I had a great (and grateful) one for getting educated.

So, while I now know what Poetry Friday is, and I will for sure try to join in the fun soon, I think that today has been "Ask For Help Friday" for me.

Or, more accurately, "You CAN Teach An Old Dog New Tricks Friday"

Fuse 8: not banned....but moi?

Well, I was just doing my routine check in over at Fuse 8 and I scrolled down to Monday's post to see that Fuse 8 has made the cut in China. Or at least has been allowed to make the cut in China. One can determine who or what is allowed to be seen by going to this site.

So I tried out my own web site, www.johansennewman.com.

And guess what? I am banned! My own harmless, kid loving, illustration web site. Hey--I didn't have any suggestive videos of four guys hitting on a librarian! To quote McCloud: "if that don't beat all..."

But not my blog. Not my "Aline Kominsky Crumb celebrating blog."

I love things that you can't explain.

Now for the tag post...

1. I met my husband in 7th grade, when we were 12. If not for him I would not be doing what I do today. Thanks, Honey. PS: we met in the fall of 1964....

2. In high school I was a cheerleader and then a majorette. I liked marching around the field like a fool to corny band music, and twirling a baton, more than cheering the jocks on to football victories.

3. I was so traumatized in art school that I didn't draw or paint for years because of that. Instead I became a puppeteer with my husband and then a dollmaker.

4. My natural hair color is bright red, which is turning gray, so most people think I am a blonde but really I am a red head who has gotten old.

5. My first book as author/illustrator is a story that I first scribbled down 24 years before it came out as a book (don't give up).

6. I collect things: cowboy boots, cookie jars, Elvis lamps and stuff, jukeboxes, cowboy chotckes. This is a problem. I love junk. I hate to dust.

Now I have to tag people--yes?

They have to post 6 obscure things about themselves.

This is fun, but don't try to do it after 3 drinks.....

I tag:

Shennen Bersani
Liz Dubois
John Nez
Paula Becker
Janee Trasler
Monica Lee

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