
Welcome to Day 3, the final day in our Kidz Book Buzz tour, with the delightful Kathyrn Fitzmaurice and her debut children's novel,
The Year the Swallows Came Early. Today I wanted to introduce you to the woman behind the words and talk a bit more about
her inspiration. I also wanted to talk a bit about food, since that is one Groovy's
loves and one of the focal points within this story.
To begin with, I wanted to share an article with you that is very touching and wonderful. It shows the inspiration and connection between Ms. Fitzmaurice and her Grandmother and will also give a great background into how
The Year the Swallows Came Early came to be.
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Monday, February 2, 2009
O.C. writer gets Grandma's gift of inspiration
Kathryn Fitzmaurice discovered a spark of creativity in a box of old manuscripts.
By PETER LARSEN
The Orange County Register

It was a summer that Kathryn Fitzmaurice never forgot: Thirteen years old, she traveled from Arizona to sta
y with her grandmother, where most nights she drifted off to sleep to the clackety-clack-clack of an old Smith Corona typewriter echoing through the
penthouse apartment.
Her grandmother, Eleanor Robinson, was a science-fiction author, who spent the quiet dark of night dreaming up stories of aliens and deadly intergalactic viruses.
By day, she occasionally lunched with her agent, taking Kathryn along as the grownups discussed new characters and story lines, and the kid soaked it all up.
"It was this wonderful New York lifestyle," Fitzmaurice says. "And I thought, 'This would be so exciting to be able to make up your own characters!'"
Back home, she started to write: Poetr
y, short stories, chapters of novels, sending them off to any contest she could find.
"The first contest I entered after that I won first place, and of course, my grandmother was thrilled to death," Fitzmaurice says. "I won $25, and that was enough encouragement to keep me going."
But life has a way of rewriting one's dreams, and by the time Fitzmaurice finished college, she'd decided on a career as a teacher – with its greater stability – over the shakier lifestyle of the poet or novelist.
Still, the dream sown by that fabulous summer with her grandmother never entirely vanished.
When Fitzmaurice was 25, her grandmother died, leaving her a box of unpublished manuscripts, correspondence with her
agent and publisher, and a note that said, "Give these to Kathy – she'll know what to do them."
"Of course I didn't know what do to with them," she says. "But I read them all and put them all away."
And away the box went, in a closet or a drawer, for year after year, until one day, quite by chance, Fitzmaurice opened it anew and realized that within those crinkly sheaves of faded paper her grandmother had also provided her the greatest gift any writer could ever hop
e to receive:
Inspiration.
• • •
The thing that impressed Fitzmaurice most about her grandmother's job was that you got to create whole worlds from the fabric of your imagination.
"I realized that fiction w
as what you made up, and it can be whatever you wanted it to be," she says of the
lasting lesson of that summer. "I think for a 13-year-old girl, that's a fun thing to think of."
She sent her work to Robinson, and eventually to her grandmother's agent, Phyllis Westberg, too.
"Starting when I was 18, I sent her things," Fitzmaurice says"Things she really probably did not have time for. But she would always respond kindly, and was very encouraging."
Yet despite the positive feedback, the insecurities of a writer's life seemed too much as she left college.
"I didn't know if I could really write," Fitzmaurice says. "It's a scary thing to sit down and wonder whether you can do it. So I pursued a job that I knew I could earn a living
in."
She taught first, second, and third grades, which gave her a love for children's literature. With husband Brian, she s
ettled in Monarch Beach in Dana Point, and raised two sons, Sam, 15, and Hugh, 12.
Then five years ago, Fitzmaurice was cleaning when she came across the box from her grandmother, stashed in a drawer.
"I opened it up in the middle of the floor, and thought, 'I really would like to start this,'" she says. " 'I'm 40 years old; if I'm going to do it, I should start trying.'
"So I sat down and I wrote the first paragraph."
* * *
The story Fitzmau
rice decided to tell was that of an 11-year-old girl who lives in a small California town, which while unnamed is a clearly modeled after San Juan Capistrano with a dash of Dana Point, too.
Eleanor "Groovy" Robinson suffers a great disappointment as the story unfolds, and is forced to face the difficulties in forgiving people who break their promises.
In addition to naming her heroine after her grandmother, Fitzmaurice also gives
her character a writer-grandmother and an inherited box of manuscripts.
Getting that story told though is a tale unto itself, Fitzmaurice says.
After a year of writi
ng, she had 60 pages and no idea where to go from there. Writing classes at UC Irvine and a writer's group helped greatly.
Then, in the spring of 2007, a children's writing conference in Big Sur provided the last break she needed – an introduction to an agent, Jennifer Rofé, who offered to read her book that weekend if Fitzmaurice had a spare copy.
"I did have it," she says, confessing how opportunity almost slipped through her fingers. "But I was so scared, I didn't want to give it to her, so this whole weekend I avoided her."
Six months later, Fitzmaurice contacted Rofé, meekly asking if she remembered
her. Manuscripts flew back and forth, as did revisions. In October of 2007, Rofé sent the book to five editors.
