Also, they’ve digitized my book, and you can flip through the whole thing on the Art House Co-op site: http://www.arthousecoop.com/library/6123. Or, if you’re in the Brooklyn area, you can see it for real and in person at the Brooklyn Art Library at 103A N. 3rd St., Brooklyn, NY 11211 with the call number 153.3-3.
O.K. Now I’m all finished.
Sketchbook Project 2012—Scarecrow in color #sketchbookproject
And here’s the last drawing my Sketchbook Project sketchbook.
The quote is the title of the song by The Hives (who happen to have a really cool website, by the way). I loved the song when I heard it on the Cartoon Network (see the embedded video), but it was really hard to find a copy at first since it was a bonus track only on the UK version of their Black and White album. Eventually iTunes caught on that I was looking for it, and finally made it available for me. Thanks, iTunes.
Publishers Weekly liked the book!
Yes! THE Publishers Weekly!
Here’s what they had to say (and how it looks on the printed page):
In “Garlic Toast,” one of nearly 30 brief works of “flash fiction” in this collection of dark comedy and horror, the main character is brutally attacked and chased by a monster, before awakening in bed from a nightmare. “You wipe the sweat from your forehead…. You close your eyes and smile. You hope the next one is just as good.” That type of kid—the one who revels in being terrified—is the audience first-time author Thompson is aiming for. In stories that last only a few pages and comics that resemble Nickelodeon cartoons on acid, Thompson riffs on zombie, werewolf, and other ghoulish genres, while also finding the horrific in unexpected places. In “Testophobia,” a test-taker’s increasingly anxious thoughts are superimposed over a blurred-out exam below (“Hemophobia: Fear of blood. Won’t wipe off. On fingers. On sleeve, paper. Smeared. Trembling. Shaky. Shaking”). And in a cartoon labeled “Lobotomy Pie,” a freshly baked pumpkin pie cools on a counter, while a jack o’lantern sits mutilated in the foreground. Just the thing for readers who aren’t scared of the dark—or for those who are and like it. Ages 12–up.
(!)
And here’s the link to it online:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-9836699-0-6
Five impossible things before breakfast
The last thing I saw before I went to bed Saturday night was the very end of Alice in Wonderland. I found it on ABC Family just as the White Queen and Hatter were standing outside the queen’s castle waiting and hoping Alice would show up to battle the Jabberwocky.
That last paragraph doesn’t really matter much except that, when Alice first gets a look at the Jabberwocky, she tells Hatter that sometimes she “believes as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” So I’m sitting here before breakfast thinking of the things that, until yesterday, I would have thought were impossible, and I’d like to share five of them (I’m lazy, it’s early, and I’m pushing it to find five).
1. I am (apparently) a writer
Growing up a reluctant reader makes this one all the more impossible. I guess now I’ve become what might be considered a “reluctant writer.”
I did write the Twisted book so I would have something to illustrate, but in the end there were words involved and I did write them. That, and they were bound in a book.
3. I would be reviewed in Publishers Weekly
I’d like to think that only happens to real writers.
4. Writers would accept me as one of their own
I spent the weekend at a writer’s retreat trying to convince everyone there that I was actually just an illustrator, not a writer, and that I didn’t really like to write. They convinced me otherwise.
5. Editors wouldn’t laugh and point when I read them my manuscript
At that writer’s retreat over the weekend? Yeah. I got to read to two different editors from Scholastic; Grace Kendall and Mallory Kass. I personally witnessed them laughing over the weekend, and they both seemed to have complete control over their index fingers, and neither of those things were directed at me as far as I could tell.
And I believed all of these impossible things before breakfast.
But you know the thing I’m thinking about as I’m writing this? Not only am I going to have to accept all of the above, but I’m also going to have to update my website.
Oh, and 6. Slay the Jabberwocky.
Nickelodeon cartoons on acid (!)
How exciting!
Publishers Weekly, the book industry’s leading news magazine since 1872, has taken time out of their busy schedule to review my book, Twisted: Tales to Rot Your Brain Vol. 1! Just getting a review from them is outstanding, but it gets better: They actually liked it!
Here’s a little bit of what they had to say:
“In stories that last only a few pages and comics that resemble Nickelodeon cartoons on acid, Thompson riffs on zombie, werewolf, and other ghoulish genres, while also finding the horrific in unexpected places…Just the thing for readers who aren’t scared of the dark–or for those who are and like it.”
Crazy, huh?
Here’s a link to the complete review so you can see for yourself: http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-9836699-0-6.
You can grab your own copy at Amazon by following the link above. It’s available in hardcover, paperback and completely digitized for your Kindle. And then maybe you can write a little review of your own?
I got to talk about writing and illustrating—and people actually listened!
A few weeks ago I was part of a panel at the Frick Art & Historical Center discussing kid’s books, writing and illustrating them and getting them published. The panel was in part in conjunction with their current exhibit: Draw Me a Story: A Century of Children’s Book Illustration, but it was also to celebrate Women’s History Month.
We talked about our influences in writing and reading kid’s books, including influential female characters and writers. I explained that I wasn’t a very good reader growing up—not that I had trouble reading, but that I just wasn’t interested in doing it. I was what publisher’s now refer to as a “reluctant reader,” which generally is code for “boys.”
When I wrote Twisted: Tales to Rot Your Brain, I had no trouble keeping that young, reluctant reader in me in mind. I wrote short, short stories that would work well with the short-attention-spanned reader I used to be. I also illustrated many of the stories in the book which addressed the “pictures or it didn’t happen” side of my reading brain. And, for the part of me that wasn’t interested in the subjects that were available for me to read at the time, I wrote about the things that might have kept my attention.
