Report by Elaine Ridge, Co-RA of SCBWI SA, on the Retreat

Go to www.scbwi.za.org/ regularly to see when our next event is.


The Retreat (5-9 May) at Goudini Spa began gently with time to settle in during the day and an excellent, mellowing dinner in the evening. In the opening speech, Elaine Ridge highlighted some of the contributions that South African writers and illustrators could make, stressing the importance of imaginative and inclusive writing. The next four days were a good mix of sparkling and informative presenters, practical workshops, the chance for all participants to get candid and constructive feedback from international and local experts, and to brush up or learn new writing, illustration or editing skills from an array of local experts (Robin Malan, Mariana Brandt, Marjorie van Heerden, Joan Rankin, Janie Oosthuizen-Taylor, LeAnn Hardy). There was also the opportunity to dig beneath the surface of the publishing world during panel discussions which sometimes became quite heated. Participants also had the chance to reflect on how to improve their time management and how to identify their own particular niche. As if that were not enough, there was time to network in the most pleasant of surroundings with Jacuzzis, hot spring swimming pools and even facials on offer. Those who were more energetic were able to take invigorating walks or even go horse riding on a nearby farm. The day’s events ended off with ‘a midnight snack” and stories told by a consummate story teller, Sindiwe Magona.

The international guests all gave excellent presentations. Suzanne Koppe, a German literary agent’s talk was entitled “From story board to published book. Although few South African authors and illustrators have agents (exceptions are Niki and Jude Daly), she gave us all an informative and entertaining account of how a well-chosen agent can help an author and some hard facts on how to become street-wise and sell oneself more successfully in the tough world of publishing

Suzanne Cantrell began her talk: ‘Blank page to under a child's pillow – the creative processwith a slide of her desk back home in the UK with its pictures, mementos, reminders and notes around it to illustrate the different kinds of work and some of the authors and illustrators she works with. Her insider accounts of working with Emily Gravett, Julia Donaldson, Kazuno Kohar and Chris Riddell were deliciously entertaining but at the same time provided interesting insights into the creative process. We were all encouraged to hear that although Macmillan says it doesn’t accept unsolicited manuscripts, in practice staff can’t resist opening the letters – some of their established authors were ‘discovered’ in this way.

Many participants were surprised and delighted to find the new avenues of work magazines offer them. Christine Clark’s talk on magazines in the US provided extensive information on the wide range of children's magazines which are available in the US and practical tips on how to get your writing or illustrations published. She highlighted the importance of making a study of the content and the particular identity of the magazine, including the particular target group. Guidelines for submission are usually posted on the web site.

The Retreat was a wonderful experience. As one person put it, “I came here thinking I was expecting too much, but this has far exceeded my expectations”.

See below details about the retreat that was held in May 2008...


1) Event information and description

2) Programme Schedule

3) Notes

4) Cost for the Retreat and accommodation

5) More about the International presenters

6) More about the South African presenters



Event: 4-Day Writers and Illustrators Retreat

Date: May 5-9, 2008

Location: Goudini Spa Holiday Resort, Rawsonville (±100 km from Cape Town, South Africa, www.goudinispa.co.za)

Cost: Details below

E-mail SCBWI@goodtaste.co.za (NB! Kindly put “Writers & Illustrators Retreat Inquiries” in the subject line of your e-mail)

The Retreat is made possible in part by an SCBWI Professional Grant

Description: The 4-day Writers and Illustrators Retreat will take the form of an informal symposium at a natural hot water spa near Cape Town. The Retreat will include whole-group seminars, small workshops, one-on-one sessions, and a host of informal activities. Writers and illustrators will have the chance to mingle with accomplished and prominent, local and international children’s book authors, illustrators, editors, critics, and publishers.

Each attendee will be scheduled to have a one-on-one review session in which they will get feedback and advice as to what direction they should take with their work and how to get publishers to actually look at their work.

An area will be made available where attendees can display their work and time will be scheduled for agents and publishers to view the displays.

Our country is a beautiful and exciting destination and the Goudini Spa is situated in a particularly magnificent, mountainous part of the Western Cape. The talks, reviews and workshops will be scheduled in such a way that writers, illustrators and our guests will also have time to bathe in the warm spring water, socialise, and to dream... to even become a bit healthier while they charge their batteries!


Programme Schedule


MONDAY:

Travel to Goudini Spa, register, book in and get to know the resort

18h30 - Dinner and welcome address by Marjorie van Heerden, co-Regional Advisor of the SCBWI SA.

