Kathy Stinson ~ Turning the Pages
Canadian Author of Books for Young People
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Archive for Blogging

Writers’ Blogs I Like Reading

By Kathy · Comments (2)
Wednesday, January 23rd, 2013

girl reading blogs Sometimes after a lengthy interruption to one’s writing life, it’s hard to get back in the groove. Whether time away from a project is for holiday celebrations, vacation, tending to the needs of family or friends, or for work that’s sure to put bread on the table next month, there’s an inevitable break in any momentum one has managed to build. Crazy as it seems, it can actually be scary to open up that file that will invite your characters (if you’re writing fiction) or your subject (if you’re writing non-fiction) back into your life again. (“If you’re writing”, I say, but if you’re like me, after a lengthy interruption, you’re not writing. You’re doing just about anything to avoid it.)

To nudge myself gently toward the task that I know will engage and even engross me once I’m back at it, I will sometimes read blogs of other writers. It sort of feels like I’m working, it sometimes gives me a practical tip or two, but often it just helps me find that part of my brain that remembers I am a writer. No, I’m not so far gone that I actually forget that, but after time away from my writing, I don’t feel much like one.

Some blogs I like to visit are friends’ blogs: www.erinthomas.com and www.lenacoakley.com, for example. Both of them have links to other blogs that I also visit from time to time.

Sometimes I visit the blogs of writers whose work I’ve been editing: like www.tudorrobins.ca (Tudor’s first novel, Objects in Mirror, will be published this spring.)

During our email chats about her manuscript, Tudor put me onto another blog that has become one of my favourites: www.kaykenyon.com.

Reading other people’s blogs isn’t writing. It won’t get that story or that non-fiction book written. Only writing will do that. But it’s a painless and often effective way of easing back into writing. What writers’ blogs do you like to read when you need help easing back into your own work so you can once again feel like a legitimate member of the writing community?

Comments (2)
Categories : Blogging, Reading, Writing
Tags : resources for writers

My Dad, Doug Powell

By Kathy · Comments (2)
Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Kathy Stinson and her father, Doug Powell My dad’s birthday is this week. I wrote this post about him in response to a Red Room challenge to “blog about great parents”.

My dad didn’t tell me how to live a life of courage and integrity. He showed me, in how he lived his.

When I was nine, and my siblings four and fourteen, he left the appliance service company he worked for to go into business for himself. With a wife and three kids to support, it took a lot of guts to forego a predictably steady income to branch out on his own, but he thought he could make a success of it and he did. He loved fixing appliances, but he wouldn’t do it evenings or weekends. Those times were for his family. He ran “Powell Appliance Service” out of our station wagon, with my stay-at-home mom acting as his answering service. He earned his customers’ loyalty by dealing with them honestly and with respect. He could have earned more than he did on the calls he made to their homes, but he wasn’t about making as much money as possible, just doing the best job he could (of everything he undertook to do), and he earned enough to provide his family with a good home, a cottage, and opportunities for a little travel.

My dad’s example helped give me the courage to make a go of living the financially unpredictable but independent life as a freelance writer. His area is things mechanical and mine words, but his example of learning by doing – some I witnessed and some I heard about in the stories he told of his life before I came along – taught me that I could do that too, learn by doing. So I could say that he’s at least partly responsible for the fact that my body of work spans many genres.

My dad was handy around the house when we were growing up, and after my sister and I married men who were not, he continued doing odd jobs for us: fixing our appliances, of course, or a leaky tap, installing a dimmer switch, or building a deck. He still takes being a helpful dad seriously. Just the other day, he came to my house and replaced a kitchen tap. He’ll be 84 years old this spring, but there he was, on his back with his head under my sink, reaching up into the dark with his tools while I held the flashlight. If only my ability to write could be of some use to my kids! (Well, they have been featured in some of my books; perhaps that’s something?)

Still living independently, my dad volunteers for the Red Cross, delivering Meals on Wheels to shut-ins twice a week, sometimes three times a week when they need someone to fill in on short notice. He has been doing that for thirteen years. Golf season is about to start up soon and he’s keen to get back out on the course. I hope that when I’m in my eighties, I’ll be as resourceful, active, and as unselfish as he is.

Part of his being a good dad to me and my sibs was being a good husband to our mother. In one of my favourite photos of them together, they are dancing and laughing. (Was it on the occasion of my brother’s wedding, when I didn’t know yet that I was expecting my first child, and their first grandchild, who would later be born on my father’s birthday? I think so.) When my mother’s health began to fail, he took care of her in their home for as long as he could. She lived in a chronic care facility for the last seven years of her life, most of them in a private room. This meant, for my dad, living pretty frugally and eventual concern about whether his savings would support him through his old age, but he wouldn’t have had it any other way.

After my mom died, my dad had the good fortune to have a wonderful friend and companion to share his days with, a lovely Scottish woman who made him laugh again and kept him young. Sadly, he lost her to cancer last year, but he was her best friend and he kept her company on her long and difficult journey. He faced that loss, too, with courage because “you have to”.

