All day long Edgrr lay in a heap just as the little girl had left him. Kenyon shook his head. He just did not understand him.
“Don’t you want to be adopted?” he asked. “Don’t you want to be loved?”
“No,” Edgrr growled. “Real bears do not need love. Real bears live in the woods and eat berries. Real bears do not need anybody.”
Kenyon sighed, but it made him sad to think of all the wonderful things Edgrr was missing.
“We must help him,” Kenyon said to the other bears. The shop was closed for the night, and all the people had gone home to their nice warm houses.
“We must show him what it is like to be loved.”
“But how?” asked all the other bears.
“I do not know,” Kenyon sighed, “but we must think of something. We must.”
So, all the bears sat and thought. Kenyon wrinkled up his forehead as hard as he could. No one said anything. The shop got very very quiet. Outside the wind howled and blew gusts of snow up against the window. It was a cold February night and Kenyon was glad to be inside.
“That’s it!” he exclaimed.
“What’s it? What is it?”
But Kenyon put his paw to his lips and winked meaningfully in Edgrr’s direction. “Shh . . . . I’ll tell you later.”
You will have to wait just a little bit longer to hear Kenyon’s plan. My new book, “Edgrr the Bear Who Wanted to be Real” will be published on February 1 2024. You can order it now from my web site: theclickercenter.com, or after February 1 through Amazon
The key turned in the lock, and the shop owner walked in.
“Get over here at once,” Kenyon hissed. “Someone will see you.”
“Then I shall growl and scare them away,” declared Edgrr. “I am a real bear. I won’t sit in the window anymore. I won’t! I won’t! I won’t! And you can’t make me!” he shouted. He ducked under the table cover and hid between two large cartons.
Kenyon groaned, but he couldn’t move from the window. A young mother came in with her two little girls. They came up to the front of the shop to pick out a bear. Kenyon watched in horror as Edgrr crept out from under the table and stalked up behind the little girls. He was growling under his breath and looking his fiercest.
The eldest girl turned around and saw him, but she wasn’t a bit afraid. She picked him up and gave him a big hug. Edgrr went limp and put on his scowliest face.
“What about this one, Mommy?” asked the little girl, holding him up so he could be seen.
“No, I don’t think so, dear. He doesn’t look very happy. Put him back in the window. What about this one? I like this bear.”
She picked up a cinnamon-colored bear who smiled and grinned, and could barely keep from laughing out loud at the thought of being adopted. The little girls liked him a lot so the shop owner tucked him away in a pretty gift bag, and off he went to his new home.
Edgrr will be published on February 1, 2024.
You can order both books through my web site: theclickercenter.com
Or you can get them through Amazon. You can order Edgrron Amazon after Feb1 2024.
Kenyon Bear did not understand. Kenyon was the shop’s bear. He was bigger than the others, and he lived in the window year round.
Kenyon like to help the little bears find good homes. He didn’t mind not being adopted himself. The shop was his home, and he had many good friends who came to visit. But he did not understand Edgrr.
Just before opening every morning Kenyon did a check of the window. It was his job to make sure all the bears were back in their places before any people came in. After a full night of playing, it wasn’t always easy to remember where everyone belonged.
On this particular morning Kenyon looked around at each of his friends. Chester was sitting up straight and tall on Hector the toy horse. Six little bears were sledding down a hill of cotton snow. In the side window four more bears were cutting out valentines.
“One, two, three, four . . . .” Kenyon did his head count. “Wait a minute, I’m missing someone. Oh no! Where’s Edgrr?”
Kenyon checked the window again, but Edgrr was not to be seen. The shop would open at any moment. He couldn’t start a search now. They’d be caught.
And then he saw Edgrr. He was hiding under a table over by the tea cupboard. But it was too late to do anything about it.
Edgrr will be published on February 1, 2024.
You can order both books through my web site: theclickercenter.com
Or you can get them throughAmazon. You can order Edgrron Amazon after Feb 1 2024.
“Teddies To The Rescue” is the first book in the Kenyon Bear Series.
Kenyon is sent a letter that contains a plea for help and the adventure begins.
“Teddies to the Rescue” makes a great read-aloud bedtime story. The chapter format invites young readers into the story.
When I was little, I would read the same story over and over again. That’s what happened with “Teddies“. I heard back from so many of the parents of our young readers. “Teddies” was a great favorite.
