Bombs launch and tread desk

My Brantford book launch for Making Bombs For Hitler is taking place on April 16th. Michelle Ruby of the Brantford Expositor did a lovely story about the novel. You can read it here.

Brian Thompson, photographer extraordinaire, came over the day before to take a photo of me and the book. I asked if we could do something different and he said sure, so I took him downstairs and showed him my tread desk. Go to the link above for the article, then click on the photo. He even captured the movement of my legs! Pretty nifty!

 

 

Barb Hesson’s Making Bombs review in the Calgary Herald

Here.

Making Bombs for Hitler by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch (Scholastic Canada, 186 pages, $8.99)

Skrypuch gives us another compelling tale based on the slave raids Hitler conducted throughout the Soviet Union. This is the courageous story of Lida, who was separated from her family. Her determination to find her sister and her usefulness as a seamstress help her survive the brutal labour camps.

For ages nine and up.

Come to my Toronto book launch, March 7, 2012

The World Federation of Ukrainian Women’s Organizations and the Ukrainian Women’s Organization of Canada, Toronto Branch, invite you to the launch of

Making Bombs For Hitler

by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

When: Wednesday March 7, 2012 @7:30pm

Where: UNF Toronto Community Centre, 145 Evans Ave, Etobicoke ON

The author will give a brief talk, followed by Q&A. Books available for sale and autograph. Light refreshments.

 

 

 

 

 

BookDragon’s awesome review of Last Airlift

Check it out here.

Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch is one of those mega-award-winning Canadian authors (with more than a dozen titles) who hasn’t crossed over our shared border (just yet!) with the same success. She’s best known for her historical novels for younger readers about what must be one of the most difficult subjects ever – children and war. Her latest, which debuted far north last fall, hits U.S. shelves next week (March already!). Airliftis Skrypuch’s first narrative nonfiction, the true story of Son Thi Anh Tuyet and her last days in her native Vietnam and her first days with her Canadian family.

Tuyet can’t remember life before she came to live in the Saigon orphanage with all the children, babies, and nuns. Her only memory of “outside” are occasional visits of a woman with a young boy, who may or may not have been her mother and brother. “‘After a while, they stopped coming.’”

On April 11, 1975, Tuyet is frantically packed into the back of a van with babies and toddlers strapped into makeshift boxes headed to the airport. She is one of 57 children on what will turn out to be the last Canadian airlift operation to save orphans from a war-torn Saigon on the verge of collapse. As an older child of 8 with a leg weakened by polio, Tuyet is convinced she’s been brought only to help care for the younger children; as long as she remains useful, perhaps she will not be sent back to the orphanage.

Her remarkable journey – filled with unfamiliar faces, words she cannot understand, a future that seems so uncertain – lands her with a family of her own. “‘You are my daughter,’” her new mother assures her even before she can understand the words, “‘Not my helper.’” “Grassswingplay,” her new father teaches her. And “‘sister,’” her new siblings call her with comforting hugs and kisses.

Enhanced with documents and a surprising number of photographs, Airlift is a touching, multi-layered experience. The strength of Skrypuch’s storytelling shows strongest in the smallest details: Tuyet’s wonder at discovering that stars are real things in the sky, her knowing better than the adults that to quiet the screaming babies is to place them close together, her doubt about “dads … [who] didn’t seem very real [as] she had never actually seen one.”

In the ending “Author’s Note,” Skrypuch explains how her initially intended novel became Tuyet’s narrative: ” … I was going to piece together a story of one orphan based on the experiences of many. But as I recreated these experiences from my research, an interesting thing happened. In small flashes, Tuyet bagan to remember more. … When Last Airlift was complete, Tuyet was overwhelmed by the fact that it was, in fact, her own story that had been reclaimed.”

Terry Hong
BookDragon
Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program
http://bookdragon.si.edu/
http://www.facebook.com/sibookdragon
@SIBookDragon

Doing a book talk: Advice for the newly published

Speaking about your own book is a lot of fun. Relax and enjoy it.

A talk is a conversation with individuals who just happen to be sitting all together. Make eye contact. Read their expressions. Modify your talk depending on those expressions.

If it’s a big group, be sure to use the microphone. Make eye contact with someone in the back row and ask if they can hear you.

The ideal set up is to have either a wireless microphone that’s pinned on, or a handheld. If it’s not wireless, hopefully you’re on a long leash. When at all possible, I like to walk amongst the audience so that the people in the back and on the edges don’t feel left out.

Because you are having a conversation with your audience, do ask them questions. When I give a talk, I like to ask a few questions right at the get-go so I can tailor my talk to the particular crowd at hand. No two audiences are ever the same. One thing I like to find out is if there are aspiring writers in the room, or students, or librarians etc. If there are writers, be sure to give some writing tips at some point during your talk.

You can also ask them why they came. You may be surprised at the reasons. The answers can break the ice. Also, you’ll find out what they want to know from you by how they respond to this.