Opening speech: Children’s books come of age: a London agent’s international perspective. - a talk by international literary agent, Rosemary Canter, from United Agents


TUESDAY:

Morning at leisure until 10h00 - Breakfast (not included in the fee - see NOTES* below); a walk or a swim

10h00 - From story board and manuscript to published book: How to find your own way in the world of publishing.
- a talk by international literary agent Susanne Koppe

11h30 - Tea break

12h00-13h30 Three workshops running concurrently:

Writers workshop (English) – Writer’s tools; style, grammar and dialogue - Robin Malan

Writers workshop (Afrikaans) – Writer’s tools; style, grammar and dialogue - Janie Oosthuysen

Illustrators workshop- How to draw children; An in-depth look at children of different ages and how their bodies changeMarjorie van Heerden

13h30-14h30 Lunch

14h30-17h30 20-minute one-on-one review sessions with: either one of the international literary agents, an international editor or a local editor (the attendee’s choice)

18h30 Dinner

Evening: Planning, Deadlines vs. Creativity – Balancing your Life (creativity group discussion followed by a critique session)

Later: Midnight snack and a bedtime story by Sindiwe Magona


WEDNESDAY:

Morning at leisure until 10h00 - Breakfast, a walk or a swim

10h00 - Blank page to under a child's pillow - the creative process. - a talk by Editorial Director, Picture/Gift Books, Macmillan Children's Books, UK, Suzanne Carnell

11h30 Tea break

12h00-13h30 Three workshops running concurrently:

Writers workshop (English) - Verbal characterisation; Character developmentHelen Brain

Writers workshop (Afrikaans) - Verbal characterisation; Character developmentMarianne Brandt

Illustrators workshop – Visual characterisation; Character developmentJoan Rankin

13h30-14h30 Lunch

14h30-17h30 20-minute one-on-one review sessions with: either one of the international literary agents, an international editor or a local editor (the attendee’s choice)

18h30 - Dinner

Evening: Finding your Niche and Nurturing it; Finding your Muse inside Yourself (creativity group discussion followed by a critique session)

Later: Midnight snack and a bedtime story by Sindiwe Magona


THURSDAY: Morning at leisure until 10h00 - Breakfast, a walk or a swim

10h00 - The Naked Editor (an exposé à la Jamie Oliver) – publishers, international and local, in dialogue

11h30 - Tea break

12h00-13h30 The International children’s magazine market: what they material need; how to submit work; How does children’s magazine Copyright and payment work. - a talk by international editor Christine Clark

13h30-14h30 Lunch

14h30-17h30 20-minute one-on-one review sessions with: either one of the international literary agents, an international editor or a local editor (the attendee’s choice)

18h30 - Dinner

Evening: Contracts and payment terms (discussion group session with publishers and editors)

Later: Midnight snack and a bedtime story by Sindiwe Magona


FRIDAY:

Friday will be an opportunity for final informal discussions, networking, follow-ups, exchanging ideas and impressions and wrapping up before travelling home.

11h30 - Closing speech by Sindiwe Magona (Tea/coffee and refreshments)

Fluit, fluit, my storie is uit, by die een deur in en die ander deur uit.

(or as the poet put it) “And they lived happily ever after... for a while.”

NOTES*

All meals, tea/coffee and snacks are included in the price, except breakfast. The bungalows are equipped for self-catering, so you could take some provisions along and make your own breakfast. Alternatively, breakfast is also served in the dining room, at your own cost. We have negotiated a very reasonable price for shared accommodation in the self-catering bungalows which sleep three people (single rooms are available at a higher cost and these can be booked for you through Robyn Eiserman of Good Taste Travel & Event Management, telephone: +27 (0)21 657 8153) or email SCBWI@goodtaste.co.za

For more information about the Goudini SPA/Resort/Conference Venue, see their website: http://www.goudinispa.co.za/

The number attending the Retreat will unfortunately have to be limited. If you are an SCBWI member, you are assured of a place, subject to confirmation of your booking on or before 15th March, and you will also be given a discount on the price (see below). Also, the SCBWI will again have a stand at the Cape Town Book Fair this year, and only SCBWI members will be able to display their work at our stand. (So, if you are not yet a member of the SCBWI, weigh the benefits, do the maths and you may decide to join before the Retreat.)

Please note that, even if your name is currently on the SCBWI SA e-mailing list, you are NOT automatically a member of the SCBWI.

To become a member, go to: http://www.scbwi.org/members/join.htm and follow the HOW TO JOIN instructions.

