Dian Curtis Regan

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*Dian's Book Shop*

Princess Nevermore

Kaley's Korner

About the Author

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Picture Books

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Middle Grade Novels

Young Adult Novels

Anthologies

*FORTHCOMING BOOKS*

Third Grade Rules

Redheads Rock

Rocky Cave Kids

Fairies

*Free Curriculum Guides*

*School Visits/Speaking*

How to Order Books

Autographed Books

Writer Resources

Write a Book in 5 Minutes

For Young Writers

Gotta Keep Reading

FAQ

Quotes on Writing

Letters From Readers

Monster Hall of Fame

Writers in the Kitchen

The Walrus Pond

Venezuela

Cats, cats, cats

Acknowledgements

CONTACT

Children's Book Author

Poco keeps my home office running while I'm visiting schools. Here he is, hard at work.
Dian is a former school teacher
(Denver, Adams County, District 12). 
She has visited many schools
across the U.S. and in Venezuela.


Please refer to the information
below for details.

If you'd like to invite Dian
to your school, email:


speakingrequest (at)
diancurtisregan.com




Materials needed:


*projector for Power Point
*a microphone (in large areas)
*a podium with a light 

cat, home office, Dian Curtis Regan
Gracie tries to help me write, but ends up taking over my computer chair.




FEES:

Schools:  $1000 per day, plus expenses
                 In the Wichita area: $800 per day

Expenses include:

* Airfare or mileage (if driving)
* Meals on the day of the visit
* Hotel accommodations.

Sessions:  A one-day visit includes three sessions for any age level.
 
                Pre-K ~ 2nd Grade  (30 minutes)
                3rd Grade ~ 5th Grade  (45 minutes)
                6th Grade ~ 12th Grade (45 minutes)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Libraries: $600 for a one-hour author presentation
                  In the Wichita area: $300

There are no extra charges for travel expenses or
accommodations.  Books will be donated to the library.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Keynote/Banquet speaker:  One Writer's Journey: $1000


An informative and humorous peek into the life of a former
school teacher
who decided to become a full-time author:

the ideas behind the stories,

the road to publication,
the detour to South America,
a bit of history
about the children's book industry,
and a celebration of the best audience
a writer could ask for--
young readers.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Book Sales:  Arranging to have books available
can be done through a local independent bookstore,
directly from the publishers, or through: 

Watermark Books (in Kansas) Contact Rebekah at 316-682-1181   
The Best of Books (in Oklahoma) Contact Kathy or Julie at 405-340-9202

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Here is a sample schedule for an author visit: 

Group 1: 9:00 to 9:45
Group 2: 10:00 to 10:45
Autographing: 11:00 to 12:00
(Autographing separate from the sessions
allows one on one time with students)
Lunch: 12:00 to 12:45
Group 3: 1:00 to 1:45
Autographing: 2:00 until finished 




Virtual School Visits



Dian will be offering virtual school visits soon.
Please check back. 


Fee:

Power Point Presentation, plus Q&A, 60 minutes:  $300
Question and Answer session only, 30 minutes: $150

Materials can be pre-sent to the school: 
bookmarks and donated books

Please see free teaching guides for use in the classroom here.




Photos of school visits, signings, and conferences.  Click here.






Ten Tips for a Successful Author Visit

1.  The most important tip:  Prepare students by having them read (or be familiar with) the author's books.  This seems obvious, but doesn't always happen.  When students do not know anything about the "guest speaker," it's a lost opportunity to encourage writing and reading.  

2.  Encourage students to write down questions ahead of time.  Some feel more comfortable reading their questions than asking them spontaneously in front of a group.

3.  In addition to reading the books or hearing them read, younger students can illustrate a favorite scene or create book marks.  Older students can write and share book reviews, write a commercial for the book, act out a scene, or make a class collage.  One school built life-size dioramas of a few of the books--truly a "hands-on" projects.

4.  Let parents know about the author visit.  Some parents are aspiring--or published-- writers and enjoy sitting in on the sessions.

5.  Have the author's books available for sale before, during, and after the visit.  This is important, not because it's an opportunity for book sales, but because students have made a connection with an author, which makes a big difference in motivating them to read and write.  (With a royalty of only two cents per paperback for book clubs and book fairs, money is not the reason authors want their books available to the students!)

Many poor readers will give the books a chance if they've met the author in person.  For others, it generates (or re-charges) enthusiasm for their own writing.  As a former elementary school teacher, I've seen the "magic" of this happen many times and it's priceless. 

Local bookstores will handle book sales as a "book-fair" so the school receives a percentage of sales.  The school provides the author's name and list of available books and the store does the rest, even sending someone to handle books and money the day of the visit. 

Books need to be ordered EARLY (as soon as you know the author is coming) so students have time to read them.  (I always receive last minute panic calls about books that haven't arrived yet, so please be aware that this process takes time.) 

Pre-selling books is a good idea, but there will also be those who decide on the day of the visit that they want a book, and those who decide after the author has departed. (Can you tell I'm a former teacher?)

6.   In the sample schedule above, a separate time is set aside for the author to autograph and visit one-on-one with students.  One system that works well is to have each class, one at a time, send students with books to the autographing area so they can visit with the author while having their books signed. 

If there are too many students to allow for individual signings, students can leave their books with a slip of paper inside, noting their name, class, and the name of the person to whom the book is to be autographed.

Note:  Please let students know I will not sign slips of paper, body parts, etc.  I'm at the school to promote reading and writing - - not my own name.  I will provide a master sheet for bookmarks so that all the students can have something to take home.

Finally,
please don't schedule autographing during the author's 15-minute break between sessions!

7.  Consider having a drawing during each session for several books.  The winners may have their picture taken with the author while their books are being signed.  Other schools draw for "lunch with the author."

8.  Have students make name tags for the session.  It's helpful to the visiting author while he/she is answering questions, and greatly helps while autographing.

9.  If the visiting author is driving to your school, please send a detailed map!

 
 

10. For further information about author visits, see: Terrific Connections With Authors, Illustrators, and Storytellers: Real Space and Virtual Links written by Toni Buzzeo and Jane Kurtz, published by Libraries Unlimited.

I hope this information is helpful to you.  And I wish you many successful author visits at your school!

Dian Curtis Regan






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