Monday, October 12, 2009


The National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance

The Exquisite Corpse Adventure

TAKE 5 Interview: Katherine Paterson


1. Katherine Paterson—This is so exciting! You are writing the second episode of the Exquisite Corpse Adventure! What was your honest reaction when you read Jon Scieszka first episode? Did you think, oh gosh—I’ve got to follow this! Was it a bit scary? Or just loads of fun?

My first reaction was that that crazy Jon Scieszka had gone even crazier, throwing everything into the Corpse including meatballs. How could anyone follow that? Then I remembered what Mary Brigid Barrett, our fearless leader and the originator of the idea had told us all: “It’s a game! Have fun!” So I decided to do just that.


2. How did you decide, amongst all the characters and plot possibilities that Jon presented in the first episode, what you wanted to write about? Was it an impulsive reaction, or did you give it some thought? Did one little detail speak to you or did you react to the total hilarity of Jon’s first episode?

Well, obviously, my first and most important job was to keep Nancy and Joe from blowing up in 47 seconds. The rest was duck soup.

James Ransome’s evocative illustration for The Exquisite Corpse Adventure Episode Two: The Lost Clue written by Katherine Paterson

To read Katherine’s zany new episode go to: http://www.read.gov/exquisite-corpse/episode2.html


3. Do you have childhood memories of playing progressive story games like The Exquisite Corpse, or Cliffhangers as some kids call it? Or did you ever play imaginary play games inspired by your favorite stories and books?

I remember we used to play gossip where as you probably know, the participants sit in a circle and the first person whispers something and the next repeats what she has heard and so on around until the last person says out loud what she heard which usually bears very little resemblance to the original message. Actually, the further away the better and funnier.


4. You are an incredibly busy author, why did you decide to take the time to contribute to The Exquisite Corpse Adventure?

Since I’m a vice-president of NCBLA, I nearly always take part in whatever it is we plan to do. For example, I contributed to Our White House : Looking In, Looking Out which took a good bit of research and was a pretty serious business. The Exquisite Corpse was neither serious nor did it require much in the way of research; so actually, it was just a lot of fun.

Katherine Paterson and Mary Brigid Barrett, contributors to the NCBLA award-winning publication Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out, giving Alexander McCall Smith, author of the NO. 1 Ladies Detective Agency books, an impromptu tour of the White House in 2008 at the National Book Festival’s Author Breakfast.




5. What are you working on now? Do you have a new book out this year that you would like to share with us?

I do have a serious novel out this fall entitled, The Day of the Pelican, and my husband John and I are working on an adaptation of a wonderful early 20th century story by Eden Philpott that we hope will be out in 2011. I’ve got something else going that I can’t talk about yet.


Ask for Katherine’s powerful new novel The Day at the Pelican at your local library or bookstore.


Remember, every two weeks a new amazing and hilarious Exquisite Corpse Adventures episode will be revealed at:

http://www.read.gov/exquisite-corpse/episode2.html

or read it in an interactive book form at:

http://www.read.gov/exquisite-corpse/Book/#page/2/mode/2up

And be sure to check out the NCBLA’s Exquisite Corpse Adventure Educational Resource Center at:

http://www.thencbla.org/Exquisite_Corpse/exquisite_home.html



Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Exquisite Corpse Adventure continues . . .












One More Day Until The Exquisite Corpse Adventure
Episode Two is Revealed,Written by None Other Than Katherine Paterson!!!!!!


When we last left Joe and Nancy, their train was rushing toward a bridge, where a bundle of dynamite was about to explode!
Jon Scieszka wrote these last lines in Episode One . . . .


"Joe looks once more at their 'birthday card.'

'So now what do we do?'"


What will Joe and Nancy do??
Can Katherine Paterson get them out of this mess?!


Here is a visual clue-- a small crop from
James Ransome's intriguing illustration for Episode Two of the . . . .
Exquisite Corpse Adventure!!!

Monday, October 5, 2009

The Exquisite Corpse Adventure: Illustrator Spotlight!



Chris Van Dusen's Dynamite Illustration for
The Exquisite
Corpse Adventure!



"All of my illustrations are painted in gouache (rhymes with "squash") which is kind of like an opaque watercolor. I paint on illustration board and I usually start with the background and work my way to the foreground.

Since the writing is so wonderfully wacky in "The Exquisite Corpse Adventure" there are several images which would make great illustrations. Still, I choose my subjects carefully. I want to intrigue the reader with the illustration as I hopefully did in Episode 1. For this piece, I decided to lead off with a real cliff-hanger (literally!)."


Chris Van Dusen was the first illustrator to respond to the NCBLA's quest to find four illustrators who would be willing to take on the The Exquisite Corpse Adventure challenge! This is the second time Chris has volunteered to help the NCBLA; his eye-catching double page illustration of President Teddy Roosevelt and his exuberant brood of children and pets is one of many vivid and illuminating illustrations gracing the pages of the NCBLA's award-winning publication Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out!

In the NCBLA's Exquisite Corpse Adventure Educational Resource Center pages you will find more information about Chris, as well as an art appreciation article on Chris's Episode One illustration that will get kids and teens talking about art, color, and design.







Chris Van Duysen has a brand new book out this fall, The Circus Ship, a book he has both written and illustrated!! Ask for it at your local library or bookstore!


And don't forget to take a look at Chris's lively illustration of Teddy Roosevelt and his family tumbling down the White House steps in Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out!