The Transit Museum event was wonderful. It was amazing to be back in this subway car, sharing the book, surrounded by friends and family.
A write up of the event appeared in Publisher's Weekly here, and there are more photos at the Transit Museum's flikr stream here.
This was such a great experience. Thanks so much to everyone who came out and special thanks to Virgil Talaid and the staff of the Transit Museum for planning the event.
Showing posts with label Subway Story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Subway Story. Show all posts
Friday, December 9, 2011
Monday, November 28, 2011
Transit Museum Event!
I'm really excited to be doing a very special event at the New York Transit Museum in Brooklyn this Saturday. I'll be reading 'Subway Story' inside the subway train car where I first heard the true story that inspired it!
If you haven't been to the Transit Museum yet, it's an amazing place. The turnstiles alone can keep me endlessly occupied...
Train fans, New York fans, picture book fans - Please join me for a very special event!
Here's what Lee Magill of Time Out New York Kids has to say about the event:
"It's not every day that a visit to a museum inspires an undertaking as enormous as writing, illustrating and publishing a picture book, but that's just what happened to Julia Sarcone-Roach at the New York Transit Museum. It was there she learned about the subway car recycling program that sparked her Subway Story (Knopf, $17; ages 5 to 9), a tale about a 1960s-era MTA car named Jessie who flourishes as the newest and brightest train in the fleet, is abandoned in a railyard after decades of service, then begins life anew on the bottom of the ocean as a manmade reef in which shellfish, coral and fish slowly take up residence. Author-illustrator Sarcone-Roach's colorful, evocative images draw out the magic in the already remarkable true story... as though she'd dreamt the tale up herself. It's fitting that the artist is returning to the museum to share her book with her intended audience: adventurous kids with a passion for trains and serious love for the environment."
Thanks Lee!
So please come for the story, and stay for the turnstiles!
all ages welcome
More information on the Transit Museum is here.
Corner of Boerum Pl and Schermerhorn St.
If you haven't been to the Transit Museum yet, it's an amazing place. The turnstiles alone can keep me endlessly occupied...
Train fans, New York fans, picture book fans - Please join me for a very special event!
Here's what Lee Magill of Time Out New York Kids has to say about the event:
"It's not every day that a visit to a museum inspires an undertaking as enormous as writing, illustrating and publishing a picture book, but that's just what happened to Julia Sarcone-Roach at the New York Transit Museum. It was there she learned about the subway car recycling program that sparked her Subway Story (Knopf, $17; ages 5 to 9), a tale about a 1960s-era MTA car named Jessie who flourishes as the newest and brightest train in the fleet, is abandoned in a railyard after decades of service, then begins life anew on the bottom of the ocean as a manmade reef in which shellfish, coral and fish slowly take up residence. Author-illustrator Sarcone-Roach's colorful, evocative images draw out the magic in the already remarkable true story... as though she'd dreamt the tale up herself. It's fitting that the artist is returning to the museum to share her book with her intended audience: adventurous kids with a passion for trains and serious love for the environment."
Thanks Lee!
So please come for the story, and stay for the turnstiles!
all ages welcome
More information on the Transit Museum is here.
Corner of Boerum Pl and Schermerhorn St.
Friday, November 25, 2011
Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast!
I had a wonderful visit with Jules over at Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast - one of my absolute favorite blogs! Read her thoughts on my books and learn more about the making of Subway Story and some secrets of the Secret Plan here.
(Find out what Rosalind Russell has in common with a Morse code obsessed kitten...)
(Find out what Rosalind Russell has in common with a Morse code obsessed kitten...)
