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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: 2008 ALA Awards, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 8 of 8
1. July 2016 Bartography Express: “Then my obsession with all-things-coyote began”: Maria Gianferrari & Bagram Ibatoulline’s new picture book

To get Bartography Express in your inbox each month — and to have a shot at the August giveaway of 88 Instruments, my new book with illustrator Louis Thomas — you can sign up on my home page.

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2. Review of the Day: Coyote Moon by Maria Gianferrari

CoyoteMoon1Coyote Moon
By Maria Gianferrari
Illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline
Roaring Brook Press (an imprint of Macmillan)
$17.99
ISBN: 978-1-62672-041-1
Ages 4-7
On shelves July 19th

I feel as if there was less nature out there when I was a kid. Crazy, right? But seriously, as I grew to be an adult I was appalled at the discovery that other people in the United States had to deal with stuff like ticks and chiggers and painful jellyfish and worse. Me? The worst encounter I ever had with something stinging or biting were a couple of sweat bees on my knuckles. But the critter that seemed the most impossible in terms of everyday encounters has been, and continues to be to this day (until the moment we come face-to-face) the coyote. Coyotes were always the heroes of Wild West tales of Native American folklore. They didn’t just wander into your Michigan backyard or anything . . . did they? Now, thanks to books like the beautiful Coyote Moon I learn that coyotes live in every American state except Hawaii. Best that I get as much information as possible about them then. Thankfully, I’ve lots of help. Maria Gianferrari and Bagram Ibatoulline ratchet up the realism to eleven, making it hard to walk away from this book without considering the modern coyote’s plight.

The sun has set and the moon is on the rise. What better time for a coyote momma to leave her den and search for tasty morsels for her kin? Slipping in and out of the shadows of a suburban neighborhood, the coyote attempts to secure a mouse, a rabbit, and even the eggs of Canadian geese, all to no avail. As the sun begins to rise in the east, however, the coyote smells, seas, and hears a flock of turkeys. There is no hemming or hawing now. Without another thought she secures a big one for her family. Of course, before she returns home, she howls. A potentially dangerous act to perform so close to humans, but fortunately the one person who hears her is the one person who understands why she would howl in the first place. Backmatter consists of Coyote Facts, Further Reading, and Websites.

CoyoteMoon2 copyThe book is not written in verse or rhyme, but there’s something inherently rhythmic to Ms. Gianferrari’s text. Listen to how she begins the book: “Moon rises, as Coyote wakes in her den, a hollow-out pine in a cemetery. Coyote crawls between roots. She sniffs the air, arches her back, shakes her fur.” That’s beautiful, that is. Gianferrari’s text is like that from start to finish and it all gets particularly interesting near the end. What an interesting choice it was to switch into the second person near the story’s end. “You open your window… You watch as Coyote slips under the fence painted pink by the sun.” Interesting too that the coyote gets her name capitalized throughout the story. She’s the heroine, no bones about it, and refusing to give her a name keeps her appropriately wild. Capitalizing the word “coyote”, however, gives just the slightest personal bent to an otherwise impersonal descriptive name.

Which brings us to the art. I’ve been a big time fan of artist Bagram Ibatoulline for years. He’s one of those artists that are so good he’ll never ever win any American illustration awards. Such people exist all the time and this is particularly true of artists who truck with realism. Ibatoulline’s challenge here is twofold. On the one hand, he has to render the coyote and her environment in a nighttime setting without sacrificing detail. On the other hand, without giving his character any anthropomorphized tendencies, he also needs to make her sympathetic in her quest to provide food for her babies. The end result is fascinating to watch. With the aid of a full moon, Ibatoulline believably provides just enough light to justify seeing every single solitary hair on the coyote mama’s pelt. Often her eyes are the most colorful things on the page, aided in part by the streetlights as well. He even manages to give the sky that odd pink/grey color it sometimes takes on thanks to light pollution. I don’t know that I’ve ever seen it so perfectly rendered in a picture book before. Then there’s his ability to accurately render the light of an early dawn. We see the light striking the trees, the day beginning on the houses, and silhouetted against the lake the mama coyote. And even then, every single hair on her head is present and accounted for. How does he do that?

