Friday, October 12, 2012

Beauty, No Beast

His name is Carmel. Easier to say than the candy-color of his beautiful coat.
I can't say whether he will become the star of a children's book as did his predecessor, Leonardo da Cat. Can't say if he would have survived the wilds of my 9th Street backyard and neighborhood, either,  because he's back. Glory be! His sneaking out the atrium when the "door of opportunity" cracked, made for a dark hour of tense reflection. But true to his feline instinct, he sneaked right back in when he had endured enough of cold and wet grass. Hopefully we--and he--learned a lesson: It's better to reflect on all that's good and easily had than to wander aimlessly without support. With luck and dilligence, he won't get a repeat oppportunity.

Great-granddaughter, Lucy, at fifteen months recently discovered that little fingers in Carmel's coat feel even better than the fuzzies in her board book about baby pets. Hands-on learning even trumps books.



 
                          Carmel reflects: MY FACE--MY WINDOW!

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Out To Lunch

Not really, but there sure is a gap between posts and for once, it's not my fault. This handy gadget is only useful as it's up and running and when the power cord is NOT supplying juice, the laptop goes into coma mode--unexpected and unsuspected for so recent a purchase.

My connection with words in the interim has been in reading, only. Not many word-use errors to report, but here are three in one book: "Sara laid down next to , , , "  and ". . . sick little cherubs laying side by side."    Kind of makes you feel like saying "CLUCK! CLUCK!" doesn't it? Even before that in the story a character was ". . . gesturing up the stairs for her to proceed him."  Now don't tell me those were typos. And where was the proof-reader or line editor to have allowed such errors submitted by one of their established contributors?

GOOD NEWS: I just finished reading a novel with NO BOO-BOOS!
BAD NEWS: I came within a second of cancelling my onlineWord-A-Day because yesterday Anu Garg posted the word apostle and referenced its meaning with a blatantly political slam against one of the presidential candidates. How unwarranted and lowbrow!

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Writing's The Easier Part--of Writing

You can have the best ideas pop into your head. You may have beautiful penmanship (in which case I haven't met you, but you may be out there).
Words may fall onto your page almost publishing ready. But if your off-the-top-of-your-head writing needs no editing, I don't know you. My educated guess is that your work needs an edit--or two--or three--or . . .     The best of writers instinctively recognize what can be left out to make their work even better. Easier for the reader to grasp--first time over, with pleasure.

So I'll make this blog uncharacteristically short for me. You don't need to know that even my detiorating handwriting is sometimes better than what lands onscreen. Poor eyesight, late-life computer learning--sort of--all the twists and turns and unwaranted screw-ups--give me fits.

My favorite part of writing is getting the thoughts on paper. And in long-hand on any paper--Post-its, tablets, journals. Tapping out one letter at a time on a keyboard is not me. But unpublished, we would not have met otherwise. THANKS for reading. Love to hear from you on COMMENTS.

Readers, only

Fall is a favorite season for me mainly because it isn't summer any more. While summer's heat fades away, fall is perfect for spring plantings. And fall's my favorite season. Already I am looking forward to new beauties selected from catalogues, for when they arrive I get to plant all the bulbs and rhizomes exactly where my mind's eye has pictured them in bloom: Iris, daylilies, lily trees, cyclamen, parrot tulips--some new to me.

My "readers" sit quietly under solar lights--various sizes alone, in pairs, or threes among the flowers. "No 'dirty' books allowed," I say just before they get their annual scrubbing and a maybe a change of location in the patio garden. Some of these statuary readers are angels or cherubs, but most are children--like in real life--holding book. Perfect for a children's book writer.


No question, my favorite flower of the year is the BIG, lavender fall crocus that surprises me annually right after I've given up looking for it. No green stems and leaves to hint of its pending arrival, just slender pure white stems with enormous blossoms popping up to last for weeks. To my surprise the resident squirrel compounded the beauty by relocating a bulb.                            



 

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Kindred Spirits

But only in theory.  Lucy Maud Montgomery may have had a better handle on how to get her words in print.  I alas, too often hit a wrong key when I am on my last sentence and out the window goes my brain work. That's what happened last time I wrote a blog post.  It set me back to no writing at all -- the the possibility that I posted this very title and not content.  I wanted to say that I had the night before lucked into a TV showing of Anne of Green Gables, my all-time favorite. Worth losing sleep.  I'm sure I'm not alone in finding inspiration whenever it is my good fortune to walk on famous writer's ground.  Twice I have visited Ms Montgomery's Silver Bush "one of the happiest spots in the world" on Prince Edward Island.  Even took a carriage ride over the property and enjoyed fresh-baked molasses cookies and tea in the museum run by Campbell relatives.  The video scene where Anne and her best friend/neighbor stood on those unusually red cliffs prompted me to seek out my photos.  Could have been the exact location.


