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      <title> by caasha</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/desua/mldsjotaad</link>
      <description></description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2013-03-16 22:58:23 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Acacia, Julia &amp; Samantha</title>
         <author>desua</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/desua/mldsjotaad/wish/8134667</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>
	&nbsp; Being able to speak up for herself wasn't always easy. The author 
grew up as the youngest of five sisters in a house full of books in 
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  Every evening at dinnertime the McDonald family would 
gather around the kitchen table, talking and telling stories. But with 
four older sisters, Megan remembers barely being able to get a word in 
edgewise. "I'm told I began to stutter," she says. “That’s when my 
mother gave me a notebook, so that I could write down everything I 
wanted to say!”</p><p>
 Pretending to be a pencil sharpener was Megan McDonald’s first 
experience as a writer. She was 10 years old when she wrote the story 
for her school newspaper. “Anything can become an idea for a story,” 
says McDonald. Megan has written and 
published over 60 books for children in 22 languages, including the 
hilarious Judy Moody adventures, which are largely inspired by her 
childhood memories of growing up with four older sisters.
</p><blockquote><p>
	&nbsp; Megan says, “I am lucky to be a writer, because I get to live in 
my imagination. (And I get to go to work in my pajamas!) I spend my days
 thinking like a hermit crab or a little blue penguin or a girl who 
loves bugs. Or pretending I’m a bossy big sister with a little brother 
named Stink. Or traveling back in history as a young girl who journeys 
across the Santa Fe Trail in 1848. Or solving a mystery in 17th century 
Jamestown. I spend my days looking at things upside down, inside-out, 
sideways, wondering, imagining, questioning everything, always wanting 
to see the inside.</p></blockquote><p>&nbsp;Megan has a B.A. in English from Oberlin College and a Masters in 
Library Science from the University of Pittsburgh. When she took her 
first writing class, her professor told her to go home and rip up all 
the poems she had ever written. He told her she was a prose writer. 
Megan went home and looked up “prose” in the dictionary to find out what
 she was!It meant <span>the ordinary form of spoken or written </span><a href="http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/language">language</a>, <span>without metrical structure, as distinguished from poetry or verse</span>.Before she became a writer, Megan worked in museums, libraries
 and bookstores. She has also made a living as a storyteller and a park 
ranger. Megan McDonald now lives with her husband in Sebastopol, 
California.</p> I first got to thinking about moods as a story idea when I visited
 bookstores, schools, and libraries, talking with kids of all ages. “Are
 you ever in a bad mood? Can you write books when you’re in a bad mood?”
 they'd ask. This inspired me to dream up Judy Moody, a character with a
 whole range of moods, good and bad, happy and sad.
<p>
	&nbsp; &nbsp; Growing up as the youngest of five sisters often put me in a mood.
 There was the time my family took a beach vacation in Florida. I had to
 stay home with my aunt. I didn’t set eyes on the ocean until I 
was a teenager! Then there was the time we went to Washington D.C. My 
sisters got to take a tour of the White House, but I was too young to 
go. I stayed home and thought up the Rubber Hand trick (as Judy does to 
Stink) to play on my sisters!&nbsp;And let's not forget when my mom made 
pilgrim costumes for Halloween. With four older sisters, those costumes 
got passed down to me year after year after year. “BOR-ing!” as Judy 
Moody would say.&nbsp;So, guess what? I wrote a book about it for beginning 
readers!
  
		http://www.meganmcdonald.net/content/meet-megan</p>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2013-03-16 23:06:12 UTC</pubDate>
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