Posted in info

Issue 10 activities: mad scientists!

"Issue 10 cover Alphabet Soup"We’ve updated the ‘Activities’ page! (You’ll find the page on the menu across the top of the blog, under the header picture).

ISSUE 10—AUTUMN 2011

ACTIVITIES

1. PLAY with chemistry online. Check out ChemiCroc—a cool website for primary school kids, with online activities.

2. Check out the International Year of Chemistry 2011: Australia website. There are some chemistry-related word searches and activities.

3. HANDS-ON CHEMISTRY: Visit the CSIRO website to see how you can make your own bath bombs. (Give as gifts, or drop one in your own bath and watch it FIZZ!)

4. TRY a YUMMY EXPERIMENT: experiment with reactions—visit the Science Wizard’s website to find out how to make your own sherbet. Yum! (You’ll find citric acid in the grocery store,  near tartaric acid.)

5. READ some chemistry-themed books! We like George’s Marvellous Medicine by Roald Dahl. Can you think of any others? Click here to tell us your favourites, and we’ll add them to the list!

MUSIC LISTENING LIST

Our listening list is compiled by Danielle Joynt, from Cantaris. Danielle has also included comments for some of these pieces. (Tip: Ask about CDs at your public library—libraries often have a good collection of CDs for loan if you prefer not to buy.)

1. MUSIC FOR THE ROYAL FIREWORKS—GEORGE FREDERIC HANDEL

"Music for the Royal Fireworks cover"This is a suite—originally for wind-band and later re-scored for orchestra—composed by George Frederic Handel in 1749. The music was commissioned by King George ll of Great Britain to celebrate the end of the War Of Austrian Succession and the signing of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748.

The music was first publicly performed in rehearsal on 21st April 1749 in Vauxhall Gardens, London. Over twelve thousand people attended the rehearsal, causing a three hour traffic jam of carriages, after the central arch  on the newly built London Bridge collapsed.

During the actual concert on the 27th April, the musicians were housed in a purpose-built theatre which caught fire after the collapse of a bas-relief scultpure of King George during the fireworks!

2. VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS SCORED INTO MELODIES

In 2003, researchers in Italy began transforming the low-frequency seismic rumblings of volcanoes into musical scores in an effort to predict when the volcanoes would erupt. Researchers created a concerto from the underground movements of Mount Etna in Sicily and created melodies from Tungurahua in Ecuador. By correlating music with precise volcanic activity, researchers hope to learn the signature tune of an imminent eruption.

3. CARL PHILIPP EMMANUEL BACH (1714-88) compared the music of his father’s generation with “overly-spiced cooking”.

Erik Satie likened the chromaticism of Wagner’s music to sauerkraut!

Sergei Prokofiev compared the cloyingly sweet berries he sampled on a visit to the country with Chopin’s “effete” nocturnes.

4. POPULAR MUSIC

Love Potion Number 9 is a classic popular song written in 1959 by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. It was originally performed by The Clovers that year. The well-known version was recorded by The Searchers in 1963.

5. THE ENGLISH COMPOSER EDWARD ELGAR is said to have believed that the tune of the first of his “Pomp and Circumstance” marches would “knock ‘em flat”. As an amateur chemist, he proved that literally …

"Pomp and Circumstance cover"His friend, the conductor and composer William Henry Reed, tells how Elgar delighted in making a ‘phosphoric concoction’ which would explode spontaneously when dry—possibly Armstrong’s mixture, red phosphorus and potassium chlorate, used in toy cap guns. One day, Reed says, Elgar made a batch of the stuff but then musical inspiration struck. He put the mixture into a metal basin and dumped it in the water butt before returning to the house.

‘Just as he was getting on famously,’ wrote Reed, ‘writing in horn and trumpet parts, and mapping out wood-wind, a sudden and unexpected crash, as of all the percussion in all the orchestras on earth, shook the room … The water-butt had blown up: the hoops were rent: the staves flew in all directions; and the liberated water went down the drive in a solid wall. Silence reigned for a few seconds. Then all the dogs in Herefordshire gave tongue.’

