Now the author of more than 60 books for preschoolers, Steve Metzger started his career with many assignments that had nothing to do with children s books or publishing. After graduation from Baruch College, he drove cabs, washed dishes, worked as a hotel clerk and handled a variety of other positions. He eventually found his way to the Bank Street College of Education, where he earned a master s degree in education in 1981. That led to a decade of work as a preschool teacher, and then, in 1992, to publishing giant Scholastic, which issues and retails books, CDs and DVDs for preschool-grade 12 students and their teachers. Since 2004, he has been vice president and editorial director of all Scholastic book clubs, managing a programme which today reaches 10 million students in 500000schools.
He became a writer solely by luck. During a Scholastic staff meeting, he suggested that the company do more books about children at preschool. Jean Feiwel, then publisher, asked whether the characters should be changed from children to dinosaurs, and the name Dinofours popped into his mind, Metzger recalls.
Although Scholastic editorial commitments keep him in the headquarters offices most weekdays, Metzger continues to make some school visits, mostly in Manhattan.
Unlike many writers, Metzger admits he wasn t much of a reader as a child. He spent almost all of his childhood in Kew Gardens Hills in Queens NY, where he was far more interested in active play.
Today Metzger lives near Central Park in a household focused on writing. Wife Nancy Novick writes on health and medicine, and daughter Julia has been the inspiration for some of Metzger s stories, most of which have been published as 32-page Scholastic paperbacks. You ll see many of them described at his website at stevemetzgerbooks.
Now the author of more than 60 books for preschoolers, Steve Metzger started his career with many assignments that had nothing to do with children s books or publishing. After graduation from Baruch College, he drove cabs, washed dishes, worked as a hotel clerk and handled a variety of other positions. He eventually found his way to the Bank Street College of Education, where he earned a master s degree in education in 1981. That led to a decade of work as a preschool teacher, and then, in 1992, to publishing giant Scholastic, which issues and retails books, CDs and DVDs for preschool-grade 12 students and their teachers. Since 2004, he has been vice president and editorial director of all Scholastic book clubs, managing a programme which today reaches 10 million students in 500000schools.
He became a writer solely by luck. During a Scholastic staff meeting, he suggested that the company do more books about children at preschool. Jean Feiwel, then publisher, asked whether the characters should be changed from children to dinosaurs, and the name Dinofours popped into his mind, Metzger recalls.
Although Scholastic editorial commitments keep him in the headquarters offices most weekdays, Metzger continues to make some school visits, mostly in Manhattan.
Unlike many writers, Metzger admits he wasn t much of a reader as a child. He spent almost all of his childhood in Kew Gardens Hills in Queens NY, where he was far more interested in active play.
Today Metzger lives near Central Park in a household focused on writing. Wife Nancy Novick writes on health and medicine, and daughter Julia has been the inspiration for some of Metzger s stories, most of which have been published as 32-page Scholastic paperbacks. You ll see many of them described at his website at stevemetzgerbooks.
Steve Metzgertaught preschool for several years, then
worked at Scholastic, where he ran school book clubs and created
more than 60 children's books.
Janan Cainis the creator of the popular 'Way I' children's
picture book series, with over two million copies in print. Janan
grew up in Darien, Illinois, with a deep passion for drawing and
painting. Her 30-year career as an illustrator and author spans a
range of accomplishments, from illustrations for corporate
campaigns and consumer packaging, to branding and communication
design for Fortune 500 companies. In 1993, Janan left the corporate
world to raise her two daughters. She wanted to teach them words
for their feelings but couldn't find picture books for young
children dealing with the complexities of emotions in a
straightforward way that children could grasp. Tapping into her
passion as an illustrator, she decided to create her own book and
with that, her first picture book, 'The Way I Feel', was born. With
over 2,000,000 copies in print, The Way I Feel is among the
best-selling children's picture books of all time winning numerous
awards and accolades. Janan also wrote and illustrated Lost and
Alone and co-created The Way I Act with Steve Metzger.
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