News From PriceClan Publishing - by Susan Price
I’m
lucky in that I have two brothers, Andrew and Adam, who are both talented artists. Andrew Price, designs most of my indie-covers.
Here's a round-up of PriceClan projects just now.
We've re-issued my successful picture book, The Runaway Chapati. As with The
Wolf’s Footprint, people (especially teachers) were forever asking me where
they could get copies.
‘Chapati’ is The Gingerbread Man with added spice. I asked my brother,
Adam Price, if he’d like to illustrate a new edition. And here it is.
I asked Adam to make the pictures
vivid, and he drew inspiration from his love of India and its colours.
The chapatti’s nemesis is a tiger,
not a fox — and here is a sketch for Adam’s wonderful, springy tiger.
The book is excellent for early
readers, with its repeated words and sounds. (It was originally published as an
early reader book.)
Copies signed by the author and artist are available from my website.
Adam has also written and
illustrated his own picture-book: Tinku
Tries To Help.
‘In the shadow of the
mystical mountains,
Deep in the
tiger-haunted jungle,
Stood a city of flowers
and fountains,
That was home to the
marvelous Mogul.
In his palace of marble
and jade,
With domes and spires
of golden glory,
Tinku the elephant
lived and played.
Now listen as I tell
her story.’
Told in rhyme, it’s a tale of a little elephant who tries very hard, but with more enthusiasm than skill, to help with preparations for
the maharajah’s wedding day. The story's end end is full of love, and has a surprise which
sends the readers back to the beginning to search every page of the detailed
and colourful illustrations.
I can only say I’m jealous. I wish
I had written it.
It’s ideal for snuggling up with a small
person while looking at the pictures, and laughing at Tinku’s mishaps.
It’s
available as a paperback from Amazon — or, for a little extra, you can buy a
signed copy from my website, dedicated to your own small person.
Signed
copies from my my website:
PriceClan
Publishing seems to be going into picture books in a big way –
well, with two artists at hand, why not?
Brother Andrew and I are working on a
picture book of Billy Goats Gruff – though we’re meeting lots of problems. We
will get there.
Andrew has used a comic strip
approach — here’s a sketch.
The story will be told with
speech-bubbles and sound effects. Like The
Runaway Chapati, it will be an effective aid to teaching reading, with lots
of repeated words and sounds. ‘Who’s
trip-tripping across my bridge?’ As with a comic, 'trip, trip, trip' will be written under the goat's hooves.
Despite set-backs, we still hope to have the book on
sale for Christmas.
Finally,
I’m working on my book Follow The Dogs,
which will be my first entirely original self-published book — all my others
are re-published back-list books.
Follow
The Dogs is based on my reading about the drovers’ dogs who accompanied
their masters as they drove cattle to market in the late 18th and
early 19th century. The cattle had to be walked slowly, so they
wouldn’t lose weight, and by the time they reached market, the harvest was
ripe. So the drovers stayed to earn extra money by helping with the harvest.
However, the farmers they worked for didn’t want the herd-dogs around their
farms.
So the drovers told the dogs to go
home by themselves — and they did! The dogs walked by themselves, sometimes for
hundreds of miles, to reach home. They were fed at drovers’ inns along the way.
Later, when the drover made his own way home, he paid the inn-keepers for the
dogs’ food.
My book tells the tale of a boy
escaping from bad treatment who falls in with a couple of drover’s dogs, who
adopt him. Having nowhere else to go, he decides to follow them to wherever
they’re going — with a desperate hope that, like a stray dog, he’ll be taken in
wherever it is the dogs call home.
Brother Andrew is teaching me to use a
graphics programme so I can design the cover. It isn’t easy — but with Andrew’s
help, I’ll manage it. Here’s an early peek at the work in progress.
In the book, one of the dogs is
almost entirely black, but I couldn’t find a modern photo of a black collie, so
part of what I’m learning with the graphics programme is how to make a mostly
white dog mostly black.
Finally, my
book, The Wolf’s Footprint, is still
selling steadily in its new PriceClan edition. It begins, like Hansel and
Gretel, with children being abandoned in the forest.
But
there is no witch. Instead a wolf-pack appears…
When the book went out of print, I
had many, many emails from teachers asking where they could find copies. I put
the few I had up for sale on my website – they were bought almost immediately.
So I commissioned my artist brother
to produce new illustrations, and republished it as a paperback.
It’s now available as an ebook and a
paperback.
Comments
.
Dennis - I wish I could say there's a really simple graphics programme, but even with my brother's help I'm finding graphics fearsomely complicated. Even he admits that he doesn't understand or use half of it.
I think I've got it - and then, next day, find that I haven't at all.