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Showing posts with label Neal Porter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neal Porter. Show all posts

Friday, November 6, 2015

Lost.Found Blog Tour: Interview with Matthew Cordell




While I was at the ALA Annual Conference in San Francisco this summer, I received an advanced copy of the book Lost. Found (Macmillan, 2015) at a Macmillan event.  I listened to editor Neal Porter talk about the book there, and loved the cover. I had a good feeling about it. 

I read the book at home, and reread it a few more times, thinking about the story, and how different it was-- Imagine telling a story using only two words! 

In the book, a bear loses his red scarf in a snowy forest. Several other animals each find the scarf, and use it for different purposes. Each of them in turn also loses the scarf. When the scarf is lost once more,  the animals (who are together at this point) all come across the scarf at the same time. They immediately start to tussle for it. The bear happens upon them, discovering that his scarf has been completely unraveled. How does the story end? Get a copy of the book to find out! 

Lost. Found was published this week, and today, I am hosting Matthew Cordell, the illustrator of this book, on my blog! You can imagine how happy this makes me! (Very!) 

My interview questions are in red, and Mr. Cordell's answers are in black. 


Matthew Cordell: Image courtesy of MacKids Books


Matthew, you have illustrated so many books! (Find a link to his website below.) Tell us about what you hope to do as an illustrator with each book.

I’ve definitely been incredibly fortunate over the years, with all these opportunities to work on a so many incredible manuscripts. And also given the opportunity to write and illustrate my own picture book passion projects. And in all that time, I feel like I’ve slowly figured out my place in all of this. I’ve grown—little by little—more comfortable with opening up and showing a lot more of myself in my work (the good and the bad). I’ve evolved and, I hope, become more accepting of taking risks. But there are two things that have been constant markers in my work in books from day one. Selfishly, I want to satisfy myself. (And believe me, it ain’t easy.) I’m always trying to push myself in the ways I know how—in my artistic media, a very loose and free pen and ink line with very loose and free watercolor brushwork. Secondly, (not necessarily second in importance, of course) I hope to satisfy the children who will be looking at and reading my books. I’ve always got those little eyes, hearts, and minds in mind from start to finish. How will kids respond to this character? These expressions? This scenery? These colors? Quite often now I read many of the books I’ve written and illustrated to kids at schools all over. I know I’ve got to get this just right. I owe it to them. I owe it to myself. Otherwise I’m totally bombing in front of those kid crowds. And nobody wants that.


I remember reading hello! hello! (Disney-Hyperion, 2012) for the first time and thinking about it long after I read it. What have you heard from readers about the story/message in this book? How did you come about writing it?

I love to hear that it had that affect on you. This book holds a very special place in my heart. It was the first book I wrote that was entirely inspired by one of my own children (our first born). More specifically, I suppose, it was inspired by my shortcomings of being a dad! At least in this one particular moment. I was playing with my daughter, who was about 2 years old at the time, when I felt the lure of a nearby laptop. The ever-addictive Facebook, Twitter, email, etc. I thought if I snuck over to this computer and did my thing, surely my daughter wouldn’t even notice I was gone. I was wrong. It only took a few minutes and from across the room I heard her little voice squeak out, “Dada, stop checking email and play.” It was quite an awakening. I felt: 1) shocked that my 2-year-old new the word “email” and 2) horribly guilty that I was on the computer doing something selfish and lame instead of being present for her. Afterwards, I kept thinking about what had happened and it occurred to me that this must be playing out with families all over, all the time. And I knew that a picture book (a book that is read by both child and adult) was the perfect format to bring up this sort of commentary. Never at any time in making this book did I mean for it to be some sort of finger-wagging session. I really just wanted it to be observational. Like I said, I fully own up to letting technology time-to-time wedge it’s way into my parent-child relationships. Working from home especially, it’s a very real situation in my life. And continues to be. I don’t like that it is, and when I realize I’m doing that I stop. With hello! hello!, I never wanted to preach. I merely wanted to suggest… observe, accept, understand, and evolve. I mean this DOES happen. Most people, I think, appreciate it and can enjoy what I did, how I rendered it, on that level. But I think there’s others who—for whatever reason—will just be annoyed by any book that they think is trying to, I guess, scold them. And those people aren’t really into hello! hello!. Such is life…

Matthew, can I tell you how much I adored Special Delivery? There is so much color and detail within the pages of this book! And thank you for the gift under the dust jacket! Can you tell us about your work on this book? What was the partnership like between you and Philip Stead?

Wow, thanks so much! Special Delivery was an absolute treat to work on from beginning to end. It was a whole lot like three friends and kindred spirits just… messing around. I mean, really having fun. (Those three being Phil, me, and our editor Neal Porter.) And in the process we were making pictures, story… music. I think at some point I likened it to free jazz. The story and art are so very topsy-turvy, yet painstakingly put together like that.

Phil and I had known each other for a while, having met and hung out at various ALA and other conferences over the years. And Neal too. We all got along so well (similar tastes in books, life, and laughs) that at some point it was suggested (probably by me) that we should really do a book together. Sometime later, Phil mailed me the manuscript for Special Delivery. (Snail mail, not email. Natch!) I knew as soon as I saw Phil’s manuscript that I NEEDED to do it.

