Children’s book workshop coming up

Hi everyone,

On the morning of May 2, I’ll give a 2-hour workshop in Branson as part of the OWL Spring conference. It’s a good group. I’ve had ties to OWLs for a lot of years. I’m delighted to be back. This will be the same workshop I gave last year in Kansas City for The Writers Place.

At 6:00 that evening in Springfield I’ll present my poem, “66 is Catchier,” at a formal dinner (The Telegraph Ball) in The Shrine Mosque as part of the Centennial Celebration for Route 66.

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Ozarks Writers League

It's almost conference time!
Ozarks Writers’ League Spring Conference,
Saturday, May 2, 2026
In the Branson Room of Branson West Best Western

9:00 a.m. Registration and book table set up.
9:25 a.m. Welcome and announcements.
9:30 a.m. Children’s Book Workshop. David Harrison, author of over 100 books for children, will present a two-hour workshop on how to find a publisher for your children’s book.
11:30 a.m. Break for lunch. There might also be a short break during David’s presentation, but we’ll play that by ear.
1:00 p.m. OWL’s 2026 Adult Writing Contest. Contest chair Linda Runnebaum will announce this year’s contest and tell us about the categories.
1:10 p.m. Tips for Entering Writing Contests. Margarite Stever and Bonnie Tesh, longtime sponsors and judges of one of OWL’s contest categories, will provide tips on how to improve your odds of winning or placing in writing contests.
2:00 p.m. Ten-minute break.
2:10 p.m. A Path to Publication. Greg Stout, author of 29 traditionally published books, will describe how he went about finding his publishers (four different ones).
3:05 p.m. Five-minute break.
3:10 p.m. You Have a Manuscript. Now What? Lia Wu, publisher and editor of Ozark Hollow Press, will provide tips for editing manuscripts and for reading publishing contracts.
https://ozarkswritersleague.info/conferences/

Pssst, wanna hear a poem?

Hi everyone,

My friend and writing partner, MAY JO FRESCH, has posted 19 of the poems we’ve recorded, some by her, some by me, some by us together, from our upcoming Stenhouse title, The Phonics Handbook Poetry Collection, 101 Decodable Poems, due out in July. She selected representative poems from each section and made it easy to access the poems as well as their curricular alignments in the book. This provides solid examples of what to expect when the book becomes available. I’m tickled that she included “Shirley the Shark.” It’s a real tongue twister. I recorded it some years ago when we were in a sound booth in California. While I struggled to get through a reading without a goof, Mary Jo and others present were in the other room, betting on how many takes I would need. Humph. Be sure to look for that one.

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Here’s the link to her webpage. https://maryjofresch.com/101-decodable-poems. The Phonics Handbook Poetry Collection can be preordered now on Amazon. Please share this information with others.

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I have nothing to say today

Hi everyone,

This is one of those mornings when I have nothing to say. Any right thinking person would say, “I have nothing. See you tomorrow.” But a writer writes. A blog isn’t exactly like, “Dear Diary” or jotting notes in a journal. It’s a blank space. Blank spaces need words on them. And so I respond to my need (obsession?) to put something down.

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This is a rabbit hole in front of our son’s house in Canon Beach, Oregon. I was looking for the picture of me holding up a coffee mug like I’m toasting you to put here but ran across the hole and went with it instead. I’ve always been intrigued by holes. I wrote a poem once about holes for the book, The Purchase of Small Secrets.

A Hole in the Ground

What creature
tilled the grass
to tunnel here?

A hole in the ground
always makes me wonder.

Is this one empty,
choked with dirt
that trickles through the roof
and rattles down abandoned halls?

Or is something there,
heart pounding,
sniffing me
down in the dark?

A hole in the ground
always makes me wonder.

(c) 2005 David L. Harrison

Later on I wrote a book about creatures that live underground, The Dirt Book. I like trees. I wrote a book about trees, A Tree is a Community. I like insects. I wrote a book about insects, Poems About Creeping Things. I don’t like midges. I wrote a book about them called Now You See Them Now You Don’t. I don’t like chiggers. I wrote a poem about them. That one became the namesake for Bryon Biggers Band, has been performed many times, and recorded on a CD

A Sad Tale

Nothing frightened Bryon Biggers,
Not even lions, not even tiggers,
He spent his life exploring this land,
Knew these hills like the back of his hand.

Striding down the path he came
Always looking for bigger game
But in the end he met his match
In a lowly Ozarks chigger patch.

Byron laughed, “Ha ha!” cried he,
“No bug could be the death of me!”
But halfway through that patch of chiggers
And it was over for Byron Biggers.

He clawed those bites till his dying breath,
Sighing, “I’ve scratched myself to death.
Someday they’ll find me here alone
With chiggers gnawing on my bones.”

He died the way he lived – brave,
And few have seen poor Byron’s grave.
He’s buried high on a lonely hill
Where to this day he itches still.

Here lie the bones of Byron Biggers,
Eaten alive by hungry chiggers,
So if you see poor Byron twitch,
Scratch his bones ‘cause they still itch.

(c) 1998 David L. Harrison

Looks like I wound up making a point for others who write or think about it, that we often start with something we like (or don’t like) and take off from there. Might be a poem. Might be a song. Might be a collection of related poems. Might be a story. Might be a subject that stays with you and reoccurs in your writing, a go-to theme or subject. But first, you have to put some words down in that blank space.

Watching in Spring

Hi everyone,

I love this time of year. On warm days we sit outside and watch spring, like a diver on the tip of the board, poised to plunge. It’s a privilege to have a front row seat.

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Growing numbers of geese honk and gobble in the mating season. Yesterday I peeked over the fence into our neighbor’s yard and received a serious scolding from a pair of nest-hunters. To put me in my place for raising my phone for a picture, they flew away, fooling no one. Minutes later they were back.

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Every tree and bush is tipped with buds. Early bloomers are already sending forth their pollen on sneezy breezes. The Bradford pears lead the way as usual. Yesterday our three windchimes banged out a raucous accompaniment to the excitement in the air.

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My favorite tree on the yard is this hackberry, the inspiration for last year’s picture book, A Tree is a Community. I expect another season of great adventures on and around this wonderful plant. As I watch a sparrow being a sparrow, I grow small enough to fit into the tapestry of nature.

Dr. Sam speaks

Hi everyone,

A friend and colleague, SAM BOMMARITO (DR. SAM), flies off from St. Louis next week to Baltimore where on Tuesday he will deliver a keynote address at the State of Maryland Literacy Association Conference. I wish I could be there. Some of you may have watched from time to time when I take part in one of Dr. Sam’s podcasts. He has been an educator for six decades and is “well known for his weekly Literacy Podcast, interviewing world class scholars across all domains of literacy research and practice.” He has spent the last 6 years in a quest to find common ground using common sense with the goal of freeing educators to use research-based practices from all sides of the great debate.

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At the main dinner, the conference will feature Sam hosting a podcast with TIM RASINSKI, another old friend. Another reason why I wish I were going to be in that audience. Good luck, Sam! Enjoy yourself, Tim!