Here are some of the comments people shared when the books were first available:
“My eight year old son keeps your book by his bed along with two or three other toy treasure. He looks again and again at it with his younger brother. We’ve read it a million times. And he always knows if it’s been moved for dusting his table. I believe it’s that book we all had as children and that we’ll always remember.” New York
“My family loves “Teddies To The Rescue”. A big favorite with Louis who is four and has learned to love the word Chapter since spending time with Teddies. He is now only interested in books that have chapters.” Virginia
This next one refers to the second book in the Kenyon Bear Series. It could have been written for any of the Kenyon Bear books.
“Emma (Age 6) and I snuggled down one evening with “Edgrr The Bear Who Wanted To Be Real”, and read it straight through. When we finished, we felt wonderful and thought it was a very special and important thing that Edgrr learned. . . Thank you for sharing.” New York
“My Son is eighteen and has a reading difficulty, though he does well in other areas. He liked “Teddies to the Rescue” so much, I bought him the second book. He ordinarily does not like books, but these are the first ones that he liked and in fact discussed with me. He wants to know when there will be another one.” California
The world has changed a lot since the Kenyon Bear books were written. We live in the digital age. But young children still have teddy bears, and they still love being read to. I hope there is still a place in this modern world for some bear magic.
“Teddies To The Rescue” is available as a hardcover and a paperback.
I designed an ebook version, but then decided not to use it. Ebooks have many advantages, but they lack the charm of a printed book. Children’s books are about more than the stories they contain. Holding a book in your hands, turning the pages and discovering new worlds, new friends, seeing your favorite books stacked up on your bedside table, these are all part of falling in love with reading.
I may issue “Teddies” as an ebook at some point, but for now enjoy it in the hardcover and paperback versions. It is a perfect bedtime read-aloud, as well as a great book to give to your young readers.
You’ll see that the hardcover and the paperback are two different sizes. The paperback version is larger and may be better if you are reading the book aloud. The larger page size makes it easier to share the illustrations. The hardcover is a great size for young, independent readers to enjoy on their own.
You can also get it from Amazon. If you are ordering the book from outside of the US, that is the easiest way to get it. When you do a search for “Teddies to the Rescue” in Amazon, make sure you are looking at the new edition. The original edition is still listed even though it is out of print.
When you order the book through Amazon, do please add a five star review. Your reviews help others to find the book.
“Teddies to the Rescue” is available now through my web site: theclickercenter.com and through Amazon and other booksellers. To learn more about the real story behind “Teddies to the Rescue” read on:
“Teddies to the Rescue” is the first book in the Kenyon Bear series. It was originally a Christmas present for my mother.
I listen to so many interviews in which people talk about their terrible childhoods and their alcoholic, abusive parents. I’m almost embarrassed to say that I had lovely parents. I “chose” them well.
One of the great lessons I learned from both of my parents was you create your own reality. When I was twelve, my mother decided it was time to stop being a stay-at-home mom. College tuitions were looming in the future, and it was time to augment the family budget. Instead of looking around for a “normal” job, my mother created her own job. She decided to make use of her lifelong passion for collecting.
Collectors collect. If my mother were stranded on a desert island, she would have collected shells and interesting pebbles. Since she had more scope than a desert island provides, her collections were much more wide-ranging. There were times when the house resembled a museum more than a place people actually lived.
My mother liked to collect. It was the hunt that appealed to her. She wasn’t a hoarder. She didn’t need to keep everything she found. She was perfectly happy creating a collection, enjoying it for a time, and then selling it on. So the “job” she decided on was opening a herb shop. The shop gave her the perfect excuse to go hunting and the herb shop gave her the perfect setting.
A herb shop is its own self. It is whatever you want it to be. My mother brought all of her interests together to create a shop that was a unique and enchanting experience. It was part antique shop, part specialized garden center, part art gallery, part food boutique, part book store, and most importantly part toy shop. If you wanted something special, something you weren’t going to find in other stores or gift catalogs, you went to The Shuttle Hill Herb Shop.
One Saturday when I was in the shop, an older lady came in and asked us if we would be interested in carrying pears. Pears? That seemed very odd. We weren’t sure what she meant. It was a busy morning. We didn’t really have time to talk to her. My mother excused herself to go help another customer and this lady left the shop. She returned a short time later with a box filled with handmade teddy bears. Not pears. Bears.
They were enchanting. They were beautifully made. Yes. We would be delighted to sell her bears in the shop.
That was the beginning of a wonderful relationship with Jane Kenyon, the maker of the shop’s bears. We put them up in the front window where everyone going past could see them. It wasn’t long before the bears started to have adventures.