"I've found out at last what makes the roads red.  It's a great comfort," says Anne.  Lucy Maud had a gift for dialogue unique to her characters and I never tire of rereading her stories I've acquired for my library.  My Anne of Green Gables Journal is so beautiful with illustrations and quotes that I have never to this day written a word onon the lines.  Examples of kindred spirit thinking:"I'm so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers. It would be terrible if we just skipped from September to November, wouldn't it?"

And "Don't you feel as if you just loved the world on a morning like this?"

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Critiquer's Confession

You caught me. That is, if you read my last two blogs. You can tell I read only the photo caption, not the article. Obviously I didn't really study the photo, either.

Somehow, in the far reaches of my ancient mind the last name, Tyler, rang a bell as some female sport's standout--same alma mater. But maybe those initials (C.J.) crept in unbidden from the book I was reading at the time. I've since counted ten C.J.s in the print of a mere one and one third pages! And protagonist C.J. was a female.

My guess is the newspaper people have made up for their original gaffe by giving HIM another shot (that's shOt) with a BIG full color face-front photo captioned "HEAD OF THE CLASS." Without even reading the article I can see it's a guy. And my conscience is clear. End of this story.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Inappropriate Language

Well, that's one way to put it. and I'll always wonder who brought it to the newspaper staff's attention. My guess would be that the young golfer or her mother got on the phone and let the paper people know that she wouldn't be clipping that photo for her album anytime soon. A much smaller version of the same photo appeared today with this caption: "Shikellamy's C.J.Taylor
hits a drive off the tee at the Susquehanna Valley Country Club on Thursday. An editing mistake in Friday's edition placed inappropriate language in the photo caption."

Let this be a lesson to your fingers, folks. The letters i and o sit companionably side-by-side on your keyboard, but they are not interchangable. In this case, one key made an embarrassing difference.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Don't print "oops!"

Sometimes it is the writer's fault when a wrong word appears in print. But then again, where was the proof-reader or copy-editor whose job it is to catch the error? And does it really matter when it's just a small word? Will readers tend to skip over and not notice? Or will it stop them dead in their tracks with wonder? Or double them over in fits of laughter? You decide.

It all depends on point of view. In today's regional newspaper (which shall  luckily remain nameless) a large black and white photo appears featuring a golfer in action. The one-line caption under her photo did make me snicker and for that I apologize.Must have stunned the athlete who has every right to say "this really stinks." Should have made the paper people cringe and point fingers at the perpetrator whose ineptness sent this to press:

" ------------- hits a tee SH*T during . . . . ." 

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Diverse Reads in Modern Format

     I have a fairly recent (hard to keep abreast of so prolific an author) Nicholas Sparks and an old Jeanette Oaks (final in one of her many series) on my i-pad 2. I loved the "book feel" of turning pages so much I've read Sparks twice. But meantime, my daughter, Marti, has filled this online "bookshelf" with shelves and shelves of old children's books. Some sounded so quaint in language style we laughed our heads off reading aloud to each other. An anonymous version of  The Three Bears was amusing and one we'd never read. The illustrations, alone, dated it to at least back to my childhood or earlier. In public domain, these are freebies.

    I'm thinking I need to check out the shopping cart for It Doesn't Grow on Trees. Only recently I have learned from AuthorHouse, the publisher, that they now have my Junior Chapter book available in eBook format. I love that story. Haven't even checked on the price, but I know I'll love the chapter beginnings and endings so carefully crafted--by me. And then there's that wonderful page turning feel. If anyone reading this gets to it first, please report in.

    

Putting a Period on Good Writing

     Quoting from a recently-read novel: "----------- stared at the plastic checkered tablecloth on the table."

     Duh! I say those three tagged-on words (on the table) insult the reader. Unless the writer thought we pictured a tablecloth covering a window or door. A period after tablecloth would  have sufficed.

     It is too easy for a writer on a roll to over-write--clutter phrases, sentences, paragraphs, and pages with extraneous words. Sometimes the urge (or editorial request/expectation) to meet a novel's total word-count trumps common sense.

