Skip to content
Book icon

Beautiful Backlist

The other day, one of my colleagues mentioned that she saw one of our titles at a knit shop window (below). The title was Silkworms, a nonfiction work we brought in from a Japanese publisher, Akane Shobo. A then on-staff editor, Sylvia Johnson, wrote the text. The awesome photographs by Isao Kishida completed the package. […]Read more "Beautiful Backlist"
Book icon

Holiday Baking

By Domenica Di Piazza, Editorial Director, TFCB I don’t do a lot of baking for the holiday season, although I do typically make at least one batch of cookies. This year, I’m going to make espresso shortbread (left) again. It was a huge hit last year. I realize this has almost nothing to do with […]Read more "Holiday Baking"
Book icon

A New Holiday Song

By Carol HinzEditorial Director, Millbrook Press Deck the halls with children’s authors,Fa la la la la, la la la la.Brian Cleary, Sally Walker,Fa la la la la, la la la la. Keep your clever rhymes a-goin’,Fa la la, la la la, la la la.Trudy Harris and Anne Bowen,Fa la la la la, la la la […]Read more "A New Holiday Song"
Book icon

Oh, The Things I’ve Learned

By Sara HoffmannSenior Editor As some of my fellow bloggers have mentioned, one of the benefits of being an editor is that you’re always learning something new. I recently had the opportunity to help develop an upcoming Spring 2010 series called Is That a Fact? (cover pictured). This group of books explores whether there’s any […]Read more "Oh, The Things I’ve Learned"
Book icon

A Christmas post, sort of

Actually, I suppose it’s a “why-haven’t-I-seen-this-in-a-novel-yet post. The town I grew up in had a fairly serious extra-curricular boy choir. I was not in it, but I had several friends who were. It was an uncomfortable social balancing act for these pre-adolescent boys. On the one had: dorky robes, practice, and high voices. On the […]Read more "A Christmas post, sort of"
Book icon

Living with Your Subject

By Domenica Di Piazza, Editorial Director, TFCB I’ve always assumed that biographers inevitably fall in love with their subjects. After all, they cohabit the same psychic space for months, if not years, and a certain amount of transference is likely to occur. Kind of like falling in love with your surgeon after he or she […]Read more "Living with Your Subject"