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SCBWI-LA Writer’s Day 2004 Contest Results

Listed below are the winners of the 2004 SCBWI-LA Writer's Day Contest. Categories included: Middle Grade; Non-fiction Picture Book; Non-fiction; Picture Book; Young Adult, and Poetry. Congratulations to all!
2004 Writer's Day Contest Winners

Middle Grade
Winner: My Life Is a Fortune Cookie by Carina Camamile
Honorable Mention: Weird Kids, Book One: Weird Origins by Eric Luke
Honorable Mention: Cave of the White Cobra by Kathryn Sant
Non-Fiction Picture Book
Winner: Out of the Dark: The Worker Child by Joseph Taylor
Honorable Mention: Our Uncle Sam by Maria Johnson
Honorable Mention: Come and Get It! Chow Time in the Desert by Karen Troncale
Non-Fiction
Winner: Metamorphosis: The Hilary Duff Autobiography by Vicki Arkoff
Honorable Mention: Soldiers, Ghosts, and a Lady Dancing by Joyce Glazier
Honorable Mention: Windwagon Will by Jo Ann Koch
Picture Book
Winner: The Sound in the Woods by Tamara S. Mullen
Honorable Mention: Rosa Sat ...And Changed the World by P.J. Lutz
Honorable Mention: Brother & Sister Goose Nursery Crimes Case #1: Who Ran Away with the Spoon? by Jay Asher
Young Adult
Winner: In The Deep by Sidonie Wiedenkeller
Honorable Mention: Dreamwalker by Lorie Brallier
Poetry
Winner: All Tied Up: A Collection of Rope Poems by Mary Ann Dames
Honorable Mention: A Collection of Poems, Organized As Songs by River Montijo

2004 Winners



SCBWI-LA Writer's Day 2004

SCBWI-LA's Writer's Day featured inspiring, funny, moving, and useLisa Findlayful presentations by authors Paula Danziger, Julie Williams, Deborah Hopkinson and Kathleen Krull.
In addition to individual talks by editors Jeannette Larson of Harcourt Children's Books and Lisa Findlay of Random House, the record-sized audience was treated to a fascinating look into the author/editor experience by editor Jeannette Larson and author Kathleen Krull.
Deborah Hopkinson and Julie Williams

The Professional Forum, conducted by Judith Ross Enderle and Stephanie Jacob Gordon, instructed conference attendees on the best ways to weave their books into a school's curriculum.
Jeannette Larson and Kathleen Krull

The day ended with the presentation of awards to the winners of the annual Writer's Day Contest.
Judith Enderle and Stephanie Gordon



Event Archives

SCBWI Tri-Regions of Southern California sponsors many events throughout the year. Click on the links below to read about some of them.

SCBWI-LA:


llustrator's Day 2005
llustrator's Day 2004

llustrator's Day 2003

Writer's Day 2004

Writer's Day 2003


SCBWI Ventura:

Writer's Day 2004


CAROLINE HATTON

Sue Alexander Service and Encouragement (SASE) Award recipient April 24, 2004

In Sue's own words…
It is a truism that busy people get things done. And when said of the 2003 recipient of the Sue Alexander Service and Caroline HattonEncouragement Award—it is extremely, breath-takingly true. Not only is she a distinguished scientist with many demands on her time, she is also a writer of novels and nonfiction for young people, a newsletter editor, and a full-time volunteer. And that is only a bare statement of fact—a beginning, if you will. It does not detail how much time she devotes to the newsletter in addition to a demanding and exacting full-time job in her profession. It does not hint at her creativity, as she set about updating the look of the newsletter, bringing it into the current century with verve and instinctive insight into what the readership needed from its pages. It also does not hint at her generosity of spirit as she volunteers to help in every aspect of SCBWI-Los Angeles. It is most evident that she exemplifies the word Service at its best. And so it gives me great pleasure to present the 2003 Sue Alexander Service and Encouragement Award to Caroline Hatton.
In Caroline's own words…
When Sue announced that the SASE award presentation was next, I asked Carol Tanzman, "Why does Sue call it the sassy award? Isn’t it supposed to be sase [which rhymes with face]?" Guess what. I've changed my mind. I now think sassy sounds fine.
After joining the SCBWI in 1997, I started attending the Westside Schmooze when it was run by Ann Stalcup and Claudia Harrington. Claudia became co-regional advisor and got a lot busier. I kept asking, "Why not do this or that at the Schmooze?" Finally Claudia suggested that I help tireless Ann run the Schmooze. I've now passed that torch to the thoughtful Joseph Taylor.
Meanwhile, Kite Tales editor Mary Ann Dames asked if I would take over. "I’m tantalized," I said. Weeks passed. She e-mailed, "Are you still tantalized?" Editing Kite Tales has been my excuse for approaching star professionals and … letting them volunteer to do all the work! It has reintroduced project and team management in my life. Both had disappeared from it when I semi-retired from my day job as a scientist to make time to write. (I used to run the UCLA Olympic Lab, testing athletes for performance-enhancing drugs to make sure they didn't cheat.)
Most of all, volunteering for SCBWI-L.A. is my most significant, if indirect, contribution to children’s literature and literacy. I can help connect others and pass information all day long, feel good anytime. What a life! I thank all my SCBWI friends for it.





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