Brava

November 2013

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Buy Tickets Now Photo by Greg Anderson madisonsymphony.org, Overture Box Office, or (608) 258-4141 AUGUSTIN A MADISON HADELICH SYMPHONY CHRISTMAS RETURNS NOV. 15, 16, 17 OVERTURE HALL DEC. 6, 7, 8 OVERTURE HALL John DeMain, Conductor John DeMain, Conductor KERNIS Too Hot Toccata LALO Symphonie Espagnole RACHMANINOFF Symphony No. 2 SPONSORS: Steinhauer Charitable Trust UW Health Burn Center and UW Department of Surgery Rosemarie Blancke DeEtte Beilfuss-Eager & Leonard P. Eager, Jr. Wisconsin Arts Board MADISON SYMPHONY CHORUS MADISON YOUTH CHOIRS MT. ZION GOSPEL CHOIR SPONSORS: American Printing Company Nedrebo's Formalwear John W. Thompson & Jane A. Bartell BMO Private Bank Hooper Foundation/ General Heating & Air Conditioning An Anonymous Friend Colony Brands, Inc. Hans & Mary Lang Sollinger Wisconsin Arts Board NEW SUBSCRIBERS RECEIVE UP TO 50% OFF at madisonsymphony.org/subscriptions or call (608) 257-3734. 18 BRAVA MAGAZINE | NOVEMBER 2013 Sometimes the rejections offered advice. "I got one form letter with a note: 'Cute, but not for us.' But several suggested changes, commenting that if I made them they'd like to see it again." sadder and I'll take another look." So Zietlow Miller killed off poor Bernice and sent it back, only to be rejected again. "I started sending out the 'sad' version regularly, and the rejection letters would ask, 'Does it have to be so sad? Can't the squash survive?'" When Anne Schwartz publisher, an imprint of Random House) called, Zietlow Miller couldn't even remember what version she'd sent. It was the happy version. So not only would Zietlow Miller be a published author, but Bernice would go on to bear the book). ents, and, of course, Bernice the squash came to life under the pens of Anne Wilsdorf, an artist in Switzerland, whom Zietlow Miller has never met. "When a publisher decides to buy a book, if they need an illustrator for it match them up," says Zietlow Miller. It acters over to someone with whom she had never spoken, but Zietlow Miller is thrilled with the results. "Anne did her thing, and I did mine," she recalls. "Working completely independent of each other really helped. It ensured that there wouldn't be any instances of Anne suggesting Bernice be an artichoke, or of me critiquing Sophie's hairdo. "And it turned out beautifully," she says. Since its publication earlier this year, "Sophie's Squash" has been accumulating impressive accolades, including starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and School Library Journal. etlow Miller's daughter, Sonia, is now 11. Her only critique is that Sophie doesn't look like her, while Zietlow Miller's older daughter exclaimed, "Wow, this almost "She's since told me she's proud of me," says Zietlow Miller. "She's 16. I'll take it." the slush pile, Zietlow Miller now has an agent, and deals for three more books. But she'll always have a soft spot for "Sophie" and the long journey they took together.

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