Smelling Sunshine: book release!

Smelling Sunshine: book release!

SmellingSunshineCover

Smelling Sunshine, the picture book that I wrote and illustrated, published by Star Bright Books, has just been released! Smelling Sunshine is a story that creates a path through various cultures by describing one world doing an ordinary chore of hanging laundry that becomes extraordinary in its personal nighttime comfort. Kirkus Review said,…when it comes to domestic chores, hanging laundry is about as universal as it gets, and the activity is presented here as an intimate, positive experience for parent and child to share.

So check it out!  And think about supporting your independent bookstore; indie bookstores build community in your community http://www.indiebound.org/ You can also order from the publisher http://www.starbrightbooks.org/details.php?id=411or from amazon http://amzn.com/1595726365

Find out more about how Smelling Sunshine was made by clicking on The Next Thing Blog Tour, here on this blog page.

If you live in the Bay Area, join me:

·         Saturday, November 9th, 12:00 PM at Depot Bookstore in Mill Valley, 415-383-2665 for a booksigning http://www.depotbookstore.com/

 

Saturday, February 1st, 11:00 AM at Mrs. Dalloway’s Bookstore in Berkeley, 510- 740-8222 http://www.mrsdalloways.com/for a presentation and book signing.
Discover the difference between a rough sketch and a finished illustration, and find out more about how a picture book is made. Listen to a reading of
Smelling Sunshine and pick up a free bookmark!

Hope to see you soon. Happy reading.

 



 

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1 thought on “Smelling Sunshine: book release!

  1. Ashley

    Hi Constance,

    I love the idea of your book Smelling Sunshine. I’m a big fan of hanging laundry to dry and I wish it would experience the revival in suburban areas that it used to enjoy as the normal way to dry your clothes, leaving the power guzzling clothes dryer behind. Such a peaceful and universally applicable activity!

    However, I’m curious why you chose to exclude fathers from the task, instead opting for a gender normative presentation of the task as purely the domain of mothers? As the Kirkus review you quote elsewhere on this page says, “apparently nowhere in the world are fathers involved in laundry.” Surely we must cast aside these ridiculous gender norms and present domestic activity as the domain of all, for the benefit of our children of both genders! What a missed opportunity to include gender diversity with the cultural diversity you chose to include.

    Reply

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