SOUP’S ON: Jackie Urbanovic in the Kitchen (Part 2)!

 Well, here we go with a back-to-back quack! (Click here if you missed Part 1.)

I hope you brought your appetite. For our second course with the multi-talented Jackie Urbanovic, we’ll be getting down to the nitty gritty detail of just how she makes her pictures. We’ll also hear about her consuming passion for comics, and for the first time ever on any blog, we’ll find out what she eats!

Quello again, Jackie. Could you describe how you did the illustrations for your two books featuring Max the duck?                                    

First, I look at the big picture. I begin with thumbnail sketches — tiny sketches for every page being roughly 2″ x 3″ in size. I doodle the entire story in sequence. I begin this small so that I can quickly see the pacing and movement of the entire book at once. This allows me to plan where the climatic points will fall and to begin deciding what will be illustrated and what will be left to the words. It also lets me make sure that the story is fitting well into the 32 pages I have. I may do a set of thumbnails 2 or 3 times as a way to experiment and quickly try out different possibilities.

Second, I begin what’s called a book dummy. This is a larger set of sketches, folded like a book, at the same size as the book will be. The drawings are still doodles, but now there is room to see a bit more detail and to hand write the text in place. At this stage I make more changes because I can now see with more clarity if my original ideas work once they are full-sized.

 

Third, I work on creating my characters –deciding how they will look. This can be a few hours or a few days of work. I begin with looking at reference photos of the type of animals or people I’m working on and sketching them just to learn what they look like. Then I begin a process of caricaturing and simplifying them — exaggerating their features and making them into a personality a reader can recognize. I do a lot of experimenting. Then I mail these sketches as well as the book dummy to my editor, who looks them over. We discuss what works and what could be better.

Fourth, I do another set of revisions based on my editor’s responses. This is sometimes another book dummy, but most often it is a set of finished sketches with the revisions incorporated.

 

Fifth, after we’ve gone through all the revisions, I enlarge each sketch 40% and trace the image onto watercolor paper using a light table. The light table allows me to see through the paper. I enlarge the sketch so that I have room to put in more detail and to be more free with my brush strokes.

Sixth, I wet each piece of paper and secure it to a masonite board using a wide paper tape. Once the paper dries, it stretches out taut. Now, when I paint, the paper won’t buckle.

Seventh, I paint on 3 to 6 pages at a time, moving from one to the other. While one painting is drying, I can work on the next. This also gives me the chance to put a half finished painting aside for awhile when I’m not sure about how it’s working. If I leave it for an hour or two and come back to it, I can often see what needs to change.

 

Lastly, I re-draw over the light pencil outlines with a brown watercolor pencil, dipped in water, for my final outline. As I finish each painting, I cut it off the board and tape it to the wall. This way I can compare the colors and textures from the earlier paintings to the later ones, making sure they stay consistent.

Finished art from Duck at the Door

Thanks so much! The average person merely sees the final product, not realizing how much detailed work and patience is involved in creating it. Let’s shift gears a little. The comic strip, Maggie, Inc., is a brilliant example of your passion for the genre. Did you draw comics/cartoons as a child? What were some of your favorite comic books? Would you like to do a graphic novel someday?

I love doing the Maggie, Inc., comic strip. There’s so much fodder for ideas and humor in my everyday life and that of my self-employed friends. My friend, Michelle Massman, came up with the idea and everyone I knew shared their stories with me. Yes, I drew cartoons as a child. I even created my own comic strips. I loved reading Uncle Scrooge comics the best. I also enjoyed reading Val, Archie, Batman, Superman, The Phantom — and I adored Mad Magazine. I also admired the drawing on the comic strips Pogo and Lil’ Abner, but I couldn’t understand the stories. A dear friend, Steve Thompson, brought those strips and others to my attention again as an adult. (He is the official Pogo historian and publishes the Fort Mudge Most, the Pogo/Walt Kelly fan magazine.)