 

See the activities and the themed listening list for issue 9 (summer 2010).

See the activities and the themed listening list for issue 8 (spring 2010).

See the activities and the themed listening list for issue 7 (winter 2010).

Posted in competitions, info, poetry, teachers' resources

Summer 2010 writing comp!

Win a $20 book voucher!

"Writing a poem"Write a poem up to 10 lines long (shorter is fine). Your poem must include the word ‘snap.’ Include a competition entry form—you can print one from Alphabet Soup‘s website.

ENTRIES CLOSE 7 JANUARY 2011. (We’ll accept entries postmarked 7 January.)

This writing competition is open to children aged 12 and under. Entries are judged in 3 age categories.

Posted in authors, info, teachers' resources

Q&A with Hazel Edwards

There's a Hippopotamus on my roof eating cake (cover)Issue 9 features a Q&A with Hazel Edwards, author of There’s a Hippopotamus on Our Roof Eating Cake, and Plato the Platypus Plumber (Part-time) and many more books! We could only include a selection of questions in the magazine, so here’s the full interview for you to enjoy.

Where do you live?
In my imagination. But also in the same house (in Blackburn, Victoria) where my cake-eating hippo still lives on the roof.

How old are you?
The age of the character I’m writing at the time.

(Hazel’s Tip: on the publisher’s page of a book there is a year the author was born, like 1945, and then a dash. If there’s nothing after the dash, they are still alive.)

I try to keep my photo up-to-date, my real face.

"Hazel Edwards, author"
Hazel Edwards, 2010

What was the inspiration for There’s a Hippopotamus On Our Roof Eating Cake?

Our new roof leaked. My then 3-year-old son thought there was a hippo up there, when the workmen banged around trying to fix the leak.

Of your own books, which is your favourite?

The one I haven’t written yet.

"Plato the platypus plumber (part-time) cover"Your favourite character?

Plato the Platypus Plumber, who has a toolkit that also fixes grumpy people. I love the way illustrator John Petropolous has drawn the toolkit, the water pipes and the Cassandra font he’s used (named after his daughter)

Where do you get your ideas?

I have an ideas notebook of things I see or hear, mixed with ‘What if?’ imagination. Other stories depend upon participant-observation, of going and doing something new, knowing you will write about it afterwards. So you pay special attention. Like in Antarctica. Or when I went down the waterways to find out about the platypus.

Why did you become an author?

Being an author is also an excuse for asking questions, and then it’s called research."Cake-Eating Hippo plays by Hazel Edwards"
I like learning new things to write about, and new formats in which to write the stories.

I like (collaborating) working with other creators like co-authors, illustrators, film-makers and puppeteers. I learn new ways of thinking in pictures, movement or textures. Even with interpreters who change the words into another language. Plato is being translated into German. Many of my books are in Braille or Auslan signing for deaf kids, Some are becoming electronically available on Kindle, iPad and iPhone and that’s an exciting and quick way for stories to travel across cultures and countries.

My favourite is when a story is performed especially on stage. I’m loving the process of film-making with Pocket Bonfire.

When did you first appear in print?

A story in the newspaper’s kids’ section when I was about eight.

Are you working on a new project at the moment?

Pocket Bonfire Productions’ short film inspired by There’s a Hippo … is out. Working with these guys across three years has been fun as they read the book as children and remained fans taking it into film, their way of storytelling.

Hazel shares some of the best questions she’s been asked.

I was asked, “Does Plato the Platyplus Plumber  talk to the cake-eating hippo?’ Previously I hadn’t thought about my fantasy character from one picture book talking to one of my others.

Do your characters ever talk to each other?
"Flight of the Bumblebee (cover)"

In my head. Maybe all my characters from different stories could meet? … Imagine a party or a TV panel with the clumsy Bumble from The Flight of the Bumblebee, the grumpy male bellydancing pig from Duckstar, my Gang-O orienteering sleuths … and other characters I haven’t written about yet who are waiting in my imagination.