     There are strict word-count rules for genres and age-appropriate work. Trying to  keep up with  published writers of upper middle and young adult work, I stretched and stretched till I had well over 9,000 words in a second or third draft of my book suited to third through sixth-grade readers. But then I bumped up against a pro--the author of Mrs. Wishy Washy fame, Joy Cowley.

     "A Junior Chapter book should have no more than 6,000 words," she informed me and over the week of serious editing and a couple of one-on-one mentoring sessions, 3,000 words vanished. And saving only the best, It Doesn't Grow on Trees became my latest pride and joy for children. Nothing was lost in the cutting--only made the better to hold a young reader's attention.

     The lesson I learned the hard way stuck with me and has served me well: Sometimes you just have to kill your 'darlings'."

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Careless Writing or Clueless?

    What well-published writer would appreciate being labeled a third or fourth-grader? I read popular novelists, some who have 30-40 books published, and conclude they weren't paying attention in language arts--otherwise known in the old days as English class--my favorite subject from third grade on. Not only am I frustrated at how frequently I read gross grammatical errors, but I wonder why it wasn't caught or corrected before the book went to print? My choice of Larger Print makes every word stand out on the page. And I cringe. I huff and I puff in exasperation when I see (often} that the author doesn't know the difference between bring (to) and take (away). Or how to use sit and sat. Or
lie and lay. Oh, woe is me! I learned all that in third grade and I'd read with a less critical eye and way more pleasure if I didn't have to play editor. Those writing books may offer clues. But who is reading them? Not the careless writer, for sure.

Who Wrote That?

    My question in some part of the reading of Love Inspired books--way too many times in a startling number--is Where was the editor, copy-editor, proof-reader? Or was the well-published author the one who fell asleep at the wheel? I am referring to the many times I have been dumbstruck when the wrong character name is given attribution. What a jolt to read "Buck nodded!" This occurred right after a paragraph about what was written on Buck's new grave marker. And on the story's final page where the protagonist was doing the speaking and whose name was totally familiar by Page 278.
When I finished reading this novel I took the author up on her Dear Reader comment that if I had a minute, she'd love to hear from me. Her website did not appear to have been updated for years, so let's not hold our breath for a response. Will we ever know who wrote that? Stay tuned.

P.S.
Already the author of the latest novel I've read--in which a wrong attribution appears on the final page--has e-mailed back to thank me for pointing out the "very bad mistake," she called it. She hasn't even seen the book since it came out! How gracious of her to thank me for giving her a headache!

Sunday, July 29, 2012

How I Survived Without Writing

How many words have slid off my keyboard this summer? Few. Fingers too wet. Sweat dripping into my eyes. Back stiff from sleeping in a chair in a way too cool room with AC set at the max. But in my unproductive writing mode has my brain been on summer leave? Oh just see my long list of what I did this summer and I won't even be expected to write a back-to-school essay using that theme. I read whole novels in a single sitting, even if I started at bedtime. I watered the patio pots and garden, letting the leaky hose cool me from fingertip to elbow. I stared at the Super Moon from eastern horizon rising to clouded obscurity--enjoying the cricket chirp background  and dampish cool. I proved that with care and feeding, even I could grow a colossal tomato plant in a pot. All summer I have studied closely, and in awe, the daily life of another happy tabby. I've recorded piano pieces and my Author voice reading of kid's picture books. Having survived the heat, I'm once again thinking back to the keyboard. And here I am. Writing.

Writer or Waiter?

When served at ________ (fill in the blank), you will hear "Enjoy!" It is universally accepted as an accompaniment with food presentation. But is that admonition acceptable--even with a smile--as you sign your published work? Assuming your text is the finished product of your writer training, don't start (or stop) pushing your pen until you've fashioned a signing that reflects and is a credit to the whole. Funny, clever, poignant, provocative, it can make a favorable lasting impression if it's right. Readers will know.
Leave "ENJOY!" in the hands--er, the mouth-- of the capable waitstaff. Sign your work like a writer.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Author News Flash

What could be more entertaining than just holding a book in your hand while watching the pictures fly by? My guess would be that having a story read to a child by the author of the text would enhance the experience by much. So watch for notification of when mini CDs will be available to accompany each of my published picture books. They will be offered with every new purchase and will be available for previous purchases. Whose voice best reflects the tone of my stories? Mine!

