Kate Coombs
Author of The Runaway Princess
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Works by Kate Coombs
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- Canonical name
- Coombs, Kate
- Gender
- female
- Short biography
- [excerpted from the author's website]
I'm a lifelong bookworm, which is the best way to learn to be an author. As a bookworm, I found that sometimes my parents and teachers interrupted my reading in order to get me to do other things, like eat or sleep or do schoolwork or chores.
In between reading, I babysat my little brother and sister, learned to play the clarinet and oboe, took art classes, went camping, and began to write. I wrote little plays with parts like the Glorious Queen for me and the Quiet Servant Girl for my sister. During my Nancy Drew reading phase, I wrote a mystery with a heroine who was eerily similar to Nancy. After I was about 10, I mostly wrote poetry. In high school, I considered becoming a professional oboist or an artist, but I ended up majoring in English when I got to college. I had never stopped reading children's books, and I used to study in the college library right next to the children's bookshelves so I could take breaks to read those books. They were way more fun than my class assignments! I began writing short stories in my twenties, almost always fantasy. I also kept writing poetry.
After college I worked as an editor and an educator. I got a bilingual teaching credential in Los Angeles, where I taught lots of little Latino kids. Later I worked as a home teacher, driving around L.A. to teach seriously ill students. I've taught college writing classes, too, which means I've taught students in grades K through 13. Most recently, I got a master's degree as a Reading Specialist so I can help students who are having a real struggle learning to read.
I now live in Utah, where the snow still seems surprising every year and the deer hang out in our backyard. I am still a bookworm, but I am also an author, and both things make me very happy! - Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Los Angeles, California, USA
Utah, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
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Reviews
Finally! I've been promising a review of Kate Coombs' delightfully fractured fairy tales, Runaway Princess and the new sequel, Runaway Dragon, which I nominated for Cybils. The time has come - seems just right to write about these now that Charlotte's Library is introducing a Middle Grade Science Fiction and Fantasy roundup.
To recap, because it's been a while since the first story.....Princess Margaret (Meg to her friends) is horrified when her father and the prime minster cook up a scheme show more to improve the country's economic status; offer her in marriage to whoever will destroy the dragon, witch, and bandits! Meg decides to rescue herself - and then rescue the "scourges" of the country. She takes old friends along with her, meets new friends, and discovers that the world isn't as simple as she thought. But her courage and practical thinking pay off and with her friends' help, all ends well.
Now, Meg has a new problem. Her baby dragon is growing up. And like all not-so-young creatures, he wants to try his wings. Meg decides finding Laddy is the perfect excuse for a quest! She's been feeling cooped up in the castle and she's ready for adventure! But how can she have an adventure with her best friends, guardsmen, and her parents all determined to keep her safe? Well, toss in an Enchanted Forest, a suitably malevalent villainess, a few new friends, and a giant, and things get complicated fast! Will Meg ever find Laddy? And what will happen when she does?
These stories are, to me, some of the best examples of middle grade fantasy.
First, you need to hop over and read Laurel Snyder's post on the difference between YA and MG fiction. These stories fit perfectly into that model. Meg is not just going on hilarious and exciting adventures, she's learning about the world and her place in it. I love the humor and craft that goes into Coomb's excellent plots, but the characters are even more fun. Each one learns about themselves, but not in an egotistical I-am-discovering-myself way (um, yeah, I don't really like YA in general. Too self-absorbed). Plus, Coombs has managed to create a believeable and independent fantasy heroine. Too many fantasy heroines are either completely useless wusses, waiting to be rescued, romanced, or guided OR they're unbelievable super girls who never put a foot wrong and get themselves out of every predicament. Meg is just perfectly in-between. She courageous and determined and has lots of skills and good qualities; but she also knows when she needs help and that she has a lot to learn.
Verdict: Fantasy fans who like plenty of humor and strong heroines will fall in love with Meg and her friends. Talk these up to fans of Patricia C. Wrede, Jessica Day George, Sarah Beth Durst, and Gail Carson Levine. These aren't just for girls either; there are plenty of diverse characters of both genders to enjoy and Runaway Dragon in particular divides the story between Meg's adventures and her friends' struggle to escape. Highly recommended!
