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Never Give Up!

One of the things I love about teaching the Pages classes is the opportunity to read and learn right alongside my students. I am endlessly amazed at their insights. There is never a class when they don’t point out something I did not see or interpret another way. This is the same thing I loved about homeschooling, watching the light come on in my children’s eyes as they discussed a great character in a book or a line they were chewing on!

I started out this last Pages class as I usually do, discussing the author. This session we are reading, “Because of Winn-Dixie”, by Kate DiCamillo, which happens to be her first published book. Kate has led an interesting life. She was born in Philadelphia but moved to Florida when she was five due to health problems. She had chronic pneumonia as a child and was often hospitalized, which gave her plenty of time, (you got it) to read!

What I loved most about Kate’s story was the realness in her struggle to become a writer and the resilience it took to get her writing into the “right” person’s hands.

After graduating with an English degree and working lots of odd jobs, Kate ended up following a friend to Minnesota at 30-years old. She started working at a book warehouse (not her dream job). She also started waking up at 4am before her shifts to write two pages every day.—a habit that Kate has kept to this day. After four years she started submitting her books to publishers and received 473 rejection letters. Let me say that again, 473 rejection letters! That number has had me thinking and talking with my family and my students.

How would it feel to receive 473 rejection letters?

Would I personally give up?

Throw in the towel?

Would I think I don’t have anything of value to say?

And the answer I keep coming to is: I think I might. I am not sure my ego could withstand that number—473!

Resilience is simply the capacity to recover quickly from difficulties. To really go deeper, what are resilience skills? This is the list of traits that appeared when I looked it up:

Self-confidence.

Optimism.

Flexibility.

Responsibility.

Patience.

Problem-Solving.

Self-awareness.

It made me think that this is the list we should hang for ourselves to remind us of what is needed to push through the hard, ego-breaking experiences and get to the other side.

I am glad that Kate picked up that list and continued to submit her writing. Because of Winn-Dixie did finally get into the right person’s hand. It made it through sitting on one of these people’s desks while they were on maternity leave, only to be found again when the person returned and was cleaning her desk.

On top of this, her story went through multiple rewrites before it was published. Kate DiCamillo’s path to success was not an easy assent but more of a difficult and sometimes brutal climb. Gone are my assumptions that writing just comes easy to some. What replaced that thought is the thought that those who get to the top of the climb embrace that list of resilience skills and are courageous in using them.

Kate DiCamillo has gone on to publish 25 novels and has sold over 37 million copies. Four of her books have been turned into films and she is one of only six authors to have won two Newbery Honor awards. She spends 12-15 hours a week writing and 35-40 hours a week reading. I don’t know about you, but I will keep my resilience list hanging, right next to my pencil and paper. I will keep a warm cup of tea right next to the book I am reading. I choose to make it courageously to the other side, one page at a time.

~Clare Bonn

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FREE Spelling!

A wordsmith recognizes the plasticity of language and delights in the potential of a word.

Words are like Play-Doh, moldable, colorful, and brimming with potential.

Learning to spell should be like breaking off a piece of brightly colored Doh, rolling and twisting it to shape, and discovering the wonder of a word!

Did you know that you can make more than 350 words from the word “construction”?

Here are a few examples:

  • Play with making 4-letter words and you will discover: Ruts and Rust
  • Keep going to the 5 and 6-letter words and you will stumble upon the soft and C sound:

           Circus and Citrus

  • And the bigger the words you make, the bigger the surprise:

           Risotto? Unicorn?

Our program, of course, is the perfect pairing with our 2nd and 3rd Grade Collections, but it works well for the budding wordsmith at any elementary level!

We are happy to announce our brand new spelling program. And even more happy to announce that it’s free—yes, FREE! Everything you need to get started can be accessed via the link below.

Set your students happily on their way to literacy.

 

Click through to discover more.

 

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Meet Claire

I can tell you a lot about rabbit warrens; not necessarily their scientific side, like what makes them structurally sound or how far they reach below the earth, but what it feels like to dig them with one’s paws or weave down a tunnel’s narrow twists and turns. This might seem strange, seeing as I’m a human and remain securely aboveground—but that’s where the realm of fiction comes in. 

Watership Down, a book told from the perspective of rabbits, is one of my alltime favorite stories. My love for this book not only stems from the author’s perspicacious depictions of themes like heroism, freedom, individuality, and leadership, but from my warm childhood memories of my dad reading Watership Down to me and my brother at night, engrossing my attention so fully that it felt like I was the one searching for a new warren and I was playing a game of rabbit politics. I laughed during the story’s highs and cried during its lows. I hung onto every word with bated breath. This nightly ritual of reading with my family cemented in my heart that literature connects us to the people and world around us—a life without reading would be a drab, dull affair indeed. 

Ever since these early days of living vicariously through stories, I couldn’t imagine a future for myself that didn’t involve reading and writing. I love doing things—like climbing, surfing, backpacking, running, painting, drawing, writing—but at the end of the day, nothing makes sense of our experiences quite like literature. It’s the looking class through which life takes on color. 

These days, I’m honored to share my passion for great books with our friends at Blackbird & Company. If we can help children take one step on their journey to read well, write well, think well, I consider ours a job well done. 

——————

Claire Sakelson earned both her Bachelor’s and Master’s in English at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, from which she graduated in 2024. While there, she minored in Psychology and emphasized in fiction writing. She also taught a Writing and Rhetoric class for Cal Poly freshman, which helped her develop a teaching philosophy that centers using positive feedback to nurture students’ ideas, creating intrinsically motivated—and skilled—writers. She joined the Blackbird & Company team in January 2025 and is blessed to live on the beautiful California Central Coast in San Luis Obispo.