A little bit ago, I shared my thoughts about Baby Dragon’s Big Sneeze, which is really something you need in your library (if you have people around in the right age range, anyway). Now, here are a few Answers to my Questions from Sheryl Bass, the author. I enjoyed these answers—and really appreciate how she didn’t say anything about my embarrassing typos that I finally noticed when I formatted this post.


Can you talk a little about the genesis of this particular book? What about this idea (among the large number of others you may have had) that made you devote the time to it?
This book started with a big sneeze of my own. I had the ridiculous thought that it was a good thing I wasn’t a dragon or it could have done a lot of damage. This was approximately 13 years ago. The book has been edited and revised since then.

The illustrations are fantastic—how did you team up with Ramesh Ram? What was the process of working with him to combine story and pictures?
This is a self-published book, but the term “self-publishing” is a bit of a misnomer as there are many people who can help every step of the way. I found my mentor, April Cox of Self-Publishing Made Simple while I was watching a free online video she produced about her services. She has approximately 12 illustrators who she regularly works with and knows that they are willing to do work for hire such that the author can retain rights to the illustrations after their work is complete and they are competent and responsive. She had me review the websites of all 12 illustrators and pick my favorite 3 or 4. Then, I asked the three or four of them to draw the exact same scene from my book in black and white. I paid each of them $50 do do this sketch. I then whittled it down to my top two illustrators and had my friends and family be a focus group and vote on their favorite illustrator. Remesh Ram of Prayan Animation won the votes. He is fantastic and I plan to use him for my future children’s picture books.

I can only imagine that coming up with a story in rhyme brings particular challenges—did you find yourself having to abandon ideas, or backtrack a bit when you couldn’t find a decent rhyme and rework a sentence or two?
Yes! I definitely found writing in rhyme to be a challenge. However, I believe it is well worth it. Many publishing houses don’t like rhyme right now. Various types of children’s books go in and out of style and perhaps rhyme is not as in fashion as it once was. However, I am a big proponent of rhyme as there is research supporting it for children in language acquisition, vocabulary expansion, giving a children a sense of rhythm and encouraging reluctant readers. This is part of why nursery rhymes are so useful and enjoyable for children.

You chose to publish this yourself, rather than going through a small press, or a larger “traditional” press—any regrets about that? Any advice for others considering this path?
I have no regrets about self-publishing this book and doing so in the future with additional children’s books. The advantages to self-publishing are more creative control (I chose my own illustrator and told him exactly how I wanted the dragon to look, what I wanted my townspeople to be wearing, etc.), the royalties are higher (40-50% versus 10-12 percent with traditional publishing) and a faster turn around time to publish (months versus years for traditional publishing).

Before this book, you had a couple of personal essays about dogs published—writing about dogs is a big interest around these parts—can you tell us a little about those essays and the books they were in? Any plans to combine your children’s books and your interest in dogs?
These were two slightly different versions of the same story about being a stage mom to my now deceased dog, Lyric. She starred as Toto in the Boulder Dinner Theatre’s production of The Wizard of Oz. She was the only cast member without an understudy and got paid in prime rib every night (since it was dinner theater). Her mom got paid $40 per show. She did 7 shows per week for five months. This story can be found in Lost Souls: Found! Inspiring Stories About Chihuahuas (Kyla Duffy and Lowrey Mumford) and Second-Chance Dogs: True Stories of the Dogs We Rescue and the Dogs Who Rescue Us (ed. Callie Smith Grant).

Related to that—what’s next for Sheryl Bass, author?
I have two additional children’s picture book stories in drafts and others not yet put to paper that I plan to self-publish. You can find my current book and eventually, my others at http://www.be-kindpublishing.com.

Thanks for your time—and thanks for this great little book—I hope it finds its audience!