"Gang-O Kids (cover)"A challenge

A librarian set students a challenge—Make up your own story based only on ALL Hazel’s book titles. Try it. They were allowed to add ‘and’ or ‘but’  joining words. Some fun stories appeared.

Does Hippo cook?

No, but recently we did a Channel 31 ‘Kids in the Kitchen’ program. Two 10 year olds made ‘hippo footprints’ (pancakes) and ‘ muddy platypus bubbles’ while I read the books Plato the Platypus Plumber and  Hooray There’s a Hippo on Our Roof Having a birthday Party’. We also made ‘ant bread.’

Do your children help with stories?

My children are adults now but I co-wrote, ex-blog  Cycling Solo; Ireland to Istanbul with my son Trevelyan. He did all the cycling. Now 11-year-old Truman helps me with story ideas.

How long does it take to write a book?

There’s thinking time and writing time. And re-writing time. I do about ten drafts. A picture book takes an illustrator at least a year to draw, sometimes longer.

"Duckstar (cover)" Any advice to aspiring illustrators?

I write an art brief, which is like a letter to the artist. For Plato, I asked for a plumber’s tool kit with a mobile phone that a platypus could wear underwater.

Any advice if doing a project on an author?
1.    Read at least three of the author’s books
2.    Google the author’s website.

What is the kind of answer the Hippo gives to fan’s questions?

"hippo caravan cover"Jenna asked, “How old are you Hippo?”
Hippo said: As the cake-eating, rooftop hippo, I am celebrating the 30th anniversary of being found on the roof. But I am ageless.

Maybe I am your age?

I am as old as you imagine me.

Love from

Hippo (via Hazel who does the typing. My feet are a bit big for the keyboard.)

Visit Hazel Edwards’s website for more about her books and book trailers, notes, reviews and publisher links. You’ll also find a link to Pocket Bonfire Production, film makers of the Hippo.

Posted in info, teachers' resources

Summer 2010 issue out 7 December!

"Alphabet Soup magazine issue 9 cover"

Inside issue 9 of Alphabet Soup magazine:

  • Q&A with Hazel Edwards, author of There’s a Hippopotamus on Our Roof Eating Cake (and many more books!)
  • Australian Wetlands at Perth Zoo
  • Stories, poems and book recommendations
  • Kids’ writing (your own stories, poems and book reviews!)
  • Crossword
  • The Book Chook’s writing tips for kids
  • Summer 2010 writing competition

Oh! And don’t forget to admire the cover. The artwork is by Angel Hatton, the winner of our design-a-cover competition.

SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR CHRISTMAS and we’ll post your order on 20 December 2010 with a postcard attached notifying the recipient that it is a gift subscription from you.

Subscribe online and write ‘Christmas gift’ in the ‘message to sender’ field or

Download an order form and send it in with your cheque or money order (and note on the form that it is a Christmas gift).

A 1-year subscription is only $29.80 (including p&h)

Posted in competitions, info, teachers' resources

Win a $20 book voucher! (Spring writing comp for kids.)

Our spring writing competition for 2010 closes on Friday 22 October 2010.

The bad news is that we haven’t had as many entries as we usually find in our PO Box. The good news is, there’s still time to enter! (And we can’t guarantee that you’ll win, but with fewer entries you have a slightly better chance of winning. But shhhh, we didn’t tell you that.)

"Child writing, illustration by Greg Mitchell"For this competition, you have to write a funny story about a musician—maybe that scared off a few writers but we’re sure you can write something funny about a crazy conductor or a brass player who likes blowing bubbles out of his tuba, or … a dog howling whenever his neighbour practises the recorder … or … ___________________<– enter your own idea here.

The competition is judged in 3 age categories: under 7s, under 9s and under 12s and there are $20 book vouchers to be won.

Here are the details:

SPRING 2010 WRITING COMPETITION

Entries close 22 October 2010

Write a funny story about a musician. Length: up to 350 words—shorter is fine. Your entry can be handwritten or typed.

Include a competition entry form. This may be printed from the website, photocopied, or contact us to have one emailed or posted to you.