My Blog Site

http://mariampineno.blogspot.com/

International Readers

 
Afternoon tea at the Visser home in Enkhuizen, Holland. Lis accepts hostess gift, happy to read it to her young granddaughters in Dutch.
(Spring 2005)


Mr. Visser asks the author to
read a few pages aloud.






Young Serbian host adds picture books to his growing display of gifts from guests.
(Spring 2006)












The Croatian interpreter is happy to accept specially-signed books
after the school entertainment. (Spring 2006)








In Moravsky Svatyjan
of the Slovak Republic,
Elena Simkova
(Elementary English Teacher, K-6) and retired-teacher mother, hostess of lunch, happily accept gift books signed for Elena's children Zuzana (5) and Ondrej (4)
(2005-2006)




After a home-hosted lunch in Spreyer, Germany, 7-year-old Maja and her mother, Maven join us in our riverboat cabin to accept gift books.  (April 2008)

It Doesn't Grow on Trees

 

Jonathan James hasn't sung a solo since his first grade disaster.
Now he considers auditioning for the fifth grade musical.
From before and after "Do-or-Die Day," Jon endures the daily taunts of Big Bad B and his buddies. But how could this be worse
than bearing the brunt of one of Ms. Fa-La-La's big time explosions?
Maybe this will be the year Jon finds his motivation
and surprises himself most of all!
Copyright 2009 For Grades 3-6 (Ages 8 and up)
ISBN 978-1-4389-2678-0
Retail price: $9.00
IT DOESN’T GROW ON TREES: The Story Behind the Story
No, it isn’t one of thousands of books and online articles about money. Titles based on the old clichĂ© rival the stars in number, but my first chapter book is not about some kid being bored by an adult’s preachy take on monetary matters. What this junior chapter book is about can be found on page 14. I won’t spoil it for you, as discovery is ever at the heart of page-turning. You will delight in finding the title’s roots and repetitions right to the end.
Is the story about a real 10-year-old boy? Definitely. Based on a music-teaching experience, it’s a tale I’ve wanted to tell for a very long time. Memory, intact, was kept alive by the child’s wallet-size class photo kept over my desk. I know but one Pop-Pop in real life. He gave permission to use his grandkids’ affectionate title without fear of my taking literary liberties. In school I often answered to “Mrs. Piano,” but Ms. Fa-La-La was more fun to create in booming tones—which was not me. No secret, highly fictionalized characters/scenes make great stories.
Imagination coupled with experience kept sentences flowing from chapter to chapter. Initially wondering what past incident could cause a child enough anxt to keep him from performing, I had only to recall one program where a first-grader lost his lunch onstage. I changed the song title and the prop because . . . (Ask me).
A fine alternate choice from dark fiction, this 10-chapter book (enhanced with original illustrated pages) shows the positive side: an easily intimidated child blossoms into his real potential with perseverance, work, and latent talent. You can put your money on that.

IT DOESN'T GROW on TREES is also available online at www.AuthorHouse.com and Amazon.com.  Books can be purchased from www.eCygnet.com

a Box of Bears



Stuffed polar bears in a gift shop feel sad that they are constantly passed over for other toys because their pale fur makes them blend into a cotton snow background.
Can a giving spirit help Big Bear and Little Bear out of their predicament?
Follow these cuddly critters from cover to cover to learn how one good gift leads to another.
Copyright 2009 Read-to Pre-school-grade 2
ISBN 0-9721897-3-6 Read-yourself grades 2 and up
Retail price: $12.00
The giving theme in A BOX of BEARS, suitable for all ages, elders included, makes this new book a thoughtful school, community, or hospital library gift/donation.
This book was officially released on Friday, November 13, 2009 

A BOX of BEARS: the Story Behind the Story

I can do better than that. What children’s writer hasn’t thought, if not said it? Exactly how I felt on reading the free book accompanying the plush toy-of-the-year. I didn’t like the cover and I objected to the title. A confusing half-dozen or more character names began with the same letter. The story ending suggested the inappropriate child behavior of keeping a secret from Mother. But I had already bought the toys for a classroom gift from invited December Author.
After I’d explained my feelings about the commercial story this was one first-grader’s question on politely raising his hand: “Why did you buy it if you didn’t like it?” Good question.
“It was free,” I said, “and you can’t always judge a book by its cover!” But I admitted I do.
For the first and second-grade classes, I’d written my own story about toy bears without any relation to the original. It was too long for their attention level, but well-received anyway. Then I worked on and off for years on revisions and cuts to suit a young-reader picture book format.
And when my professional artist/daughter Marti said yes, our fourth collaboration was launched. It didn’t exactly crash, but keeping it afloat for a couple of years was our biggest book challenge yet. Know any artist who thinks white-on-white is easy? Doubtful.
More than once we hoped our book might be marketed in time for holiday shoppers. 2009 is the year for reality. A BOX of BEARS’ bright, beautiful acrylic illustrations will bring the joy of giving right into the heart and home of every lucky reader. Its evergreen theme defies shelf-life conventions for holiday books.  And I truly believe. I did better.