For any questions about the programme, contact Marjorie van Heerden at +27 (0)21 856 0432 (office hours only) or e-mail scbwi.za@gmail.com (kindly put “Writers & Illustrators Retreat Inquiries” in the subject line of your e-mail). Alternatively, go to either www.scbwi.za.org or www.scbwi-za-capetown.blogspot.com/


About the bookings, payment or other arrangements contact: Robyn Eiserman of Good Taste Travel & Event Management, 11 Myhof Road, Claremont 7708, South Africa. Tel: +27 (0)21 657 8153; Fax: +27 (0)21 671 5106; Mobile: +27 (0)82 972 3181; Email: SCBWI@goodtaste.co.za

COST OF THE RETREAT INCLUDING ACCOMMODATION:

Booking will close on Wednesday 16th May 2008 and no more booking will be accepted after that date - so to assure a place, must be done in the next two days. As soon as we have your booking, we will send you a registration form to fill in.


These prices include shared accommodation (in bungalows sleeping three people), coffee/tea, lunch, dinner and the conference fee for the four-day Writers and Illustrators Retreat at Goudini Spa in May 2008:

1) SCBWI members who settle in full upon booking (early payment discount, – R2, 955 per person sharing

2) SCBWI members who wish to only pay a 50% deposit upon booking and the balance in April – R3 642 per person sharing

3) Non-members who settle in full upon booking (early payment discount, – R3,582 per person sharing

4) Non-members who wish to only pay a 50% deposit upon booking and the balance in April - R4,252 per person sharing

Transport to and from Goudini Spa is not included in these prices.

Should an attendee wish to be joined by one or more family member or friend for a four-day holiday in Goudini, this could be arranged. Such holiday makers, however, will not be able to attend any of the Retreat activities, sessions or meals and the price for their accommodation (excluding meals, but with self-catering facilities) will be R600 per person, sharing. Extra guests should be booked at the same time as the Retreat attendee, and space is subject to availability at time of booking.

MORE ABOUT THE PRESENTERS

MORE ABOUT THE PRESENTERS
CHRISTINE FRENCH CLARK

CHRISTINE FRENCH CLARK
Editor, Highlights magazine, USA

Christine French Clark is Editor in Chief of the magazine division of Highlights for Children. In this role, she edits Highlights magazine (for children 6 to 12) and is responsible for the magazine's award-winning web site HighlightsKids.com. She also oversees the publishing of Highlights High Five, a new magazine for children in early childhood. She served as creator and first editor of this publication, which launched in January 2007 and has more than 400,000 subscribers.

Clark has almost 30 consecutive years of experience in children's publishing. Prior to joining the Highlights staff in 1994, she was employed by the Children's Better Health Institute. There, she edited four other periodicals for children. In 1990, she was named Editorial Director, overseeing publication of seven magazines for children. Earlier, she was an Associate Editor of preschool curricula for David C. Cook Publishing Company, where she wrote more than one hundred stories, poems, and lesson segments for children. She has a bachelor's degree in communication arts.

Highlights, with a circulation of almost two million, is the best known and most widely circulated children's magazine mailed to homes. In 2006, Highlights celebrated its 60th anniversary and the printing of its one-billionth copy.


SUSANNE KOPPE

SUSANNE KOPPE

Children’s book Literary Agent, Auserlesen Ausgezeichnet Agency, Hamburg, Germany

Susanne Koppe was born in Munich in 1963. She studied German literature (major), education and psychology in Munich.

She went to Simmons College in Boston, MA on a Fulbright grant. She received an American Master of Arts in Children’s Literature in 1986 and a German Master of Arts in literature in 1988.

After her studies Susanne Koppe worked as a scout for the publishing houses Beltz & Gelberg and Random House. She has also translated and published reviews and essays in various newspapers and magazines.

After having run the children’s booklist Rotfuchs at Rowohlt Publishers from 1997 – 2001 she founded her own agency for literature and illustration in 2002 in Hamburg. Among her clients are authors such as Lilli Thal (runner up for the German Youth Literature Award, published in English by Annick Press and illustrators such as Franziska Biermann and Antje Damm.

For more information see her website: www.auserlesen-ausgezeichnet.de


Rosemary Canter

SAD NEWS! - Rosemary is ill and will not be able to fly to South Africa. She will be coming to South Africa later this year, when she feels better, so you will still have a time to listen & meet with her.

ROSEMARY CANTER

Children’s book Literary Agent, United Agents, London, UK.