Mrs Kenyon made an extra large bear for the shop. Of course, he was called Kenyon in her honor. In “Teddies to the Rescue” I write:
“Kenyon is the shop’s bear. He lives in the window all year round. At Christmas he dresses up as Santa Bear and hands out gifts to all the other bears.”
“At Easter he puts on long rabbit ears and pretends he’s the Easter Bunny.”
“In between times he dresses to suit the season, and the other bears join him. They’re so funny. In the summer they go swimming with inner tubes and flippers.
At Halloween they dress up in scary ghost costumes and go Trick or Treating.”
All of that was true.
The bears had many adventures in the window. One of our customers lent us some of his antique toys for the bears. He brought us a metal horse and a big green car. In the winter I let Kenyon have my snow shoes and the bears went camping. In the summer they relaxed in hammocks and beach chairs.
From left to right: The characters in “Teddies to the Rescue”: Pippin and Christopher in the car, Amber in his sailor’s suit, Kenyon the shop’s bear, Bertram with his aeroplane, Chester and Hector the horse.
People stopped in just to see the bears. Every Saturday Mrs Kenyon would bring us another box filled with the most beautiful, enchanting, and magical bears. The bears found loving homes, all except for one amber colored bear who was returned to us in the most horrible condition.
He was missing an ear and his stuffing was falling out of large holes in what had once been his beautiful mohair fur.
We sent him back to Mrs Kenyon for repairs. She patched him up as best she could. She made him a sailor suit to cover up the worst of the repairs.
That bear’s name is Amber and he still lives in my house. It is his story that I share in “Teddies to the Rescue”.
Jane Kenyon’s son was a talented artist. In the fall of 1985 I suggested to him that we create a children’s book together to give as a Christmas present to our mothers. I would write the story, and he could illustrate it.
Mark and I pulled out our favorite children’s books to compare what we liked for illustrations. We went against the trend of the day which was strongly influenced by Disney movies. We chose instead black and white, pen and ink illustrations.
The result was “Teddies to the Rescue” which we gave to both our mothers that Christmas.
Of course, they loved the book. That goes without saying. Mothers are biased. They would have loved it no matter what it was like. You can’t go by their opinion. I was biased as well, but that’s okay. I loved what we had created. Mark’s illustrations captured the magic of all my favorite children’s books.
We decided to take the next step and publish the book. I had heard about the difficulties of getting books published, especially books that didn’t fit the accepted norms. We had created a chapter book for young readers. (This was long before the Harry Potter books made it okay again for children’s books to have chapters.) And we had pen and ink drawings instead of the Disney-influenced illustrations that were the norm.
We made the decision to publish the book ourselves. Now remember this was 1986. We are essentially talking the pre-digital age. We were able to use the typesetting equipment at the State University, but the typesetting was done blind. On my very primitive version of a home computer, I would guess at the formatting I wanted, send it the computer at the State University and several days later, I would get back a scroll of typesetting paper.
As I unrolled it, I always felt as though I was back in the days of the ancient Romans.
The text on the scroll had to be cut and pasted onto story boards. A story board is exactly what it sounds like, a stiff piece of cardboard on which a pair of facing pages are laid out.
The scroll of paper was cut up and the appropriate text along with any illustrations were glued to the story board. On quite a few of the pages we wanted the text to wrap around the illustrations. If the indents weren’t quite right, I would guess at the corrections. I could see the coding on the computer screen, but not how the page would actually look.
I would send in the corrections, and a few days later I would get another scroll of typesetting. It was a laborious process because almost right wasn’t good enough. We went through approximation after approximation until both Mark and I were satisfied with the result.
The stack of story boards for “Teddies to the Rescue” plus the blues, scrolls of the typesetting, and an original copy of the book.
A stack of story boards was finally sent off to the printer. A few weeks later the blues arrived. That’s a photocopy printed from the final plates. The blues are your last chance to spot any typos and make any needed corrections before the book goes to press. Changes are expensive at this point so you have to hope you haven’t made any major errors.
With that last hurdle cleared, the books were printed. We were ambitious. We ordered a print run of 5,000 books. That would have been a respectable printing even for the major presses. It was very ambitious for an unknown author with a self published book.
The books arrived in time for Christmas 1986.
By that time Mark and I were already at work on a second book: “Edgrr The Bear Who Wanted to be Real”. We published that story the following Christmas and the following year we published the third book in the Kenyon Bear series, “Sara’s Story – The Bear Nobody Wanted”. Mark had to bow out of illustrating this third story. His non-artist work life was taking too much of his time to work on a third book, so Sara’s Story was illustrated by another good friend, Jane Isabella. Jane was a professional artist who worked for us from time to time in the shop. Jane brought her own style and sense of whimsy to the pen and ink drawings.
