Showing posts with label flogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flogging. Show all posts

Brooklyn Nine makes the Maud Hart Lovelace Book Award Master List

>> Thursday, June 2, 2011

More good news for The Brooklyn Nine: it's been selected for the 2011-2012 Maud Hart Lovelace Book Award Master List, sponsored by the Minnesota Youth Reading Awards! Minnesota students in grades 6-8 who read and/or listen to at least three titles from the list get to vote. Thanks, Minnesota readers--I hope I can count on your vote!

I'm Alan Gratz, and I approve this message. :-)

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Brooklyn Nine makes Garden State Teen Book Award list

>> Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Some good news to share: The Brooklyn Nine has been nominated for the 2012 Garden State Teen Book Award for Grades 6-8. All right! Thanks, New Jersey. Once again, I'm in great company--and once again, students will read B9 along with a lot of other books and vote on their favorite.

The Brooklyn Nine has now been nominated for eight state lists. Thanks everyone, and don't forget to keep reading over the summer!

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I'm interviewed at From the Mixed-Up Files...of Middle Grade Authors

>> Friday, April 15, 2011

Head over to the "From the Mixed-Up Files..." blog to read an interview with me about Fantasy Baseball, writing middle-grade fiction, and my former life as a play-by-play basketball announcer...

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Something Rotten in German!

>> Monday, April 11, 2011

How cool is this!? My first novel in translation--Something Rotten in German. Eine Lüge ist nicht genug, which Wendi says can either mean "A Lie Is Not Enough" or "One Lie Is Not Enough." (Wendi has a Masters degree in German.)

I'm so excited about this! I hope it becomes a bestseller in Germany so I can go there and do a tour and see some German soccer games. I actually follow the Bundesliga and know something about German soccer, believe it or not...

For you German-speakers out there, here's the summary:

Das Leben endet tödlich, auch für reiche Industrielle.
Das Leben geht weiter, auch für die Witwe des Firmenchefs der Papierfabrik.
Das Leben ist ein abgekartetes Spiel, findet Hamilton, den die Hochzeit seiner Mutter mit dem Bruder seines Vaters anwidert.
Das Leben auf dem Planeten ist in Gefahr, findet die Umweltaktivistin Olivia, wenn niemand etwas dagegen unternimmt, dass die Abwässer der Papierfabrik weiterhin den Copenhagen River verseuchen.
Das Leben will gelebt werden, rät Horatio seinem Freund Hamilton.

Es ist was faul in dieser US-amerikanischen Kleinstadt, deren Einwohner von der Papierfabrik Elsinore Papers abhängig sind. Die vermeintliche Alternative »Arbeitsplatzabbau oder Ökologie« stimmt nicht mehr. Auf Dauer wird das Unternehmen nur überleben können, wenn es umweltverträglich produziert. Und auf Dauer wird das Leben nur dann wieder lebenswert, wenn sich eine böse große Frage beantworten lässt: Ist der alte Firmenchef Rex Prince ermordet worden, und wenn ja, wer steckt dahinter?


I'd love to know what changes, if any, they had to make to the story to make it work for a German audience!

You can see the book page for Eine Lüge ist nicht genug at the German publisher's website here. Thanks, Boje, and thanks to my translators, Gerold Anrich and Martina Instinsky-Anrich!

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Google Alerts Round-up

>> Thursday, March 24, 2011


Time for some last-gasp winter Google Alerts from the interweb!

Southwest Middle School won the Gaston County, NC Battle of the Books competition. They had to answer questions about 27 different books--including The Brooklyn Nine! Congrats, guys!

And The Brooklyn Nine has made another state list! B9 was selected for the 2012 Oklahoma Sequoyah Master List! Thanks, Oklahoma. You're OK with me! (Yes, that's a postal abbreviation joke.)

I recently did a Skype visit with students at Upper Dauphin Area High School in Elizabethville, PA, and the local paper wrote up a great article about it. You can read it here.

And I'm starting to get alerts on Fantasy Baseball!

Mr. H at the SMS Guys Read blog loves the Fantasy Baseball poster I sent him...

Zoe posted a great summary/review of Fantasy Baseball at NextHub.com...

...and Ms. Certo at Hope Middle School recommends Fantasy Baseball as an independent reading selection for classrooms.

Thanks, everyone!

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Google Alerts Round-up

>> Friday, January 21, 2011


News flash! Just a couple of quick round-up alerts to share:

Edi at Crazy Quilts includes Samurai Shortstop on her list of Essential Asian American books...

