What's so amazing about Salina is that while this book is a milestone for her, she has actually illustrated, written, and designed nearly 200 interactive, novelty, and concept books for young children! I had the pleasure of reading a wonderful draft of one of Salina's upcoming books, and I was surprised to find that she considers herself a beginner at writing character-driven stories. Her devotion to learning craft inspired me in writing my own picture book manuscripts.
Still, I had to make her explain the difference between the books that made her name and wonderful stories like PENGUIN AND PINECONE, which is receiving rave reviews everywhere. Believe me, Salina is busy, so I'm so pleased she shared these answers with us.
Novelty
and interactive books are books with interactive elements designed into
the book, usually for our youngest audience (though there are novelty
books for older children and adults as well). A novelty book may include
lift-flaps, touch-and-feel elements (cloth or textures embedded into
the book), sliding elements, tabs to pull, wheels to spin, special
peek-a-boo die-cuts, sound buttons, and even pop-ups are in the category
of "novelty." Almost any book that is different from your standard book
format is considered novelty which opens the door to lots of creativity
in this genre. I have done a few concept picture books (COUNT MY BLESSINGS 1 THROUGH 10, CHORES! CHORES! CHORES!, SUPER BABIES ON THE MOVE, all published by Penguin), but these are different from
narratives.
How did you first get published? And how did you come to publish so many books . . . all without an agent?
I
worked as a designer/art director for three years at Intervisual Books, a
book packager/publisher that specializes in interactive and pop-up
books. Best publishing education EVER! It is there that I learned about
novelty books, and there that I fell in love with them.
My passion for
them grew and grew, and the more I designed them, the more I wanted to
illustrate them too. I was given the opportunity to illustrate a few
books while employed there, as a freelance project. This gave me some
credibility in the world of publishing, and later lead to Cindy Loh,
editorial director of S&S at the time, to contact me about
illustrating a novelty book written by another author. I was actually
floored when she contacted me. Numb, and in shock.
This was the year I
had left my job to relocate to San Diego to be with my fiancé, now
husband, and was freelancing, hoping for book deals with my former
company. Intervisual acquired many novelty titles from me, but I hadn't
even considered submitting my books to NY houses at the time. I quickly
jumped at the chance. Thankfully, Cindy was happy enough with the
project to ask me to illustrate another novelty series. But this time,
she asked me if I could write the text as well. I'd never written
anything other than first-words books. But I also couldn't let this
opportunity slip away, so I quickly told her yes. (See a pattern?) Cindy
was kind enough to edit my clunky text and make it publishable.
After
the novelty series, I was ready to submit projects of my own. I asked
if I could send her something, and she and Robin Corey (former S&S
publisher) said yes. It was a project she immediately loved, but after
12 months, ultimately had to pass due to pricing issues. So I built a
new dummy set and sent it to Penguin as an unsolicited submission.
(Building dummies are time consuming, so I would only build one set and
target one house at a time until I heard from them.)
I had no agent, no
connections at Penguin, just an address from my Children's Writer's and
Illustrator's Market reference book. It took about six months before an
intern called me on the phone to say they love it, and if an editor
could call me to discuss a deal. It was an incredible eight-book deal. I
remember this moment because I was pregnant with my first son (now 8 1/2
yrs old). I was also publishing lots of novelties with S&S at the
time. Two years later, Penguin offered a 22-novelty book, two-year exclusive
deal. This is how I came to publish so many books, especially with
Penguin, and without an agent. Those two houses kept me busy. Robin
Corey moved to Random House later. She acquired several titles while
there. My Penguin editors moved to various houses which gave me new
connections and new publishing opportunities. Cindy moved to Scholastic
(who gave me my Cartwheel contact), then moved to Sterling, and now at
Bloomsbury. This is all to say that my publishing contact list grew and
grew over time simply because my editors moved.
But
now, I DO have an agent (Jamie Weiss Chilton at Andrea Brown Literary
Agency), and I find our partnership to be INVALUABLE on so many levels.
What is the creative process for interactive and novelty books? Do publishers come to you, or do you develop the ideas yourself?
Mostly,
I create the projects myself and submit them traditionally. I create
the entire book (design, illustrations, text and format) and build a
book dummy to ship out (or digital book dummy that's emailed). But in a
few cases, publishers have contacted me to create something specific for
their list with general guidelines. But this does not guarantee an
acquisition, however. It's more of a suggestion from the editor that I
could choose to follow up on or not.
Creating a
novelty book is really a unique process because there are three very
distinct and important elements to a novelty, and each must work with
the other seamlessly: the format, the concept and the art. The format is
the physical design of the book, and the added interactive component.
The concept is the idea of the book, including text. And the
illustrations must fit the audience AND the publishing imprint, which is
why I work in several art styles.
Some
of your books, including the gorgeous KALEIDOSCOPE, are highly
engineered and/or involve complicated die-cuts and moving parts. What's
the process for developing those? Can you think of any specific
compromise or change you end up making?
