Happy January,
  
    Happy New Year!  I am hard at work finishing the last pages of GINGERBREAD CHRISTMAS.  As I do every month in my hedge-a-gram I'm taking some time to be in touch, and tell about how things are going in my life as an illustrator - author.
     Every year I have to work extra hard to finish my book before the deadline in mid January.  Even though the book won't be published until next fall, the artwork and the final text must be ready now.  Although working faster doesn't help, I can put more hours in every day.  To put the most optimistic perspective on it, perhaps small daily decisions I make painting the art work are easier, because I know I don't have time to change my mind, and do something over.  The designer at the publisher will need my artwork finished so she can set the type on the pages, and together we can change the text to accommodate any places the art has infringed on the area assigned to the type.  Hopefully there won't be any!
     Probably the best part of this time is seeing the whole book up on my bulletin board.  I can correct for balances in the color or gauge how the art reflects the story.  For example, one double page spread shows the old cast iron stove.  Its black color really dominates the page and looks a little heavy.  I will go back in with white gouache, an opaque watercolor paint and change some of the large areas to dark grey, over-painting on the white gouache, as if it looks like it is in sunlight.  There is another area showing the garland covered bandstand.  I deepened the green to make it look further away and more remote in contrast to the close-up of it when the gingerbread band plays.  I may also feel Gingerbread Baby's rascally character needs to be amped up.  I wrote a taunting little song for him to sing and I will see if I can fit it in.  The wiley trickster is a character found though the world's folk tales and myths, and that's how I see the Gingerbread Baby in my story.  I want him to be funny and loveable too.
     As I work, my thoughts go back to the long November and December book tour.  It was very tiring because I wanted to do my best job on my presentation about THE TURNIP and my drawing of Badger Girl I did for the audience.  At first, after the signing I would curl up on the bed at the back of the bus and not wake up until we were almost at the next signing.  After a few days I got my equilibrium and it wasn't so overwhelming.  I so much enjoyed seeing the children's artwork and the families that hold reading and books dear - more so that ever before.  I don't have an answer for the cause, if it is because book lovers are rallying and devoting their time to books because electronics are so popular, of if people are accepting there are many ways to tell stories and books can't be replaced.  I was excited to see so many vibrant libraries with many in the town or city involved with them.
     Probably the most surprising happiness is when a family tells me they've adopted a quote from one of my books into their families playful at home dialog.  I see myself as more of an artist so it makes me feel proud to have my words take on a new life.
     My two Dutch Bantams, Reuben and Rilke, a rooster and hen behaved beautifully during the tour and my show and tell at every stop.  They were on TV three times and twice I sat with them on a white couch.  The couch stayed pristinely white, I'm happy to say!  They were mailed home from California, after the tour, Express Mail!  They travel in a special cardboard mailing box with lots of air holes covered by special filter paper.  They got lots of treats and they seemed perky and peppy when I opened their box when they arrived home, although the postman said Reuben was very vocal in the mail truck.  I don't now if it?s my imagination, but my chickens do seem to sense when we are nearing home when I take them home from poultry shows.
     When I'm working the long hours during the race to my deadline, I listen to audio books and the radio.  I have really enjoyed Edmund DeWaal?s book, THE WHITE ROAD.  I am a big fan of THE HARE WITH AMBER EYES, by DeWaal.  Both books talk about obsession among other things, a subject I like to contemplate.  My other favorite is THE OLD WAYS by Robert Macfarlane.  The book tells about the paths and trails on land and sea of the British Isles.
     I also heard a wonderful interview of Stephen King and I was launched into a soaring state as Stephen described the writing process, because his words ring so true.  His book is called ON WRITING, I highly recommend it to anyone who feels writing is their calling, even if they do it in pictures, like I do.  I wanted to end with that  "hats off" to Stephen King, because I hope you too feel that wish to create as we enter the New Year - always a good time to access our goals and life paths.
     Happy New Year!

                                  Jan Brett