Why Children’s Books?

Our first publication was Disney Looking at Painting, after which any title has been a doddle to produce! Reconciling high Brit culture with the demotic of Disney was a gas. Overall, it turned out quite well, with 110,000 copies in print.

Then we met Rob DeSalle, Ian Tattersall, and Patrica J. Wynne, sciences professionals at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and devised Bones, Brains, and DNA and Brain. Next, after doing The Summer of Cecily, a story of author Nan Lincoln‘s heroic rescue of a harbor seal, it seemed like a good idea to do the story through the seal’s eyes–thus Cecily’s Summer. The trick is finding the right people to do the right books and in this we have been very fortunate. Of course, you want a strong text and great illustration but you also want to create a book that doesn’t look like all the others on the shelf. Luckily for us, our writers and artists have strong stylistic senses and return to us with new, fresh material time and again. We work around their skills and the subject at hand, designing the format to suit. Authors are never wrong and artists are always right. The rest is, er, finesse!

In all seriousness, though, we maintain that the aesthetics and sensibilities of our authors, illustrators, and author-illustrators are of the most importance. Commodity publishing, or “just giving the public what they want,” is a distracting idea when what we publishers do is fall in love with an idea and work out a way to share it.

And these ways are changing. Looking at and reading books will soon be only the first step in the adventure, with website tie-ins, multimedia components, and interactive materials to follow. Hardback, paperback, audio, digital, and the rest are all zones of publishing, different ways of reaching what remains the same public. Though fads and fashions change the pitch and alter the balance of forms as time goes by, the zeal of their audiences remain a constant.  It’s a case of “play it again, Sam,” as the famous mishearing of the old Bogart line goes. Only now we’re “playing it” on a new set of instruments and in a shifted key.

Amid such a constantly-shifting technology, it is interesting to note that children’s books haven’t changed substantially in content since the Victorians invented the genre. Still, reprints of old favorites are hard to come by. There are fewer and fewer “classics” now. Quality is also an issue, as older books — like the French Babar series, for instance – that had a high quality of production now appear in a tatty, cheapening form.  Beatrix Potter’s long-running Peter Rabbit has fared better with Penguin, but such cases are rare.

My advice? Hoard your precious, dog-eared copies of Caps for Sale, your (original!) Curious George, the Madelines and Ferdinands and Flat Stanelys of your childhood — if you still have them. If they’ve disappeared from your parents’ house, your storage space, or been hand-me-downed to friends and family, fear not. Likely within months or minutes of this writing, you will be able to read them to your favorite tots from the screen of your Kindle.

The Summer of Cecily

The Summer of Cecily by Nan Lincoln

The Summer of Cecily by Nan Lincoln

List Price: $18.95
Sale Price: $16.11
Savings of 15 %

DESCRIPTION

Have you ever read a book and wished it was your story? The Summer of Cecily is that kind of book. Magically, Nan Lincoln makes her six-week adventure raising an abandoned seal pup feel like your story, too.

With humor, compassion and an incredible gift for storytelling, she takes the reader on a journey, from the first life-and-death struggle to get the starving pup to feed, to the unexpected dilemma of what to do with a baby seal who adapts so well to a life with humans. Car and wheelbarrow rides, gardening, television watching, and living in a log house; the growing seal begins to think she is human, too. It is up to her new mother to teach the pup how to be a seal again and how to live in the ocean, to swim, eat fish, and socialize with other seals.

The reader will learn, along with Cecily, what it takes to be a harbor seal.The Summer of Cecily is a heart-warming and inspiring true tale about the meeting of a creature of the land and a creature of the sea, of falling in love and, ultimately, having to say good-bye.

It is also the story of a very special place, where an ordinary day can turn into an extraordinary adventure. This first complete portrait of the artist behind the legendary dresses is published to coincide with the first museum retrospective of designs by this American fashion icon.