Labels:
Call of the Wild,
Interviews,
Reviews,
sketchbook,
Subway Story,
The Secret Plan
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
A Family of Readers
This past Sunday, Roger Sutton and Martha Parravano, Editors of the Horn Book Magazine discussed their book, A Family of Readers at the Eric Carle Museum in Amherst, MA. They also introduced "new books from 2011 that they found exceptional and wished they could add to their 2010 book as excellent examples each genre and reading level."
I'm honored to report that Subway Story was included on this list! About Subway Story they said:
"Reminiscent of classic Virginia Lee Burton, this story of a subway car turned into a reef is a fresh, innovative way to approach nonfiction. While the story is factual, the subway car talks with a personality of it own, creating an accessible and entertaining blend of fiction and nonfiction."
Thanks to Roger Sutton and Martha Parravano! More on their list of 2011 books here.
I'm honored to report that Subway Story was included on this list! About Subway Story they said:
"Reminiscent of classic Virginia Lee Burton, this story of a subway car turned into a reef is a fresh, innovative way to approach nonfiction. While the story is factual, the subway car talks with a personality of it own, creating an accessible and entertaining blend of fiction and nonfiction."
![]() |
| There's Jessie, in a crowd of great books! |
Thanks to Roger Sutton and Martha Parravano! More on their list of 2011 books here.
Come hear Subway Story this weekend in New York!
This Saturday, November 19th, I'll be reading at the New York Book Fair at noon at the Goddard Riverside Community Center (593 Columbus Ave., New York, NY- at 88th St.) I'm also looking forward to hearing Selina Alko read from her great new book, Everyday Dress-Up at the festival too!
Proceeds from the Book Fair support Goddard Riverside Community Center, which provide services annually to 17,600 people from Manhattan’s Upper West Side and Harlem. The agency manages 600 units of affordable housing. It advocates for justice and enriches community life with recreational, cultural and arts activities. More information about the book festival can be found here.
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Also, this Sunday, November 20th at 11 am, I'll be reading and signing Subway Story as part of an event with my friend Meghan McCarthy, who will be reading from her new book, Balto, at BookCourt in Brooklyn. (163 Court St Brooklyn, New York) Please stop by and say hello!
Proceeds from the Book Fair support Goddard Riverside Community Center, which provide services annually to 17,600 people from Manhattan’s Upper West Side and Harlem. The agency manages 600 units of affordable housing. It advocates for justice and enriches community life with recreational, cultural and arts activities. More information about the book festival can be found here.
------------------
Also, this Sunday, November 20th at 11 am, I'll be reading and signing Subway Story as part of an event with my friend Meghan McCarthy, who will be reading from her new book, Balto, at BookCourt in Brooklyn. (163 Court St Brooklyn, New York) Please stop by and say hello!
Release Party at Hooray For Books!
On Saturday, I was delighted to return to Hooray For Books in Old Town, Alexandria, Virginia to celebrate the release of Subway Story. Thanks to all my friends and family who came out to support me. It was great to see some familiar faces! And to my Mom who provided many delicious treats and Adam, for the cake collaboration.
![]() |
| Jessie in cake form. |
![]() |
| Beautiful cookies from Mother's Macaroons, thanks to my own mom! |
![]() |
| Some enthusiastic audience members helped me spot Milo's sneaky feet in The Secret Plan. |
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| It's hard to hide an elephant in a cats' house! |
![]() | |
| Author and friend Marc Tyler Nobleman stopped by! |
Labels:
Delicious Cookies,
Event,
Subway Story
Friday, November 11, 2011
Big Weekend for Subway Story
On Saturday I'll be celebrating Subway Story with an event at Hooray For Books in Old Town, Alexandria, Virginia at 2pm. Join me for a reading, signing, and refreshments!