"I graduated from Cambridge University with a degree in History. After that I worked for about fifteen years in publishing,to begin with in the world of adult books, fiction and non-fiction. I fell into children’s publishing by accident and stayed by enchantment. Then in l989 I switched careers when I was taken on by Peters Fraser & Dunlop, a big and distinguished agency, with a brief to develop a list of writers for children and teenagers. I added illustrators to the brief too. It was a completely blank canvas and a wonderful opportunity.

I now have an extensive list of clients, who write for a wide range of children, from babies up to aspirant teenagers, children of 11 and 12. I like good writing of all kinds, whether for commercial or more literary markets. After all these years, I still love my job ! It’s fascinatingly varied and I am always hungry for wonderful new talent. I should add that in January of this year, all the agents and staff of PFD left to set up our own agency: United Agents."

Our list of International presenters is perfectly rounded off by the editor from Macmillan, Trade Books, London UK, who will be giving the opening speech and doing reviews too. The editor’s name and CV will be available soon


Susanne Carnell

Suzanne Carnell: “I am so delighted to be joining you for what I am sure will be an enriching experience for us all. On my first visit to South Africa a couple of years ago I was struck by the enthusiasm and dedication of everyone I met connected to the world of children’s books. The commitment and passion of authors and artists was matched by that of booksellers, librarians and educators alike. I look forward to being similarly inspired this May and to learning more about your fascinating country.”


Suzanne Carnell

Editorial Director, Picture/Gift Books, Macmillan Children's Books, UK

After graduating from Oxford University with an English degree she held a temporary post at Penguin Books in New Zealand, and has since had over twenty years of publishing experience, primarily in children’s books.

In her current role, Suzanne works with such internationally successful, award-winning authors and artists as Emily Gravett, Julia Donaldson, Axel Scheffler, David Roberts and Chris Riddell, while at the same time continuing to seek and to nurture new talent. Her ever-present ambition is to create a picture book list of excellence.

Ann Jacobus and Sandra Guy interviewed her in September 2003. See interview at
http://www.scbwifrance.com/meetthepros/interviews_2003
/suzanne_carnell.htm


Saturday, April 26, 2008

Marianna Brandt -Workshop presenter


Marianne Brandt

Writer

Marianna Brandt has written quite a number of childrens’ books. She received a White Raven-nomination for her book The Mealiecobb Doll/Die mieliestronkpop. Her previous books with H&R are: Die geheim van die toringkamer, Die stoutsterte, Van Texel tot Tafelbaai, Markus Stermuis/Marcus Star Mouse. Marianna also writes for educational publishers; local and overseas. Marianna lives in Boston, Bellivlle.

Ek is in Kaapstad gebore en het in Namibië groot geword. My ma



het elke aand vir ons vier meisiekinders stories gelees of vertel, ook van Blinkoog die nagmonster wat kinders opvreet wat nie wil slaap nie. Net die woorde 'Daar kom Blinkoog.' was genoeg waarskuwing van Ma dat dit nou slaaptyd is. In Swakopmund het ek as kind 'n ryke verbeelding gehad en ons was vry om ons verbeelding uit te leef. Ons het kartonhuise gebou, winkel-winkel gespeel en vir die hoenders skool gehou. Ons het hulle laat stil sit deur 'n klippie op hulle koppe te sit. Pa was 'n polisieman en soms het ons saam met hom langs die Skedelkus gaan uitkamp, in tente geslaap en na die huil van die hienas geluister.

Na skool het ek in die Vrystaat gaan studeer en 'n Mediese Tegnoloog geword in chemie. Vir ongeveer tien jaar het ek in laboratoriums landwyd gewerk. Toe gaan ek oorsee en sien Europa, Verre Ooste en Israel. Ek kon net nie weer aanpas tussen die vier mure van die laboratorium na hierdie ondervindinge nie.

Met geen ondervinding sluit ek toe aan by die SAUK, Afrikaanse Diens. Dis toe daar wat ek leer skryf het. Baie stories (ongeveer 50) vir Siembamba het gevolg, een van hulle Poppie-Dot van die Kaap. Die storie is toe deur Tafelberg Uitgewers uitgegee.

Ek het ook na 'n jaar of twee by die SAUK by 'n TV-maatskappy aangesluit. Daar het ek geleer om draaiboeke te skryf, veral vir die opvoedkundige mark, TV2 & TV3. Ek het ook navorsing gedoen en gehelp met die vervaardiging van 'n paar 'Uit en Tuis' programme terwyl ek vir die maatskappy gewerk het en het dit baie geniet.