It seems I have not inherited my dad’s patience with the frail or ailing, but I am hoping, still, to learn it from his example. And I hope that as I face more and more the loss of loved ones, that I can do it with the same strength of spirit that helps my dad go on living his life.

I used to think my dad would live forever. I began to face the reality that he won’t three years ago, when he had his first small stroke. He has lived and is still living a good life, a life he can be proud of. He embraces life fully each day, especially on days when the morning sun streams into his apartment, but the thought of passing in his sleep does not frighten him. I wish for my dad a peaceful passing when his time comes, but I hope his health will hold and he’ll be with me for a good long time yet. I take comfort in knowing that in some ways, he will be with me always.

You can read about other great parents here.

Comments (2)
Categories : Blogging, Family, Life in General
Tags : father, integrity, parents, seniors

It’s "Take Your Webmaster to Lunch" Day

By Kathy · Comments (2)
Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

I wonder if my sister cooked this one up as a way of getting me to take her to lunch. She’s clever enough to do something like that.

Since 1999, when she designed my first website, Janet has been responsible for establishing and maintaining my presence on the World Wide Web. (I wonder how many people remember that that’s what www stands for. I bet my sister does.)

Kathy Stinson's old website
In 1999, designing sites was a hobby for my tech-savvy sister, and she did mine for free, claiming it to be a good opportunity to learn and practise her website-building skills.

When she started up her own business in 2002, she did me the favour of continuing to update and maintain my site at a family discount rate. And at that point, I was doing her a favour by giving her business.

Those days are long past. Organized Assistant is now a thriving enterprise with clients all over North America and even overseas, so I’m lucky Janet and her husband and business partner, Scott, are willing to keep me on as a client!

Through many changes to my site – the addition of new titles, activities to accompany each, author interviews, a “bookstore“, and more - Janet has been ready with fresh ideas for content and design.

Three years ago, she also urged me to start my blog. I did so somewhat hesitantly, but by last fall it had become a regular and enjoyable part of my routine.

If you haven’t taken a look around my website lately, I hope you will! Thanks to my clever webmaster/sister, you’ll find my blog there too, and a chance to “Like” me/”Become A Fan” on Facebook.

Kathy Stinson's new website

So, Janet, where would you like to go for lunch?

Comments (2)
Categories : Blogging, Family
Tags : Take Your Webmaster to Lunch Day, website design

Happy B-Earth Day to me!

By Kathy · Comments (1)
Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Can’t believe I let this opportunity to mention a great book about one of Canada’s first environmentalists go by yesterday! I’m referring of course to Love Every Leaf: the life of landscape architect Cornelia Hahn Oberlander. I’ll blame it on being too focused on my birthday. :-)

Kathy Stinson & Cornelia Hahn Oberlander

I’m grateful to Linda Granfield for sending me Tundra’s Earth Day blog post “for [my] scrapbook.” If you don’t know her work, check it out. You’ll see why she thinks in those terms – why scrapbooks have been key to the books she has written, for starters – and why more of us (including me) should keep them.

Comments (1)
Categories : Blogging, Kathy Stinson Books, Reading
Tags : Cornelia Hahn Oberlander, earth day, environment

The People in my "Neighbourhood"

By Kathy · Comments (9)
Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Home again from Liberia, I was contemplating what aspect of my week there I would blog about – what illustrators were learning and doing with Gord Pronk while I worked with writers? how a group decides which “personal heroes” qualify for inclusion in a Liberian anthology? the fun we had with an oral “dialogue” exercise? – when my sister’s blog post about a few of the Very Important People in the virtual world her business takes her into gave me another idea.

The world has seemed a smaller place since last year when Liberia became an extension of my neighbourhood, and I’d like to introduce you to just a few of the Very Important People I hung out with there last week.

Mike Weah (with the help of his wife Yvonne and others) runs the We-Care Library in Monrovia. He is the dynamic mastermind behind the Reading Liberia program that has taken me to Liberia twice now. At a meeting last Thursday, after Gord described what needed to happen with the artwork being created for the books soon to be published, Mike said, “There is this big river between us. God made a mistake.” I love the man’s sense of humour, and of course his passion, too, for doing whatever it takes to get books written and illustrated by Liberians into the hands of Liberia’s children and their teachers.

Ade Wede Kekuleh is one of the writers whose work I was given the chance to read last week, and I was pleased because I found her a bit elusive last year. After discussing her story about kids who miss out on breakfast because they’re too busy watching on TV to pay attention to their mother, we had a conversation in which she explained to me that, yes, children in Liberia today would relate to her story. “But,” I said, “I was told that homes in Liberia don’t have electricity.” “That’s right,” she said, “but there are generators.” From Ade, I also learned how the Liberian people keep their clothes so immaculately pressed, despite often difficult living conditions. Ade is one of only four women in the group of sixteen writers in the group that met at St. Teresa’s Convent School last week, just down the road from the Cape Hotel. The reverse male:female ratio to what one usually finds in a comparable group in Canada.