Runaway Princess
ISBN: 0374355460; Published August 2006 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Borrowed from the library; Purchased for the library
Runaway Dragon
ISBN: 0374363617; Published September 2009 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Borrowed from the library; Purchased for the library show less
To recap, because it's been a while since the first story.....Princess Margaret (Meg to her friends) is horrified when her father and the prime minster cook up a scheme show more to improve the country's economic status; offer her in marriage to whoever will destroy the dragon, witch, and bandits! Meg decides to rescue herself - and then rescue the "scourges" of the country. She takes old friends along with her, meets new friends, and discovers that the world isn't as simple as she thought. But her courage and practical thinking pay off and with her friends' help, all ends well.
Now, Meg has a new problem. Her baby dragon is growing up. And like all not-so-young creatures, he wants to try his wings. Meg decides finding Laddy is the perfect excuse for a quest! She's been feeling cooped up in the castle and she's ready for adventure! But how can she have an adventure with her best friends, guardsmen, and her parents all determined to keep her safe? Well, toss in an Enchanted Forest, a suitably malevalent villainess, a few new friends, and a giant, and things get complicated fast! Will Meg ever find Laddy? And what will happen when she does?
These stories are, to me, some of the best examples of middle grade fantasy.
First, you need to hop over and read Laurel Snyder's post on the difference between YA and MG fiction. These stories fit perfectly into that model. Meg is not just going on hilarious and exciting adventures, she's learning about the world and her place in it. I love the humor and craft that goes into Coomb's excellent plots, but the characters are even more fun. Each one learns about themselves, but not in an egotistical I-am-discovering-myself way (um, yeah, I don't really like YA in general. Too self-absorbed). Plus, Coombs has managed to create a believeable and independent fantasy heroine. Too many fantasy heroines are either completely useless wusses, waiting to be rescued, romanced, or guided OR they're unbelievable super girls who never put a foot wrong and get themselves out of every predicament. Meg is just perfectly in-between. She courageous and determined and has lots of skills and good qualities; but she also knows when she needs help and that she has a lot to learn.
Verdict: Fantasy fans who like plenty of humor and strong heroines will fall in love with Meg and her friends. Talk these up to fans of Patricia C. Wrede, Jessica Day George, Sarah Beth Durst, and Gail Carson Levine. These aren't just for girls either; there are plenty of diverse characters of both genders to enjoy and Runaway Dragon in particular divides the story between Meg's adventures and her friends' struggle to escape. Highly recommended!
Runaway Princess
ISBN: 0374355460; Published August 2006 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Borrowed from the library; Purchased for the library
Runaway Dragon
ISBN: 0374363617; Published September 2009 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Borrowed from the library; Purchased for the library show less
Author Kate Coombs and illustrator Lee Gatlin deliver a spooky collection of monstrous poems in this engaging picture-book, perfect for the Halloween season. "Climb up the wistful, mistful hill / where weeping gargoyles sit. / Slip past the gloomful, moonful graves / where small ghosts peer and flit. / Walk up the weary, dreary path / where scarab beetles crawl. / Come in the sneaky, creaky door / and pace the doom-dark hall." So begins the text, which then presents eighteen individual poems show more devoted to specific students at the Monster School (and in one case, their game of baseball in the graveyard). The final selection profiles a seemingly ordinary boy... but is he?
