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Richard Torrey's Studio

7 Pal Ct
Shoreham, NY, 11786
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Richard Torrey's Studio

Richard Torrey's Studio

  • My Books
  • Gallery
  • Blog
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  • Appearances
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Blog

BOOKWORM FOR KIDS REVIEWS ALLY-SAURUS & THE VERY BOSSY MONSTER

August 17, 2017 Richard Torrey
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 I've now written/illustrated 15 books and have been reviewed hundred's of times. That said, I can't remember a reviewer "getting me" in a way that Tonja Drecker did in her wonderful Bookworm for Kids review this week of ALLY-SAURUS & THE VERY BOSSY MONSTER. 

I know that doesn't mean much to those who may be reading this, but as someone who spends a year or more thinking nonstop about a story-the writing, the illustrations, the cover, the end pages,  and even after that continues to tweak it until it's finally ripped out of my hands because of deadlines-it means everything.  

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"The power of imagination combines with an enthusiastic heroine to tame even the fiercest monsters of reality.

Ally and her friends love to pretend, and each has a favorite role they slip into--dinosaurs, a performer, and a bear. . .kind of. The three have so much fun until the new girl in the neighborhood, Maddie, steps in and wants to lay down tons of rules. All of which serve her purposes, of course. Ally and her friends want to be nice and try to play along, but at one point, things get out of hand.

Imagination flows from every page, letting its magic unfold as Ally and her friends are swallowed up in their own delightful worlds..."  

Continue to read the review by clicking here. 

 

 

 

Tags dinosaurs, new book, children's books, bully, understanding, girls, imagination, review
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A Tightrope Walk Without A Net

July 18, 2017 Richard Torrey

I first posted this picture on my Facebook page in May of 2016 with the caption, "staring at a blank page, beginning the long-sometimes painful-but always exhilarating-process of turning a spark into a story..."
I then struggled for two months only to create a hash of a story which I subsequently buried next to the many other "misses". 

Having gone through this process many times, I know the best thing you can do sometimes is to put the story away in order to let it "ripen"...for a month...a year...sometimes ten. I probably have a hundred stories, or pieces of stories that I worked on for days, months, or in some cases years. Sometimes when I pull them out again, they will have indeed ripened. Other times...not so much-still rotten.

If there is one thing that separates an amateur from a professional, it is the massive amounts of time invested-with absolutely no guarantee of a positive outcome. It is understood going in that it often won't end well. iIt's a tightrope walk without a net.

That said, if you put in the work, learn from the gazillion mistakes you will make, and stay with it, you get better at generating ideas. You get better at fleshing them out. You get better at sensing whether you have something that is worth the investment of your time. You also start to love that tightrope. 

So, the story I posted about last May-and buried last July...well, I dug it up last month, ripped out much of what was rotten (most of the story), and just put the finishing touches on a new version-and Sue likes it!!!! (which is always the first test). Time to send it off to my agent. I'll let you know if anything happens.

Tags new book idea, story, children's books, sketches, Illustrator, children, author, bear, play, cooperation, understanding, friends, process, picturebooks
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