Rosanne Parry's Blog
August 28, 2024
A Horse Named Sky and friends
A Horse Named Sky is out in paperback this week. I’m thrilled to see a little sneak preview of A Wolf Called Fire in the back of this edition. Big thanks to Kirbi Fagan for her gorgeous art. I’ve been doing radio interviews all day chatting about this book, so here on the blog I’d like to take a moment to highlight some other new horse books that I think young readers will love.






First up is Sierra Blue by Suzanne Morgan Williams. It’s a story about a girl with a unique ability to connect with injured horses and a race horse that desperately needs her.
Fans of history will love the well-researched and thrilling story of how the famous Lipizzaner horses of the Spanish Riding School were rescued from the bombing of Vienna during WWII. It’s called They Saved the Stallions by Deborah Hopkinson.
I’ve long been a fan of the Phantom Stallion series by Terri Farley. It’s set in the same ecosystem as A Horse Named Sky. Terri is a life long advocate for wild horses and her writing in this series is brilliant. I’m so happy so see it reissued.
Finally, if you are looking for a good riding academy story you’ll love Jessica Burkhart’s new series, Saddle Hill Academy. The first four titles are out and I hope there will be many more.
And because I’m such a fan of picture book non fiction, I can’t pass up the opportunity to sing the praises of Horse Power: how horses changed the world, written and illustrated by the brilliant Jennifer Thermes.
July 25, 2024
Oregon Spirit Book Award 2024
More great news! A Horse Named Sky has been awarded the 2024 Oregon Spirit Book Award by the Oregon Council of Teachers of English. I’m so grateful for all the hours they poured into choosing a great slate of locally grown books to highlight. I am even more grateful for all they do to support the teachers that make literacy happen year after year in spite of mounting obstacles.
My thanks also to illustrator Kirby Fagan who brilliantly captured the landscape of the Great Basin, Virginia Range, and Sierra Nevada, and the many moods of Sky and his family. Horses are not easy to draw. I’m so glad they chose you to illustrate. Thanks to the lovely team at Greenwillow for once again crafting a gorgeous book.
A Horse Named Sky will be going to paperback at the end of August, and as always, if you are looking for a signed and personalized copy, please contact Annie Blooms bookstore to arrange it. We ship anywhere in the US.
July 19, 2024
A Wolf Called Fire
Friends, I’m thrilled to announce that my next middle grade novel, A Wolf Called Fire, will be available on February 4th, 2025. The story will be illustrated by the brilliant Mónica Armiño and the luminous cover below was created by Cindy Derby.
For years young readers of A Wolf Called Wander have asked, often plaintively, “but what about Wander’s brother?” “Why did he have to die?” “Where did he go?” It’s a rare gift to find readers so invested in someone who was not even the main character. I know that Wander had to think his brother was gone forever or he would never undertake his great journey. But I couldn’t bear for him to see his brother die, so (against the urging of my editor) I left that part of the story open; I’m so glad I did.
It has been more than ten years since I did the research for A Wolf Called Wander which came out in 2019. We’ve learned a lot about wolves and about wolf pack dynamics in the years since. The character of Fire was inspired by Wolf 8, one of the first wolves brought back to Yellowstone Park 29 years ago. Like Warm, who grew into his adult name Fire, Wolf 8 was the omega of his pack. He was small, not especially handsome, and frequently bullied by his brothers. He grew up to be a wise and compassionate leader, a gifted mentor of pups, and a fierce competitor who never killed a wolf he defeated. Wolf 8 became the patriarch of the largest and most powerful pack in Yellowstone’s history the mighty Druid Peak pack. From that lived example of leadership, I created a young omega who listens well to his mother and learns from hard earned experience the first thing she ever told him: “Big is not the only good thing a wolf can be.”
I hope this story will inspire readers to love the wilderness and to become what ever kind of leader they were meant to be.
Many thanks to my talented and tenacious agent Fiona Kenshole of Transatlantic, the wonderful team at Greenwillow, including my editor Virginia Duncan and art director Sylvie Le’ Floc’h, my critique partners, Nora Ericson and Michael Gettle-Gilmartin, and my patient and supportive family.
March 13, 2024
A Book Birthday for The Wolf Effect
I’m so thrilled to share the launch of my first non-fiction picture book The Wolf Effect: a wilderness revival story. I will be in conversation with Leslie Bernard Booth and her new book One Day This Tree Will Fall. They are both books about environmental renewal–a topic we are both passionate about. Come see us at Annie Blooms Bookstore at 7pm on Tuesday May 7th. 7834 SW Capitol Hwy, Portland Oregon 97219
January 31, 2024
SKY is an Oregon Book Award nominee!
