special report
AMERICAN GIRL
May/June 2007 Issue
AMERICAN GIRL is published bi-monthly by Pleasant Company. Target age
is 8+ -- girls seen inside magazine, or heard from in reader mail top
out at 13. The magazine is heavily activity oriented; most of the
content is focused on helping girls do something – though not always
how-tos. After reading over a dozen recent issues, it’s clear that most
fiction is relationship centered – themes involve friendship,
appreciating family, etc. Boys are mostly absent from the stories. Most
items in this issue have no byline.
From the Guidelines
Fiction - contemporary up to 2300 words.
Protagonist must be 8 - 12. Especially likes humor and seasonal. No
romance. No science fiction, fantasy, or horror.
Nonfiction - 150 words or less profiles of girls within AG's reader
age.
Crafts or Recipes (directions are usually one paragraph long - often
50 words or less).
Longer nonfiction must be queried. They also take collection
articles containing several crafts or recipes on a single theme -
should be simple to do, inexpensive, and keep safety in mind. Also
interested in seasonal puzzles and games.
Pays on Acceptance. Responds in 12 weeks.
$500 for stories, $300 for articles.
AMERICAN GIRL
8400 Fairway Place,
Middleton, WI 53562-2554.
From the Masthead:
Editorial Director - Michelle Nowadly Watkins
Executive Editor - Kristi Thom
Sr. Managing Editor - Barbara E. Stretchberry
Article Editor - Mary Richards Beaumont
Lifestyle Editor - Jessica Hastreiter
Associate Editor – Aubre Andrus
ANALYSIS OF SPECIFIC
ISSUE
May/June 2007
Theme of this issue is color
Letters from You – One girl compliments an article on service
dogs from a past issue. Two compliment activities relating to
Valentines.
Girls Express - [Editors frequently note that this is the area of
AMERICAN GIRLS most in need of freelancers]
- Rainbow In A Jar! A jar of M&Ms separated by color and layered
in a jar.
[82 words – A single paragraph of directions, no separate list of
materials. Specific brand names not mentioned. No byline]
- Did You Know? - short color related fact and a "buzzword" - an
unusual vocabulary word, in this case: kaleidoscopie.
- AG Art Gallery – reader art.
- True Story – A 13-year-old reader tells how she painted a dog
mural on her grandmother’s fence, includes photos
- Creative Corner – covering a headband with embroidery floss –
single paragraph of directions, 51 words.
- Rainbow in Nature – reader poem
- Color Confusion – puzzle where reader matches unusual names for
colors (cerulean, saffron, onyx, etc) to graphics of crayons in that
color.
- Lunch Box – Making salads using items of different colors.
- Shining Star – a 12-year-old girl who makes and sells pink
crafts to raise money for breast cancer research.
- Contest – reader art – girls designed colorful outfits. [Next
contest – snowless snowmen]
- Heart to Heart – True Colors. Readers talk about what color they
would be if they were a color. [Next reader subject – holiday
birthdays]
- Friendship Matters – Red Faced. Embarrassing moments shared with
a friend.
Let’s Letter – tips for creating and using unusual lettering.
This is an excerpt from an American Girls book Letter Art 2.
Green Girls [Shannon Payette Seip – this is the first item
with a byline in this issue] Profiles three girls (12, 11, and 9] and
their involvement in ecological projects [One girl works as a junior
ranger during the summer, one girl got her school involved in projects
to save the manatee, and one girl got her school to put paper recycling
boxes next to all the classrooms.] The article also has eco-friendly
tips in the margins.
Why Are Jeans Blue? [Quiz] A trivia quiz about color – nine
items.
Color Your World – Fifty very brief suggestions for adding color
to your life including hairstyles, room décor (all diy and very
inexpensive) and clothing tips like tying ribbons to flip-flops and
using groups of colored ribbon as a belt.
Cooking – Colorful Cake – This recipe does have a “you will need”
section. Involves baking but tells reader to ask an adult for help using
the oven. Ingredients include boxed cake mix and canned frosting.
Ally Ackerman in the Pink [Kathleen O’Dell] Fiction. A girl who
hates pink gets a month-long visit with a pink-obsessed cousin. Themes
about both sharing and not bottling up your feelings until you blow.
Brainwaves – activities and puzzles. Finding things in pictures
and other picture puzzles. Word finds (since this is a shaped word-find
to match the magazine theme, I would guess it’s done in house and
consider only offering more unusual puzzles). Also color-related
sayings. And a riddle whose answer is found by coloring in color-coded
picture.
Mini-Mag – each issue of AG has a mini mag girls can make that
matches the issue.
Colorful poster pullout
Help! – advice column (girls ask about what to do about girls
making fun, siblings who break things, reaching goals, life with braces,
embarrassing parents, school stress, and losing a pet). Help columns in
tween magazines are great sources of age-appropriate conflict that could
turn into fiction ideas!

This page last updated on 01 May 2007
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