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072 - Read-Aloudability: The Measure of a Great Picture Book Part 2

Picture Book Summit Podcast

Release Date: 01/07/2025

077 - How to Analyze a Picture Book: Part 2 show art 077 - How to Analyze a Picture Book: Part 2

Picture Book Summit Podcast

It's time for How to Analyze a Picture Book - Part 2. In this episode, we talk about how to analyze a picture book's illustrations and other things to look for when analyzing a mentor text. First up, illustrations: What's the job of the illustrations? What do they add to the story? How does color make a difference? If you're an author-only creator, how can you leave room for the illustrator and still get your story across? Is it okay to use art notes? Then we jump into a variety odds and ends to consider and pay attention to as you continue to analyze and study picture books, including "is...

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076 - How To Analyze Picture Books: Part 1 show art 076 - How To Analyze Picture Books: Part 1

Picture Book Summit Podcast

Today we share how to analyze a picture book. In many of our discussions and presentations, the Picture Book Summit Team and our guest speakers analyze picture books and use that analysis to illustrate the point we're teaching. When you as a picture book creator learn how to analyze a picture book, you can turn reading picture books into your own writing class. As you look for and identify the key elements of a picture book we discuss today (and in our next episode!), you'll be able to more easily spot revision opportunities in your own work—getting you that much closer to a publishable...

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075 - Roundtable: Celebrity Picture Books show art 075 - Roundtable: Celebrity Picture Books

Picture Book Summit Podcast

Today in our Picture Book Summit Roundtable discussion, we tackle the touchy topic of celebrity picture books. So, what's the truth about celebrity picture books? Do celebrities get to cut the line when it comes to publishing? Are they held to a lower standard than lesser-known writers? Do they help or hurt the industry? We have the opportunity to hear what it's like to be and/or work with a celebrity author as Emma Walton Hamilton shares her experience of writing with her mother, actress Julie Andrews. You might be surprised what it's like on the flip side of the celebrity book coin. Then...

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074 - The Appeal of Dark Picture Books show art 074 - The Appeal of Dark Picture Books

Picture Book Summit Podcast

What is the appeal of dark picture books? Do kids want to read (and re-read) books about tougher topics? How do you make these books kid-friendly?  Julie Hedlund leads our Roundtable discussion about dark picture books, what place they have in children's lives, and why they can be so important.  Books mentioned in this episode: The Rough Patch by Brian Lies The Longest Letsgoboy by Derick Wilder and Catia Chien Show Way by Jacqueline Woodson and Hudson Talbott Kamau & ZuZu Find a Way by Aracelis Girmay and Diana Ejaita Finding Papa by Angela Pham Krans and Thi Bui Lubna and...

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073 - Read-Aloudability: The Measure of a Great Picture Book Part 3 show art 073 - Read-Aloudability: The Measure of a Great Picture Book Part 3

Picture Book Summit Podcast

Picture book authors are closer in their craft to screenwriters and playwrights than any other kind of author. Why? Because picture book writers direct their readers on how to read the book. It's your job as a writer to make your (often adult reader) look like a rockstar. Emma Walton Hamilton shares how to make your manuscript reader-proof.

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072 - Read-Aloudability: The Measure of a Great Picture Book Part 2 show art 072 - Read-Aloudability: The Measure of a Great Picture Book Part 2

Picture Book Summit Podcast

It seems nothing is more fun to read aloud than lyrical or rhyming picture books. A common misconception is that it's easy to write rhyme: just count the syllables and make the end words sound alike, right? Wrong. Good thing you came across this episode, where Julie Hedlund—rhymer extraordinaire—gives examples of what good rhyme and lyrical writing actually is, what makes it work, and how to write it yourself. 

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071 - Read-Aloudability: The Measure of a Great Picture Book Part 1 show art 071 - Read-Aloudability: The Measure of a Great Picture Book Part 1

Picture Book Summit Podcast

Picture books are a truly unique genre of literature. Other books CAN be read aloud, but picture books are ENGINEERED exactly for that precise purpose.  In this episode, Emma Walton Hamilton defines the importance of "Read-aloud-ability" (HINT: it can sway the submission process), while Katie Davis illustrates one impactful way to factor that secret sauce into your writing.  Stay tuned! This is the first of a three-part series.

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070 - Meet the Gatekeepers show art 070 - Meet the Gatekeepers

Picture Book Summit Podcast

Editor and agent assistants: the rarely-talked-about demi gods of the publishing industry.  They are the gatekeepers, and if they don't think your manuscript is up to snuff, it won't be leaving the slush pile. So what can you do about that? In this episode, Emma Walton Hamilton asks editor and agent assistants AZ Hackett, Claire Tattersfield, and Gaby Caballero all the burning questions. 

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069 - Shadra Strickland - The Parallel Universe of Authors and Illustrators show art 069 - Shadra Strickland - The Parallel Universe of Authors and Illustrators

Picture Book Summit Podcast

Author/Illustrator and Agent Shadra Strickland reveals how to get at the heart of your story by sharing ideas and exercises to get your creativity flowing—in your brain and on the page. This is a fun one. Happy listening!    

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068 - The Fan Brothers: To Imagination and Beyond show art 068 - The Fan Brothers: To Imagination and Beyond

Picture Book Summit Podcast

In this episode, Eric and Terry Fan, also known as writing-illustrating duo The Fan Brothers, are taking us to new worlds in To Imagination and Beyond. They reveal their unique path into picture books after originally pursuing other careers and talk about some of the unconventional sources for their story ideas. They are proof that stories can hop from one place to another: from a t-shirt design that eventually became The Night Gardener, or a careless doodle from thirty years ago that grew into Lizzy and the Cloud. Eric and Terry reveal how your next story may be waiting in the...

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More Episodes

It seems nothing is more fun to read aloud than lyrical or rhyming picture books. A common misconception is that it's easy to write rhyme: just count the syllables and make the end words sound alike, right?

Wrong. Good thing you came across this episode, where Julie Hedlund—rhymer extraordinaire—gives examples of what good rhyme and lyrical writing actually is, what makes it work, and how to write it yourself.