The Bear Models
A BOX of BEARS Gift Basket. This one of a kind, All Occasion Gift Baskets Online exclusive gift basket contains a new book that makes a great gift for children of all ages The November 2009 release was written by Mariam D. Pineno and illustrated by Martha L. Pineno. The story follows stuffed polar bears in a gift shop who feel sad that they are constantly passed over for other toys. Follow these cuddly bears from cover to cover to learn how one good gift leads to another. Pier 1 brown rice gift basket, A Box of Bears book signed by the author and the illustrator, 3 plush 12" Cuddly Cousins bears, 2 plush bear hand puppets, 1 Buddy Bear paint-by-number artist set, 1 7oz. fat free gummi bears, 1 2oz. box of mini Teddy Grahams, and 1 acrylic polar bear dish.
 

Books can be purchased from www.eCygnet.com



a Hat for Hannah


All-School Hat Day is a week away and kids tease Hannah every day, sure she won't find a hat to wear. Determined, Hannah will keep on looking, if it takes all week. Choices. Choices. A jaunty French beret? A fancy red gardening hat? Will Hannah ever find a hat with p i z a z z? Time will tell. A delightful little picture book 4.25 x 5.5-Postcard size-- perfect for your little one's hands.

Copyright 2004 An Early Reader: Pre-School to Grades 2-3
ISBN 0-9721897-2-6
Retail price: $5.00


Hat for Hannah: the Story Behind the Story
Pizzazz? Or pizazz? According to Webster’s D. you can have it either way. But if you were a second grade reader sounding out, wouldn’t your mouth stop and drool at pizza without bothering to finish the word? That’s how I decided which version to use. “Hannah needs a hat. A hat with pizazz. She needs it for next Friday.” So the unique post card size book opens. For a week, Hannah bugs everyone in sight about hats. Perseverance pays. But I’m getting ahead of my story.
I saw the hot pink hat—sunflower-backed—among second grade kids invading my daughter Beth’s music room. Some more outlandish than others from theme-land headgear to authentic sombreros. I happened to be visiting on Hat Day when Emily’s pizazzy hat and lively style caught my eye. In turning my observation into a story, I imagined a variety of hat styles from everyday life and when I found them, I needed models.
My illustrator/daughter Marti wanted visuals so I/we shot five fat rolls of film of everything from porches, screen doors, school entrances, railings, family members, and even me—the grandma watering her flowers. For me, the book’s most poignant page was based on a photo of my dad in his jaunty French beret, sitting at a sidewalk cafĂ© in Paris. Ever the avid reader, wouldn’t he be pleased with his role in illustrating a modern child’s book?
Mentor/editor/friend Joy Cowley had brief input into this book, too, and no surprise, her
contribution again was about choosing from while deleting “darlings.” In my enthusiasm, I had developed more hat scenes than appropriate to include. Not bad ideas—just too many. Another exercise in writer’s choices. I’m still learning.

The Real Grandma
Photo by Kerry Shirk -- THE PICTURE PLACE

Books can be purchased from www.eCygnet.com

Leonardo's Lesson

Readers who followed the Talented Tabby,
Leonardo da Cat, already know him as
Official Greeter and Artist's Model.
From the early morning PLUNK! of a big box,
to the silence in the last class of a long, long, day,
Leo wants to learn.
Now who, on this purr-fect day, will teach him?
Does it really matter?
Perhaps Leo's best lesson is about people.