My skrywersloopbaan het toe eers weer in 1992 begin vlamvat met die Aids storieboeke in Engels vir Macmillan Uitgewers in Johannesburg. Dit is voorgeskryf vir Natal, Swaziland, Kenia en Namibië. Daarna het baie boeke gevolg vir Macmillan in Johannesburg en Macmillan in Engeland.

In 1994 het Poppie-Dot by die Grootrivier gevolg, ook uitgegee deur Tafelberg uitgewers. Ek weet dat die stories in die boek al opgevoer is deur skole in die Weskaap en word ook tans in die kurrikulum onderrig in Stellenbosch gebruik

In Mei 1998 was ek een van 'n groep van vyf skrywers uit Suid-Afrika vir 'n program Shuttle 99 Project (Kuns & Kultuur) wat in Ysland gehou is en deur die Nordiese Raad van Ministerieë georganiseer is. Een van die skrywers was Zakes Mda, 'n bekende ook in dramakringe. By die geleentheid moes ons 'n kinderboek produseer. Myne was Kria the Summerbird wat deur 'n Yslandse uitgewer uitgegee is.

In 1999 het ek vier Afrikaanse stories geskryf vir die Rimpelstoriereeks van Maskew Miller Longman vir Graad 3. Hierdie stories het 'n Eretoekenning gekry wat deur die Weskaapse Boekforum toegeken is.

Ek hoop om nog baie kinderboeke in Afrikaans te produseer. Veral stories waarvan kinders hou.

Onlangse Publikasies

2001: Toringkamer (jeugboek 13-15jr) Human &Rousseau

2002: Die Stoutsterte (Kinderboek 8-10) Human & Rousseau.

2003: The River Queen (Kinderboek 10-12) Macmillan, UK

2003: Markus Stermuis op die Sojoes ... 3 ...2 ...1 (ook in engels) Human & Rousseau

2004: The River Queen (Macmillan UK)

2004: Afrikaans vir Ons (medeskrywers vir Graad 4,5.6)

2004: Om die Wêreld - Maskew Miller Longman (Graad 6)
Hoekom is die see swart - MML (Graad 4)

2005: Nelson & Ali (Heinemann UK)

2005: Die Kat van Rowerbaai, Die Dertiende Uur, Die Geheim van die Kiss, Shamila se blomme, Die Kunsjuffrou, Tanja in Taiwan (Graad 5 - Heinemann SA)

2006: Die Avonture van Magrietjie Swaaiboude - Human & Rousseau

2006: Die Stoutsterte - Poot aan Wal (einde Mei) Human & Rousseau

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Janie Oosthuysen-Taylor - Workshop presenter


Janie Oosthuysen-Taylor

Author of children's books
and translator of the Harry Potter books

Adriana Maria Oosthuysen was born on 13 November 1956, at Paarl. After matriculation from the Hoër Meisieskool Bloemhof in Stellenbosch she studied at Stellenbosch University (BA, HED). She taught English at a high school and then became lecturer at the Athlone College in Paarl.
She married, had two children and got divorced. She is now married to John Taylor and devotes her time to her family. They live in Durbanville. Janie Oosthuysen started writing in 1994.

Quote: Afgeval, seergekry, opgeklim en weer gery... (Fell down, got hurt, got on again and rode on... Translation by Franci de Kock]

Awards:

ATKV Prize for Youth Literature: 1996 (second prize) for Kara en die blafdemper, 1998 for Drome op Duinebaai and second winner for My hart behoort aan jou and 2000 (second prize) for Eggo's van gister
1996-97: C.P. Hoogenhout Prize for children's literature for Ouma Hester en die Dreadnought, Merk III and Juffrou Luisenbosch en die Breinwassers and Professor Experimento se verskriklike formules
Academy Award for translation 2002

Recent Publications:
Skaduwee van die dood, Human & Rousseau, 2000
Riempelstories: Vir vryheid!, Kagiso Education, 2004
Riempelstories: Dra toktokkiessokkies?, Kagiso Education, 2004

Translations:
Narnia books by CS Lewis:
Prins Kaspian
Die perd en sy seun
Die leeu, die heks en die hangkas
Die towenaar se neef
Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling:
Harry Potter en die kamer van geheimenisse
Harry Potter en die towenar se steen
Harry Potter en die orde van die feniks
Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer, 2002

