Tuesday, May 24, 2011

My thoughts and prayers go out to all of the good people in Missouri. The tornado that hit Joplin on Sunday was absolutely devastating. I was just in southwestern Missouri last week, visiting a school in Branson. The people I met on my trip were warm and wonderful. The land was beautiful. My condolences go out to everyone who lost family, friends, & homes in the disaster.

Thank you to Cynthia Matzat for arranging my Missouri visit and for her brilliant organizational skills & hospitality. Here we are having a chicken & dumplings dinner at Lambert's Cafe - a fun establishment where your dinner rolls are literally thrown at you by the wait staff.

Left to Right: Stefanie McKoy (3rd Grade teacher), Kolby (Buzz Lightyear Fan), Salley Doherty (Music teacher), Cindy Matzak (Media Center teacher), and myself (eating fried okra for the first time).









GRACE FOR PRESIDENT is proud to be a 2010-2011 Missouri Show Me Reader Award Nominee!

Monday, May 16, 2011

From the (E)Mail Bag

Dear Ms. DiPucchio:
My two-year-old daughter and I have read Clink about a thousand times. Thank you (and Mr. Myers) for creating such a delightful book.

We have a question about one of the robots that appears in some of the pictures. Actually, they seem to be a series of robots: the little blue and white spheres with numbers on them. They sort of look like floats for a fishing line. On the first page of the story, one appears just under the "SPECIAL" sign, and another appears at the bottom of the page in the hands of a blonde-headed boy. On the spread where Clink's dancing is wreaking havoc, they appear all over.

We have figured out the purpose of most of the other robots in the book, but we cannot figure out these little guys. Can you tell us what they do? If not, would Mr. Myers be able to help?

Thank you again for Clink, and thank you for whatever help you might provide. We look forward to exploring your other books.
Jay
Morton Grove, IL





Hello Jay,
How nice to hear from a CLINK fan! I'm thrilled to hear you and your daughter are enjoying the book together.
That is so awesome. As for your question....I looked up those little blue & white guys in the book and I don't know
what they are either! I have c.c.'d the illustrator, Matt Myers, on this email.

Matt, can you solve this mystery for us?? I'm curious too!

...k e l l y d i p u c c h i o...


Jay,

Matt here. Thanks for the fantastic note! You're right, the little fishing float-sized bots are in a series, which I imagined goes to 500. I think the highest number visible is 211? A good robot store should have an inexpensive model that everyone can afford, right? Sort of an impulse buy, sold next to the counter. They would be sold in a package that would hide the number, so that the customer wouldn't know which number they got until they bought it. Collect 'em all!, would be on the package. But that all got too complicated, so I just showed a bunch of them already out of their packages.

There were a lot of robot designs that never made it into the book, just because there are only 32 pages. As you can imagine, inventing robots is pretty fun.

On your 1001th read of the book, see if you can find:

1) The Pie Flattener 2000
2) The only robot that exists in the real world
3) A reference to a movie robot
4) The world's smallest violin robot playing a sad song for Clink

As for our hero, before I started drawing anything, Kelly had told our editor that she had an idea for how Clink should look — toaster head and accordion body. Perfect! I said, happy that Kelly has good ideas. The accordion became a radio later on, mainly because I can't draw accordions. Some artist's can't draw hands, but with me it's accordions :)

Matt

P.S. Don't tell your daughter there's a robot out there that will eat her asparagus for her. She'll want it.
*********************************

In other robot-y news: Check out these super cool pictures created by the young robo-artists in Marquette, Michigan. Who wouldn't want their very own Party Pickle Robot?!






Monday, April 25, 2011

Cool School

I'm waving to all of my new friends at Hodgkins School in Hodgkins, Illinois! Check out these awesome hall displays of scenes from ALFRED ZECTOR, BOOK COLLECTOR, illustrated by Macky Pamintuan. Thanks to all of the terrific students & staff who made my trip to the Chicago area fantastic!