I still read comics, comic strips and graphic novels. Here’s a partial list of my current faves:

Scary Grandmother by Jill Thompson
Elfquest by Wendy and Richard Pini
Howard the Duck by Steve Gerber
Groo the Warrior by Sergio Aragones
Usagi Yojimbo books by Stan Sakai
The Asterix books by Goscinny and Udzero
Nausicaa (and any books or films) by Miyazaki
Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson
Mutts by Patrick McDonnell
Zits by Scott and Borgman
The cartoons and books of Jules Feiffer, Shel Silverstein, William Steig, Sempe, Posy Simmonds, Carol Lay, Peter Kruger, and Ronald Searle . . . and old comic strips: Gasoline Alley, Pogo, Little Nemo, Krazy Kat, Polly and her Pals.

My childhood dream was to become a comic book artist. I didn’t stray too far from that original dream, as picture books are a similar way to tell stories. And I would love to do a graphic novel someday.

This is so fascinating to me. Of course I read some comics as a child, but I am learning now about an entire industry that is exploding with exciting innovation and unleashed creativity. Speaking of innovation, Max the duck’s cooking has been described as creative and experimental. Yesterday you mentioned your love of cooking. Please describe your fondest food-related memory from childhood.

I love to cook and eat! I love discovering new foods and new recipes. I enjoy listening to the Splendid Table on NPR. I’d like to travel more just to sample the cuisine of many different cultures. And I’m fascinated with the politics of food and food production.

All of the women in my family are and have been tremendous cooks. My mother and grandmother grew their own vegetables and made many things from scratch:  pickles, horseradish, raisin bread, kugelis, sausage, jams, coconut cream pie. I remember my mom and grandma both used to cook chicken with potatoes and carrots in a shallow pot with a little water. It would cook slowly on the stove all day until everything was very soft. And the smell in the house was absolute heaven.

Okay, my mouth is officially watering, and I’m growing weak at the mention of coconut cream pie. Describe your favorite meal. Is there one particular food that inspires your best work?

My favorite meal . . . hmmm, that’s like asking me my favorite book. Don’t get me started! Let’s see — I love a good spinach pie with a side of tabouli along with some feta cheese and olives. Or something Thai or Vietnamese, or a good deli sandwich with pickles and fries, or, I could go on and on. Eating anything I really enjoy inspires me, especially when I can eat it with my family or friends. And while I’m not sure Gobstoppers inspire my best art, I do munch on them constantly while I work.

What can you tell us about the recipe you’re sharing today?

I recently experienced this recipe from my cousins Tomas and Jen. It’s a Lithuanian dish. It appeals to me because it harks back to my heritage. Had I seen it in a cookbook I would NEVER tried making it because it was such an odd combination of foods. But, fortunately, they brought the dish to my house first and I absolutely loved it. I guarantee it tastes much better than it sounds!

TOMAS AND JEN’S (AND NOW, JACKIE’S) FAMOUS COLD BEET SALAD

4 cans beets
1/2 jar dill pickles
1 can white beans or chickpeas
small red onion
mayonnaise to taste

Chop the beets, pickles and onion into small pieces. Mix with beans and mayonnaise. Serve cold.

 

Thank you so much, Jackie, for sharing this interesting, insightful, and wholly satisfying two course meal with us. Where else could we have gotten beets and gobstoppers on the same plate? It’s been great learning about you and your creative process!

For info on school visits and some of the books Jackie has illustrated for other authors, visit her website.

If you’d like to learn more about Jackie’s comic strip, Maggie, Inc., click here.

For a cool interview with Jackie’s mentor, Jane Resh Thomas, click here.

 

**All spreads posted by permission, © 2008 Jackie Urbanovic, All Rights Reserved.

friday feast: the educated cookie

Happy (burp) Holidays!

Do you think it’s possible to have too many cookies?

You see, for the past 3 weeks, I’ve been swimming in them.