Miss Attitude at Reading in Color read Samurai Shortstop as one of her 2010 Historical Challenge books, and posted a really in-depth and thoughtful review of it on her blog...

And Samurai Shortstop gets a namecheck in a great Mother Jones article about a high school teacher who really knows how to reach even the most difficult kids.

Thanks, everybody!

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Early Fantasy Baseball reviews

>> Wednesday, January 19, 2011


Tis the season for me to start biting my fingernails: the first reviews for Fantasy Baseball are appearing!

First, Dave at the Just One More Page blog (and bookseller at The Blue Marble Bookstore in Ft. Thomas, Kentucky) reviewed an advance reader copy, and says Fantasy Baseball is "one not to miss."

Then I found out that Publishers Weekly reviewed Fantasy Baseball! Here's their review:

Continuing to use baseball as backdrop, Gratz (The Brooklyn Nine) moves from historical fiction to fantasy with a story that playfully mixes storybook characters with stadium action. When Alex finds himself in Ever After he's sure he's dreaming--case in point, he's recruited to play in a high-stakes tournament for a team captained by Dorothy Gale, she of the ruby red cleats. Dorothy's teammates include lesser-known Oz characters like Tik-Tok, Scraps, and Button Bright, who's in danger of fading away because nobody reads the sequel he appears in. They insist Alex is a "Lark," somebody's daydream, and not a book character at all, but they keep him because the kid can flat-out play. Eventually, Alex figures out whose daydream he is in a thread that adds poignancy and tension to a slightly unwieldy narrative, as the Oz team encounters Mother Goose, the critters from Redwall, L'Engle's Charles Wallace and Mrs. Which and Whatsit, among numerous literary cameos. The predictable ending is the only one possible, but Gratz frames it with an interesting question about what effect dreams can hope to have on the dreamer. Ages 8–12. (Mar.)

Thanks Dave, and thanks PW!

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The Brooklyn Nine in Horn Book

>> Thursday, January 13, 2011

My friend Clay Carmichael reports that The Brooklyn Nine is featured in a Good Sports Books guide supplement in the January issue of Horn Book. Thanks, Clay, and thanks Horn Book!

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B9 earns a 2011-2012 Young Hoosier Book Award nomination!

>> Monday, December 27, 2010


I got great news right before the holidays (and all the snow!) hit: The Brooklyn Nine has been nominated for the 2011-2012 Indiana Young Hoosier Book Award! The Brooklyn Nine is one of twenty books nominated in the Middle Grade category.

Thanks, Indiana Library Federation--and happy reading, Young Hoosiers!

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Fantasy Baseball Poster Giveaway

>> Thursday, December 23, 2010


This past summer I took a two-week letterpress class at Penland School of Crafts, and what did I create and print? Fantasy Baseball posters, of course! A set of four, in fact, and I'll be giving copies of each away in the months leading up to Fantasy Baseball's release in March 2011.
 
First up is the game day poster for the big finale: the championship game between Dorothy's Oz Cyclones and the Big Bad Wolf's Grimm Reapers, done in the style of classic sports adverts. The date of the game is the book's on sale date. The poster is 9"x19", type-set in wood and lead, hand-printed by me, and, as they say, suitable for framing.
 
Readers of my eNewsletter already have a leg up on this, but even if you don't subscribe* there's still a chance for you to get in on the action. Just click on this link to enter. The drawing is free, the postage is free, and all street addresses will be pitched once I've mailed out the prizes. But hurry--I'm going to pick the winners tomorrow, on Christmas Eve.
 


*And seriously, why aren't you signed up for my newsletter already? The sign up is just an easy scroll to the bottom of the page...

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Join me for A Book and a Chat tonight at 6:30 p.m. EST!

>> Tuesday, November 30, 2010



Just a quick post to let you know I'll be appearing on A Book and a Chat tonight at 6:30 p.m. with Barry Eva as a part of his "Male YA Author Month." I think you can even dial in to ask questions! If you miss the chat and want to give a listen, the interview will also be available to listen to afterward online and as an MP3 download at Blog Talk Radio.

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Mahar Drygoods Is Closing!

>> Monday, November 29, 2010

Sad news folks. Mahar Drygoods - THE coolest place to buy kid stuff online - is closing. They carry the work of some of my favorite artists, and the day Robert Mahar emailed me to inquire about carrying my dolls was one of my best business days ever. Ever! When I "rebranded" my Shiny Happy World last year and narrowed the focus of what I do, one of the ways I articulated that focus was to ask myself about every potential product, "Is this the kind of thing Mahar Drygoods might carry?" Seriously. And now they're closing.