And this Sunday, Pete Hamill's wonderful review of Subway Story will be in the New York Times Book Section here. The article is great, and I'm honored and humbled by the kind words from such an amazing New York author.
The picture above accompanies the article, and is actually a self-portrait of my boyfriend Adam and I. I was painting this page as we were baking a wedding cake for a friend. (Incidentally, he and I will be carrying cake down to Virginia from Brooklyn for the Hooray for Books event.) I had such a delightful time when I was there last for The Secret Plan release party, I'm looking forward to returning and hope to see some familiar faces tomorrow!
Please come for books, and stay for cake!

And this Sunday, Pete Hamill's wonderful review of Subway Story will be in the New York Times Book Section here. The article is great, and I'm honored and humbled by the kind words from such an amazing New York author.
The picture above accompanies the article, and is actually a self-portrait of my boyfriend Adam and I. I was painting this page as we were baking a wedding cake for a friend. (Incidentally, he and I will be carrying cake down to Virginia from Brooklyn for the Hooray for Books event.) I had such a delightful time when I was there last for The Secret Plan release party, I'm looking forward to returning and hope to see some familiar faces tomorrow!
Please come for books, and stay for cake!
Labels:
Delicious Cookies,
Event,
Reviews,
Subway Story
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Questions for a Subway Conductor
For anyone curious about what operating a modern subway car is like - there's an interesting interview with a subway conductor in Gothamist. The full interview is on Reddit here, including a true story about a man who would serially impersonate subway conductors so that he could sneak on and drive the train!
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Holy Smokes!
Subway Story received a wonderful starred review in the Horn Book!
"Sarcone-Roach displays a discipline not always seen in books about the environment; she allows her theme of reuse and recycling to emerge naturally from a fine story and lets readers draw their own conclusions without adding a heavy-handed one of her own. Here youngsters meet Jessie, a subway car that begins service during the 1964 New York World’s Fair and contentedly operates for approximately fifty years before she is dismantled. Jessie and other cars like her are hauled out to sea and, in a small scary moment (which is quickly resolved), dumped into the ocean. There she happily resides as an artificial reef that’s home to myriad sea animals. Illustrations, unexpectedly cozy-looking, emphasize the story’s tone. Structurally and artistically, the book recalls Virginia Lee Burton’s The Little House (rev. 11/42) (“Over the years, Jessie saw the city change, and she had some changes of her own”): Jessie’s half-century of traveling the city is depicted through a series of curved routes much like the streets and roads that close in on the Little House with the passage of time. Front end pages trace Jessie’s original underground route; final ones show a peaceful, blue ocean where she now rests. An author’s note describing the science behind similar projects and a bibliography conclude the book. - Betty Carter"
I'm grateful for this thoughtful appreciation of Subway Story by the Horn Book. The observations about details like the endpapers and the Virginia Lee Burton parallels make me especially happy. She's been a lifelong inspiration for me, and The Little House is one of my favorite picture books.
Here's a picture of my desk as I was beginning to develop early character sketches for Subway Story, complete with breakfast brownie, coffee and copy of Katy and the Big Snow. (Don't those snow drifts on the cover look a little like waves?)

Many thanks to Betty Carter and the Horn Book!
"Sarcone-Roach displays a discipline not always seen in books about the environment; she allows her theme of reuse and recycling to emerge naturally from a fine story and lets readers draw their own conclusions without adding a heavy-handed one of her own. Here youngsters meet Jessie, a subway car that begins service during the 1964 New York World’s Fair and contentedly operates for approximately fifty years before she is dismantled. Jessie and other cars like her are hauled out to sea and, in a small scary moment (which is quickly resolved), dumped into the ocean. There she happily resides as an artificial reef that’s home to myriad sea animals. Illustrations, unexpectedly cozy-looking, emphasize the story’s tone. Structurally and artistically, the book recalls Virginia Lee Burton’s The Little House (rev. 11/42) (“Over the years, Jessie saw the city change, and she had some changes of her own”): Jessie’s half-century of traveling the city is depicted through a series of curved routes much like the streets and roads that close in on the Little House with the passage of time. Front end pages trace Jessie’s original underground route; final ones show a peaceful, blue ocean where she now rests. An author’s note describing the science behind similar projects and a bibliography conclude the book. - Betty Carter"
I'm grateful for this thoughtful appreciation of Subway Story by the Horn Book. The observations about details like the endpapers and the Virginia Lee Burton parallels make me especially happy. She's been a lifelong inspiration for me, and The Little House is one of my favorite picture books.
Here's a picture of my desk as I was beginning to develop early character sketches for Subway Story, complete with breakfast brownie, coffee and copy of Katy and the Big Snow. (Don't those snow drifts on the cover look a little like waves?)
Many thanks to Betty Carter and the Horn Book!
Upcoming Events
There are some exciting events ahead for Subway Story. Please join me if you can!
Community Bookstore - Sunday, October 16th at 11am - I'll be reading and signing Subway Story in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, NY.
Boulevard Books and Cafe - Saturday, October 22nd at 11am - Come join me as I read and sign Subway Story in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn, NY. $20 Includes signed copy of the book, storytime and activity!
Hooray For Books - Saturday, November 12th - I'm delighted to be returning to Old Town, Alexandria, VA for a VA/DC Book Release Event for Subway Story. There will be snacks!
BookCourt - Sunday, November 20th - I'll be reading and signing Subway Story at an event in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn with Meghan McCarthy, who will be presenting her book, The Incredible Life of Balto.
Stay tuned for more events!
Community Bookstore - Sunday, October 16th at 11am - I'll be reading and signing Subway Story in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, NY.
Boulevard Books and Cafe - Saturday, October 22nd at 11am - Come join me as I read and sign Subway Story in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn, NY. $20 Includes signed copy of the book, storytime and activity!
Hooray For Books - Saturday, November 12th - I'm delighted to be returning to Old Town, Alexandria, VA for a VA/DC Book Release Event for Subway Story. There will be snacks!
BookCourt - Sunday, November 20th - I'll be reading and signing Subway Story at an event in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn with Meghan McCarthy, who will be presenting her book, The Incredible Life of Balto.
Stay tuned for more events!
Book Release Day!
Today is the official release date for Subway Story, and in Jessie's honor, here's a great ad from 1964 for the brand new R33 subway trains:
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Subway Story at PowerHouse Books!

