The Prince Who Was a Piccolo – Book Review

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Written by Barbara Roman

Illustrated by Vladimir Cebu

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0BJYD1KYF
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently published (Oct. 24 2022)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 32 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8359896238

About the Book:

When his father, the King, demands that the Prince be a “Royal Trumpet”, the unhappy boy brings doom and gloom to the kingdom until a mystical maiden guides him to finding his own unique music.

Barbara Roman’s ‘The Prince Who Was A Piccolo’ teaches children about self-esteem, asserting independence, attitudes, and being comfortable with their own identity. They will also learn about different musical instruments and the influence of music on our lives and emotions. There are mystical qualities in the story as it metaphorically touches on meditation, intuition, and spiritual guidance.

Beautifully illustrated by Vladimir Cebu, this book is a rich learning experience for children, as they learn about music instruments, and ways to express their emotions.

What I Thought: 

The Prince Who Was a Piccolo is a wonderful story with the subtle underlying moral value for children to believe in themself and strive for their own talents in life, whatever those talents may be.  I fell in love with the prince and his brave attitude to not give up searching for his own musical talent, even though his musical talent may not please his father the king. The story is so well written that I believe this book will become a classic in children’s literature. The artwork is fantastic. This story is one of the most creative stories I’ve read in children’s literature in several years. Kudos to the author!

About the Author:

As Barbara Roman, I am the author of the children’s books, “Alicia and the Light Bulb People in Star Factory 13” and “Hubert in Heaven – a hi-tech angel gets his wings.”

Find Barbara Roman’s children’s books here. 

The Dragon Grammar Book Wins 2018 Book Excellence Awards

July, 2018

St. Paul, Alberta author, Diane Mae Robinson, wins 2018 Book Excellence Awards in Education & Academics Category for The Dragon Grammar Book – Grammar for Kids, Dragons, and the Whole Kingdom as the book rides the # 1 Amazon Bestselling status for several weeks.

Multi-award38

2018 Book Excellence Awards press release here: https://www.pressrelease.com/news/announcing-the-2018-book-excellence-award-winners-127514
Visit Book Excellence Awards 2018 Winner Pages: https://www.bookexcellenceawards.com/2018-Winners-c29486334?offset=30

The Dragon Grammar Book has been a # 1 Amazon Bestseller in Teen & Young Adult Language Arts eBooks for several weeks.

AmazoncomScreenshot_2018-07-13 The Dragon Grammar Book Grammar for Kids, Dragons, and the Whole Kingdom - Kindle edition by Diane Ma[...]

Diane Mae Robinson has also won 10 international book awards and the prestigious Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Emerging Artist Award (literary arts) for her children’s fantasy/adventure series The Pen Pieyu Adventures.

bookcover-group-series

Visit the author’s Amazon page to read reviews about all her award-winning books: https://www.amazon.com/default/e/B007DKO8SK/

Visit the author’s website for information about reviews, awards, and fun kid stuff: https://www.dragonsbook.com

 

Book Review – Kitty Claus by T. L. Needham

Kitty Clause coverKitty Claus

by T.L. NeedhamLizzy Dodig (Illustrator)
Kindle Edition, 28 pages
Published November 10th 2013 by Outskirts Press Inc. (first published November 16th 2012)

About the Book: Can Kitty Claus, the meanest cat around, learn what Christmas is all about? On a snowy Christmas Eve a fierce cat named Kitty Claus rules over a family of starving mice. Until a frightful crisis for the ferocious Kitty Claus is resolved when the father mouse rescues him from danger and transforms their adversity into a new bond of mutual friendship. This is a little story-poem of transformation, courage, and righteous behavior that generates the most positive outcome. Originally published in the award-winning book -PESKY POEMS- a collection by T. L. Needham.

What I Thought: Kitty Claus is a wonderful poetic story. I love books that give me warm heart tingles, books that are written in a whimsical way where magic flows from page to page. I especially enjoyed the heartwarming theme of helping those in need, no matter what color their fur is. The illustrations are exceptionally well done and fit the text of the book perfectly. Kitty Claus and his mice friends are charming and their tale is one everyone will love.

