As always, we’d be delighted if you share this post with anyone you think might be interested.
As a writer, birding gives me much more than inspiration. It has granted me a second lease on my career. When Braden and I dived into birding, it was the heart of the Great Recession and, like now, publishers were buying zilch. I was trying different things with mixed results, but felt more or less directionless. Birding changed all that. The more we saw and learned about birds, the more ideas I had to write—ideas that have resulted in adult books and magazine articles, and in my children’s books Fire Birds; Woodpeckers: Drilling Holes & Bagging Bugs; and Birds of Every Color. My newest title, Waiting for a Warbler, has a special history I’d like to share.
The idea to write about warbler migration blossomed in my brain only days after Braden and I visited High Island, Texas during our 2016 Big Year of birding. High Island is what’s called a migrant trap. The shelter and food it provides lures thousands of exhausted, migrating songbirds as they complete their marathon eighteen-hour flights across the Gulf of Mexico. We spent only a day at High Island, but during that time observed more than a dozen kinds of warblers along with tanagers, thrushes, vireos, and many other songbirds, and I was so inspired I quickly wrote down a story and sent it to a publisher who had expressed interest. I heard . . . nothing. No call. No feedback. No offer.
I let the idea sit for a year or so—often a useful thing to do to get perspective on a manuscript—and took another look at it. I realized it read a little stiff and impersonal, and decided to recast it as the story of one individual warbler crossing the Gulf of Mexico. I sent it to a different publisher, who wrote back within a month or two and said that he liked it, but what about working in the idea of a family waiting for the warbler to arrive? It was a great suggestion and I quickly revised the story and sent it off. Two years later, the book has been published!
The book recounts the epic, dangerous journey of a male Cerulean Warbler that runs headlong into a storm halfway across the Gulf of Mexico, but it also focuses on a family that has been working hard to improve its backyard habitat for birds and other wildlife. The two children had glimpsed a Cerulean Warbler the year before, but the bird had not stayed, and they hope to see the bird again this year. I will leave the rest to your imagination—or, better yet, until you read the story for yourselves—but I have to say that I am extremely proud of this book both because of the adventure it shares and the positive role models it offers. The delightful illustrations by Thomas Brooks help make Waiting for a Warbler both a perfect read-aloud and a useful resource for a family or class-room conservation project. Braden and I hope that you all enjoy it, and would be grateful if you share this post with friends, teachers, and others. Bird—and write—on!
Sounds like a fun book concept. Now if I could only find someone to read it aloud to me. Nothing like an engrossing story to distract me from life’s worries and relax before bedtime. An added benefit is that this fits perfectly with my not-so-ridiculous claim to be a child, so that I can collect 300 bucks a month from the government. ;-]
Yes, Roger, you need to start crankin’ out those bambinos as soon as possible because book sales are suffering across the nation!
I thought I was the only one who didn’t mature as I got older, Roger. It’s interesting how the story design grew. I’ve also got to make the point that your photos are still incredible and I suspect you have another possible career skill there as well.
In addition, today I looked at your home page for the first time, since I read the posts when they come to my email and I was surprised to see you were interviewed by NPR. Excellent interview. Very entertaining.
Thank you for the nice note, Scott. Photography is something both Braden and I enjoy and it has come in handy for many of my books. Alas, there are too many outrageously good photographers out there to consider diving into it as a separate profession, especially because I’m such a lazy photographer, unwilling to sit in a bird blind for weeks/months/years at a time! Don’t believe me? Take a look at Uschi Carpenter’s bird porfolio: Great Bird Photos