www.crackingthecover.com
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Picture
      • Ages 0-3
      • Ages 2 and up
      • Ages 3 and up
      • Ages 4 and up
      • Ages 5 and up
      • Ages 6 and up
      • Ages 8 and up
      • Author Interviews
      • Bedtime Stories
      • Gift Guide
    • Middle Grade
      • Author Interviews
      • Ages 6 and up
      • Ages 7 and up
      • Ages 8-12
      • Ages 9-12
      • Ages 10 and up
      • Gift Guide
    • YA
      • Author Interviews
      • Reviews
      • Adult Crossover
      • Gift Guide
    • Seasonal
      • Back to School
      • Christmas
      • Earth Day
      • Easter
      • Fall
      • Father’s Day
      • Mother’s Day
      • Gift Guide
      • Halloween
      • Spring
      • Valentine’s Day
      • Winter
    • Diversity
      • AAPI Heritage
      • Autism Month
      • Black Experience
      • Chinese New Year
      • Hispanic Heritage
      • Pride Month
      • Women’s History
    • Crossover
    • About
      • Review/interview policy
      • About our reviewers
    www.crackingthecover.com

    Carson Ellis’ ‘Home’ born out of little details

    0
    By Jessica on May 25, 2015 author interview, picture books

    Home CoverCarson Ellis has always loved to draw. She studied painting at the University of Montana, and after college, she collaborated with her friend (now husband) Colin on art for his band, The Decemberists. As that band gained popularity, art directors began to notice the album art and hired Carson to do illustration work. Before long, she was able to quit her bartending job and work full time as an illustrator.

    Carson is now the illustrator of nine books, the latest being one she penned herself. “Home” was published In February. “Home” is a tribute to what home is and can be — a house in the country, an apartment in the city, a palace or wigwam.

    “Home” was came after Carson spent many years wanting to write her own picture book but not feeling up to it. Many ideas were born and subsequently scrapped. Finally, “I decided to stop trying to tell a good story and to start, instead, with something I felt like I knew how to do: which is illustrate,” Carson told Cracking the Cover. “I love to draw homes, environments and little worlds full of details for readers to find and wonder about. I wrote ‘Home’ because I knew it would be fun to illustrate and I hoped it would spark the imaginations of readers.”

    Home noresize

    Not only did “Home” spark imaginations; it garnered the attention of children and critics alike. The reception was somewhat expected. “I worked really hard on it so I’m not surprised that people like the art. It did receive a lot of criticism from publishers when it was still just a manuscript,” Carson said. “People felt like it was just too broad and untethered — that it didn’t have enough holding it together or was ultimately kind of unsatisfying. So I wasn’t totally sure it worked or that people would like it until it was out in the world.”

    No matter what age, home is a meaningful concept to all of us, Carson said. That’s why she kept adult readers in mind when creating “Home.” “So often they’re the ones reading a book aloud, sometimes again and again. (As a mom, I know the distinct misery of reading a book you don’t like five times in a row to a toddler.) Home is a practical subject for a lot of adults: Do we like our home? Should we move? What would make our home better? But it can be such a fantastical one for kids, who are pretty much willing to think of anything as a home — any hole in the ground or assemblage of Legos — and to wonder who lives in it. I think it appeals to kids because it’s fun to wonder about homes and to adults because it’s fun to remember what it was like to wonder about them.”

    With all the different spreads/homes throughout the book, you’d think it would be hard for Carson to choose a favorite, but the author/illustrator says a few stand out for different reasons. “I like the apartment spread a lot, she said. “It’s set in New York City, where my parents worked when I was growing up. I didn’t like the city much as a kid, but I loved looking out the windows and seeing all the junk on the rooftops there: the water towers and greenhouses and sheds. All that stuff was a mystery to me — it still is — and it was fun to channel that mysteriousness in an illustration. I also love the spread with the Japanese businessman and the Norse god because it was so fun to paint.”

    Home Spread noresize

    Carson is currently working on another picture book she wrote. There is a lot more narrative involved, making it harder to make. The book has been through numerous revisions, and Carson is starting on the finished art for it.

    All the work is worth it, though. Carson loves picture books. “They combine poetry and art equally and there’s not a lot of limitations on what they can be and who they can be for. To me, they’re just the most gratifying creative pursuit. Picture books are also most kids’ first introduction to prose and visual art. Making them feels like a very special responsibility. I’m honored to do it.”

    Carson_EllisJoin author and illustrator, Carson Ellis, for a reading and signing of her debut picture book, “Home” at the King’s English Bookshop, 1511 South 1500 East, in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, May 26, at 6:30 p.m. Places in the signing line are reserved for those who purchase a copy of “Home” from The King’s English. Pre-order your signed copy of “Home,” by either calling the store at 801-484-9100 or ordering online. Please specify if you will be attending the event and if you want your book personalized.

    Read a complete transcript of Cracking the Cover’s interview with Carson Ellis.
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Jessica
    • Website
    • Facebook
    • X (Twitter)

    Jessica Harrison is the main reviewer behind Cracking the Cover. Prior to creating Cracking the Cover, Jessica worked as the in-house book critic for the Deseret News, a daily newspaper in Salt Lake City. Jessica also worked as a copy editor and general features writer for the paper. Following that, Jessica spent two years with an international company as a social media specialist. Jessica is currently a freelance writer/editor. In 2023, she was selected to be one of the first-round judges for the Cybils Awards — middle-grade fiction. She is passionate about reading and giving people the tools to make informed decisions in their own book choices.

    Related Posts

    As Edward Imagined tells fascinating story of Edward Gorey

    Mini Review: I Want to Read All the Books celebrates curiosity

    The Light of Home is tender exploration of home

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    • facebook
    • twitter
    • instagram
    • goodreads
    • amazon
    • bloglovin
    • mail
    Subscribe by email
    Follow
    Recent Posts
    September 20, 2024

    Polly Horvath’s Library Girl is whimsical middle-grade novel

    September 19, 2024

    As Edward Imagined tells fascinating story of Edward Gorey

    September 19, 2024

    Jessie Janowitz’s All the Ways to Go is strong contemporary MG

    September 19, 2024

    Mini Review: I Want to Read All the Books celebrates curiosity

    September 18, 2024

    The Light of Home is tender exploration of home

    Archives
    Categories
    Cybils Awards

    On Writing

    “The dance with words and the way the hair on the back of my neck raises when it works right is what I live for.”

    —Gary Paulsen

    “I write because I exist. Because I read. Because I breathe.”

    —Lindsay Eager

    “Books are kind of like the sense of smell: inhale one page and memories come rushing back.”

    —Keir Graff

    Cracking the Cover is a website dedicated to picture, middle-grade and young adult books. It features reviews, author interviews and other book news. PLEASE NOTE: We are not currently accepting self published books for review.

    Copyright © 2010-2022 Cracking the Cover. Unless otherwise noted, all books — digital and physical — have been provided by publishers in exchange for honest and unbiased reviews. All thoughts and opinions are those of the reviewer.

    Reviews Published Professional Reader 2016 NetGalley Challenge 100 Book Reviews

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.