 

Don’t misunderstand. I’ve been happier than clam cookies — dropping, rolling, sugaring, pressing, slicing, and yes, even inhaling them. By all accounts, I haven’t suffered any side effects, except for one teeny tiny thing.

Remember last week, when Sara Lewis Holmes came by with her Oatmeal Coconut Crisps? I admit I felt a little twinge then. She’s a doozy of a poet, apparently. Still, my behavior remained relatively normal.

Until — the lovely Kelly Fineman brought her Lumberjacks.

You know, there really is no way anyone can remain unaffected by Kelly’s presence. How many of you feel instantly smarter, more cultured, more refined, egads —  more apt to don a bonnet, after reading one of Kelly’s fabulous blog posts? Are you often reminded of how beautiful, versatile and exacting the English language really is, and do you feel inspired to read more, learn more, write more?

I thought so.

Now, having said all that, why didn’t anybody warn me? I made the mistake of eating some of Kelly’s Lumberjacks straight up. That’s right — no milk, no tea, no cider. Within minutes, I was waxing poetic. I began to breathe in dactyls.  Everything, even my eyebrows, wanted to rhyme.

So, with advance and profuse apologies, I present my first (and last) acrostic poem. In the spirit of the season, I beg your good will, and if you dare to try Kelly’s Lumberjacks, don’t say I didn’t warn you.

WHAT’S IN A NAME?
(for Kelly Fineman, the original Smart Cookie)


K elly took Jane to the cookie soiree,

E legant iambs gleamed on her tray.

L o, and behold —

L umberjack Lou fancied Jane,

Y earned for a kiss, that gingery swain.

F ie on thee, Woodman! Kelly cried in disgust.

I nch your way back to your forest of dust!

N o man is worthy of Jane’s witty crumb;

E at pride with your doggerel and lace it with rum.

M arry me, plaid-clad Jack, I’m high-born and well read,

A usten and Wordsworth are my daily bread.

N o matter the time, I’m bound to digress —

R adio waves in my brain rob me of rest.

O n top of these

C ookies

K elly’s sweetness is plain.

S ing thee her praises for she writes of Jane!

For those who crave poesy, intellectual stimulation, and weather reports of yore, these molasses cookies will sate your literary hunger. 

KELLY’S LUMBERJACKS
(makes 7 dozen)

 

1 cup sugar
1 cup shortening (I use butter; can use margarine or Crisco)
1 cup molasses
2 eggs
4 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ginger

Cream sugar and shortening. Add molasses and eggs, then the dry ingredients. Chill at least 2 hours. Have a small dish of sugar at hand (regular sugar, not colored or powdered or anything fancy). Dip fingers in sugar, pinch off a ball of cookie dough and roll. Place on ungreased tray and bake at 350 degrees F. “Underdone” at 12-15 minutes.

Note: Best enjoyed with a cup of tea. Wearing an empire-waisted gown, a bonnet, (and a spencer if it’s chilly), will enhance flavor. Feel free to ingest with abandon, as minimal undergarments are required with your costume.


Today’s Poetry Friday Roundup is at AmoXicalli.

We’d love to see you at the Cookie Party! Post your favorite recipe on your blog, then leave the link in the comments, or email your recipe to:  readermail (at) jamakimrattigan (dot com).

friday feast: the bones of january by sara lewis holmes

On Friday, July 6, 2007, I stumbled upon a blog called READ*WRITE*BELIEVE.

I carefully opened the door and let myself in.

 

I began to read the very first post of an author and poet named Sara Lewis Holmes:

“I like the word enter rather than the word begin because begin has always terrified and paralyzed me. Begin evokes the command of a professor at the start of an exam, and implies a linear route to a fixed end. Enter seems much more inviting, conjuring up the image of multiple doorways into a fascinating place. And of course, if you enter, rather than begin, you can always exit, re-emerging from that fascinating place, perhaps by a different door, changed by your experiences within. This is why I write.”