This Sunday, October 9th at 4pm - I'll be reading and signing Subway Story, two days before it's officially released at an event at powerHouse books in DUMBO, Brooklyn, NY! See Subway Story early and be the envy of your friends and neighbors!
I'll be there with authors Jenny Offill and Nancy Carpenter who will be presenting their delightful book 11 Experiments That Failed. And Meghan McCarthy will also be reading and signing her great new book, The Incredible Life of Balto. She will also be raffling off some original drawings at the event.
Here's the first glimpse of Subway Story in powerHouse's window!

Thanks to Jesse Zryb for the photo.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Subway Story Reviews
Subway Story has received some very nice early reviews -
from Kirkus:
Jessie weighs 75,122 pounds and is a beautiful, brand-new subway car.
She was brought to New York in the early 1960s for the World’s Fair, and she loves traveling all over the city. She speeds around curves and ducks under rivers. When musicians practice on board, she accompanies them with deep rumbles and toe-tapping clacks. Over the years, there are many changes, but Jessie never forgets her most important job—helping people travel safely. Until one season, sleek, shiny new silver trains start taking over the tracks. A downcast Jessie sits in a dusty yard, poignantly wondering about the people she had carried. “Did they notice she was gone?” Thankfully, her adventure doesn’t end there. She is taken to the Atlantic and sunk to become an artificial reef, home to many barnacles, coral and fish. Sarcone-Roach cleverly brings the story full circle: Jessie was once an integral part of a bustling city, and now a whole city lives inside of her. With sprawling landscapes and vast underground tunnels as a backdrop, readers will cheer Jessie’s story of revival. The author's acrylics gently anthropomorphize Jessie, giving her headlight-eyes and a winsome smile.
Immensely readable and surprisingly touching, this large heft of metal totes a lot of charm. (author’s note, bibliography, further reading) (Picture book. 3-6)
from School Library Journal:
This story of “Jessie,” a subway car built in the early 1960s, was inspired by the author’s trip to the New York Transit Museum and is a lovely tribute to the city and its boroughs. Told in a clever biographical format, the story begins with Jessie’s “birth” details: weight, length, etc. The shiny, new car takes her responsibilities seriously as she safely carries children to school, adults to work, and friends and family members to visit one another. As the decades pass, Jessie delivers visitors to the 1964 World’s Fair in Queens, is covered in graffiti, then painted red, repaired, and refurbished, including air-conditioning to replace outdated fans. Eventually, she is retired and becomes part of an artificial reef in the Atlantic Ocean, where she assumes her new job. The expressive acrylic illustrations set the tone and give the story depth. The features on the front of the subway car are used to make Jessie’s eyes, nose, and mouth. An author’s note gives details about the history of subway cars around the world. This title will be appreciated by train buffs and those curious about the history of New York City.
–Anne Beier, Clifton Public Library, NJ
Thanks to Anne Beier, School Library Journal, and Kirkus Reviews!
from Kirkus:
Jessie weighs 75,122 pounds and is a beautiful, brand-new subway car.
She was brought to New York in the early 1960s for the World’s Fair, and she loves traveling all over the city. She speeds around curves and ducks under rivers. When musicians practice on board, she accompanies them with deep rumbles and toe-tapping clacks. Over the years, there are many changes, but Jessie never forgets her most important job—helping people travel safely. Until one season, sleek, shiny new silver trains start taking over the tracks. A downcast Jessie sits in a dusty yard, poignantly wondering about the people she had carried. “Did they notice she was gone?” Thankfully, her adventure doesn’t end there. She is taken to the Atlantic and sunk to become an artificial reef, home to many barnacles, coral and fish. Sarcone-Roach cleverly brings the story full circle: Jessie was once an integral part of a bustling city, and now a whole city lives inside of her. With sprawling landscapes and vast underground tunnels as a backdrop, readers will cheer Jessie’s story of revival. The author's acrylics gently anthropomorphize Jessie, giving her headlight-eyes and a winsome smile.
Immensely readable and surprisingly touching, this large heft of metal totes a lot of charm. (author’s note, bibliography, further reading) (Picture book. 3-6)
from School Library Journal:
This story of “Jessie,” a subway car built in the early 1960s, was inspired by the author’s trip to the New York Transit Museum and is a lovely tribute to the city and its boroughs. Told in a clever biographical format, the story begins with Jessie’s “birth” details: weight, length, etc. The shiny, new car takes her responsibilities seriously as she safely carries children to school, adults to work, and friends and family members to visit one another. As the decades pass, Jessie delivers visitors to the 1964 World’s Fair in Queens, is covered in graffiti, then painted red, repaired, and refurbished, including air-conditioning to replace outdated fans. Eventually, she is retired and becomes part of an artificial reef in the Atlantic Ocean, where she assumes her new job. The expressive acrylic illustrations set the tone and give the story depth. The features on the front of the subway car are used to make Jessie’s eyes, nose, and mouth. An author’s note gives details about the history of subway cars around the world. This title will be appreciated by train buffs and those curious about the history of New York City.
–Anne Beier, Clifton Public Library, NJ
Thanks to Anne Beier, School Library Journal, and Kirkus Reviews!
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Meet Jessie!