The good news is that they're not closed yet, and they'll still be selling some amazingly awesome stuff through the holiday season. So head over, take a look, and buy something fabulous. They have a small handful of my dolls too, so if you think Lucy Grace. . .

Lucy Hannah. . .

Lucy Ida. . .

Abigail Fannie. . . (sorry - she's sold now)

or Abigail Georgia. . .

. . . would be a perfect friend for your little one, now's your chance to buy them from an amazing shop.

Also - Robert Mahar will still be running The Junior Society. If you like what you see at Mahar Drygoods and want to see more awesomeness curated with the same sense of style, check it out. You won't be sorry.

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The Face Front Club

>> Thursday, November 4, 2010


Dad sends along this camera phone shot of Something Rotten, still stocked and sold at Books-a-Million! He kept his card-carrying-member status in the Face Front Club by turning it face out on the shelf, too...

Have you faced out a book by an author friend today? :-)

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Google Alerts Round-up

>> Thursday, October 28, 2010


Gather around for a Google Alerts Round-up, troops!

Team Banzai member Janet send in this link to the Learning Through History newsletter, which recommends The Brooklyn Nine as a resource for historical studies centered around baseball, which is kind of a big deal this time of year. Thanks, Janet, and thanks Learning Through History!

Challenging the Bookworm likes The Brooklyn Nine because you don't have to be a sports fan to enjoy it...

Tyler B. at Otto-Eldred Junior-Senior High School writes on BookHooks that he "didn't dislike anything" about The Brooklyn Nine, and is sure "history nerds will like this book." :-)

Donna Woody at Print Matters picked up The Brooklyn Nine expecting a sports story, but feels like she got so much more...

"Like one of those cereals advertised as too tasty to be nutritious," says Doug Smith of the Lockport, New York Union-Sun & Journal, "'Brooklyn Nine' informs in an entertaining style."

And I'm a little late with the news (I was in Japan!), but Something Rotten got a great mention by Regina Brooks at the Huffington Post in an article about adapting classics for modern generations.

 Thanks, everyone!

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Giveaway winners!

>> Thursday, October 14, 2010


Congratulations to Cindy Rittenhouse of Atlanta, GA and Sherri Ashburner of Westbrook, CT--they're the winners of my first round of Very Fancy eNewsletter giveaways! Cindy wins an advance reader copy of Fantasy Baseball, and Sherri wins an advance reader copy of Sapphique, the sequel to the New York Times Bestselling fantasy novel Incarceron by Catherine Fisher.

More giveaways to come! If you haven't already, follow the link at the bottom of this blog to sign up for my e-newsletter. And if you submitted your name before, you're automatically entered to win the next time I have a contest!

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Last day to enter to win a Fantasy Baseball galley

>> Thursday, October 7, 2010


A week or so ago I announced my first Fantasy Baseball Advance Reader Copy giveaway, but I neglected to, um, pick a cut off date. (I don't do this often! Cut me some slack!)

So today is the last day to get signed up! (Like how I just made that executive decision?) Click here to register if you haven't already. Tomorrow--Friday, October 8th--I'll randomly select a winner from all the people who've entered and announce the winner here on the blog. Oh, and getting signed up now will automatically include you in all the other giveaways I've got lined up between now and pub day!

(Tomorrow I'll also be choosing the winner of the Sapphique galley, a contest available only to folks who subscribe to my Very Fancy eNewsletter...)

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Fantasy Baseball Advance Reader Copy Giveaway!

>> Thursday, September 30, 2010


The word is out: I'm giving away a free Advance Reader Copy of Fantasy Baseball, my new middle grade novel due out next March! 

You've never played fantasy baseball like this before. A flying monkey in the outfield. A toad at short. Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz on the mound. Alex Metcalf thinks he’s dreaming, but the Oz Cyclones exist here in Ever After, where storybook characters live on as long as kids in the real world believe in them.

But Alex isn't a storybook. To get home, he and the Cyclones will have to win the Ever After Baseball Tournament and earn wishes from the Wizard of Oz. Trouble is, the Big Bad Wolf wants a wish too.

To win the tournament, Alex and the Cyclones will have to defeat the wolf, play the best baseball of their lives, and find the courage to believe in themselves. But what good is believing in yourself if the real world stops believing in you?

