Showing posts with label marvin terban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marvin terban. Show all posts

Saturday, July 8, 2017

LA17SCBWI Portfolio Showcase -- and an Only at the SCBWI Summer Conference Moment!

Scenes from the annual portfolio showcase! Honorees will be announced at the morning introduction.




Meanwhile, here's an Only-at-SCBWI moment if I've ever seen one:

Keynote speaker Marvin Terban had us all in stitches this morning. However, this evening, the tables turned when SCBWI LA member Esther Pearl Watson shared the notes she took about his talk -- in the form of a comic! 

Marvin was honored, and had to take a photo to keep!


This is the kind of connection that seems to uniquely happen at SCBWI. Love it.

Catch more of the conference highlights this year through blog posts tagged #LA17SCBWI or as-it-happens on Twitter.

Saturday Start: Marvin Terban Does Funny



Marvin Terban is a popular children’s book author and veteran teacher. Called “a master of children’s wordplay” by ALA Booklist and “Mr. English for Kids” by the Children’s Book-of-the-Month Club, he has written thirty-eight best-selling books about the English language. Three of them have sold more than one million copies each. He is also Scholastic’s “Professor Grammar.” A long-time member of SCBWI, he was voted Member of the Year in 2005. Known for his lively, informative, and fun presentations, he is a popular speaker at conferences across the United States and abroad.

Three minutes in, and the laughs keep piling up - joke after joke after joke.

Like the one about the guy who wrote the Hokey Pokey song, who recently passed away. And how his last words were "is that really what it's all about?" And then how they had such a hard time putting his body in the coffin… "They put his right foot in, and then it went right out again!"

And then Marvin hits us with research, and facts, and insights about how humor is so crucial in our lives – in medicine, in education, in entertainment, and especially in the books we create for kids and teens.

Citing a study on kids and reading, Marvin tells us that the number one thing kids want is the ability to choose their own books. The number two thing they want? "I look for books that make me laugh."

He breaks down some examples of juxtaposing humor and tragedy (including Shakespeare and Saturday Night Live after 9/11)

And Marvin shares quotes and tips and stories about the inspirational power of humor. A few highlights:

"The secret source of humor is not joy, but sorrow." - Mark Twain

Do you have to be a naturally funny person to produce funny work? No.

Humor helps your characters deal with situations in their lives.

and one more from Marvin,

"Humor definitely sells."

A great, rollicking keynote!

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Marvin Terban: Look Who's Laughing

Marvin Terban, a gallant humor-panel replacement for Douglas Florian, has been associated with the SCBWI when it was just S, he says. He's written 35 books for kids about the English language, and is known as Mr. English for Kids. Booklist called him a Master of Children's Wordplay.

He started his panel with a question: What makes something that you write funny, and what makes you funny?

You don't have a funny persona, he says. Once he figured out he wasn't going to make his fortune based on his face, he decided to be funny.

Woody Allen cast Marvin in seven movies based on recommendation from Mia Farrow's kids. His wife's uncle is Henny Youngman. Neither Woody nor Henny was funny in person, but both are when performing and/or writing.

He recommends his book FUNNY YOU SHOULD ASK for aspiring humor writers. And he recommends it again. And again.

Some things that make jokes funny:
  • Wordplay makes a joke funny (homonyms, homophones, idioms--he goes over these in his book).
  • The unexpected, or a reversal of expectations.
He told us a story about being near an Egyptian bus accident that killed eight people, and noticed how, not long after the wreck, the survivors were gathered around in a circle, telling funny stories. "Laughter can take us, hours after a tragedy, and lift our spirits."

He encouraged us all to put humor in our books, even the really serious ones. (Gosh, if only someone had written a book about humor writing--that would be the one thing that would have made his presentation feel complete.)