About the Author: T. L. Needham, is an award winning author and a native of Kansas City. He grew up with tales of survival of his mother’s family, who endured life during the 1920s and 1930s in western Kansas. This inspired him to write the historic memoir–When I Was A Child, which was honored with an HONORABLE MENTION in WRITER’S DIGEST INDIE BOOK AWARDS, plus a FINALISTS by USA BOOK NEWS–BEST BOOKS AWARD in the category of History-USA. In addition, this book has been awarded the BRONZE MEDAL by READERS FAVORITE, a national book review/literary critic/author services firm. Recently this book was awarded a GOLD MEDAL by Global Ebook Awards, and the cover was awarded an HONORABLE MENTION MEDAL.
Read More: http://www.amazon.com/T.-L.-Needham/e/B004U1PXVQ/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0

Other Books by the Author:

When I Was a Child   https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11009712-when-i-was-a-child
The She Wolf http://www.amazon.com/She-Wolf-T-L-Needham-ebook/dp/B00KQ3UCRW/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8
Pesky Poems http://www.amazon.com/PESKY-POEMS-T-L-Needham-ebook/dp/B00BPEBNQ0/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8

My Writing Process

As a children’s chapter book author, the first and most important aspect of my writing process involves finding my “child voice”.  “Child Voice” is a term in children’s literature that interprets into the author being able to get inside the heads of their children characters; think and act as those children characters would think and act and, thus, be able to write about them with ease.

Through all my years of studying children’s literature and children’s behavior, a major lesson I have learned is that to write for children the writer must have a certain level of immaturity along with the ability to remember the art of play.  In my case, this is very doable, and when my friends call me immature, I take that as a compliment that I am on the right creative track.

When I am in the first stages of planning a new children’s book, I do a lot of note keeping, character building, and mapping out the fantasy world that the characters will be having their adventures in. Once I know my character’s world and know each character as much as I would know a good friend, then the plot creating process begins.

The creating of their story starts out as a movie playing in my head. This movie plays a scene, re-winds, re-plays the scene somewhat differently, builds the next scene only to re-wind, re-build, and re-plays that scene. As day and months go by, the movie keeps building, re-playing, strengthening the plot; it’s just about like the characters take over the making of the movie to get their story told.

Then one day, the movie in my head is complete and that’s when I get down to the business of writing. When I’m in the writing phase, I write with a frenzied passion for days, weeks on end, often writing non-stop for 12 hours at a time until the book is written.

Once the story is written in the first draft, I leave it alone for a few weeks to give the characters some time to settle into the story.

Then it’s on to editing. Editing phase will last another several weeks where I edit in two or three hour intervals every few days.

When I feel the book is at least 90% well written and well edited, the manuscript is submitted to my publisher. I am published with a traditional publisher, so the book will be scrutinized by their editor and the editor and I will work through several more stages of editing before the book goes on to production.

To read reviews about my multi-award winning dragon books for children: http://www.dragonsbook.com/ReviewIndex.html

 

What does it take to get a traditional book contract?

First and foremost, the story has to be in a near-perfect state. This means the plot is tightly woven, the characters are real, and the punctuation and grammar are correct.

These are absolute prerequisites before submitting a story to a publisher.

Secondly, the writer must have a strong belief in self to persevere the long and bumpy road to getting published.

My first book, Sir Princess Petra – The Pen Pieyu Adventures, (a fantasy/adventure kids book),  took  9 years of perseverance to find a home with a publisher. Below are my suggestions and insights on how I got there..

If you are just beginning the process, or if you are years into the process, remember to do your research.

As a children’s book writer, one of the most invaluable tools that I resort to is the book “Children’s Writers Book Markets”, which is produced every years. The updates in this book, as to which publishers are accepting, what they are accepting, send query or send the pdf for review, simultaneous submissions or exclusive submission, the list goes on, will become your best buddy in getting to know and understand the publishing industry.

But one thing that stays the same, the publisher guidelines must be followed.

The nature of the publishing game is that publishers have all the rules. And if you want your story to get out of the publisher’s slush pile, you must follow their rules.

To just read the “Children’s Writers Book Market” is still not enough. You must visit the publishers web-site, see what kind of books that have been published and decide if yours would fit in. If it does, write them a query letter with a synopsis of you book. Send a SASE (self address stamped envelope) for their reply. And, if they ask to see the book and want an exclusive submission, don’t sent the book elsewhere. Then wait 6 – 8 months for a reply.

In the meantime, don’t sit idle. More research, more queries. Query letters to other publishers can still be sent, even if a different publisher is reviewing your book on a exclusive submission.

Make a list of possible publisher to send our queries to. Make a list of publishers that accept manuscripts without a query and what kind of submission that publisher wants.

But make the list and keep track of where your manuscript is. This all becomes very confusing in no time. You need to keep a log of what was sent, where, and to whom.

I know. It’s a lot of rules.

For all of the 9 years that I was trying to find a publisher, my manuscript was constantly somewhere. I received 30 rejections for this book. Talk about perseverance.

A writer trying to get published has to have thick skin. Rejections are not necessarily about you as a writer, sometimes, rejections are about the immense choice a publisher has in manuscripts sent in that year. Some publishers receive upward of 10,000 manuscripts for review in a single year.

So, back to the research. Did I want to send my manuscript to a publisher that receives that many submissions? I usually tried to stay away from these large publishing houses. Being a first time author, I knew my chances would be less with these large publishing houses. I submitted to publishers that had a record for publishing the majority of their books with new authors. These facts are all in “Children’s Writers Book Market”.