Novelty
ideas like KALEIDOSCOPE often start off as little paper cut-outs. I
snip away, glue things on, sketch loosely, and try to envision the
format. The format is key for novelty. Once I nail the idea, I work on
my computer to create the art and design the book. The last thing I do
is write the text. But while I build the full-size dummy, it goes
through some changes as I find ways to improve it. Changes often occur
after acquisition as well, due to pricing, child-safety, or other
manufacturing/production issues.
PENGUIN
AND PINECONE: A FRIENDSHIP STORY is your first picture book. Why did
you branch into picture books? Did the idea come first, or did you
decide to write a picture book and brainstorm for ideas?
Picture
books seem like a natural progression from novelty and board books,
though the process in creating one is entirely different. I was obsessed
with the idea of creating a picture book with a penguin character. I
just love penguins. So cute! This lead to the first penguin-character
picture book manuscript, "Three Little Penguins," a retelling of the Three
Little Pigs. Unfortunately, this manuscript was rejected, but we did get a
revision request. Passed again. After this experience, I questioned my
ability to write a picture book. I took a break and went back to
creating novelties. Eight months later, I still thought about Penguin. I
decided he needed an entirely new story and a new art style to go with
it. I bought a Wacom tablet to experiment with new art styles on
Photoshop. (Before then, I'd only illustrated digitally with a mouse.)
Penguin was born. And with this, a story emerged.
You've
described yourself as a novice in picture books, but with so many
published titles, that's surprising to me. How different is it to write a
character-driven narrative? How have you worked on this craft?
In
writing a character-driven narrative, I have to really understand
Penguin's motivations, his emotional range, his physical range, what
inspires him, and his understanding of the world. Once I know this, many
plausible story lines reveal itself... though they're not always good
stories!
I never had to delve into a character
before for my novelties. My novelties often lack a central character
since they were often concept books. It's an entirely different way of
working for me, but I'm enjoying the new challenge!
Salina Yoon, photo credit Marlo Yoshimoto |
The character of Penguin is so vivid, adorable, and quirky too. Will we be hearing
Thank you, and absolutely you will see more Penguin books in the future in 2013 and possibly beyond! Please look for PENGUIN ON VACATION next spring!
KALEIDOSCOPE (Little, Brown) a poetic novelty with a prismatic lens for children and adults, (look for its sequel, PINWHEEL, in the spring) SPACE WALK and DEEP SEA (Sterling), a non-fiction lift-flap series, HUMPTY DUMPTY (S&S), an Easter-holiday board book, IN THE OCEAN (Macmillan), a first words board book with foil accents, JACK AND JILL (S&S), a Halloween board book, DO CROCS KISS? and DO COWS MEOW? (Sterling), a fun animal sounds book with large mouth-shaped lift-flaps, WHERE'S ELLIE? (Random House), a hide and seek board book, and last but not least, PENGUIN & PINECONE (Walker/Bloomsbury), a picture book, caps off 2012!
What other stories and books are you working on?
I
am working on three picture books at the moment, two that are
story-based and the other more concept driven. I still love creating
novelties, but I will be dedicating the next few months with completing
these... unless I'm hit with a great novelty idea that will derail my
plan.
Can you describe your other books that have released in 2012?
Thank you for inviting me to the Operation Awesome blog, Kelly!
Thank you to Salina! Visit her at www.salinayoon.com and look for her books everywhere.
I want to congratulate Salina again on her new book! My mind is boggled by her creative output.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for inviting me here, Kelly! This is a great way to celebrate my latest picture book.
ReplyDeleteSalina, are you that "unknown" person above? You are way too modest ;)
ReplyDeleteSalina Yoon is a gem, and her 200 (wow) books are treasures.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely adorable! So prolific too :)
ReplyDeleteCheers!
Deirdre
Congrats to you, Salina! I'm always floored by your sweetness and humility when I read your posts on the Blue Boards. Thanks for all the time you put into lifting others up. Here's hoping for many more picture books to come! (When do you sleep, btw? ;))
ReplyDeleteWow, Salina! Your productivity is inspiring. Congrats on PENGUIN AND PINECONE.
ReplyDeleteSalina, thanks for this fabulous glimpse into the novelty book and picture book worlds! Wow! I found this all so interesting as my mom and I are working on our own picture book series (in the concept stage). Maybe you can come back some time and talk about how to prepare a dummy book; it sounds kind of hard.
ReplyDeleteSalina, I can't wait to read Penguin and Pinecone. I'm a fan of all your work. Fun to see this interview here!
ReplyDeleteThank for the great write-up on novelty books. It is so interesting and different from doing picture books. Congrats on Penguin and Pinecone. I look forward to reading it as well as checking out some of your novelty books.
ReplyDeleteAw... thank you so much, everyone!!! (Sorry for the "Unknown" persona above. It's not modesty. It's sadly due to ignorance. Don't really know how to post comments! Hope this works!
ReplyDeleteThanks again for sharing Penguin and Pinecone with your readers, Kell! Here's the book trailer that just went live today: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJwjvniWkyk
What a wonderful interview. Well done and thank you. I loved both the insightful questions (interviewing is an art) and the inspiring answers.
ReplyDelete