As I read it the first time, images were already materializing in my brain, and I simply had to get that stuff out! And I couldn’t wait. It’s not everyday that one gets the opportunity to illustrate a picture book that includes an attempt at mailing an elephant, a plane crash, a train robbery, a ride in an ice cream truck… and more! And I’m so pleased to say that the wildly unspooling thread of Special Delivery will continue to… unspool. I’m currently working on sketches for Phil’s next chapter of Sadie’s story, titled The Only Fish In the Sea.

Matthew, this book news you've given us here is so wonderful to hear! So glad we will be hearing more from Sadie, and thankful that you and Philip Stead will give us another book! 

(Back to our interview:)

Your most recent work and the focus of this post is Lost.Found. I first saw this book at ALA Annual this past summer, and it is such fun to able to blog it about here!!

The book contains only two words: lost and found, and Marsha Arnold truly uses these words brilliantly to tell an eventful story.  When the single word “lost” is paired with your illustrations, the end result is so powerful! Several spreads in Lost. Found. show this. What was it like to illustrate this book?

Your illustrations show every movement and emotion of each animal who comes across the scarf. 

I had such a great time with Marsha’s wonderfully inventive and creative text. Which might sound odd, since there are only two words in this book. But for me, the experience of creating the spaces in between those words and even how I first read the manuscript… these things will always shape my understanding of how I have read and will read this book then and now and forever. I barely notice that there are only two words!

When I first read Marsha’s manuscript, there was a little bit of “stage direction” so to speak. It wasn’t the kind that steps on top of the pictures-to-be, not at all. Not very particular or detailed. It was simple description of what animal (bear, raccoon, beaver, etc.) has the scarf what it or they do with it and how it’s ultimately lost. And repeat. There was just enough description to outline the thread of the thing. Once I really got into the sketches, there were one or two sequences that had to be tweaked to make better sense in one way or another. But otherwise it stayed true to Marsha’s vision of how this book plays out. I love how it can be, at times, campy and fun, and other times quiet and warm and sincere. It’s a lovely blend. A blend I often like to achieve in many of my books, in fact.

And thank you for your note about the nuances of animal expressions! When one works with an economy of line (as it has been done here) the slightest curl or wrong turn of a line—a misshapen circle or line around an eye for instance—it can throw an entire drawing off. Simple line work is only deceptively simple. In the making of a book, I will throw many a drawing in the trash. Not only because maybe my wrist snapped too quickly and the pen went the wrong way. But sometimes a line is TOO clean and uniform. Or is TOO illegible and messy. No one would ever now, right? My strife!


The readers in my library always want to know what inspires authors and illustrators. How do you get your ideas for your illustrations?

When it comes to my art and images, I think a great deal of it is a cobbling together of bits and pieces of me and my life experiences. The things I find funny or not funny, animals I think are distinct and characteristic in one way or another, etc. In terms of inspiration, it can’t be any secret that I’m over-the-moon inspired by the many loosey-goosey pen and ink greats who’ve come before me. Namely William Steig, Jules Feiffer, Quentin Blake. I love their lines so much. So free and fearless, all of them. When it comes to story, I used to try and lean on experiences from my own childhood to conjure up book ideas. (With a hazy memory of it all, this yielded wildly mixed results.) I’m sure my kid life is still a little in there when I’m working on writing my own books. But now that I’m a dad, I get SO many ideas from my kids. I often say—as an author and illustrator of picture books—that my kids are my best investments. Truth be told, I actually get a little nervous when I think about them getting older! (I mean, for more reasons than just this one.)

Before we end this interview, please tell us about your work with Julie Sternberg on illustrating the Eleanor books! These are such a favorite in my library!

So nice to hear that! Those books have been a real joy to work on. It’s another great example of being able to ride the line between silly and sincere. Julie is terrific at bringing out the right amount of humor in a moment but not send it right over the top. And like I said, beyond that, there are so many poignant moments in Eleanor’s books that were so great to finesse and get just right a picture to go along with. In the beginning, it wasn’t always easy to find that balance, but once I tuned into it, it was smooth sailing. I loved collaborating on those with both Julie and our lovely Abrams editor, Tamar Brazis. Such fond memories!

What else would you like to tell readers about Lost. Found. and your work?

Lost. Found. is a book about a group of individuals that find friendship and community. Albeit after a long day of being wildly self-interested. 

Having said that, it’s been a lot of fun spending some time with you, Cynthia, after having been connected via social media for a while now. Thank you for taking the time to connect further and for having such thoughtful things to say and questions to ask!

And I love to expand community and friendships online with others too. Folks can find me on Twitter: @cordellmatthew and Facebook: facebook.com/cordellmatthew (but no other social media… My poor lil’ brain can only handle so much!)

I am so grateful to Matthew for appearing on my blog today and answering my questions! Learn more about Matthew Cordell's work by visiting his website here

To read more about Lost. Found, check out the other stops on the blog tour below: 

Blog Tour Schedule
November 3: SharpRead and Nerdy Book Club
November 4KidLitFrenzy
November 6: Librarian in Cute Shoes