Monday, September 4, 2023

MetaFiction In Picture Books

Recently I caught a webinar featuring author Carrie Tillotson discussing her funny and fabulous picture book, Counting to Bananas: A Mostly Rhyming Fruit Book, illustrated by Estrela Lourenço.

 

(*Amazon Affiliate link- As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.)

During the talk, Carrie mentioned that she had heard that there isn't as much of a market for metafictional picture books. Even though the banana in her book talks to the audience, she ignored that advice and submitted anyway. Obviously, someone thought metafiction would sell perfectly well because now she's been asked to do a sequel.

I have to admit, however, a talking banana didn't quite fit my mental picture of metafiction. I always considered it to be a writing about a book within a book, or a talking about or making a movie within a movie. A banana talking to the audience would be "breaking the fourth wall." Is that metafiction, too? Time to do some research!

What is metafiction?

Turns out that metafiction is any art that refers to itself as an artificial construct (as fiction). Characters talking to the reader or changing the path of the work is one way to do that. A book within a book is another way. Darcy Pattison has a whole list of the ways picture books may be metafiction. In There Are Cats In This Book by Viviane Schwarz, both the cat characters and the narrator break the fourth wall and talk to the reader. It is classic metafiction.

 

    

 

What about nonfiction? Can you use metafiction techniques and still call a book nonfiction?

Because by definition using this technique calls attention to the fact the work is fiction, this can raise some difficulties. Let's see how some authors have handled it. 

1. In No Monkeys, No Chocolate, by Melissa Stewart, Allen Young and illustrated by Nicole Wong has a straight nonfiction main text, but two cartoon "bookworms" give a running side commentary throughout the book.

 

  

Consensus? Most people would probably still call this nonfiction, or possibly creative nonfiction. 

 2. In both Redwoods and Coral Reefs (review at Growing with Science) by Jason Chin, a child reads a nonfiction book, but gets pulled into a fictional, imaginative setting. This is the "book within a book" sort of metafiction, although Darcy Pattison also calls it a "disruption of time and space." 

 

 

Consensus? Most people would probably call this informational fiction. 

3. Flower Talk: How Plants Use Color to Communicate by Sara Levine and illustrated by Masha D'yans (previous review at Growing With Science) features a cranky purple cactus narrator talking directly to the reader.

 

  

 

Consensus? The fictional talking cactus narrator is so integral to the story that this one is also informational fiction. Some people like their nonfiction pure and unadulterated, but more and more books are tugging at those boundaries.   

What do you think? Have you read any good examples of metafiction picture books lately?

 

(Previously published on Wrapped in Foil blog, which I'm closing. I'm moving some of my favorite posts here. )

Wrong Turn Anthology Available Now

 


Check out Roberta's newest short story in the Sisters in Crime Desert Sleuths Anthology, SoWest: Wrong Turn.  Now available on Amazon.

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Desert Sleuth's 2021 Anthology SoWest: Love Kills

 Are you ready to read? Check out the Desert Sleuth's 2021 Anthology, SoWest:  Love Kills.





Here’s the blurb:

Betrayal. Deception. Greed. Love Gone Wrong. Brothers and sisters. Lovers and liars. Fathers and daughters. Mothers and sons. From the wilds of Arizona’s Rim country to its dusty lowland deserts, you’ll find it all within the pages of So West: Love Kills. Bonds forged and broken. Covenants kept and cast aside. Love nurtured and left to rot. Not everything is as it seems. Not everyone can be trusted. But one thing is for certain—love hurts. Sometimes it even kills!

 

Contributing authors:

  • Shannon Baker,
  • Mysti Berry,
  • Meredith Blevins,
  • Patricia Bonn,
  • Lauren Buckingham,
  • Susan Budavari,
  • William Butler,
  • Patricia Curren,
  • Meg E. Dobson,
  • Beverly Forsyth,
  • Denise Ganley,
  • Roberta Gibson,  me!
  • Katherine Atwell Herbert,
  • Tom Leveen,
  • Susan Cummins Miller,
  • Charlotte Morganti,
  • Julie Morrison,
  • Claire A. Murray,
  • Kris Neri,
  • Karen Odden,
  • R K Olson,
  • D.R. Ransdell,
  • Kim Rivery,
  • Elena E. Smith.

 

Lead Editor: Maegan Beaumont.

Co-Editors: Deborah J Ledford, Susan Budavari, R K Olson, Shannon Baker, Meg Dobson

Cover Designer: Maegan Beaumont

Releasing September 10, 2021 

Monday, February 10, 2020

Check Out STEAM TEAM 2020

If you are interested in STEAM children's books, check out #STEAMTeam2020 on Twitter or the website.


STEAM Team 2020 offers a mix of genres, from nonfiction picture books to middle grade fiction that incorporates STEAM topics. There is something for everyone!



Thursday, February 6, 2020

Welcome to Robie Gibson Writes

Thank you for clicking through to this blog. I'll be adding some posts shortly, but this is not one of my primary blogs.




If you want to find out more, try Roberta Gibson's website.