This is a limited edition book - get your copies while supplies last.
Copyright 2003 An Early Reader: Pre-School to Grades 2-3
ISBN 0-9721897-1-8
Retail price: $12.00


Leonardo’s Lesson: The Story Behind the Story
“Will there be a sequel?” Kind of tongue-in-cheek, Marileta Robinson, a Senior Editor at
Highlights for Children magazine asked after reading her gift copy of Talented Tabby. She had guided my first cat’s tale in early-draft stage during private mentoring sessions at the 1996 Highlights Writers Conference at Chautauqua, NY.
Sequel? A possibility I had considered. But what followed T.T. morphed into an earlier-reader version of Leonardo da Cat’s antics, not a chronological progression. Brighter watercolors, shorter sentences, more white space and action for young read-yourselfers.


“He’s your cat, Marti,” I said. “Give me some ideas to go on.”

Well, never one to run from a challenge, she did. Our second collaboration started with her sticky-note scraps of paper, each briefly stating some real activities in Leo’s Cygnet Studios’ life. And no surprise, my accumulation of scene prompts eventually exceeded the reasonable number for my perceived-reader interest: pre-school through second grade. I’d need to cut. I did.
The story’s subtle ending shows how making friends doesn’t need to be hard. My friend, Joy Cowley (Author of Mrs. Wishy Washy fame), after a week-long Highlights Foundation workshop and the book’s printing, proclaimed, “I love Leonardo! What a cat!” And “Thanks for my copy. I shall treasure it.” High praise from a world renowned writer who met him only through my words and Marti’s art.
Joy, as mentor/editor reinforced the idea-limiting concept. So Leo wasn’t alone in his quest for learning. To be a good writer I had learned: Sometimes we must delete our “darlings,” printing only the best and filing the rest.
Leonardo da Cat keeps tabs (or more accurately, sharp green eyes)
on the illustrator-signing of the first box of books delivered
.


Books can be purchased from www.eCygnet.com

Talented Tabby



Leo, the tabby cat, was far from ordinary.

Leo (short for Leonardo da Cat) had talent. But one day this art studio OFFICIAL GREETER becomes bored. He decides to look for a real job.
As readers follow him about the studio from office to waiting room (and places in between) they may wonder if lovable Leo
will ever find his true talent.
Or could it have been there all along?
This is a limited edition book - get your copies while supplies last.
Copyright 2002 A lyrical Read-to: Pre-School-Grade 1
ISBN 0-9721897-0-X Read-Yourself: Grades 2-4 and up

Talented Tabby: The Story Behind the Story



“Does he always do this?” I ask as Leo makes a beeline for the art studio’s opening door. “Of course,” blocking the tabby cat’s path.“He’s our Official Greeter!”
Aha! A storyline inspiration. Now I’m reminded of my earlier photo-op—Leo’s lazy pose atop artist/daughter Marti’s office desk. That print begged to become a Cygneture portrait titled “Leo as Paperweight”—exactly how he appeared. Look for this painting’s beautiful adaptation as a watercolor illustration. The original oil goes along for Show ‘n’ Tell on school presentations.




I, an occasional studio visitor, admired—studied, actually—Marti’s growing Cygnet Studios Gallery collection of larger-than-life oil paintings featuring Leonardo da Cat. Based on photos, he appeared to be posing in various precarious positions on ladder tops, high railings and such.



I “put myself in the cat’s paws” (a phrase that came to me in a classroom response to “How do you know what the cat thinks?”) to ponder possible purposes in his choices of places to be. Thus, my first fiction writing took flight. My first ever kid’s book was born, its subtle message that being yourself is more than okay.



Talented Tabby, the book, is a Limited Edition, but lovable Leo will forever wrap “warm furry figure eights” around our hearts.
Leonardo da Cat (Leo) keeps tabs (or more accurately, all four paws) on his story from 30 drying watercolor-illustrated pages to delivery and illustrator-signing of the first box of books!

You may purchase the book at: www.eCygnet.com

 

About the Author

About the Author

Mariam Davis Pineno holds Bachelors and Masters degrees in Music Education from Mansfield University and Penn State University and a diploma in Writing for Children and Teenagers from the Institute of Children’s Literature. A member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, her work has appeared in poetry anthologies and national magazines.
In collaboration with daughter/professional artist, Martha Pineno, she has published four full-color young reader picture books: Talented Tabby; Leonardo’s Lesson; A Hat for Hannah; and A BOX of BEARS was released in October, 2009. Her Junior Chapter book, IT DOESN’T GROW on TREES came out March 2009 at Author House Publishers.

 
A retired music educator, Mariam credits Joy Cowley of New Zealand as her most revered mentor/editor.  Friendly-reader e-mail makes her heart sing: Writemuse@webtv.net