To win an Advance Reader Copy of Fantasy Baseball, click here! The winner will be announced soon, and I'll be doing more great giveaways in the months leading up to Fantasy Baseball's Spring 2011 release! 

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New e-newsletter on the way!

>> Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Hey gang -

I'm putting the final touches on a new (and long overdue!) e-newsletter. This one has great giveaways in it, and an announcement about my new Big Deal for school visits.

Not signed up for my newsletter? Scroll down to the bottom of this blog and get registered. It's quick, it's easy, and I won't share your e-mail with anyone else. (I also won't spam you with e-newsletters. Hey, the last one I sent out was almost a year ago!)

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Awesome Something Rotten Book Trailer

>> Friday, July 2, 2010


Check out this terrific book trailer for my young adult murder mystery Something Rotten, created by Suzanne Severns, the librarian at Bowie High School in Arlington, Texas! How great is that!? It even makes ME want to go back and read the book. :-)

Suzanne has lots more trailers for lots more great books, all of which can be found here. Thanks again, Suzanne!

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alangratz.com Redesigned

>> Friday, June 18, 2010


I've redesigned my author web site, www.alangratz.com, once again. This time it was for practical reasons more than aesthetic reasons, but I did take the opportunity to create a site that's a lot cleaner looking, and definitely more in character for me. (I liked the graffiti look of my most recent site, but it never really felt like it was an accurate reflection of me or my books.)

After the death of the last of our Windows XP machines and the failure of Vista and Windows 7 to run most of our older software--in particular, the old version of Dreamweaver I'd been using to build and maintain my web site--something had to give. I couldn't update my web site unless I fired up a buggy, unstable version of Windows XP that was achingly slow and randomly crashed every few minutes!

Not only was I not excited about purchasing the newest version of Dreamweaver for $399.00 (!), I also wasn't quite sure it would actually work on my new Windows operating systems. (Thanks, Microsoft!) Besides, we'd had such an unpleasant time with Vista we were ready to swear off Windows operating systems for good.

So part of our change included switching to a Linux operating system--specifically, Ubuntu. The first thing I tried to find then was a good open-source html editor so I could rebuild my web site, but there wasn't one standout among the programs. I dual booted Linux with Windows so we could use either one, which meant we could still use a Windows-based html editor if we had to, but Wendi and I have both enjoyed Ubuntu quite a lot and we're really trying to eliminate any rebooting into Windows just to use one particular program. (We still have to do so to use our scanner. We were still Windows users when we bought it, and had no idea Canon refuses to support Linux when we made the switch.)

Enter "cloud computing." For the uninitiated, cloud computing is the term used to describe working with programs and services that are entirely online, not a program you've loaded onto your own computer. Blogging services like the one we use here, Blogger, are good examples of cloud computing. The only thing we need is a computer with internet access. The rest Blogger (and its parent company Google) takes care of. Google Docs, Google Calendar, GMail--Google is staking a claim to indespensible cloud computing programs, and we're following right along.

As a matter of fact, the Blogger interface we use for our blog has been so easy to use, modify, and update, we thought, "Hey, why not just build the new web site out of Blogger?" So that's exactly what I did. When you click through, the web site will hopefully look more like a web site than a blog--which is all trickeration done with lots of template hacks. The new web site is, essentially, a blog in which only one blog post is shown at a time, thus making it look like individual static pages. I took out the timestamp, the comments, and the forward and backward buttons, and there you have it--a web site built in the cloud.

Not only does the decision save me money, it actually makes it easier to update my web site. Now, instead of downloading a page from my remote server, editing it in Dreamweaver, then uploading it back onto the server, I merely call up my web site, click the edit button on whichever page I want to modify, make the changes, save, and I'm done! I'm also not tethered to one particular computer with my html editor loaded on it. Now I can access the inner workings of my web site anytime anywhere I have a computer with internet access. And it'll be easy to add new pages when Fantasy Baseball comes out next year--essentially all I have to do is add new blog posts.

There are drawbacks to cloud computing, to be sure. You're essentially saving your original on someone else's server, which could go down or out of business at any time. (Google is a pretty safe bet not to do either, but it could still happen.) There are privacy and security concerns as well when your material is hosted elsewhere, but those aren't a big deal to me. I'm not dealing in state secrets or financial matters. For my purposes as a lowly author who wants to spend more time writing novels than web pages, cloud computing seems like a perfect fit.

So there you have it. The changeover is complete, and hopefully I won't have to be doing a major site redesign any time soon. Give the new site a look and kick the tires for me. If you find any problems, do let me know!

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