KidLitCon Report: Part I
The weather sucked. I think we can all agree on that. It didn’t affect much at KidLitCon except for the scheduled Library of Congress tours, where the rain made for bad traffic and delayed arrivals of our out-of-town guests. It also made some of our DC natives look outside and decide against trudging through the rain to join us at a local institution. It was a shame, because those who came for the tours were all blown away.
It did start out slowly, with a tour guide who preferred to give great detail on a piece of artwork rather than give us time with the original Thomas Jefferson Library. But we still enjoyed walking the halls of the Jefferson Building, peering down into the impressive reading room, and strolling past the Gutenberg Bible. The real stuff began when we went to the Children’s Literature Center. There, Jacqueline Coleburn showed us some rare children’s books from the collection. We saw a first edition of The Wizard of Oz, original sketches by James Marshall for Fox Be Nimble, and an early primer book.
After the Library of Congress tour, we went our separate ways, knowing we’d meet up again at dinner along with thirty or so of our blogging friends. We had two large table at Arlington’s Tortoise and Hare, quickly took over a third, and then proceeded to make more room on the corners and ends as bloggers continued to arrive. People were introduced around, and where the proper names might draw polite smiles the blog names often brought gleeful squeals. Biblio File! LibrariYAn! Miss Rumphius! The conversation was lively and loud, ending only when it looked as if we would soon be overtaken by a lively and loud band. The folks who weren’t quite done for the night headed to the hotel bar, for what Liz Burns would soon dub by the hashtag #drunkkidlitcon. But even though the topics of funny tweets, Girl Scouts, Facebook friends, and of course books seemed like they could go on forever, we did clear out at a reasonable hour, knowing that a special KidLitCon breakfast awaited us at 7:00 a.m. and that bacon wasn’t going to eat itself.
I’ll continue with the day of KidLitCon tomorrow. For now, leave me a comment if you’ve got a post about the conference and I’ll do a round-up at the end of the week.






















12 Comments:
Pam, this is awesome. Now I know exactly what I saw at the Library of Congress. :) It was amazing, wasn't it? Thank you again for setting that up.
I blogged a bit about the author panel, mostly as a way to have a place to keep the conversation going about author/blogging concerns and questions. Here's the link: http://saralewisholmes.blogspot.com/2009/10/conversation-continues-kidlit-bloggers.html
Thank you for the tour walkthrough and pics - how amazing it would have been to see the Gutenberg Bible and rare children's book collection. I look forward to the roundup!
Pam I wish I'd been able to get in to go to on the LOC tour by the sound it was fabulous. Work always ends up getting in the way doesn't it?
I second Sara's thanks to you for setting up the LOC tour, Pam. It was such fun getting that inside peek. I could have spent an entire day browsing those shelves. And it was so nice of Sybille to go to the trouble of finding books by some of us visiting authors. Way above and beyond the call. Now I'm off to visit Sara's link.
Thanks again for the all you did to make the conference and tours happen--and for this detailed account!
I did a shorter write-up at the Shrinking Violets blog:
http://shrinkingvioletpromotions.blogspot.com/2009/10/introvert-goes-to-kidlitosphere.html
(I'm posting this comment as Anonymous because OpenID is failing me today, but I am:
Jenn Hubbard, aka writerjenn.)
Or how about just a comment? I'm sorry I missed the LOC tour; sounds like it was fabulous. Glad to have made dinner and #drunkkidlitcon, though.
Thanks again for a wonderful weekend, Pam. It was nice to revisit the Library of Congress. Those particularly tours and the chance to see history close up really made the event extra special.
Oh I'm so sorry I couldn't do the LC tour! One of these days...
Thanks again for all your hard work - I had such a good time and learned so much! I owe you a drink next time you get to Baltimore!
Pam, thanks for continuing to organize all of us! The conference was great. Karen and I have a couple of posts over at Literate Lives!
Here's my long summary of the conference:
http://sonderbooks.com/blog/?p=832
It was fantastic! Thanks, Pam!
Thanks for the updates! It's almost like having been there with you. :~)
I was hoping for a "proceedings of Kidlitcon#3." Your description of the Library Congress tour was WONDERFUL! Thank you, thank you for sharing the tour. [sighs, happily]
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