Ask how many have read your book. Sometimes everyone has. Other times a few or none have. If everyone’s read the book, you’d talk about the story behind the story — the research, problems, anecdotes, stuff that went wrong. If few have read the book, be sure not to give away the ending.

As to an actual reading. Be brief.  I tend never to read more than three paragraphs, or about 2/3 of a book page. You want to paint an intriguing picture, and then you want to stop. It’s better to leave them wanting more than to put them to sleep.

The key thing people want to know in a book talk is why you were compelled to write it and how you went about doing it/researching it.

A couple other do’s and don’ts:

1. Do ask one of the organizers to mind the time for you. You don’t want to be looking at your watch. If an organizer can give you a signal when there’s 10 minutes left, then 5 minutes, you won’t go over.

2. Do not do power point. Power point is a sedative.

3. Do not be afraid of silence. If you ask for questions and none come immediately, pause. Look at your audience and give them a relaxed and expectant smile. If the first question doesn’t come after 60 seconds, ask them a question. This will get the ball rolling.

4. Do repeat each question in a clear voice so everyone knows what you’re answering.

5. If someone asks a question you don’t want to answer, say, “that’s a great questions” then reframe it into something you want to answer. As an example,when I speak to kids’ and teen groups, invariably someone will ask me how much money I make. I turn it around and ask how much money they think I get from the sale of a single book. Then I tell them and let them do their own math.

6. Don’t talk about awards, honours, sales, blah blah blah. Talk about your failures.

7. Don’t over-prepare. Don’t try to breathlessly shoehorn everything you can think of into your talk. White space and silence and pauses are very effective.

8. Do have fun!

Great review of Making Bombs For Hitler in the Montreal Gazette!

Check it out here.

In Making Bombs for Hitler, a Ukrainian woman warns 8-year-old Lida in the cattle car transporting her to slavery in Germany, “Be useful or they will kill you.”

Lida’s story dramatizes the little-known story of slave raids made by Nazi forces in the Soviet Union during the war. Young people were rounded up and used for forced labour in appalling conditions. Many were worked or starved to death; some were used in medical experiments.

From the Bukovina region of Ukraine, Lida is all alone in the world. Her mother was murdered by Nazis as she tried to help Jews, her father was killed by the Soviets. Lida is ripped away from her younger sister, whose story is told in the earlier novel, Stolen Child.

Lida learns to lie to protect herself, to say she is much older than she looks. But, alongside shrewdness, she has other sources of strength. She remembers her mother’s teaching that “You can make beauty anywhere.” And so she takes pains to stitch her work badge, the one that marks her in the eyes of her masters as a subhuman from Ukraine. Her talent with a needle saves her on more than one occasion, but her survival instinct doesn’t blunt her conscience. In a brave attempt to shield a Jewish child, she gives up her one precious keepsake, an iron crucifix.

Making Bombs for Hitler is a sensitively written page turner that teaches lessons in courage, faith, ingenuity and hard work. Lida’s odyssey brings her to the edge of death and, after a protracted struggle, immigration to Canada. It is an important story, but one requiring much adult guidance, even for an older age group than the 9-to-12 bracket for which it is recommended.

1Q84 review

1Q84

What a fascinating and odd novel. I’ve never read anything quite like it.

Vivid characters — Aomame, the gifted assassin and Tengo the underachieving genius mathematician / writer. Mix in blank-faced and dyslexic Fuka Eri, the cult, the Little People. A meandering and mind-exploding story. Murakami’s language is deceptively simple. The reader falls into the story, not realizing what they’re in for. I ended up loading this novel onto my phone so I could read it in bits and snatches. I was continually caught off balance by the various twists and turns.

I loved all the little threads that intertwined throughout and how in the end they made perfect sense.

Hard really to explain this novel. I am sure there are people who would throw it against the wall only 50 pages in, but I was entranced.

Last Airlift is an Ontario Library Association Best Bet for 2011!

Each year, the Ontario Library Association’s Canadian Materials Committee, which is under the umbrella of the OPLA Child and Youth Services Committee, picks an annual list of best books in Canada. Books are selected on the basis of their literary/artistic merit as well as their appeal for children.  Text and illustrations are of equal importance in picture books and information books.

Ten books for each category are picked from all that were published in Canada in the previous year. It is thrilling that Last Airlift was chosen as a top non-fiction of the year. It is the first time I’ve written narrative non-fiction so this gives me encouragement to write some more!

Great Kirkus review of Last Airlift!

“Skrypuch tells the story of the last Canadian airlift through the memories of one child, Son Thi Anh Tuyet. Nearly 8 years old, the sad-eyed girl on the cover had lived nearly all her life in a Catholic orphanage. With no warning, she and a number of the institution babies were taken away, placed on an airplane and flown to a new world. Tuyet’s memories provide poignant, specific details….In an afterword, the author describes her research, including personal interviews and newspaper accounts from the time. But Tuyet’s experience is her focus. It personalizes the babylift without sensationalizing it….Immediate and compelling, this moving refugee story deserves a wide audience.”