Ever since then, I’ve been totally captivated by Sara’s words. Each morning, I can hardly wait to drop in to see what she is up to. You just never know. Will a former Tibetan monk paint her toenails again? Will she talk about how drawing has influenced her writing? Or will she simply astonish me with yet another stunning, finely crafted poem?

Sara has the uncanny ability to see right into the essence of an experience, an event, an idea — while standing on her head. And I, having spent my entire life walking upright in a straight line, have found myself compelled to not only stand on my head, but to try backflips and somersaults as well.

This happens most often on Poetry Fridays. After reading  “-and this you know-“, cold corn-on-the-cob will never be the same, for it is “a dangerous act, as if it were forbidden.” How thrilling it was to follow an unexpected tenor of emotion, as I savored the poem, kernel by kernel.

Or what about “39 Reasons to Write?” Did you ever consider that “thousands of sparrows are counting on you?”  Or what about “Credo?” Would you not be compelled to worship large blueberries,”with both your eyes, for at least ten minutes?” Reading one of Sara’s poems reminds me of what Emily Dickinson once said: “If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry.”

“The Bones of January” was the first of Sara’s poems that I encountered on that Friday back in July. Now that we are in the midst of the holidays, dressing up our lives in lights, greenery, overindulgence and small talk, it is reassuring to know that when all has calmed down, we can visit this poem, enter its quiet room of spare images, and find an unadorned truth there. For such a radiant poem, it is worth the price of captivity, if only to realize we will re-emerge from a different door.

THE BONES OF JANUARY
by Sara Lewis Holmes

 

I love the plainness of January
when I have taken down my Christmas
finery, and in the shock
of my home stripped bare, I see
the corners of my rooms
again. And outside, all is
stark, gray, glorious
with no false beauty to help me
pretend that I am satisfied.

(Read the rest here.)

This week’s Poetry Friday Roundup is at the Miss Rumphius Effect.

P.S. Recently, I had the pleasure of meeting Sara in person, and she gave me this cookie recipe to share with everyone. Of course it includes variations. (With Sara, you have to remain open to all the possibilities.) I recommend eating these while reading her poems, blog or enchanting novel, Letters from Rapunzel, winner of the Ursula Nordstrom Fiction Prize, and a nominee for the 2007 Cybils Award for Middle Grade Fiction. They’re the perfect complement to her captivating words.

SARA’S OATMEAL/COCONUT CRISPS
(makes 14 dozen)

 

2 cups butter or regular margarine
2 cups brown sugar, firmly packed
2 cups sugar
2 tsp vanilla
4 eggs
3 cups sifted flour
2 tsp salt
2 tsp baking soda
6 cups quick-cooking rolled oats
1-1/2 cups flaked coconut

Cream together flour, salt, and baking soda. Add to creamed mixture. Stir in rolled oats and coconut. Drop by teaspoonfuls about 2″ apart onto well-greased baking sheet.

Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees) 10 to 15 minutes. Cool cookies on racks.

NOTE:  You can omit the 1-1/2 cups coconut and divide dough into thirds. Add 1/3 cup flaked coconut to one part, 1/3 cup raisins to second part, and 1/3 cup chopped walnuts to the third part.

VARIATIONS:

Oatmeal/Raisin Cookies:  Use 1-1/2 cups raisins instead of the coconut.
Oatmeal/lNut Cookies:  Use 1-1/2 cups chopped walnuts instead of the coconut.
Oatmeal/Butter Crisps:  Omit the flaked coconut.
Oatmeal/Chocolate Chip:  Omit coconut. Add 2 cups chocolate chips.

Join Sara and the rest of the holiday revelers at the December Cookie Party. Post your favorite recipe on your blog and leave the link in the comments, or email your recipe to:  readermail (at) jamakimrattigan (dot com).

pocket these cookies!

I don’t think Liz Garton Scanlon would mind at all, since she considers her cookies to be “THE cookie cutter cookie.”

