Tonight, I'll be trick-or-treating with my zombie pirate son, Patrick. Have a fun evening and stay safe!
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Boo!
Monday, October 29, 2007
Texas Book Festival and Percy 4
I'm back from the East Coast for a few days at home, trying to catch up on my writing! This weekend, however, I'm really looking forward to the Texas Book Festival in Austin. On Saturday, Nov. 3 at 1:30 PM, I'll be giving the first public reading from Percy 4, The Battle of Labyrinth. Come on by if you're in the area! If you came to my reading last year and were one of the many people who couldn't get in because the room filled up (my family couldn't get in, either), don't worry. We have a much bigger space this year -- the Family Life Center at 1300 Lavaca. For more information, visit the Festival's website. I will of course be giving out Camp Half-Blood T-shirts and other fun prizes while they last -- it should be Olympic-size fun!
Sunday, October 28, 2007
(More) Demigods of the Week!


I usually don't nominate more than one set of demigods per week, but what can I say? There were a lot of cool kids at Rabbit Hill! I guess I posted one late Saturday and one Sunday, so that's technically two different weeks. Samantha and Hunter, pictured above, attended the Halloween with Hades party I mentioned before at the Wilton Library, then I got to meet Hunter at the festival with her mom. Cool Apollo and Artemis costumes, ladies, and thanks for your enthusiasm. You are definitely Camp Half-Blood material!
Demigods of the Week
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Me at the Missile Factory

Yesterday Jeanne DuPrau, Neal Shusterman, Gail Carson Levine and I spent the day visiting the middle schools of Westport, Connecticut. I'd never spent the day traveling around with other authors before. I felt like the Prize Patrol or something.
We began the day at Bedford Middle School, which is a beautiful new campus. One of the teachers told me the site used to be a guided missile facility. I'm sure there's a joke in there somewhere about the similiarities between guided missiles and middle school, but I'll let it pass. The kids were phenomenal. They had been very well prepared, and were quite familiar with our books. My favorite question of the morning: "How do you write the prophecies in the books?" The answer: I write them last, after I know the plot of the book. Then I can predict the future through the Oracle! My only regret was that I wasn't allowed to sign books due to our time constraints. Hopefully some of the kids will be able to come to the public book signing today at the Rabbit Hill Festival. I met quite a few aspiring writers. At lunch, Gail Carson Levine generously read and offered a critique to two girls who had brought her writing samples. That is something those girls will remember forever. I got to sit in on Neal Shusterman's presentation, and he has great rapport with the kids. Neal is a veteran traveler -- everywhere I go, it seems like he was there last week, and I can definitely see why he's in high demand. I especially like his toilet lobster story. Ask him about it some time!
After lunch, we headed over to Coleytown Middle School for another two presentations. That's me at Coleytown in the photo above, talking with eighth graders. I got the usual requests to sign foreheads, binders, arms, etc., but I'd never had anyone ask me to sign their socks before. I declined . . . quickly.
We had dinner at the Red Barn Restaurant. Gail and I took a taxi over there, and had an interesting conversation with our driver. He said he works as a tow truck driver from 8-4 five days a week, then gets in his cab and drives until 1 AM. He figured he works about a hundred hours a week so his wife can stay home with their two small children. After hearing that, I decided I have no right to complain about anything ever again.
Dinner was fun -- a chance to chat casually with librarians and book lovers. Today, the main event starts at Sagautuck Elementary School. It's a rainy cold day in Connecticut. If it were me, I'd be curled up with a book next to a fireplace, a cat on my lap, but hopefully the attendees will brave the weather!
Friday, October 26, 2007
Blogging from Connecticut
Yesterday I spent in the air, on my way to the Rabbit Hill Festival in Westport, Connecticut. I arrived late at La Guardia in New York and got to experience the commuting pleasures on I-95 (people do this every day?) but it was worth it. Once I arrived in Westport I was treated to dinner at Rabbit Hill, the original home and studio of Robert Lawson, who wrote Mr. Popper’s Penguins among other books.
It’s not every day I get to sit down to dinner and chat with colleagues like Gail Carson Levine, Neal Shusterman and Jeannie DuPrau. (I came in too late to talk with Andrea Pinkney, though I look forward to hearing her Saturday.) We were bemoaning the fact that we rarely get to hear each other speak, because we’re usually off doing our own spiels. It looks like we’ll have at least some opportunity this weekend to listen to each other. The incomparable Tim Ditlow of Listening Library fame was also at dinner and gave us a ride to the Westport Library for the festival opening. Leonard Marcus gave a thoughtful and thorough overview of fantasy literature from the Brothers Grimm through Harry Potter. I learned so much I felt like I should be getting college credit. Apparently a lot of people in the audience were!
Today, my favorite part: off to the schools to talk to the kids! Our author entourage will be visiting two middle schools. Then there’s a dinner tonight for librarians and other grown-up festival attendees. I’ll let you know how it goes!