The third person I’d like to mention, I can tell you very little about. Only that she is ten years old and was one of a dozen or so kids who flocked around me and Gord last Thursday, the one time we got down to the beach across from the hotel. I was riveted by the girl’s poise and beauty (it’s her picture at the top of this post) and she totally captivated my imagination. Does she go to school? Are any of the younger kids her siblings? What exactly did a man who seemed to be attached to the group of kids mean exactly, when he said the kids were “community kids”? I wonder if this girl, or any of the other kids on the beach, go to school. I wonder if she’ll ever read the story by James Dwalu that Chase Walker was illustrating last week, about a boy who discovers that his father was just as afraid to cross the monkey bridge as he was.

I’d like to tell you about James and Chase. And Nementorbor, Llord, and Gabriel. Watchen, Elfreda, and Woryonwon. And others. But CODE is expecting to see a report from me soon, and of course there are the demands of my closer to home “neighbours” I need to catch up with.

My sister was inspired by someone else’s blog post, and I was in turn inspired by hers. If you’re inspired now to write about the people in your neighbourhood, I hope you’ll leave a link to your blog post, or else drop it right here in comments.

Comments (9)
Categories : Blogging, Liberia, Reading, Travel, Writing
Tags : Ade Wede Kekuleh, Chase Walker, CODE, Gord Pronk, James Dwalu, Mike Weah, Monrovia, Reading Liberia, We-Care Library

It's "Wear Red" Day

By Kathy · Comments (2)
Friday, February 5th, 2010

Did you know that today is “Wear red” day? And no, I didn’t make that up! Even though as author of Red is Best, maybe I should have. :-)

Red’s not your colour, you say? You have nothing red in your closet? Why not – just for today – borrow something from your sister, your brother, your spouse or your best friend? I tend to wear black and beige a lot, especially in winter, but on those days I do pull on a red sweater, or a red fleece, I must say winter doesn’t seem quite so cold!


Not that feeling cold is a concern for me today. As recent post(s) indicate, I’m in Liberia, working with writers and teachers as part of the Reading Liberia team. In the meantime, my brilliant support team at Organized Assistant has kept track of and uploaded this posting for me.

Actually, although I write my own postings, Organized Assistant always uploads them for me. (They are so much more technically savvy than I am.)

Happy Wear Red Day!

Comments (2)
Categories : Blogging, Kathy Stinson Books, Life in General, Travel
Tags : Red Is Best, the color red, the colour red, wear red day

Children's Book Suggestions

By Kathy · Comments (3)
Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Did you know that the “Blogged” sections on the book pages of my web site sometimes contain good suggestions for books by other authors besides me, that you or the young readers in your life might enjoy?

Take, for example, a post this week by blogger, Sue Fisher, who is Curator of the Eileen Wallace Children’s Literature Collection at the University of New Brunswick.

Why not cruise around those “Blogged” sections on my site and see what other good reads you might turn up?

Comments (3)
Categories : Blogging, Reading
Tags : authors, children's literature, young readers

7 Things You Probably Don't Know About Me

By Kathy · Comments (1)
Friday, December 19th, 2008

My sister Janet tagged me earlier this week. I’ve decided to use her challenge to “play along” with her as an opportunity to write about some of the things I’ve only thought about blogging about this month.

1. Perhaps a children’s writer should not admit to this, but for years I’ve felt rather “bah humbug” about Christmas. It’s a complicated season for blended families blessed with kids and grandkids and other family members each with his or her own hopes and expectations of what Christmas should be. This year has felt less complicated, maybe we’re finally getting the hang of what’s do-able and what isn’t, and I have found myself enjoying all the colourful lights as I walk the streets of our new neighbourhood. Who knows, I might not even grumble as I don my silly paper hat at the dinner table this December 25th.

2. I am one of the lucky few who have seen a portrait recently created by Irma Coucill that will soon be seen by thousands. Irma has done portraits of every American president, every Canadian prime minister (including 80+ of Pierre Trudeau), Read More→

Comments (1)
Categories : Blogging, Family, Liberia, Life in General

A Busy June

By Kathy · Comments (7)
Thursday, June 28th, 2007

Did you think I’d given up blogging after just two entries? No way! But it has been a busy six weeks, quite apart from all that’s happened in my garden.

The novel has now been submitted (and I can soon go to the cottage and forget I’m waiting for a response to it). I’ve also come up with new titles for two books scheduled for publication next year. (Sometimes I think it’s harder to come up with a title than it is to write a book.)

Maybe I’ll get brave one of these days and tell blog-readers what they are — if there is anyone out there reading my blog except my sister. This blogging business still seems to me a bit like throwing your diary open on the sidewalk, where it might get read or it might just get kicked in a ditch.

Comments (7)
Categories : Blogging

I’ve made it!

By Kathy · Comments (1)
Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

You know you’ve made the big time when your name appears as a clue in the crossword of a national newspaper. (Okay, so it had to be The Post.) The clue to No. 7 Down on April 30 was “Canadian Children’s author Stinson” 5 letters. That’s me! So I decided it was time to start a blog. (I wonder if anyone will read it.)

Comments (1)
Categories : Blogging, Life in General

Introducing: The Man With the Violin

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