Who am I to argue with the author of one of the sweetest reads around: A Sock is a Pocket for Your Toes — a poem featuring unconventional pockets? This book is a Junior Library Guild selection, A Children’s Crown Gallery finalist, a Children’s Book-of-the-Month Club alternate, and is recognized in Books Children Sit Still For. Sounds pretty tasty, no?


A SOCK IS A POCKET FOR YOUR TOES: A POCKET BOOK
by Elizabeth Garton Scanlon, illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser
(HarperCollins, 2004) 

But judging from the looks of Liz’s recipe, these cookies won’t stay in your pocket for very long. No matter. Make a bunch more with your kids, and read Liz’s book while the cookies are baking.  By the way, Liz has two more delectable books in the oven, both illustrated by the fabulous Marla Frazee, which will be ready for us to devour in 2009 and 2010!

Great Gift Idea:  Pair this book with a set of cookie cutters representing things from the poem (hat, bear, sock, duck, ice cream cone, etc.). Include Liz’s great cookie cutter recipe, of course. Sounds very kid-friendly to me!

LIZ SCANLON’S COOKIE CUTTER COOKIES

1/2 cup butter
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
3 cups flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
2 T milk

Cream butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition; stir in vanilla. Sift flour, salt and baking powder together, beat into creamed mixture alternately with milk. Form dough into flattened ball and wrap with foil; chill. Divide dough in fourths and roll on well-floured board to 1/8 inch thick; cut with cookie cutters. Place on greased baking sheet, decorate with sprinkles now if you wish, and bake in a preheated 350 oven for 10 to 12 minutes or until lightly browned on outer edges. Remove to cake rack to cool. Frost as desired.

Note: After eating these cookies, you may feel an overwhelming desire to write a poem. Do not panic. This response is perfectly normal, what some call “sweet inspiration.” Just remember: your heart is a pocket for a poem.

When you’ve finished writing your masterpiece, head on over to the Cookie Party to see who else has dropped by. Post your favorite recipe and leave your link in the comments, or email your recipe to: readermail (at) jamakimrattigan (dot com).

how to steal a cookie

The easiest way would be to distract the person in possession of said cookie with this fabulous book:

Once that person begins reading all about Georgina and the irresistible dog in question, he/she will forget all about cookies. This book has already been nominated for a Texas Bluebonnet Award, is recommended by Parents Choice, and is a School Library Journal Best Book of 2007.  I freely admit to having read this book sans cookies.

But looking at you, I sense your weakness. You’re probably the type who wants to have your cookie and eat it, too.

It’s a good thing the author herself, Barbara O’Connor, is here for the Cookie Party. She has brought one of her favorite recipes from The Silver Palate Cookbook (Workman, 1982). I recommend eating these very slowly,and savouring every crumb while reading Barbara’s book, to facilitate the ultimate canine cookie experience.

MOLASSES COOKIES

12 T (1-1/2 sticks) sweet butter
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup molasses
1 egg
1-3/4 cups flour
1/2 tsp ground cloves
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Melt butter, add sugar and molasses, and mix thoroughly. Lightly beat egg and add to butter mixture; blend well.

Sift flour with spices, salt and baking soda, and add to first mixture; mix. Batter will be wet.

Lay a sheet of foil on a cookie sheet. Drop tablespoons of cookie batter on foil, leaving inches between the cookies. These will spread during baking.

Bake until cookies start to darken, 8 to 10 minutes. Remove from oven while still soft. Let cool on foil.

(These are soft and chewy, and definitely worth stealing.)

TIP:  I know you will like How to Steal a Dog so much, you will bark for more.  But no need to beg, roll over, or steal. Just pre-order Barbara’s next book, coming in Spring 2008:


Leading a dog’s life? Break out of your kennel and join the Cookie Party

Post your favorite recipe and leave the link in the comments, or email your recipe to me:  readermail (at) jamakimrattigan (dot com)!