We accept emailed entries (if you include a scan of the entry form) and entries postmarked 22 October.

Good luck!

Posted in competitions, info, teachers' resources

Don’t miss the comp closing dates!

Just a reminder—i"Boy writing by Greg Mitchell"f you want to enter our design-a-cover competition, entries close on 16 September 2010. The winner will see their artwork on the cover of our summer competition (out in November) and receive $20 worth of art supplies. You can find details and an entry form on the Alphabet Soup website.

And if writing is more your thing, don’t forget we run a writing competition for kids in every issue of the magazine. Our spring story competition closes on 22 October 2010. There are $20 book vouchers for the winners in three age categories. You’ll find details and an entry form over at the Alphabet Soup website for that, too.

Good luck!

Posted in Indigenous Literacy Day, info, teachers' resources

Indigenous Literacy Day

Subscribe to Alphabet Soup today and you’ll be helping the Indigenous Literary Project—we will donate 10% of all orders received today (1 Sept 2010) to the project. Indigenous Literacy Day aims to help raise funds to raise literacy levels and improve the lives and opportunities of Indigenous Australians living in remote and isolated regions.

If you already subscribe (thank you and hooray!) don’t forget that single copies make a light-to-post gift, or consider donating a subscription to your child’s primary school.

A 1-year subscription to Alphabet Soup magazine (4 issues) is only $29.80. You can subscribe via the magazine’s website.

Posted in info, teachers' resources

Indigenous Literacy Day, 1 September 2010

Indigenous Literacy Day aims to help raise funds to raise literacy levels and improve the lives and opportunities of Indigenous Australians living in remote and isolated regions. On 1 September our editor will be in Perth city checking out ILD events organised by Fremantle Press.

"Issue 8 cover Alphabet Soup magazine"On 1 September 2010 Alphabet Soup magazine will donate 10% of all orders received on that day (subscription and single issue orders) to the Indigenous Literacy Project.

If you’ve been thinking about buying a subscription, make sure you place an order on Wednesday! You can subscribe and order single copies of the magazine via our website. (Actually, if you order any day this week and add a note marking it ‘ILD order’, we’ll count it with the orders for 1 Sept!)

A 1-year subscription (4 issues) is only $29.80.

Posted in competitions, info, poetry, teachers' resources

Spring issue 2010 out Monday 23 August!

Alphabet Soup magazine will be arriving in subscribers’ letterboxes from Monday 23rd August.

The spring issue will have you humming a happy tune!"Issue 8 cover (spring 2010)"

  • Meet Dr John Long, palaeontologist and author
  • stories and poems by adults and children
  • Verse round for 2 or 4 voices
  • meet professional viola player, Helen Tuckey
  • The Book Chook’s column: ‘How to write funny stories’
  • book reviews
  • crossword
  • writing competition – win a $20 book voucher!
  • design-a-cover competition!

Alphabet Soup magazine will be available from our WA stockists from Tuesday 24 August. (Westbooks, Zero to Ten, The Well Bookshop Shenton Park.) Or  subscribe via the magazine’s website!

Posted in competitions, info, teachers' resources

Issue 8, coming soon!

Issue 8 of Alphabet Soup magazine will be out in a few weeks, and it has us humming a happy tune. It will be heading off to the printer very soon—here’s a taste of what you’ll find inside.

  • Q&A with John Long, author and palaeontologist
  • a round chant in four parts you can try with your friends
  • Stories, poems and book recommendations
  • crossword
  • kids’ writing and artwork (stories, poems, book reviews and artwork)
  • The Book Chook’s latest writing tips (How to write funny stories)
  • Helen Tuckey, talking about playing the viola
  • KID’S COMPETITIONS: our spring writing competition and your last chance to enter our design-a-cover comp

and more!

"Books from Fremantle Press"

Do you subscribe to Alphabet Soup? The winner of our issue 8 subscriber draw will receive a $200 book pack from Fremantle Press. If you’d like to subscribe, you can subscribe online (and order single copies of the magazine) via our website. 🙂