CoyoteMoon3 copyI read almost every picture book I review to my kids at some point or another, and I’m glad that I do. Even after all these years, they have the ability to surprise me. For example, if you’d asked me if this were a tense or scary book in any way I’d have initially said no. Yet clearly the book is capable of touching a nerve. My staid stoic five-year-old daughter, who recently informed me that The Walking Dead couldn’t possibly be all that scary a show, was positively petrified by the image of the coyote making her first pounce. No wolf attacking Little Red Riding Hood has ever made such an impression on her as that shot. Fortunately, it’s almost as if Mr. Ibatoulline and Ms. Gianferrari anticipated this. As a parent I was able to smoothly flip back three pages and show the baby coyote cubs near the den and explain that this was their mama. The explanation went a far ways towards alleviating her anxiety. Later, when the coyote gets a big mouth of turkey, Ibatoulline frames the shot in such a way as to display minimal carnage. All you get is, on one page coyote’s face ending just under her nose and on the other the tail, drifting feathers indicating the turkey’s dire fate.

Some folks might make the argument that this book is clearly nonfiction, and you could see their point. If we take the heroine of this story to be an average coyote and not a single one, thereby making this an average situation and not a specific one, then combined with the backmatter (the copious “Coyote Facts” as well as the bibliography for both further reading and websites) you almost find yourself in nonfiction territory. So out of curiosity I decided to see how my library’s distributor, Baker & Taylor, characterized the book. Lo and behold, they call it straight up nonfiction, no bones about it. Personally, I don’t agree. For whatever reason, for all that the book is informative and interesting, I still found the storyline just a tad too fictionalized to count as a purely informational text. Why is this? Compare the book to Hungry Coyote by Cheryl Blackford. In both cases you have average coyote storylines, and both very realistic indeed. Gianferrari has the leg up in this case since her book has nonfiction backmatter, but in both cases I felt like I was hearing a story more than I was learning factual information. Certainly authors can do both, but at the end of the day it’s the librarians who’ll decide where to shelve the puppy. And for me, any picture book collection should be honored to receive this book.

After finishing Coyote Moon I truly believe I have a better sense of coyotes now, and not a moment too soon. Just the other day I was told that the house I’m currently renting is on a little street, dubbed by the neighbors “Coyote Way”. I was told not to be surprised if I see those cheerful souls walking down the road to their destination. And while I have no desire to get up close and personal with the clan, it would be cool to watch from my windows. So thank you, Ms. Gianferrari and Mr. Ibatoulline for giving me the confidence, courage, and curiosity to see this through. I have little doubt that those qualities, to a certain extent the very benchmarks of childhood itself, will resonate with curious young readers everywhere. Lots of younger kids love wolves. These coyotes are about to give those wolves a real run for their money. Beautiful work. Beautiful stuff.

On shelves July 19th.

Source: Galley sent from publisher for review.

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1 Comments on Review of the Day: Coyote Moon by Maria Gianferrari, last added: 6/17/2016
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3. 4. The Third Gift

Written by Linda Sue Park
Illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline
Houghton Mifflin, 2011
$16.99, ages 7-10, 32 pages

A father and son walk a desert collecting tears of sap for market, not yet knowing that the largest of those pearls will become a gift for a baby named Jesus.

In this evocative, masterfully painted story, Newbery Medalist Linda Sue Park joins with renowned illustrator Bagram Ibatoulline to weave a captivating tale about myrrh, the third gift given by the wise men to the Christ child.

Imagining a father teaching his son how to gather the treasured resin, Park describes the two walking with a basket, water-gourd and an ax across a landscape almost entirely of sandy rock to a grove of stunted and spiny trees.

The boy's father kneels by one of the gnarled trees "to see inside."  Gently, he feels the bark with his hands, and plucks off a leaf and sniffs, to determine whether its myrrh is ready to be harvested.

Finding a tree that is aged just right, he carefully selects a spot to wound, to cut a shallow X, so that the tree will weep. Then, making the cut, he watches as the sap bubbles up into a big tear.

After waiting for the tear's surface to dry into a shell, the father twists the resin off with his fingers and places it in their basket.

On this day, as the two are finishing their harvest, they see the biggest tear yet. It's the size of a hen's egg and the boy's father gives his son the honor of teasing it off.

This tear and the others will bring good money at the spice market. Some people will buy them for medicine or to flavor wine, but most will purchase them for embalming loved ones.

Two weeks pass and soon it's time for the spice market. As they arrive to sell their tears, they're ushered into a tent where three wise

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4. THE THIRD GIFT

THE THIRD GIFT, by Linda Sue Park, illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline (Clarion 2011)(ages 6+).  This elegant picture book tells the story of a boy learning his father's trade, of gathering an aromatic oleoresin called myrrh.  On one outing, he harvests an particularly fine sample, which is then sold at market to three men from the east.  They are, it seems, gathering gifts for a baby and already have gold and frankincense...