"Two hours after that, she got two phone calls expressing interest," Fitzmaurice says, including one from Brenda Bowen, who was launching her own imprint, Bowen Press, as a subsidiary of HarperCollins Publis
hers.
"I have to tell you, when she called me, it was like God calling, because she is such a famous editor," Fitzmaurice says.
Though Rofé made her wait until all the offers were in, Fitzmaurice eventually signed a two-book deal with Bowen, who made "The Year The Swallows Came Early" her imprint's debut book.
While she's almost finished with the second book – this one focusing on one of Groovy's friends – she's still only getting used to the idea that she can call herself a writer now.
"When I went online and I could preorder it from Amazon, that's when it really hit me," she says.
Asked what her grandmother would think if she were alive today, Fitzmaurice retrieves a paperback volume
of poetry by Emily Dickinson, one of the last books her grandmother ever gave her, and reads the inscription on the title page:
"E.D. is a revered poet," Robinson wrote. "Perhaps someday the same will be said of you."
Fitzmaurice closes the book and looks up.
"I think just that right there shows how thrilled she would be."
Contact the writer: 714-796-7787 or plarsen@ocregister.com
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About the author:
When Kathryn was thirteen years old, her mother sent her to New York City over the summer to visit her grandmother, who was a science fiction author. After seeing how her grandmother could make the characters in her books into whomever she wanted, Kathryn decided that she, too, wanted to become a writer someday. Years later, after teaching elementary school, and taking many classes, she now writes full time and lives with her husband, two sons, and her dog, Holly, in Monarch Beach, California.
Kathryn was born in New York City, but grew up in Scottsdale, Arizona. She holds a Master’s Degree in Curriculum and Instruction from Chapman University. Her favorite thing to do is walk her dog, Holly, who, she says is so smart, she can practically empty the dishwash
er. She also likes organizing absolutely anything, including messy garages, closets, and even cluttered junk drawers. If she could, she would eat the same thing for lunch everyday, which would be a ham, Swiss cheese, and
tomato Panini, a green apple, and a chocolate soufflé.
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Now I would like to share Groovy's recipe for chocolate-covered strawberries, found on page 272-273 of The Year the Swallows Came Early, as well as one of my own favorite
recipes.
Elenor Robinson's (perfected) secret recipe for chocolate-covered strawberries

~~~
Ingredients:
~10 - 12 large ripe strawberries with the stems intact (as gigantic as you can find)
~8 ounces dark (semisweet)chocolate
~ 4 ounces milk chocolate
~ 1/4 cup shortening
Directions:
(ask an adult to help)
~ Wash and dry strawberries.
~ In a medium-size saucepan (or a double boiler) on low heat, melt the dark and milk chocolate and shortening. Stir constantly.
~ Using the stem as a handle, dip each strawberry into the chocolate mixture and twirl it until it is mostly and evenly covered with chocolate. Do not cover the stem part.
~ Place the berry on a tray lined with waxed paper to dry.
~ Refrigerate for 30 minutes or more.
~ Serve.
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P.S. To draw the swallow (like Marisol did), after your strawberries have ha rdened for 30 minutes in the refrigerator, melt a small amount of white chocolate (1/2 cup of white chocolate chips works well fo rthis) mixed with a teaspoon of shortening. Dip a toothpick into the mixture while it is still warm, let the white chocolate drip off onto your strawberry into a pattern. (It is a good idea to practice first on a napkin.) Place strawberries in the refrigerator again until the chocolate is hardened.
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Now for one of my favorite recipes that our family and friends all seem to lov e and tons of fun to make with the kids!
Snickerdoodles Ingredients:1/4 cup sugar
1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/2 cup shortening
1/2 cup margarine or butter, softened
2 eggs
2 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons cream of tarter
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
Directions:Heat over to 400 degrees. Mix 1/4 cup sugar and the cinnamon; reserve. Mix 1 1/2 cups sugar, the shortening, margarine and eggs in large bowl. Stir in flour, cream of tarter, baking soda and salt.
Shape dough into 1 1/4-inch balls. Roll in sugar mixture to coat. Place about 2 inches apart of ungreased cookie sheet. Bake about 10 minutes or until center is almost set. Remove from cookie sheet.
Makes about 4 dozen cookies.
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Please be sure to check out the other great blogs on this tour!! Also, don't forget to stop by Kathryn Fitzmaurice's wonderful website! (
click here) I can't say enough about how I love the fact that she has discussion questions to go along with The Year the Swallows Came Early and tips for Young Writers!!! Be sure to check it out and share it with your children!
A Christian Worldview of Fiction,
All About Children’s Books,
Becky’s Book Reviews,
Booking Mama,
Cafe of Dreams,
Dolce Bellezza,
Fireside Musings,
Homeschool Buzz,
Hyperbole,
KidzBookBuzz.com,
Looking Glass Reviews,
Maw Books Blog,
Never Jam Today,
Novel Teen,
Reading is My Superpower