So, just when I thought I knew what I was doing.

My first contract was with a traditional small press that did 70% of their yearly books by new authors. The contract was signed by both parties involved; the publisher held my book for one year, which was their time period to produce the book; the publisher never came through. Things happen in this industry. After the one year time line the publisher had to produce the book, the publisher informed me they were having financial difficulties and would not be producing the book after all.  Twenty-six writers contracted with them received the same news.

Devastating.

Back to the drawing board.

After more market research, I submitted to three other publishers on my list that all accepted simultaneous submissions. Several months later, I was contacted by one of these publishers–they wanted to give me a contract.

.Ode To Joy!

The home my first book finally found was not where I expected it to be. This second contract was with a much larger publisher that publishes less than 10% of the 10,000 plus submissions it receives yearly.

So after all of the years of my submissions to small publishers, thinking that is where my best chances were, I finally got accepted by a large publisher.

My advice–send your queries and/or manuscript to every publisher, big or small, as long as your book meets with their guidelines.

An interesting fact: Dr. Seuss received 27 rejections for his book entitled “Mulberry Street:” before it got accepted for publication.

This fact is a reality for many authors. Patients, perseverance, and shaking off the dust of another rejection is the road the writer must take on the journey to finding home.

Sir Princess Petra – The Pen Pieyu Adventures, 2012, Available here:

http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/sir-princess-petra-diane-mae-robinson/1107150083?ean=9781613462645

http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B007DKO8SK

http://www.tatepublishing.com/bookstore/book.php?w=978-1-61346-264-5

Sir Princess Petra’s Talent – The Pen Pieyu Adventures, forthcoming, 2013

 

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 20

IN THE NEWS

NEWS AND INFORMATION FROM THOSE WHO MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN OUR WORLD AND IN OUR LIVES http://bit.ly/SurHxz

Award Winning Author Diane Mae Robinson Releases New Children’s Book, ‘Sir Princess Petra’

Written in the tradition of C. S. Lewis and reminiscent of ‘Shrek’, reviewers have labeled the award winning book a ‘fantasy adventure that is sure to become a timeless classic.’

Canadian author Diane Mae Robinson has released her latest children’s book, ‘Sir Princess Petra’. ‘Sir Princess Petra’, the first book in the Pen Pieyu adventures, features surprising plot twists and turns, brilliant flashes of humor, zany characters and is rooted in timeless values that shine through the charismatic main character.

The book has received a number of high-level book awards including second place in Purple Dragonfly Book Awards for Children’s Chapter Book, and was awarded 5 stars by Readers Favorite. Robinson was awarded the Lieutenant Governor Of Alberta Arts Emerging Artists Awards for Children’s Book Author and was recently chosen as a finalist for ’50 Great Writers You Should Be Reading’.

Robinson believes that “by instilling kindness, understanding, and respect in our children, they will be able to make their difficult situations easier and accomplish what they set out to do in a better way.”

“Dragon books,” stated Ms. Robinson, “have always been a passion of mine. Including a dragon as a secondary character in my fantasy/adventure series just seemed natural.”

Dragon books are one of the most popular segments of fantasy fiction and children’s books in today’s marketplace. Here, in this fantasy fiction work, Robinson uses the dragon books concept as the background to teaching young people traditional values. In the story line, Princess Petra’s unusual birthday request to become a royal knight sends the royal court into a frenzy. But when she agrees to undertake a knight’s quest, not even the royal rulebook, with its list of outrageous knight deeds, can dissuade her. Armed with a cake knife and a suit of the best royal pots and pans, Petra chooses to hush the howling dragon, Snarls, in the Forest of Doom and win her real armour. Ms. Robinson’s highly praised work demonstrates that dragon books can be something much more than dragon books.

“Snarls is a dragon,” continued Robinson, “that every reader will love: he is witty, comical, and endearing.  He may even set a new standard for dragons in dragon books.”

Ms Robinson is available for media interviews and can be reached using the information below or by email at robinsond@mscnet.ca. More information, including reviews, information for teachers and librarians and a special children’s section is available at her website. ‘Sir Princess Petra’ is available from Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Tate Publishing.

About Diane Mae Robinson:

Diane Mae Robinson has a journalism diploma from the Schools of Montreal, and an advanced diploma from the Institute of Children’s Literature in Connecticut.  She is also an artist, and teaches acrylic and watercolor art to children. She lives with her husband, Allen, in a small hilltop castle near St. Paul, Alberta.  They have four dogs and three horses, along with a forest inhabited by gnomes, fairies, a princess, and a dragon. This magical forest is where Diane creates her characters and gets the inspiration for her stories.

Contact:

Diane Mae Robinson
http://www.dragonsbook.com
robinsond@mcsnet.ca POSTED BY DON MCCAULEY AT 7:55 AM