When we first met, both our families lived in the neighborhood of Duluth’s Central Hillside. Eventually, both our families moved to the country. Susie grew up on a farm and needed the wide open spaces, and the Sandbecks are consummate gardeners. Back to nature is no fad with Walt and Ellen.
The following interview was stimulated by a desire to share Ellen’s wit and perhaps help increase awareness for her books.
enny: You started out as more of an artist. How did you become interested in writing?
Ellen: I was recruited by a non-profit environmental group that wanted me to write a booklet about non-toxic housekeeping and gardening--one of our landscaping clients belonged to the group, and volunteered me for the job before telling me about it! I had 15 years’ worth of notes that I’d been compiling about organic landscaping, and the “booklet” turned into a book which I named “Slug Bread & Beheaded Thistles; Amusing and Useful Techniques for Nontoxic Housekeeping and Gardening.”
enny: You illustrated books for the Dover Series. What kinds of things did you learn from that experience?
Ellen: Those books contained hundreds of images, so I was essentially paid to practice and improve my technique. I learned that no matter how many people love an image, it doesn’t matter if the owner of the company doesn’t get it. Also, it is a bad idea to have one’s work space in the middle of the living room, where one’s finished product is vulnerable to the predations of crayon-happy toddlers and coffee-toting guests.
enny: How would you describe your writing style, not the end product, but the process?
Ellen: My writing process... come up with an idea for a project that requires a lot of research; attempt to write a proposal that a publishing company will be interested in; endure ridicule and derision caused by my glaring incompetence at writing proposals; hire a friend to write the proposal; submit proposal to my agent; wait for contract, which is almost inevitably too short for the proposed project; nearly work myself to death meeting the deadline (They don’t call them deadlines for nothing. My last one was actually more of a “drop-deadline.”); wait for the editor’s suggested revisions; make revisions, send manuscript back; wait anxiously to hear those magic words: “Your manuscript has been accepted;” wait for check. OR, alternately, wait to hear that the manuscript has been rejected, then try to figure out how to raise the money to self-publish.
enny: You began by self-publishing a book on growing worms. What did you learn from this experience?
Ellen: Actually, I began by writing Slug Bread & Beheaded Thistles, see question #1. We are still producing copies of “Laverme’s Handbook of Indoor Vermicomposting.”
enny: How did you get your first contract with a New York Publisher?
enny: You are currently on your fourth book? What is the “working title” and what’s it about?
Ellen: I submitted the manuscript for my fourth book to Scribner on August 31, 2008. I made my deadline by one day. I’m still doing the back and forth revisions with my editor. The working title is “Green Barbarians; How to Live Bravely On Your Home Planet.” I’m not sure whether the publisher will go for that title, but I’m hoping!
enny: I loved the look and feel of your first two books, Slug Bread and Beheaded Thistles and Eat More Dirt. Your creativity spills out in so many ways. Do you like writing more or making art?
Ellen: Making art is much more fun, but writing pays better.
enny: What ways of promoting your books have you found most effective?
Ellen: Readers’ word of mouth. Giving talks.
enny: What advice would you give to someone just starting out as a writer?
Ellen: Unless you are already famous, it is very, very difficult to pique the interest of a publisher or an agent. Publishers very rarely read anything that is unagented, and agents are not interested in authors who are not already published. I think that one of the only ways around this Catch-22 is to self-publish. I usually give aspiring writers the same advice: Produce a manuscript that you really love and really believe in, pay a really good editor to edit it, then self-publish. (If you don’t believe in your book strongly enough to put your own money on the line to publish it, why should anyone else?) After your cartons of books arrive, send out review copies to local newspapers and bookstores, contact your local Barnes & Noble or other large bookseller, ask for the contact information for the regional buyer, then send a copy to the buyer. Pray for good reviews.
enny: What are you working on now? And what would you work on next if you knew you could not fail?
Ellen: I am still working on the revisions of, and illustrations for, Green Barbarians. If I knew I could not fail? I would work on women’s and children’s rights issues in repressive, patriarchal countries. I think misogyny is the root of all evil.
enny: What are you working on now? And what would you work on next if you knew you could not fail?
Ellen: I am still working on the revisions of, and illustrations for, Green Barbarians. If I knew I could not fail? I would work on women’s and children’s rights issues in repressive, patriarchal countries. I think misogyny is the root of all evil.
ennyman: Thanks, Ellen!
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