Illustrated by Lee Harper |
Turkey’s Sandtastic Beach Day published by Two Lions is the seventh delightful collaboration between author Wendi Silvano and illustrator Lee Harper. Mr. Lee rendered the bright, fun illustrations with pencil and watercolors on Arches hot press watercolor paper. Ms. Silvano addresses the conundrum of work versus go to the beach or more accurately work near the beach versus play on the beach. The farmyard animals take turns helping Turkey onto the sand and into the water with engaging word play and amusing disguises. Ms. Silvano’s seventh Turkey book entertains as much as her first Turkey Trouble published in 2012.
One Question Interview with Wendi Silvano
Hello Wendi. Welcome.
ETC: What advice would you give those in K-12 school who would like to become writers?
WS: If you want to become a published writer (or just a good non-published writer) one of the best things you can do is to read, read and read! When you read a lot in the genre that you want to write in your brain will begin to have a natural sense of what works in that genre. For example, with me, since I write mostly picture books, I read 20-30 new picture books a week. I come to see and feel what makes a good picture book text, what type language, sentence structure, length, etc. is in books being published today. It really helps! And the same would hold true for fantasy novels, middle grade fiction, poetry, or any other kind of writing.
Another thing that will help you is to practice writing all the time. Write something every day. It can be in a personal journal, for an assignment at school, on a blog or just for fun somewhere. It doesn’t have to be “good” writing… just something. That exercises your “writing muscles” and keeps them strong.
ETC: Thank you so much for visiting.
Nonfiction Component
Fun facts about turkeys.
An adult wild turkey has 5,000 to 6,000 feathers.
Wild turkeys, Meleagris californica, went extinct in California 10,000 years ago during the Pleistocene era. Turkey bones have been found in the La Brea Tar Pits.
The Aztecs and Maya domesticated wild turkeys.
Two thousand years ago and further North, the peoples of the Four Corners Region and in the states Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona domesticated wild turkeys.
Five hundred years ago the Spaniards took turkeys from Mexico back to Europe. Later, English settlers brought domesticated turkeys back to the Americas.
During the Great Depression, in the 1930s, wild turkeys were hunted almost to extinction. Only 30,000 wild turkeys remained across the continent.
Now the United States has over seven million wild turkeys.
In Colorado there are two sub species of wild turkey the native Merriam and the introduced Rio Grande.
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Visit Wendi Silvano
Visit Lee Harper
Visit your local book store:The Wandering Jellyfish Bookshop
Learn more about turkeys:
Colorado
Colorado Wildlife Council Turkey
Colorado Parks and Wildlife Turkey
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies Turkey
La Brea Tar Pits, California
PreColumbian Domesticated Turkeys
Role of Turkeys to Ancestral Pueblo
800 Year Old Turkey Feather Blanket
Earliest Mexican Turkeys in the Maya Regions
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