It’s not every day I get to sit down to dinner and chat with colleagues like Gail Carson Levine, Neal Shusterman and Jeannie DuPrau. (I came in too late to talk with Andrea Pinkney, though I look forward to hearing her Saturday.) We were bemoaning the fact that we rarely get to hear each other speak, because we’re usually off doing our own spiels. It looks like we’ll have at least some opportunity this weekend to listen to each other. The incomparable Tim Ditlow of Listening Library fame was also at dinner and gave us a ride to the Westport Library for the festival opening. Leonard Marcus gave a thoughtful and thorough overview of fantasy literature from the Brothers Grimm through Harry Potter. I learned so much I felt like I should be getting college credit. Apparently a lot of people in the audience were!
Today, my favorite part: off to the schools to talk to the kids! Our author entourage will be visiting two middle schools. Then there’s a dinner tonight for librarians and other grown-up festival attendees. I’ll let you know how it goes!
Friday, October 19, 2007
Demigod of the Week



Yesterday I visited Buda Elementary and met with some very excited 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders. Buda is a little town south of Austin. My uncle lived there back in the 70s, and it was a real trip to see how much it has changed since I was last there. The old school is still the same, though -- lots of character, a very laid back atmosphere, and friendly people.
One of the many great kids I got to see was Crispin, pictured above. Since you can only get Camp Half-Blood T-shirts from my events, I knew I must've seen Crispin before. He told me he'd been to several signings in the Austin area. His birthday was this week, and he made a Poseidon cookie cake for the occasion. Awesome!
Above you see Crispin with his cool cake. Under that is Crispin with his friend McKenna, a hunter of Artemis. The third picture shows Crispin, his parents and me at the Buda School. Happy birthday, Crispin. You're demigod of the week!
Thursday, October 18, 2007
A Week of Firsts
One thing I love about doing author visits: Every week is different. I never know what to expect, but it’s always fun.
My week started with some excellent news: the Fox movie studio has bought the rights to make the Lightning Thief feature film. They’ve had it under option for almost three years while they’ve worked on the script (twice) and negotiated with Chris Columbus, who will direct. Now they’ve exercised that option and bought the rights, which means they’re fairly confident the project is going forward. This is a good sign. Some of you may have heard of the looming Writers’ Guild strike in Hollywood, however, so all projects might grind to a halt for a few months until that is resolved. The wheels move very slowly in the movie business from what I’ve seen, so don’t start standing in line for the movie yet, but the omens look favorable.
Tuesday, I headed to Duncanville, near Dallas, where I had a fantastic visit at Hyman Elementary. Jenny the librarian and her staff really went all-out to prepare the kids. The PTO had made Camp Half-Blood T-shirts for all the teachers, and the classes had held a door decorating contest. Some students had done research projects on Greece. Others had made pictures of Greek monsters. One class turned their door into a coliseum entrance and wrote all their names in Ancient Greek. One thing I’d never seen before: The school held a pumpkin-decorating contest, and several of the entries were based on Percy Jackson. I saw a Medusa pumpkin (scary!) and the cover of the Lightning Thief done in pastels on another pumpkin. I’d never autographed a pumpkin before, but I signed the Percy one. I understand they’ll be auctioned off later for charity.
Yesterday I was in Kyle, Texas talking to the kids of Wallace Middle School. It was another first. The entire school was without power, so they had to bus all three grades to the district’s performing arts center for the presentation. Since they were leaving the school anyway, they decided to make the exodus into an evacuation drill. It’s not the first time I’ve been compared to a natural disaster . . . The arts center was a great place to have the presentation, fortunately, and because it was such a large group, I broke down and made a Powerpoint presentation so everyone could see my show-and-tell stuff. I used to use Powerpoint all the time in my classroom, but I’d never used it with my author spiel. It worked quite well. I got to show off some early drafts of the Percy covers that only exist as computer files. It’s nice to have another tool in the presentation toolbox! After the author talk, the band and cheerleaders came on stage and held a pep rally while I signed books. Never done that before, either! It felt quite . . . peppy.
At one of my presentations this week, I also had my first parent protestor! Well, he wasn’t holding a picket sign, but he did attend a session and take copious notes because he objected to the school doing a presentation about Greek gods. It went against his religious beliefs. I’ll admit it made me feel a little self-conscious, seeing this scowling face in the back of all those excited kids – his pen furiously recording my every comment. But I do give the parent credit for attending the session. At least he was gathering information and trying to make an informed judgment based on what he saw. So many times, people object to books they’ve never read, based on hearsay or knee-jerk reactions. I hope I gave the parent the information he was looking for, one way or the other! Another school reported an upset parent this week, too. She did not attend or read the books, but she didn’t like the idea of Greek gods. She went on the website, saw that I’d written an adult mystery called The Devil Went Down to Austin, and was furious. “He even writes books about the devil!” she complained. (In case you're wondering, the book is about scuba diving. The title was inspired by the old Charlie Daniels song.) I’ve gotten surprisingly few comments like this so far, but I take it as a good sign that I’m starting to get more. It means the books are getting a higher profile. Nobody protests books they’ve never heard of.