REVIEWS

via The Reading Tub (c) – “This is a wonderful, funny, and memorable story. It educates the reader. The characters and story are authentic.”

via Amazon.com (c) 2004 – “You’re on a beach- the tide is coming in- you see an abandoned seal pup halfway under a rock. What would you do? When Nan Lincoln sees the pup on the beach in the early summer of 1976 she feels like she should adopt it, six hours later she decided to and she did. She named the pup Cecily. She keeps Cecily for the summer and finds ways to make her life as similar as it would be to the life of other pups. Cecily has an attitude that is expressed by Nan (in English not seal language) and is very funny to read about. In the first chapter however Nan mostly writes about the setting and her family which is also explained in chapter 2. Soon the book heats up and she finds Cecily and you are brought along on the ride of your life as you go through the summer with Cecily, Nan, and Nan’s family. Each chapter brings a new laugh to the scene.  Nan has a unique writing style that is very descriptive and specific. She has written a very unique book that would be perfect for a 4th Grade read-aloud or an independent reading book for other grades as well as 4th Grade. All in all I would give this book 5 star rating.”

via Amazon.com (c) 2006 -  “Nan Lincoln’s real-life story of finding a young seal is both heart-warming and informative; interspersing a history and background of Mount Desert Island amongst the story of Cecily. A very interesting and all-around wonderful book.”

via Amazon.com (c) 2004 – “Nan Lincoln’s story of the summer she spent raising (with the permission of the authorities) an abandoned seal pup is the most endearing story I think I’ve ever read. Her tale of her struggles to get it to eat, swimming with it, riding around with a seal in the car, carting Cecily to the shore in a wheel barrow, then, finally, successfully integrating it back into nature is destined to be a classic. Ms. Lincoln has a wonderfully readable prose style and the story is absolutely unique. I can’t imagine anyone not being delighted with it. A friend called it ‘a little jewel.’ This is not a children’s book, although it contains both photographs and sketches of her amazing experience and will be enjoyed by all ages. The youngest children won’t be interested in her bits of history about Mount Desert Island, I suspect. Mom or Dad can skip those parts when reading out loud. This should be a movie. Where’s Michael Eisner when we need him?”

PRODUCT DETAILS

Hardcover: 128 pages
ISBN-10: 1593730349
ISBN-13: 978-1593730345
Language: English
Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.5 x 0.7 inches
Weight: 12 ounces

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nan Lincoln lives in Mount Desert Island where she is the arts editor, feature writer and reporter for the Bar Harbor Times. Her Obits are quite literally to die for and she has written for Reader’s Digest, Down East, Yankee and other nationally distributed magazines, most recently for Chicken Soup for the Soul. She is a winner of the Bob Drake Award for Journalism from the Maine Press Association and numerous other state, New England, and national awards for her writing. When not writing she sings in the Maine Women’s Balkan Choir and walks her dog Amos who, curiously enough, looks very much like a seal.

No shows booked at the moment.

Cecily’s Summer

Cecily's Summer by Nan Lincoln

Cecily's Summer by Nan Lincoln

List Price: $16.95
Sale Price: $14.41
Savings of 15%

DESCRIPTION

Cecily’s Summer is the delightful tale of an abandoned seal pup’s six week adventure into our human world. Finding the pup scared and alone on the beach, Nan Lincoln and her family rescue her and name her Cecily. Cecily takes us from the moments of anxiety waiting for Mom through all the ups and downs of adapting to the humans. Through the eyes of a seal pup we see the bond that is forged and eventually must be broken as she returns to her world. Nan Lincoln brought us the best selling The Summer of Cecily and now we hear Cecily’s Story, beautifully illustrated by Patricia Wynne.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 1593730470
ISBN-13: 978-1593730475
Language: English
Dimensions: 10.8 x 8.1 x 0.5 inches
Weight: 1.1 pounds

ABOUT THE ILLUSTRATOR

 

 

 

Patricia Wynne

Patricia Wynne

 

 

Patricia J. Wynne is an award winning artist who lives with her husband, artist Donald Silver, in New York City. She works at the American Museum of Natural History and teaches numerous courses when she is not illustrating books. Her books are frequently on Book of the Year Lists in Newsweek, Smithsonian Magazine, Scientific American, Parade, New York Times Book Review and others.

No shows booked at the moment.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nan Lincoln lives in Bass Harbor Maine, where she has been a reporter and arts editor for the local newspapers for the past 25 years – most recently with the Mount Desert Islander. In addition to raising her kids and a seal she enjoys singing with the Maine Women’s Balkan Choir, performing in community theater and playing Scrabble – preferable while in the middle of a lake or a winding salt marsh, aboard the Nan&Nan, a pedal boat, which she shares with her cousin – also named Nan. She hopes readers will enjoy meeting Cecily and learning about raising a seal and a family in a log house on an island off the coast of Maine.

No shows booked at the moment.