So I guess I wrote this book for the me I used to be, but I’m hoping it sticks with other readers who are struggling to pay attention as much as I did. And those readers aren’t just the boys in the room. I’m proof.
Moving from GoDaddy
Last December I had had about enough.
When I built my first Web site, it was 2001 and getting up and running on the Internet wasn’t the easiest thing to do. I chose GoDaddy to host because, at the time, they were the easiest thing I could find. For some reason I thought their name and logo meant they would be pretty cool to work with. I’m such a sucker.
Since the beginning, I’ve done my best to make sense of their site. It’s hard to figure out what you’re doing on it. It’s just way too hard to navigate. Not only that, at every turn they try to get you to buy more of their products. When you buy a new domain name, when you re-up your hosting, or just when you bring up the site, everywhere you turn they’re pushing more product. Once, when I called their support number, what I really got was a sales person who spent most of our time on the phone getting me to renew my hosting plan.
Still, I learned to ignore it all and stayed with the company.
For most of the past 10 years, I have endured GoDaddy’s unfemale-friendly commercials during every Super Bowl. I put up with the same attitude on their site where they tease you to “see the rest” of what they couldn’t show on T.V. And I did it knowing my money was paying for it, and I stuck with them anyway.
Last spring I put up with GoDaddy’s CEO, Bob Parsons, hunting elephants and then posting the graphic videos of it.
And still I stayed.
Until last December. That’s when I heard about GoDaddy’s support of SOPA. That’s when I decided it was time to jump ship. Turns out a lot of people felt the same way.
Up until last December I was a little frightened of moving away. I had been there for 10 years, my sites worked, my email worked and I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to figure out another company’s technology.
I did a little research, and I found a local company based right in Pittsburgh that was started just for me. Their name is pair Networks, and they had me at “we have an environmental policy.” It took a little trial and error, but all my sites were up and running smoothly within a couple of days, all my emails are in working order, and I haven’t noticed any down time since I started hosting with them.
Now I know my money is going somewhere I can be proud to say I support. I don’t have to pay for scantily clad women during my Super Bowls anymore.
See? I wasn’t lying. Saturday rocked.
I totally survived my first book signing last Saturday at the Frick Art & Historical Center, and had a great time. It was fun seeing how people “got it” when they opened the book and got a look at the twisted illustrations inside. I don’t know who else I signed for, but I know one of my books will be going to the Murrysville Community Library, so I’m just warning all you parents with kids over there: It’s coming.
It was also terribly fun to use my new Square credit card reader on my iPad. The best part was how the people handing me their cards also thought it was fun. I was a tiny bit afraid they might be apprehensive about it, but I had no problems at all. It was fast. It was easy. I’d recommend it completely. (I’ve mentioned Square so many times on my blogs that people are going to start thinking I work for them. I really don’t.)
Book buyers were rewarded with a free bookmark to take home with their new book, and we also had prints and posters available, along with various free postcards options to choose from.
I’ll be doing a little research to see where else I might be able to have a book party. If you know of any independent bookstores or quirky shops that might be interested, just let me know and I’ll see what I can do.
Book signing success!
Well, we all survived the book signing at the Frick Art & Historical Center over the weekend, and I’m terribly happy with the nice turnout! I thought I would be quite embarrassed by the lack of people in my line, but it turns out people are more willing to admit to liking the twisted stuff than I had originally thought. So, no, no embarrassment on my end at all.
I signed lots of books, and we even got to use the new Square credit card reader which, by the way, a three-year-old could figure out. The image is of our first swiper signing for her purchase. The best part was how much fun the people giving me their cards to swipe thought the card reader was. It wasn’t just me.
I brought a lot for people to choose from including copies of Twisted: Tales to Rot Your Brain Vol. 1 (both hardcover and paperback), copies of Yikes! Wow! Yuck! Fun Experiments for Your First Science Fair, and prints, posters, postcards and bookmarks with images from Twisted. We needed the entire table to fit everything.
I have to do a little research about getting into other venues for book signings, but I think this one was a very successful first try. Thanks to everybody for your support!
Now accepting credit cards
For my book signing this weekend, I bought myself a new iPad so I could accept credit cards. Yay!
Exciting and scary, but yay!
The app and hardware is from a company called Square. The app is called “Square Register” and works like a little register on your iPad. I can upload inventory—including images—and prices, and then all I have to do is click the product and the app starts a tally. So far it’s been really easy, although I’ve only been playing. The real test will come this Saturday when I have to use it in real time.
Oh, yeah. This Saturday.
I’ll be selling hardcover and paperback copies of my book Twisted: Tales to Rot Your Brain Vol. 1 along with prints, posters and bookmarks at the Frick Art & Historical Center in Pittsburgh. You’ll also get a free bookmark with every book you buy, or if you like, you can just buy a bookmark. Your call.
Here’s the scoop:
What: Book signing (along with my new buddy Stacy Innerst)
Date: Saturday, April 14
Time: 1:30-2:30 pm
Location: The Frick Art & Historical Center, in the museum rotunda
I’m hoping to see an absolutely huge turnout. I totally want to run out of books and stuff. No pressure or anything.
Just a reminder about how great Saturday is going to be
As I mentioned in my last post and to remind everybody, I’ll be doing my first book signing for Twisted: Tales to Rot Your Brain Vol. 1 this Saturday. Here’s the info:
What: Book signing (along with my new buddy Stacy Innerst)
Date: Saturday, April 14
Time: 1:30-2:30 pm
Location: The Frick Art & Historical Center, in the museum rotunda
For more information: http://www.thefrickpittsburgh.org/programs_events/The_Frick_is_for_Families.php
What you can expect when you get there:
- puppets
- write and illustrate your own stories
- storytimes
- book signings (that’s me!)
- kid’s flicks
- food!
Events start at 11:15 and run through 4:00.