O.W.L. Agency Series

There was an Old Woman Who Followed a Spy

Available on Amazon now

Our first attempt at writing a book with a broader appeal than just for family. What could fill that position? There was a book at our home titled There Was An Old Lady Who Swallowed Some Books, by Lucille Colandro. Collandro has written over a dozen variations on her swallowing things. I wondered why this poor old lady had to keep swallowing things to keep us entertained. Why couldn’t she have fun in a new book?

Peter Piper’s Pickle

Coming January 29, 2024

The Red-Hatted League

Coming May 29, 2024

By Thomas Furmato

Early Year Books

Hey Chick!

Coming March 1, 2024

By Thomas Furmato & Olivia Drallette

Quilts Come Alive Series

My wife, Jennifer, loves making quilts. She started making one for each grandchild. To add my own contribution I thought a book inspired from each quilt would be a good idea.

Peace by Piece

This book is in the works. The text is complete but the illustrations are the hold up. It is based on a quilt my wife made for Jamie, our fifth grandchild.
It is a prose of 33 stanzas, here are the first three:

We all like to create
With our words and with our hands
It just takes an idea
That grows when we add plans

It’s okay if we make things
To be seen by no one else
But also good to share
Giving a part of ourselves

With words we tell a story
With wood a house is built
We take things piece by piece
Just like I make a quilt

estimated completion date: Summer 2024

Llama Mama?

I haven’t even seen the quilt for this yet. It’s for our sixth grandchild Faye.

Dots

The Loco Pet Store

Five Wise Hatchlings

23 Sheep

When I set out to write this book it was only after I decided to write a book for my fourth grandchild. I realized that I couldn’t start there, but instead had to start with the oldest. Taking the artwork from the quilt that their grandma made was easy for me to work with. Elliana’s had 23 sheep, and though the number wasn’t intentional it made me think of Psalm 23.

The purpose for me to write this was 3 fold; to tell a story from the quilt, save a memory for my grandchildren, and to teach the Bible. But here on this webpage I have an altogether different goal. If you are visiting it, you must have a curiosity in either the books, or the author. You’re getting to know me as you read this, so I’ll share something about the book.

I started the text by taking the 23 Psalm and rewriting it as simplified as I could, trying to imagine what each word and concept would look like to a 2-5 year old. Then I drew up a story board on Google Docs and started to distribute the text into place.

For the graphics I had my daughter take some closeup pictures of each sheep and then I cropped them out of their background. On the main sheep, 23, I made a few copies, so I could position the legs in various positions. All of that was fairly easy, as I’m adept at computer graphics. The new background I thought should compliment the sheep so I went with a simple flat color for the fields and a nice big blue sky. The hardest part was the grass, because I really didn’t want to put to many small details on the pages.

I chose Amazon’s KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing) because of their offer for a free ISBN number, and of course, that’s where all the action is. The hardest part of the whole job was uploading the page images and getting them right by KDP’s standards. Using my Mac’s Pages application, but it’s awkward and basically a word editor. It did let me get my sizes right, so that was good.

Going forward I purchased a very affordable program called Gravit, which is owned by Corel. It has a handy web based version that syncs with a desktop version. It has a lot of things going for it, but mainly, I can layout my pages so I can see them at a glance, and I can design the art for each page with all of it’s drawing tools.

A screenshot of using Gravit