My new book, Subway Story will be coming out October 11th!
From Random House:
"Never was there a subway car who loved her job more than Jessie. From morning to night she carried all sorts of people all sorts of places—to work and school and World's Fairs, over bridges and through tunnels—sometimes she even took a pigeon along for the ride! But as time passed, sleek new silver cars began to take over the tracks, banishing Jessie to an abandoned lot. What will she do with no passengers to carry? And where will she go now that she's no longer welcome on the tracks?
Based on the true story of 1960's-era subway cars that are now being used to create artificial reefs in the Atlantic, this stunningly illustrated second book from Julia Sarcone-Roach is sure to delight scuba diving historians and kids alike."
Preorder it here!
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Proofs!
Monday, December 20, 2010
Subway Story
A few weeks ago I turned in the final art for my next book, Subway Story. This will be the second book that I've written and illustrated. It's about a subway car named Jessie who comes to New York in the 1960's, and the life that she lives on and off the tracks. It's based on a real subway car and inspired by a visit I made to the New York Transit Museum.

Here I am behaving recklessly on a recent research trip to said museum (inside R-33 WF car number 9306):

And here is the actual final art for the book in transit to Random House, on the subway. (In it's dignified garbage bag of transport.)
This project has been underway for a long time, so getting to make this trip meant a lot to me!

Hooray!!
Here's an unrelated subway car fact which will be familiar to anyone who's already been subjected to my trivial bits of subway information while riding the train with me...
In her final working years, Jessie had a brick red paint scheme (which was applied to many older trains - not a particular model of subway car - which gave them the nickname 'Redbirds'.) The Redbirds were retired from the tracks and replaced with newer models, like this R-160.
The flecks of red that you can see in the floor of this train are a little tribute to the iconic Redbirds!
Stay tuned for more Subway Story soon!

Here I am behaving recklessly on a recent research trip to said museum (inside R-33 WF car number 9306):

And here is the actual final art for the book in transit to Random House, on the subway. (In it's dignified garbage bag of transport.)
This project has been underway for a long time, so getting to make this trip meant a lot to me!

Hooray!!
Here's an unrelated subway car fact which will be familiar to anyone who's already been subjected to my trivial bits of subway information while riding the train with me...
In her final working years, Jessie had a brick red paint scheme (which was applied to many older trains - not a particular model of subway car - which gave them the nickname 'Redbirds'.) The Redbirds were retired from the tracks and replaced with newer models, like this R-160.
The flecks of red that you can see in the floor of this train are a little tribute to the iconic Redbirds!
Stay tuned for more Subway Story soon!
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Remoras! Our Awesome Underwater Friends
Recently I've been having fun identifying some underwater creatures from scuba videos. I came across these torpedo shaped guys who were hitchhiking on a turtle. They're Remoras (or 'Sharksuckers') and they attach to other fish, turtles, whales, sharks, and rays with a 'suckerlike organ'. I think they're tremendously neat.


Friday, April 2, 2010
Interview on Book By Its Cover

Check out my interview on Julia Rothman's very awesome book site!
Many thanks to Julia for the great interview!
Labels:
Interviews,
Subway Story,
The Secret Plan
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