I’m so thrilled to be honored alongside these other books by Oregon MG and YA authors. Thank you to Oregon Literary Arts for promoting Oregon’s awesome book culture. I’m looking forward to the ceremony in April.
February 14, 2023
A beautiful cover for A Horse Named Sky
Here’s a sneak peek at the cover of my newest novel A Horse Named Sky. The art is by the very talented Kirbi Fagin. Can’t wait to see what she does with the interior art. The book will be published September 5th, 2023.
book cover A Horse Named SkySeptember 27, 2022
Happy Birthday BIG TRUCK DAY
BIG TRUCK DAY on the littlest vehicle of them all, a Vespa!So thrilled to be celebrating my debut picture book today. In the darkest days of the pandemic my daughter and I started a picture book and song writing zoom and BIG TRUCK DAY is the happy result. I was inspired by the Big Truck Days that my public library sponsored where firefighters and garbage collectors and farmers and police persons and utility & construction workers all brought their vehicles to celebrate the care of the community. There was even a blood mobile!
Niki Stage is the illustrator and this is also her debut. Her art brought such energy and joy to the page. I appreciate her vibrant and inclusive style. I’m also grateful to Lindsay Delaney, librarian extraordinaire, who encouraged me to put in a page of back matter to answer the question, What’s a bookmobile? which was bound to come up at story time.
Many thanks to the brilliant team at Greenwillow including editor Virginia Duncan and art director Sylvie Le Floc’h. Thank you to Fiona Kenshole and the team at Transatlantic for their ongoing support. And thank you to booksellers and librarians everywhere for bringing books and kids together.
January 6, 2022
A New York Times Bestseller!!
I just received the most amazing news and on my birthday too! A Whale of the Wild is now a New York Times Bestseller! I’m so proud of this story and of Lindsay Moore’s brilliant illustrations that do so much to bring the tale to life. It was first published in the depths of the pandemic, September of 2020, when my home was shrouded in wildfire smoke. And yet people found my story and loved it and shared it with others. When the paperback edition went on sale we were in the thick of the Delta wave. Still people found my story. And now after all this time, when people were out there thinking about what book they wanted their child to have this holiday, they thought of Vega and Deneb and the Orcas of the Salish Sea. I could not be more thrilled. I hope a legion of eager readers grow up to be wayfinders and defenders of the ocean.
Many thanks to my agent Fiona Kenshole of The Transatlantic Agency who never gave up on these stories and has represented them around the world with vigor and warmth. My thoughtful and savvy editor Virginia Duncan has been a dream to work with as has the whole team at HarperCollins. Most of all thanks to the booksellers and librarians and teachers who work so hard to bring books and children together in the most challenging environment of my lifetime. Thank you!
September 24, 2021
Big Truck Day!
Vintage Tonka trucksIt’s been more than a decade since I’ve had a picture book and so I’m thrilled to announce that Big Truck Day! is coming in 2022. It’s a romp of a story celebrating a Big Truck Day like the ones the Beaverton City Library hosted my my kids were young. It’s an homage to community workers and the importance of library access for everybody.
I’m thrilled to be paired with debut illustrator Niki Stage for this project. Her art is sweet, joyful, and energetic. Just the vibe I was hoping for.
April 28, 2021
Middle Grade Book Review: While I Was Away
When I was in grade school in the late 70s, I had a friend who, like debut author Waka T Brown, traveled to Japan to stay with grandparents regularly in order to keep his language skills current and connection to his culture fresh. I remember his complex feelings about the whole thing. Pride in his culture and love for his grandparents who seemed fiercely strict to me. But sadness at missing summer camp with his scout troop. I remember that kids teased him about his proficiency in martial arts. (This was before the movie Karate Kid made martial arts popular.) But I also remember how impressed we all were by his fluency in Japanese and the way he drew kanji with a brush pen. I loved how While I Was Away by Waka T Brown captured all the beautiful complexity of being a bicultural kid moving between Kansas and Japan and finding things to love in both places. The fastest growing group of children in America are biracial, bilingual, and bicultural kids. I’m always happy to find a book that celebrates them. The publisher is Quill Tree Books an imprint of HarperCollins.