Sara was published just in time for Christmas 1988. By that time we had sold out of Teddies to the Rescue and we were running low on Edgrr. But we didn’t do another print run of either book because my mother had finally decided that after almost 20 years of running the shop she was ready to retire. 1989 was the last full year in the shop. When we closed in January 1990, we had sold out of all three books. That was quite an achievement.
Kenyon, Edgrr, Sara and all the other bears who had been featured in the books went home to live with me. I still have them all. They live in a room very much like that described in the book, an upstairs bedroom that is overseen by the very elderly, and much loved teddy bear my mother had as a child.
The bear my mother had as a child.
I wrote two more Kenyon Bear stories, but I was busy with horses. I never had those stories illustrated, and for many years they lay forgotten in a pile of other papers.
When the tree fell on my house in 2020, the story of the Upstairs Armadillo wasn’t the only manuscript that I found. I unearthed the unpublished Kenyon Bear books plus several other stories I had written.
Covid had shut down all travel. I had time to read. Time to dream. Time to write.
“No book is really worth reading at the age of 10 which is not equally – and often far more – worth reading at the age of fifty and beyond.” C.S. Lewis
“Modern Horse Training” was the priority. That book evolved out of the on-line clinics that I developed to take the place of the in-person clinics that the virus shut down. Now that it is successfully launched, I can turn my attention back to the children’s books.
So finally, after all these days of teasing you with information about my newest publishing venture, let me tell you how you can get “Teddies to the Rescue”:
You can order “the new book”Teddies To The Rescue” through my web site: theclickercenter.com and through Amazon.
Please note: At the moment (meaning August 25, 2023), both the paperback and hard cover editions are available through my web site. Only the hardcover is currently listed on Amazon. The paperback edition should be available on Amazon within the next day or two. The original edition is still listed on Amazon even though it has been out of print for years. You will want to order the new edition.
If you are ordering from outside the United States, I recommend using Amazon to avoid the international shipping charges.
And do please leave a five star review on Amazon. That will help others find the book.
Why now? Why have I finally decided to share “my hobby” with you? Let me answer that by telling you a story. In the fall of 2020 we had a severe windstorm in my area and a tree fell on my house.
There’s a longer version to the tree story, but I’ll leave that for another time. The tree crashed through the roof and created considerable damage to the rooms underneath.
During the clean up, while I was sorting through papers, I came across a story my mother had written. It had probably been ten or fifteen years since I had looked at it. She wrote it when she was in her twenties. It was the start of children’s book about Charles Alexander and an upstairs armadillo. I have always known about Charles Alexander. He was something of a good-natured poltergeist (if such a thing exists) who was part of my mother’s childhood.
The story was only a couple of pages, just long enough to introduce the upstairs armadillo. It was started but never finished. The upstairs armadillo was waiting for me to tell his story.
I have learned that when a horse or a character wants you to tell their story, you stop what you are doing and write it down. So that’s what I did. Over the winter of 2021, I wrote “The Upstairs Armadillo”. The book wrote itself very fast. I so enjoyed the process, that I wrote a second Upstairs Armadillo book, and I was starting on a third when the weather warmed up. The horses and spring chores were back to demanding more of my time, so book three of the Upstairs Armadillo series was set aside.
I was expecting to get back to it over the winter of 2022, but I was asked by a mass market publisher to write a clicker training book for them. That took precedence. I signed a contract and in March of 2022 I began writing that book. I submitted the manuscript at the end of May, and then I heard nothing. The editor I was working with stopped responding to my emails. Finally, in July I was informed that the editor was no longer with the company, and they would not be publishing my book after all. I have no idea what happened, but I was actually relieved. It had felt a bit like selling my soul to work with this company, and now I was free to manage the book myself.
That book is “Modern Horse Training, A Constructional Guide to Becoming Your Horse’s Best Friend”. I published it on April 26, 2023.
During the year that I worked on it, I never forgot about the Upstairs Armadillo or the other children’s books I have written over the years. I pulled them out of the various drawers in which they were stashed and began reading. And that’s when I decided it was time to share them.
You’re going to have to wait for the Upstairs Armadillo. I’m going to begin with the Kenyon Bear Books.
I published these books in the late 1980s and then horses took over and for many years the children’s books sat very much on the back burner.
Tomorrow I’ll share the story about how the Kenyon Bear books came to be written.
I hope you are excited by my news and you’re eager to order the new book, but I am going to make you wait just a little bit longer to find out how you can get your copy.