JANIE OOSTHUYSEN het ’n BA-graad, en het al meer as 40 kinder-, tiener- en skoolboeke geskryf, waaronder die gewilde Ouma Hester-stories en die splinternuwe Bessie Hemelbesem-reeks. Sy is al talle male bekroon, onder meer met die gesogte C.P. Hoogenhout-prys, asook die Akademieprys vir haar Harry Potter-vertalings. Janie se kinderboekkursus is propvol skryfgeheime en kortpaaie. “Ek wens ek het hierdie kursus vyftien jaar gelede self gedoen ...” sê sy.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Sindiwe Magona, storyteller

Sindiwe Magona
Sindiwe is known as Nomabali
Born on the 27th August 1943 in Umtata, South Africa

Dr Sindiwe Magona: author, poet, playwright, story-teller, actor, and inspirational speaker has recently retired from the United Nations and relocated to her home country, South Africa.

PUBLISHED WORKS: Two autobiographical books: To My Children’s Children and Forced to Grow; two collections of short stories: Living, Loving, and Lying Awake at Night ;(Africa’s 100 Best Books of the 20th Century); Push-Push and Other Stories; a novel, Mother to Mother, recently optioned by Universal Studios for a film on the life of Amy Biehl. Rees Witherspoon will play Amy Biehl; Life is a Hard but beautiful Thing [in English and isiXhosa] [Juta – 2005]; sixteen children’s books – in FIVE African languages - [Oxford University Press – 2005] – Forthcoming: Five children’s books – Oxford University Press – 2006; a young young adult novel, [NASOU].

Magona has also been published in the New York Times, the Cape Times, and the Cape Argus as well as in magazines. Several of her short stories and essays have been anthologized. Forthcoming: The Best Meal Ever! [Tafelberg – May 2006] – a children’s book – [in English, isiXhosa, and Afrikaans].

AWARDS:

1993 – Honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters – Hartwick College, Oneonta, New York

1997 – New York Foundation for the Arts – Fellowship – Non-fiction category

1997 – Xhosa Heroes Award from the Xhosa Forum – Western Cape

1997 – UNdimande - Grand Prize Winner – Bhala Writers Short Story Contest

2000 – Bronx Recognizes its Own (BRIO) Award – Fiction

2003 – Proclamation (NY State Senate Democratic Leader, David A. Patterson) - on World Aids Day 2003 – in recognition of artistic work on the issue of HIV/AIDS.

VUKANI! An Aids play has been performed in Colleges, Churches, and theatres in the United States.

LOST AND BROUGHT BACK: Original screenplay, just completed – February 2005.

Besides Writers’ Conferences, Magona has given readings and addresses at numerous other international fora, including the United Nations, the Kennedy Centre, The Riverside Church, the Ford Foundation, Temple and Columbia Universities, to name a few. She has received numerous awards in recognition of her work in women’s issues, the plight of children, and the fight against apartheid and racism. Her first ten years at the United Nations were in the Department of Public Information where she worked in the Anti-Apartheid Radio Programmes.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

LeAnne Hardy - workshop SA PRESENTERS

Writer

“My name is LeAnne Hardy. I may have grown up in a Midwestern suburb of Indianapolis, Indiana, but I have now lived in six countries on four continents. I have sipped cream tea in Oxfordshire, slid down rocks in a Mato Grosso river, eaten stewed goat at a Mozambican wedding, climbed Table Mountain and shopped at Mall of America. My books are set in a variety of countries, and each tries to capture the unique feel of that place.

I have degrees in philosophy (from Indiana University, Bloomington, IN) and library and information science (from University of Minnesota, Minneapolis), but my secret love was always children’s literature. I began collecting beautiful picture books before I had the excuse of my own children. I started writing seriously when I was well into my forties. It took me a long time to convince myself that this was not a time-consuming hobby for an obsessive-compulsive perfectionist, but something that could touch the hearts of other people.

My primary target audience is children and young people because they have their whole lives ahead of them. The images of God, themselves and their place in the world planted in young minds can carry them through a lifetime of challenges. Although most of my stories are about faith, I am less interested in the process of coming to faith than I am in people of faith working out what that means in the specific situations of their lives. For more about my motivation for writing, see my article "The Value of Children’s Literature for Twenty-first Century Africa."

