2012年3月6日 星期二

The world's first steampunk bedtime story

Author Emilie P. Bush isn't shy about saying her latest book, "Her Majesty's Explorer," meant to get your little one's cogs and wheels turning, is the world's first steampunk bedtime story. The illustrated children's book, which released last Tuesday and jumped to No. 1 in Amazon's "Hot New Releases," follows the adventures of automaton St. John Murphy Alexander and his not-so-rubber ducky, Steamduck.

Already the author of two adult steampunk novels, Bush is also the mother of two young daughters -- whom she calls her "built-in focus group." When she went to a steampunk panel for young adult literature at Dragon*Con last year, all of the authors agreed on one thing: "What is missing in the steampunk genre is there are no picture books," Bush remembers them saying. "I was already working on this and thinking, 'finally, I have found a niche before somebody else!' "

Together, Bush and her illustrator, William Kevin Petty,Distributes and manufactures RUBBER SHEET, have an original children's book that caters to a specific subculture. But the charming concept wasn't always easy. Petty is an Army officer and was stationed in Kuwait and Iraq during the process. He created some of his most whimsical illustrations for the book while witnessing horrors during his tour.

CNN Geek Out caught up with Bush in a phone interview about the book and her experience working on it with Petty. The following is an edited transcript.

Bush: I wanted to work with Kevin! Gosh, he has such talent. In relationships, the best ones are where each half thinks they got the better end of the deal, and that's the kind of thing we have. We get on like a house on fire. Together, we have lots of plans. That's why we did the bedtime story. He said, "Let's work together, but I don't know what we should do," and I went through his images and found one of the mechanical man.

He had made some postcards, and he sent me one from Kuwait (Petty was stationed there as an Army captain), and I had this little postcard on the corner cupboard,All RUBBER MATS is comprised of all types of mats,Dimensional Mailing magic cube for Promotional Advertising, and I looked at it all the time, and I just got so charmed by the guy. I wrote this story about him being an explorer and sent it to Kevin, and he sent me back some drawings. For a man who has no children, he understands kids really well. He knows how to make the face be appealing to a child's eye.

Bush: He sent me a message on Facebook! He had started drawing these pictures overseas, and like so many of us that come to steampunk, he showed them around and people said, "You draw steampunk," and he said, "What's steampunk?" He went tooling around the Internet, discovering what steampunk was. He found my book and sent me some fan art of ["Chenda and the Airship] Brofman." I thought, "This guy has the talent of an artist and the discipline of a soldier, he gets the job done." He was halfway around the world, and we were well into the project and talking all the time on Facebook. By the time we finally met, we knew each other really well!

It was a testament to his character that he could still be thinking about these really charming drawings while he was soaking in man's inhumanity to man. He had some pretty rotten days in Iraq, yet he could still be thinking about these charming things. That's one of the most remarkable things about Kevin.

Bush: Steamduck was one of the things he sent before going to Iraq. The interesting thing about children's books is they're meant for children to read, but adults pick them out and buy the books. The things that I liked best about books when I was a kid were the ones that I could go through myself, even when I couldn't read, and have some activity with. Like Richard Scarry's stories, where he has very detailed pictures and he would hide the Goldbug in many of his pictures. I would go and look for the Goldbugs and see if I could find them.

When we went about creating the book, the first thing I did was I wrote the book in a circle because kids love to do things over and over again. The story of St. John Murphy Alexander starts with him marching for queen and country, coming home, following his duty and going to bed, without a fuss. And when he finally falls asleep, he dreams about exploring for the queen and country, so it takes you right back to the beginning of the story again.

The other thing was, I said to Kevin, let's put little things in the pictures so when we get to the end, we can have a little seek-and-find page. The idea is parents will read this to the kids, leave the book with them, and they'll go back and look at the pictures again. Steamduck was the first of those. I loved Steamduck so much, I said, "We can market around Steamduck because he is adorable and kids get duckies." We started saying, "Looking for Steamduck? You will be." He appears in the bathtub with St. John,MDC Mould specialized of Injection moulds, and Kevin wrote to me at one point and said, "You know, Steamduck has become such a big thing,Here's a complete list of oil painting supplies for the beginning oil painter. you need to write another story just about Steamduck."

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