IZZY & OSCAR BLOG TOUR w/ Author & Illustrator Guest Posts
ABOUT THE BOOK
Octopuses make the best pets! Discover why in this charming picture book from an acclaimed author/illustrator team
Pretend pirate captain Izzy is looking for a pet when an adventurous little octopus squiggles into town. Oscar isn't exactly warm and fuzzy, but Izzy decides to take him home anyway.
Young readers will be tickled by Izzy's attempts to teach Oscar to behave like a dog, a parrot, a pony-and gratified by Izzy's realization that in the end we love others for who they are, not who we want them to be. Besides there's one thing octopuses are really good at...octohugs.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR/ILLUSTRATOR
Allison
Estes has written more than a dozen books. Izzy & Oscar is her first picture
book, and was really different and fun to write! Some of her other books are The Short Stirrup Club series (ten
titles) for middle-grade readers, four titles in the Thoroughbred series (fun because she got to start over in #24 with
all new characters), and Paw & Order:
Dramatic Investigations by an Animal Cop on the Beat, which is an adult
book but fine for animal lovers of all ages and full of happy endings.
After 29 years in New York City, Allison recently moved
back to her home town, Oxford, Mississippi. She lives in the country with her
son, two grandparents, two dogs, and two horses. Right now, when she isn’t busy
cooking supper, taking care of dogs and horses, teaching writing workshops and
driving to soccer, she is working on another picture book, another adult book,
and more happy endings.
Tracy Dockray grew up on the plains of West Texas with
a love of books and innumerable pets. She moved to New York where she studied
fine art and acquired several old motorcycles.
Her career veered from sculpture to puppet making to murals and finally
to children’s books. She is ecstatic to have illustrated 30 books including two
that she wrote herself.
Tracy
now lives in a creaky, cavernous brownstone in Greenwich Village, with a
hairless cat, 2 fuzzy dogs, two children and a very tolerant husband. She is thrilled to have been able to
illustrate Mrs. Cleary’s Ramona series and The Mouse and the Motorcycle series
since she has a soft spot for them both.
Although Tracy studied Fine Arts in school, she has come to the happy
conclusion that drawing pictures for children’s books is the finest art she
knows.
Social
Media
Website:
http://www.tracydockray.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tracy.d.rudd
REVIEW
As a 'pirate' captain, Izzy needs a pet. When she meets Oscar, the octopus she and her friends think that he will fit the bill. But as Izzy discovers, an octopus has unique needs as well as abilities. The illustrations are cute and work well for the imaginative nature of the story. A fun story about friendship and discovering one's unique talents, after all, even octopuses have special abilities that help them survive. The additional information about octopuses at the end of the book is a great touch.
GUEST POST
Author Allison Estes
How I Got into Writing
For as long as I can remember, I have loved books. But here
is how I discovered that I was also an author:
When I was little, we moved to Charlottesville, Virginia,
where my dad started work on his PhD in astronomy, and I started first grade,
at age 5. It was a private first grade, in the basement of the teacher’s house.
On the first day of school, I noticed a poster on the wall, a black-and-white
photograph of some children riding a merry-go-round, with these four letters
underneath: R E A D. Every day I came to school, and I looked at that poster,
and I did not know what those letters said, until one day, all of a sudden, I
did know: “read.” And from that moment on, I could do it: read. Anything.
Everything. It was just like that for me: like a switch flipping on. Like a
part of my soul coming to life. It was a private, marvelous little miracle that
gave me sudden insight into my young self. Ever since that moment, I have
always been a reader. And somewhere not long after that, I began to conceive of
myself as a writer. I wrote, bound and illustrated my first book using several
feet of leftover computer paper my dad gave me, and a fair amount of Elmer’s
glue. (The title was My Toy Book.) And
I have been reading and writing ever since!
GUEST POST
Illustrator Tracy Dockray
How I got Into
Illustrating
In the dusty part of Texas I was a
quiet kid and a BIG reader and loved the library like a refugee. In school I was terrible at math, but I could
draw. I remember the high point of my grade
school experience was when my undersea crayon picture was picked along with
some other “great” artists to be exhibited in the South Plains Mall.
Challenges
reigned in Middle School and High School where there was someone else who was
super-duper good at art. She was always
picked for everything artistic. But,
being second best artist didn’t stop me because I believed in my heart that I loved
making art the most. In college, we were to choose our majors. I loved
illustrated books and voiced that desire to a professor. He scoffed and said
that that wasn’t Fine Art. So
consequently, I ended up becoming a Fine Arts major in sculpture. After graduation I moved to New York. I made puppets and to make a living, I learned
to paint doing murals for children’s rooms, until I realized that I really did want to illustrate for
children in BOOKS.
Having no training in illustration or even painting, beyond what I learned with a big can of paint and a wall, I hesitantly put together a portfolio. A thoughtful boyfriend pretended he was my agent and got my first illustration job from a kind editor at Farrar, Straus & Giroux. Since then I’ve illustrated over 25 books. I’ve been scathed by a book trade publication, and there are certainly super-duper better illustrators out there but I still believe that I love children’s books and making pictures for them the most. And that’s the finest art I know.
And happily, our latest book “Izzy and Oscar” got a great review from Kirkus, no less. And guess what’s in it? Lots of undersea pictures! Glad I didn’t give up, there’s room for so many artists out here. Don’t give up if you love what you do.
Having no training in illustration or even painting, beyond what I learned with a big can of paint and a wall, I hesitantly put together a portfolio. A thoughtful boyfriend pretended he was my agent and got my first illustration job from a kind editor at Farrar, Straus & Giroux. Since then I’ve illustrated over 25 books. I’ve been scathed by a book trade publication, and there are certainly super-duper better illustrators out there but I still believe that I love children’s books and making pictures for them the most. And that’s the finest art I know.
And happily, our latest book “Izzy and Oscar” got a great review from Kirkus, no less. And guess what’s in it? Lots of undersea pictures! Glad I didn’t give up, there’s room for so many artists out here. Don’t give up if you love what you do.
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