THE THIRD GIFT combines exceptional text and art to present a story of an ordinary boy's association with the third gift to the Christ child.  An author's note provides additional context and background.  A perfect Christmas gift and story for the ages.

3 Comments on THE THIRD GIFT, last added: 11/8/2011
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5. Review-Crow Call by Lois Lowry and illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline


Link for the book:
http://store.scholastic.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay_null_38682_-1_10052_10051

Publishers weekly Best Book of the year for 2009

Scholastic Press , 2009, 32 pages
Publishers state for ages 4+, Amazon states for ages 9-12. (I read this book to my 6 1/2 year old granddaughter and she loved this book--in my opinion I believe ages 9-12 is not accurate.

Other books by Lois Lowry:
Number The Stars, The Giver, The Willoubys, Gathering Blue, The Birthday Ball
She is the author of 30 books!

This book was borrowed from the library for the purpose of reading/reviewing...and treasuring.

The book I read is a hard back library edition. The front cover appears to be water color; created with warm golds, sepia and browns. A lone little girl named Lizzie is dressed in a mans shirt, and is gazing upwards in to a tree where a flock of crows have just flown away from. She is perfectly still, as if wanting to relish and soak in this precious moment. The pictures throughout the book display a cold and still morning outing between Lizzie and her father. The father has recently returned home from war, and he and Lizzie are warming up the bond between them that had been disjointed because of his absence. They are hunting crows that have and will destroy farmers crops. Liz is apprehensive about this; yet she wants to spend time with her father.
Great book! Timely for this period in our nations history with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
This would be a great book to read to children who need help understanding the strained relationships that happen during a war with the absences of children away from their parents.

Attention authors!!!!!
I feel that more books need to be written (minus any political beliefs) focusing on helping children and young adults deal with a parent coming home from war!

Blissful Reading!
Annette

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6. A Jane Yolen Celebration

In honor of Jane Yolen's 71st birthday and the 300+ books that she has written—winning awards for many—we are celebrating by sharing with you some of her more recent picture books and board books.

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7. Great Joy


Great Joy by Kate DiCamillo, illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline. 2007. Copy supplied by publisher, Candlewick.

The Plot:

Young Frances, preparing for a Christmas play, observes a monkey and organ grinder. Where do they go at night, she wonders? "Somewhere," her mother assures her. "Everyone goes somewhere." But Frances suspects this is not so.

The Good:

I think I have a new favorite illustrator. The illustrations, while in color, remind me of a 1940s movie; the mother, in particular, is right out of Miracle on 34th Street. There are other clues that it's set during or just after World War II: the cars and clothes, of course, but also the patriotic bunting, the framed photo of a man in uniform.

The ending is hopeful, rather than happy. The child invites the man and his monkey to the Christmas play; he comes, and the last two-page spread shows the organ grinder as part of the community. He and the mother are talking, as the monkey plays with the children.

The darkness in the story (the missing father, the organ grinder living on the streets, the family alone) is reinforced by the shades and shadows of the illustrations. This acknowledgement of the darkness in life is often found in DiCamillo books; to appreciate light, you need darkness; finding hope and joy means coming from a place with neither.

5 Comments on Great Joy, last added: 12/5/2009
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8. 2008 ALA Award Winners Announced: black cats, colorful world and more

I woke up early this morning, excited to check my computer for the winners of the 2008 ALA Awards. It’s always an exciting moment to find out who the winners are, after all the guessing game that surrounds the occasion, with books lovers of all ages making their own predictions for the medals. You can see the complete list of winners here.

My Colors, My WorldWe congratulate the authors and illustrators of all winning and honor books and, in particular, Yuyi Morales, for the Pura Belpré Illustrator Award she received for Los Gatos Black on Halloween, written by Marisa Montes (Holt) – Los Gatos Black was also a Belpré Author Honor book; and Maya Christina Gonzalez, for the Pura Belpré Illustrator Honor captured by My Colors, My World/Mis colores, mi mundo (Children’s Book Press), which she also wrote. My Name Is Gabito: The Life of Gabriel García Márquez/Me llamo Gabito: la vida de Gabriel García Márquez, illustrated by Raul Colón, written by Monica Brown (Luna Rising) has also received the Pura Belpré Honor, and deservedly so.

Keep your eyes peeled: Maya Christina Gonzalez’s gallery will be featured on the PaperTigers website as part of an upcoming update focusing on illustrators. Make sure to check the website tomorrow to see a sample of her award-winning work, including images from My Colors, My World.

0 Comments on 2008 ALA Award Winners Announced: black cats, colorful world and more as of 1/14/2008 11:23:00 AM
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