Showing posts with label anthem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anthem. Show all posts

KENT STATE cover reveal

We interrupt our regularly scheduled program to bring you this message from our sponsors. (Who remembers this on television long ago?)

I'll have lots more to say about KENT STATE as we get closer to its publication date on April 21, 2020, but for now, we have a cover, and we have the most lovely blog interview to reveal that cover, and to talk about KENT STATE and ANTHEM, on John Schumaker's blog, Watch, Connect, Read

Here is that interview -- thank you for the great questions, Mr. Schu! -- and here is that stunning cover, designed by Elizabeth Parisi at Scholastic. More soon. For now -- voila. Amazing, yes? 

ANTHEM is coming: chapter 3

ANTHEM, Book 3 of the Sixties Trilogy, publishes on October 1. Each of the book's 47 chapters begins with a song from the Sixties to set the tone, mood, and scene. Every day between now and October 1, come have a listen and read a snippet from each chapter.

This is Chapter 3 (day 45):

"Windy"
Written by Ruthann Friedman
Performed by the Association
Recorded at Western Recorders, Hollywood, CA, 1967
Drummer: Ted Bluechel, Jr. (concert); Hal Blaine, (studio) 

MOLLY

"The first time I heard 'Windy' I wanted to change my name. I love the Association. They are my favorite band. I love the way they harmonize and all the feeling they put into their songs. // Barry looks like their leader, Terry Kirkman, with the same blond hair, long sideburns, and crooked mouth with the gap between his two front teeth. And that smile! Just like Barry's."




"I want to ask Mom what planet we're from, if she thinks I can get away with leaving home to find Barry, that Dad would allow it, or that Barry would even come with me, if I could find him. It will never happen. But Mom thinks it will." 

The plot begins. :> A girl who loves the Association, and her cousin who loves Iron Butterfly, and an old school bus between them -- their chariot -- awaits. 

Back to Norman -- who does not think this trip is in any way a good idea -- in chapter 4.


ANTHEM is coming: chapter 2

ANTHEM, Book 3 of the Sixties Trilogy, publishes on October 1. Each of the book's 47 chapters begins with a song from the Sixties to set the tone, mood, and scene. Every day between now and October 1, come have a listen and read a snippet from each chapter.

This is Chapter 2 (day 46):

"In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida"
Written by Doug Ingle
Performed by Iron Butterfly
Recorded at Gold Star Studios, Hollywood, CA
 and Ultrasonic Studios, Long Island, NY, 1968
Drummer: Ron Bushy

NORMAN:

"I'm a drummer. My name is Norman. I hate that name. My mother named me after Norman Vincent Peale and The Power of Positive Thinking. She's a positive person. She kills me... So I'm going to change my name. Who has a name like Norman anymore?.... Rock and roll drummers have names like Keith and Ron and Ringo. At school I get called 'Normal,' especially by the hoodlums in P.E. I'm going to change that." 

 

This fuzzy video is a live performance of the entire song (all 17 minutes!), with Ron Bushy's 3-minute drum solo coming in at 6:10. Or you can watch just the solo here. Norman would have *loved* YouTube. He is forever tapping out the drum solo with straws, utensils, fingers, whatever is at hand... just like countless young drummers did, in the late sixties.

"When I listen to 'In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida' I listen loud, with my head right next to the speaker, lying on the floor. The world is going down the crapper, but when I'm lost in the music -- any music -- I don't care."

Tomorrow, Chapter 3, back to Molly. Working our way to Chapter 47 and publication day!




anthem's debut at the american library association

One more interruption to Summer Reading posts, to share my remarks about the forthcoming ANTHEM, Book 3 of the Sixties Trilogy, that I gave at the Scholastic Literary Luncheon at ALA in Washington, D.C. last weekend, June 23, 2019.

There were five of us reading: Amy Sarig King, Sharon Robinson, Da Chen, Raina Telgemeier, and me, each of us with a new novel about to be published. (You can find out more about them and their new books at the links.) 

 
It was a fabulous afternoon spent with lovely school librarians who took galleys from each of the five books with them. I felt so lucky to spend time with my four colleagues and my Scholastic family, as well as our moderator, Paige Battle.

Along with my remarks I showed some stills from ANTHEM. Here they are, in the order I presented them, remarks interspersed. I can't wait for y'all to hold the actual book in your hands! As teachers said in our signing line, over and over, "We've been waiting forever for this book!" Me, too. I hope you love it. xoxo Debbie
========

The year I was 17

I “had a moment” with Socrates,
thanks to a philosophically-minded English teacher.

A bestie of mine – also 17 – gave me a Bible that year,
to remember her by.
She inscribed her name in the front of it: “from Jan.”
I still have that Bible.

We lived in the Philippines,
at Clark Air Force Base.
My dad flew C-141 Starlifters into Vietnam with supplies,
and out of Vietnam with bodies,
and although I was just as caught up in the feelings 
of teenage spiritual fervor as my friend was,
I also felt something else vital and important stirring in me,
courtesy of my new friend, Socrates.

So I opened that Bible and wrote on the inside cover:
"The unexamined life is not worth living."

And then I went off to examine life.
I rode on this bus. 




And I’m told I had a really good time. ha!

And now there is Anthem,
a story about those late-sixties years,
and what I didn’t know then – so much I didn’t know
and what I came to understand
in my quest and pursuit of wisdom,
through Socrates’ methods of
questioning and logical argument,
by examining and by thinking –
A life-long quest,
often derailed,
often stumbling,
and very much still underway.

In Anthem, teenaged cousins Molly and Norman
are on this quest as well, whether they know it or not,
as they travel across the country
from Charleston, South Carolina
to San Francisco, California,
in an old school bus,
on their way to find Molly’s brother – Norman’s cousin –
who left home under dire circumstances the year before and now has been drafted.

Molly – who is 14 and opinionated –
and Norman -- who is 17 and long-suffering –
spend tons of time on their trip arguing with each other – furiously defending their points of view, frustrated, exhilarated, exhausted, lost, found, and totally missing the point, in what my ardently enthusiastic husband
(who has just read the novel for the first time)
calls "a buddy novel, a quest novel, a coming-of-age novel, and a road novel –
ALL IN ONE! “

Socrates, I thought, as I wrote it this book,
would be proud.
And appalled. hahaha!

BUT!
Along the way, Molly and Norman,
and those they pick up and drop off,
discover America.
They shift their points of view.
They come into new understandings.
They learn and grow and become bigger than they were:









 









 


And -- there is a lot of rock and roll.
Molly – the emotion machine -- loves the Association. 
 
Norman – who longs to be a rock-and-roll drummer and
get out of high school marching band –
loves Iron Butterfly.

 
Anthem is a love letter to America in 1969,
and a challenge to young people today.

It is BOOK 3 of the Sixties trilogy,
written in the same documentary format as
Countdown and Revolution, asking
the same question as those books do –
and perhaps,
the same question Socrates posited,
in his own wise way,
so many years ago:



Are you on the bus, or off the bus?