kidfreelance

Educational & Youth Publishing

A sampling of Sean's works:

Capstone Press's Velocity Series
Chelsea House Character Education Series
MADD-honored classroom magazine article on alcohol and the teen brain
Award-winning middle-grade biography
Middle-grade science
Easy-Reader Sci-Fiction Novella
Award-winning grade school geography
A controlled-vocabulary text

From the Nonfiction Front ...

September 24, 2009

Tags: A dry spell ...

Fish or famine ... anyone who has been freelancing for a while knows the unnerving wobble between too much work and nowhere near enough. In 17 years, I've experienced two patches as slow as this one. Is it the chilled economy? But I've got lines in the water and the fish are starting to circle again.

My Grandma Lena used to skewer a kernel of corn along with the nightcrawler when we went out for sunfish. Perhaps I'll include some posolé along with my next batch of clips?

Here's wishing well on all who make their living with words and wits.

smc

Comments

  1. September 30, 2009 7:40 PM EDT
    Well... I found 3 quotes at the front of the index card box-of-quotes I keep on my desk. First: "Learn the alchemy true human beings know.
    The moment you accept what troubles you've been given
    the door will open." - Rumi Then this one: "In the difficult are the friendly forces, the hands that work on us." - Rainer Maria Rilke And the final one: "In times of adversity make energetic progress in the good." - Lao Tzu
    I admire you.
    - Lynner

Cool Quotes


That so few now dare to be eccentric marks the chief danger of the time.
-John Stuart Mill

It is blissfully simple to strike a savvy, sophisticated pose by attacking someone else’s creations, but the old adage is right: Any fool can burn down a barn. Building one is something else again. -Martha Beck

The world in which you were born is just one model of reality. Other cultures are not failed attempts at being you: they are unique manifestations of the human spirit.
-Wade Davis

Story means pleasure, as distinct from art; it would rather gratify than edify.
But stories also protect us from chaos, and maybe that’s what we, unblinkered at the end of the twentieth century, find ourselves craving. Implicit in the extraordinary revival of storytelling is the possibility that we need stories—that they are a fundamental unit of knowledge, the foundation of memory, essential to the way we make sense of our lives: the beginning, middle, and end of our personal and collective trajectories. It is possible that narrative is as important to writing as the human body is to representational painting. We have returned to narratives—in many fields of knowledge—because it is impossible to live without them.
-Bill Buford, 1996

"Adulthood is the consequence of decisions made by a teenager."
-Stew

"It is so easy to be cynical. It's an accurate reflection of reality. It's much harder; it takes a philosophical point of view, to be optimistic. You have to work at it every day. One of the joys of working with children is that they are still unspoiled by cynicism."
-Yo-Yo Ma

"Kids are not stupid. They're just short." —Jack Prelutsky