Readers who enjoyed such titles as Adam Rex's Frankenstein Makes a Sandwich, or Marilyn Singer and Gris Grimly's Monster Museum, which also offer picture-book collections of spooky poems, will undoubtedly enjoy Monster School. The poems are creepy and humorous by turn, with an occasional phrase that caught my eye. The final portion of "It's Nice," about a shy little creature, was particularly lovely: "People call me a ghost, like my edges are fluttering. / But I'm just quiet, the way a night / shines with stars that aren't saying a word." The illustrations are well-suited to the text, capturing the gruesome humor of the poems. Recommended to anyone in the market for new Halloween poetry collections. show less
Readers who enjoyed such titles as Adam Rex's Frankenstein Makes a Sandwich, or Marilyn Singer and Gris Grimly's Monster Museum, which also offer picture-book collections of spooky poems, will undoubtedly enjoy Monster School. The poems are creepy and humorous by turn, with an occasional phrase that caught my eye. The final portion of "It's Nice," about a shy little creature, was particularly lovely: "People call me a ghost, like my edges are fluttering. / But I'm just quiet, the way a night / shines with stars that aren't saying a word." The illustrations are well-suited to the text, capturing the gruesome humor of the poems. Recommended to anyone in the market for new Halloween poetry collections. show less
Kate Coombs, who made her debut with the middle-grade fantasy, The Runaway Princess, turns to the work of the Brothers Grimm in this new fairy-tale picture-book, offering a somewhat revisionist take on the story of Hans My Hedgehog (Hans mein Igel in the original German). Born to a prosperous farming couple, who had long wished for a child - the father declaring at one point: "I want a son even if he's half a hedgehog!" - Hans was human from the waist down, and hedgehog on top. Although show more raised in a loving home, Hans - who grew to be an excellent fiddler - was isolated by this difference, and terribly lonely, eventually withdrawing to the woods, where he tended to his flock of pigs. When two different kings become lost in his woods, and promise to give him whatever they first see, upon returning home, if he helps them on their way, our half-erinaceous hero embarks on an adventure that will bring him his heart's desire...
Although I found Hans My Hedgehog engaging enough - the story was appealing, in a somewhat surrealistic fairy-tale fashion; and the colorful acrylic artwork, done by John Nickle, although not destined to become a personal favorite, was very expressive - I was a little disappointed to see how many elements of the story had been changed in this telling. Hans plays a fiddle, rather than the bagpipes (I LOVE the idea of a bagpipe-playing hedgehog!); his family is supportive and loving, rather than cold and uncaring; and he doesn't really punish the first princess (who refuses to honor her father's promise) at all. While I can understand why the author might want to change an element or two, for contemporary readers, the result of all these changes, collectively, was a tale that felt rather watered down to me, with all of the strangeness, and the lurking sense of menace to be found in the original, carefully elided. Of course, I appreciated the author's afterword, in which she mentions all these changes, but I was left with the feeling, despite my moderate enjoyment, that it was an odd choice, to retell such an unusual fairy-tale - this is the first picture-book edition of this Grimm selection that I have run across, although a similar Latvian tale can be found in The Hedgehog Boy - but leave out many of the elements that make it, well... so prickly! show less
Although I found Hans My Hedgehog engaging enough - the story was appealing, in a somewhat surrealistic fairy-tale fashion; and the colorful acrylic artwork, done by John Nickle, although not destined to become a personal favorite, was very expressive - I was a little disappointed to see how many elements of the story had been changed in this telling. Hans plays a fiddle, rather than the bagpipes (I LOVE the idea of a bagpipe-playing hedgehog!); his family is supportive and loving, rather than cold and uncaring; and he doesn't really punish the first princess (who refuses to honor her father's promise) at all. While I can understand why the author might want to change an element or two, for contemporary readers, the result of all these changes, collectively, was a tale that felt rather watered down to me, with all of the strangeness, and the lurking sense of menace to be found in the original, carefully elided. Of course, I appreciated the author's afterword, in which she mentions all these changes, but I was left with the feeling, despite my moderate enjoyment, that it was an odd choice, to retell such an unusual fairy-tale - this is the first picture-book edition of this Grimm selection that I have run across, although a similar Latvian tale can be found in The Hedgehog Boy - but leave out many of the elements that make it, well... so prickly! show less
"Breathe and Be: A Book of Mindfulness Poems" by Kate Coombs is a beautiful, and very accessible, book of poetry for elementary-aged children. I have been researching, listing, and purchasing books to house in a "calming space" within my library. It's a place for students to decompress, calm down, and relax. Besides an aquarium, fidgets, and coloring sheets, I want students to access books that will give them tools to become less anxious and more calm. This poetry collection is the perfect show more addition. I will be able to use a short five-line poem to teach students as a memorization and recall technique for calming themselves. I think I'll use "I breathe slowly in, I breathe slowly out. My breath is a pathway of peace moving softly through me. Each day I can breathe and be." Every poem in this book is written in the Japanese poetic form of a Tanka, which is traditionally 5, 7, 5, 7, and 7 syllables for each line. This form is more loosely followed as short, long, short, long, long for each of the five lines. I love these short, fun poems each is full of figurative language -- personification, simile, and metaphor. show less
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