I currently live in South Africa where I focus on writing for children affected by HIV/AIDS. There are more than 12 million orphans in Africa, and many more who are living with sick and dying parents. That is more than every single child in the U.S. states of Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Tennessee, and Wisconsin put together. That’s a lot of children growing up without parents. But it’s not just a huge number. Each child is an individual who needs to know God’s love, who needs to see wise choices modeled, who needs to be encouraged not to give up on life. Fiction stories about children like themselves, struggling with the same issues, help young people to know that they are not alone. Find out about other projects to help people affected by HIV/AIDS.

“Mom, do you have to make everything a learning experience?” my kids once complained. (Hey, we were home schooling in Mozambique, Africa. What home schooling Mom could resist pointing out the stratigraphy of a rocky outcropping during vacation in neighboring Swaziland?) The fact is I am a teacher by nature. I enjoy speaking to school groups about being a writer and conducting writers’ workshops, especially with those on the front lines of working with children in difficult situations. Contact me about when I can be in your area.

When I am not at my computer writing, you will probably find me at the ice rink figure skating. Yes, there are ice rinks in Africa, but not many. No, I can’t do a triple axel like you see on TV, but I do a nice Salchow and a decent waltz jump-toe loop combination. Besides, I’m working on this neat book about a figure skater who doesn’t want anyone to find out that her parents have HIV.”

Selected Works

Fiction

Glastonbury Tor - A tale of the Holy Grail and the tumultuous England of King Henry VIII

Juvenile Fiction

Beads and Braids - Who will take care of Lindiwe when her sick mother passes?

Between Two Worlds - It’s never fun to be different, and Brazilian–born Cristina Larson feels very different.

The Wooden Ox - Despite the war, Keri’s parents wouldn’t let anything really bad happen to her... would they?

Robin Malan- workshop SA PRESENTERS



ROBIN MALAN

Writer

Robin Malan: He has worked in English teaching and theatre in education all his life (his poetry anthologies Inscapes, New Inscapes and Worldscapes are among his many compilations for school use). He was artistic Director of PACT Playwork theatre-in-education company, 1972–8. He was Assistant Head at Waterford Kamhlaba United World College in Swaziland, 1978–92. He ran a specialist bookshop in Mbabane, Africasouth Books in Swaziland. He has taught in the Department of Drama at Stellenbosch University and tutored in the English Department at the University of Cape Town. He now lives in Cape Town. He does volunteer work for Triangle Project, the health and social development organisation for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people. He writes a monthly column ‘Young Gay Guys’ for Exit newspaper. He was one of the founding editors of English Alive, the annual anthology of writing from high schools and colleges in Southern Africa, from 1967 to 1971, and was again editor from 1995 to 2004; and again from 2007 onwards. His novel for young people The Sound of New Wings won the runner-up prize in the Young Africa Awards 1998–9. He is the Series Editor for the Siyagruva Series of novels for South African teens, published by New Africa Books; as a writer in the Series, he uses various pseudonyms. In 2001 he was awarded the Molteno Medal for lifetime service to literature by the Cape 300 Foundation, on the Council of which he now sits. His recent books are his novel based on the life of John Keats Rebel Angel (2005), and the novel The Story of Lucky Simelane (2005). His first play, The Boy Who Walked into the World (2005), was a finalist in the 2005 PANSA Festival of South African Contemporary Theatre Readings. His 1972 guide to South African English Ah Big Yaws? was reissued in 2006. His compilation South African Plays for TV, Radio and Stage was pubished by Oxford University Press in December 2007. He publishes new South African plays in the Playscript Series under the Junkets Publisher imprint.

Robin Malan
email
robinmal@iafrica.com or info.junkets@iafrica.com
http://junketspublisher.blogspot.com

Joan Rankin - workshop SA PRESENTER




JOAN RANKIN
Writer and illustrator

Joan was born in Johannesburg, South Africa on the 24th June 1940. She studied graphic art at Michaelis Art School Cape Town (1957-1958) and studied Fine Art with Sidney Goldblatt for several years. She worked in Fibre Art and puppetry; mainly shadow theatre.

She has illustrated over thirty books for children, many of which she has written herself and which have been published internationally.

She won the HAUM Daan Retief Publishers Competition for children’s book illustration in 1986, the Katrina Harris Award for Children's Book Illustration in 1991and the Oppenheim toy portfolio gold award in 2003.

Joan has participated in exhibitions in Barcelona, Bratislava, Sarmede, Italy, New York and Japan.

She lives with her husband and family in Johannesburg.

Selected Bibliography

2007 - Theo the Library Cat; Theo and the Cat Burglar; Theo and the Circus Act by Wendy Hartmann and illustrated by Joan Rankin, Publisher: LAPA Publishers (SA)

2007 - Today at the Blue-Bird Café, by Deborah Ruddell, illustrated by Joan Rankin, Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry/Simon & Schuster.