Tuesday, April 5, 2011

ADOPT-A-ROBOT DAY!



Please join me in welcoming CLINK to the world! To read an interview about how this book was born, go here (Bookin' With Bingo), and check out the April 5th entry.

Be sure to visit illustrator Matthew Myers's awesome website. (Paintings So Good You'd Swear He's Dead).

To watch the Clink book trailer, go here.




Starred Review in Publisher's Weekly!

Description: Description: Description: http://www.publishersweekly.com/images/star.gifClink
Kelly DiPucchio, illus. by Matthew Myers, HarperCollins/Balzer + Bray, $16.99 (32p) ISBN 978-0-06-192928-1

Though this is his picture book debut, illustrator Myers's vision of the robot Clink's world is fully developed. It's a place where toy stores sell shiny, talented robots who do homework and make chocolate chip cookies, while the chunky outdated robot Clink--much cuter than the others, of course, with a toaster head and blocky red feet--only plays music and makes toast. Kids line up for the cookie-making robots and wave lonely Clink's burnt toast away: "He hadn't been programmed to cry, but somehow he leaked rusty tears every time." Finally, a boy named Milton appears, who "likes burned toast, is great at fixing things, and... loves to dance." DiPucchio's (Grace for President) text percolates with plenty of humor, and the inevitability of the plot provides security for smaller readers. Myers has a wonderful time drawing gems like the victim of Clink's disastrous haircuts (the unfortunate girl looks like a trimmed hedge) and the polka-dot underpants a fellow robot offers to Clink as consolation. Extra marks for the distinctive combination of geek elements with a dash of sentimentality. Ages 4–7. (Apr.)



On Sale Now!


Sunday, February 20, 2011

Zombie Party!

Last weekend I was in New York City for a freakishly fabulous zombie party at Simon & Schuster. The party was a scream. Heartfelt thanks to Namrata Tripathi and Sonia Chaghatzbanian. I had a bloody good time!



Super talented & super nice ZOMBIE IN LOVE illustrator, Scott Campbell (pictured with severed foot)

Available wherever books are sold AUGUST 2011!



The first signed copy!


Zombie valentines!



The chocolate eye balls were to die for!



Mmm...finger food!


The Medulla Oblongata red wine was divine!


Zombie team: (left to right) Sonia Chaghatzbanian, me, Scott Campbell, and Nami Tripathi.



The NYC trip doubled as a Ghouls' Weekend! My booootiful traveling companions - my daughter, Hannah & my mother, Lorraine.








Saturday, January 1, 2011

Happy New Year!

2011 is the year of the Robot, the Goldfish, and The Zombie!

Wishing everyone a very Happy New Year...and remember, "don't go with your song still inside you."




Ethan Lipton & His Orchestra, from the movie THE SHIFT.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Thankful

On this Thanksgiving Eve, I'd like to give a shout out to my new friends in Rochester, New York. Northwood, Village, and Quest Elementary Schools hosted my visit earlier this month and I had a terrific time!



BIG thanks to Julie Rapp who organized my visit from start to finish.

Assistant Principal Karen Bolinger read THE SANDWICH SWAP to every single class at Northwood Elementary while dressed as a peanut butter & jelly sandwich! I want to bring her on the road with me as my mascot!


These two lovely young ladies wrote their own lyrics to a beautiful song about friendship and they sang it to me! Thank you, girls! You are so talented.



An amazing gallery of "Sandwich Friends".


Me and more Sandwich Friends.


These little helpers did a fantastic job sharing what they remembered about the beginning, middle, & end of the story in my HUNGRY FOR BOOKS program.



And a great, BIG, GIANT thank you goes out to Brooke who made this enormous, custom sandwich for me for my school visit programs. Check out Brooke's Etsy store, Royal Rugrats, to see all of her adorable felt play food sets.

Happy Thanksgiving to all of my readers!