Tomorrow, I’ll be speaking at the San Antonio Book & Author Luncheon, which is a big deal. They always get a sell-out crowd of about a thousand people. It’s quite the social outing. There’s a whole slew of great authors, but it marks a first because the amazing Naomi Nye, San Antonio’s poet laureate, is speaking, as am I. The luncheon has never before featured San Antonio authors. In fact, years ago I remember a former book editor for the Express-News telling me bluntly, “It’s a shame, but the luncheon will never feature a San Antonio author. We need to bring in higher profile authors from outside to attract a crowd.” For the first time, two San Antonio authors get to speak, and the luncheon is still very much a sell-out. What an honor to attend, and how gratifying!
And now, I’m off to another school visit. Have Powerpoint, will travel!
My week started with some excellent news: the Fox movie studio has bought the rights to make the Lightning Thief feature film. They’ve had it under option for almost three years while they’ve worked on the script (twice) and negotiated with Chris Columbus, who will direct. Now they’ve exercised that option and bought the rights, which means they’re fairly confident the project is going forward. This is a good sign. Some of you may have heard of the looming Writers’ Guild strike in Hollywood, however, so all projects might grind to a halt for a few months until that is resolved. The wheels move very slowly in the movie business from what I’ve seen, so don’t start standing in line for the movie yet, but the omens look favorable.
Tuesday, I headed to Duncanville, near Dallas, where I had a fantastic visit at Hyman Elementary. Jenny the librarian and her staff really went all-out to prepare the kids. The PTO had made Camp Half-Blood T-shirts for all the teachers, and the classes had held a door decorating contest. Some students had done research projects on Greece. Others had made pictures of Greek monsters. One class turned their door into a coliseum entrance and wrote all their names in Ancient Greek. One thing I’d never seen before: The school held a pumpkin-decorating contest, and several of the entries were based on Percy Jackson. I saw a Medusa pumpkin (scary!) and the cover of the Lightning Thief done in pastels on another pumpkin. I’d never autographed a pumpkin before, but I signed the Percy one. I understand they’ll be auctioned off later for charity.
Yesterday I was in Kyle, Texas talking to the kids of Wallace Middle School. It was another first. The entire school was without power, so they had to bus all three grades to the district’s performing arts center for the presentation. Since they were leaving the school anyway, they decided to make the exodus into an evacuation drill. It’s not the first time I’ve been compared to a natural disaster . . . The arts center was a great place to have the presentation, fortunately, and because it was such a large group, I broke down and made a Powerpoint presentation so everyone could see my show-and-tell stuff. I used to use Powerpoint all the time in my classroom, but I’d never used it with my author spiel. It worked quite well. I got to show off some early drafts of the Percy covers that only exist as computer files. It’s nice to have another tool in the presentation toolbox! After the author talk, the band and cheerleaders came on stage and held a pep rally while I signed books. Never done that before, either! It felt quite . . . peppy.
At one of my presentations this week, I also had my first parent protestor! Well, he wasn’t holding a picket sign, but he did attend a session and take copious notes because he objected to the school doing a presentation about Greek gods. It went against his religious beliefs. I’ll admit it made me feel a little self-conscious, seeing this scowling face in the back of all those excited kids – his pen furiously recording my every comment. But I do give the parent credit for attending the session. At least he was gathering information and trying to make an informed judgment based on what he saw. So many times, people object to books they’ve never read, based on hearsay or knee-jerk reactions. I hope I gave the parent the information he was looking for, one way or the other! Another school reported an upset parent this week, too. She did not attend or read the books, but she didn’t like the idea of Greek gods. She went on the website, saw that I’d written an adult mystery called The Devil Went Down to Austin, and was furious. “He even writes books about the devil!” she complained. (In case you're wondering, the book is about scuba diving. The title was inspired by the old Charlie Daniels song.) I’ve gotten surprisingly few comments like this so far, but I take it as a good sign that I’m starting to get more. It means the books are getting a higher profile. Nobody protests books they’ve never heard of.
Tomorrow, I’ll be speaking at the San Antonio Book & Author Luncheon, which is a big deal. They always get a sell-out crowd of about a thousand people. It’s quite the social outing. There’s a whole slew of great authors, but it marks a first because the amazing Naomi Nye, San Antonio’s poet laureate, is speaking, as am I. The luncheon has never before featured San Antonio authors. In fact, years ago I remember a former book editor for the Express-News telling me bluntly, “It’s a shame, but the luncheon will never feature a San Antonio author. We need to bring in higher profile authors from outside to attract a crowd.” For the first time, two San Antonio authors get to speak, and the luncheon is still very much a sell-out. What an honor to attend, and how gratifying!
And now, I’m off to another school visit. Have Powerpoint, will travel!
Thursday, October 04, 2007
Prepare for Battle . . .

. . . The Battle of the Labyrinth. Today, Publishers Weekly announced the title for Percy Jackson 4, along with a first look at the cover by John Rocco. You can read the whole article here.
The main website at http://www.rickriordan.com/ has also been updated. Check back for more info over the next few months, as I'll try to keep you updated on the latest developments in advance of the launch date: May 6! See you in the Labyrinth, half-bloods . . .
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