2004 - What Sam Said, written & illus

. by Joan Rankin, Publisher: Songololo Books;

2003 - A Frog in the Bog, by Karma Wilson illustrated by Joan Rankin, Publisher:
Margaret K. McElderry (New York, NY)

2002 - First Day by Joan Rankin, Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books,

2001- Mrs. McTats and Her Houseful of Cats, by Alyssa Satin Capucilli Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry (New York, NY)

1999 - You're Somebody Special, Walliwigs by Joan Rankin Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books.
1997 - Wow! It's Great to be a Duck, by Joan Rankin, Publishers: Bodley Head (UK); McElderry (USA); Kematis (Denmark) & Aladin Books (USA)

1996 - Scaredy Cat, by Joan Rankin; Publishers: Margaret K. McElderry; 1st U.S. ed edition; Human & Rousseau; Bodley Head (UK); McElderry (USA) & Little Red Fox (UK)

1995 - The Little Cat and the Greedy Old Woman by Joan Rankin, Publishers: Human & Rousseau; Bodley Head (UK); McElderry (USA); Zirkoon (Netherlands)

Joan Rankin. SA Writer & Illustrator ––Tel./Fax: 011 648 3264 (joanr@eject.co.za)

Marjorie van Heerden - workshop SA PRESENTERS



MARJORIE VAN HEERDEN

Writer and illustrator
Co-Regional Advisor of SCBWI SA

Marjorie was born and grew up on a farm near Cape Town in South Africa. From an early age she loved drawing animals and people. After school she studied fine art at university where she met her husband. They honeymooned and camped around Europe for a year and then, back in Cape Town had their first child. Reading picture books to her daughter awakened Marjorie's interest and for the last 30 years she has been writing and illustrating for kids. Her picture books, as writer and/or illustrator, have been published in the USA, England, Germany, Greece and many African countries, in English, Afrikaans, French, German, Greek and about twenty African Languages. The original artwork for a number of her books has been shown at various international exhibitions in Europe and elsewhere. Her greatest joy is in writing and illustrating a picture book that is good enough to be kept under the child's pillow at night, but her greatest contribution to date has probably been the 16-title reading series she designed, created and published for the millions of historically disadvantaged beginner readers in South Africa.

Although she has travelled far and wide and even stayed for long periods in other countries, including the USA, Marjorie and her husband always returned to South Africa and they now live in Gordon’s Bay, a coastal village near Cape Town. Her two children are grown up, also live in the Cape and her first grandchild was born July 2007 and is already inspiring Marjorie .

She started the South African Chapter of the SCBWI in 2003 and is currently Co-Regional Advisor of the SCBWI SA

Six new books of Marjorie’s were published in the last seven months: Nina and Little Duck; Lulama’s Long Way Home; The Authentic, Unusual, Alarming, Actual, Factual, Story Book; San Tales from Africa and Phepa and Itumelang’s Adventures.

For more about Marjorie and her books visit her website and blogs:

http://www.grafikon.co.za/
http://www.marjorie-cv.blogspot.com/
http://ww
w.marjorie-van-heerden.blogspot.com/
http://marjorie-books.blogspot.com/
http://marjorie-van-heerden-articles.blogspot.com/
http://marjorie-educational-books.blogspot.com/
http://marjorie-readers.blogspot.com/

Recent publications

2007 - Nina and Little Duck by Wendy Hartmann and illustrated by Marjorie van Heerden, Publisher: Human &Rousseau SA (Also available in Afrikaans)
2007 -
Lulama’s Long Way Home by Marjorie van Heerden, Giraffe Books, an imprint of Pan Macmillan Publishers Available in 12 languages (all official SA languages and Portuguese)
2007 – San Tales from Africa by Raffaelle Delle Donne and Illustrations by Marjorie van Heerden; Pub
lisher: Struik Publishers (SA)
22007 -
Folktales from Africa, by Dianne Steward and Illustrated by Marjorie van Heerden, Publisher: Struik Publishers (SA)

2006 - The Adventures of Phepa and Itumelang by Mary Clanahan and Illustrated

by Marjorie van Heerden[also available in Afr.]
Struik Publishers (SA) [also available in Afr.]
2006 T
he Authentic, Unusual, Alarming, Actual, Factual, Story Book by Marjorie van Heerden; Publisher: Human & Rousseau Publishers(SA) [also available in Afr.]