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1. Fusenews: Spring is here, spring is here / Life is skittles and life is beer

  • The weather!  She has warmed here in NYC!  The crocuses and daffodils and purple flowers that I can never identify are blooming in my front yard.  The birds are singing and there are buds on the trees.  Tis spring spring spring!  To celebrate, we begin today with a poetic celebration of baseball (a very spring thing) written by none other than my father.  You may have known that my mother was talented in this manner.  So too mon pere.  Enjoy!
  • News That Did Not Make a Sufficient Splash in America: How is it that we are not ALL aware that over in Bologna the small Brooklyn publisher Enchanted Lion Books won the prize for Best Children’s Publisher of the Year in the U.S. category?  I do not recall seeing this in my PW Children’s Bookshelf (though perhaps I missed it) nor on my tweets.  Come on, people!  Big time honor here and it couldn’t have gone to a nicer company.  Well done!
  • There are few things the British like more than rereleasing new Harry Potter covers.  They just revealed the new Jim Kay cover and while it does resemble some of the European covers I’ve seen, I think it is the very first time I’ve ever seen a hog associated in any way with Hogwarts.

Harry’s hair is actually messy!  And here is a nice interview with the artist in question.

  • I say this in all sincerity: The Bay Area Children’s Theatre may be the coolest theater of all time.  Yes, I love the New Victory Theatre in here NYC and my heart will always have a soft spot for Children’s Theatre Company of Minneapolis, but check out this upcoming season.  It was Rickshaw Girl that drilled it all home for me.  Rickshaw Girl!  That would work brilliantly on the stage.
  • This one’s interesting.  There’s an extension (I think they’re called extensions, though I’m a little hazy on that point) that once installed on your computer allows you to browse Amazon.com and see the availability of the items there in your local library.  The applications, should they get out, could be enormous.  Using an online retailer to search your local library (which could be useful if your library’s search engine is archaic).  Curious how people feel about this one.  It’s called Library Extension.
  • We’ve seen books written by children reach various levels of popularity over the years.  Swordbird, Eragon, She Was Nice to Mice, etc.  And we’ve seen celebrity children’s books flood our shelves whether we want them or not.  Now the two have come together with an upcoming release and it’s . . . um . . . well, it’s kind of the ULTIMATE celebrity child author of all time.  This I’ll pass on, though.
  • What kinds of children’s books would you like to see?  Where are your pet personal gaps?  Marc Aronson begins the conversation.
  • Daily Image:

I don’t usually show tweets that amuse me, but this one had me laughing aloud in public for days.

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4 Comments on Fusenews: Spring is here, spring is here / Life is skittles and life is beer, last added: 4/15/2015
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2. Susan Elizabeth Phillips’ thoughts on reading The Boxcar Children

The Boxcar Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner, the first book in the series, has come to life in the animated film, “The Boxcar Children,” with voice actors Joey King, Mackenzie Foy, Zachary Gordon, and Jaden Sand.  Directors include Daniel Chuba and Mark A. Z. Dippé. It’s now on sale wherever DVDs are sold!

Boxcar DVD cover

Susan Elizabeth Phillips, a New York Times Bestselling author of over twenty novels, writes about how reading The Boxcar Children as a young girl helped shape her love of reading for pleasure:

The Boxcar Children is the book that changed my life. An exaggeration? Nope. Cross my heart. I was seven years old and in second grade. Learning to read had been a terrible struggle for me, and my seven-year-old brain could not comprehend reading for pleasure. And then Mrs. Martin began reading The Boxcar Children to the class at the end of each school day.

BC cover 51DMhV03xGL__SY344_BO1,204,203,200_

I was enraptured with the story from the first page, and to this day, I remember the sick feeling in my stomach when the school bell rang, and Mrs. Martin closed the book—the story UNFINISHED. Then, the agonizing wait through the next day for the magical moment—would it ever arrive?—when she would open the book again.

After that introduction, how could I not beg my mother—not that it took much begging—to take me to the library to get Surprise Island. And then The Yellow House Mystery. My lifelong love of reading had begun.

herosaremyweakness

Phillips’ newest book Heroes Are My Weakness is on sale everywhere that books are sold beginning on August 26th. You can visit her website; follow her on Twitter, and like her Facebook page.


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3. Top 100 Children’s Novels Poll #99: The Boxcar Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner

#99 The Boxcar Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner (1942)
19 points

If there is a shining example of a book considered a classic in spite of the fact that it has garnered no awards, my vote would go for Warner’s ultimate kids-living-on-their-own story. When I was a child I spent a frightening amount of time writing stories about independent children who were orphaned by various horrible means. Looking back, I suspect that my influence at the time had to be Ms. Warner. Yet you will not find her books mentioned in Louise Seaman Bechtel’s Books in Search of Children, Anita Silvey’s Children’s Books and Their Creators or even The Essential Guide to Children’s Books and Their CreatorsMinders of Make-Believe by Leonard Marcus makes no mention of it nor does Gertrude Chandler Warner have an entry in the 1971 edition of The Who’s Who of Children’s Literature, compiled and edited by Brian Doyle.  Finally, pick up a copy of your New York Times Parent’s Guide to the Best Books for Children by Eden Ross Lipson.  Nope.  Not there either.  Heck, nobody even sent me a quote of the reason they liked this book.

The reasons for this are manifold but one problem may be the fact that you are dealing with the titular book in what would later become a series.  Many is the library system that carries the Boxcar Children series but not that many kids know that the series had a single book begin it all that acted as a starting point.

The plot as described by Wikipedia says: “Originally published in 1924 by Rand McNally and reissued in 1942, the novel The Boxcar Children, tells the story of four orphaned children, Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny. They get permission to stay overnight at a bakery but run away when they hear the baker’s wife say she will keep the older three and send the youngest, Benny, to an orphanage. They create a home for themselves in an abandoned boxcar in the forest. They fear their legal guardian, their grandfather, believing him to be cruel. They enjoy their freedom, but need to seek help when Violet becomes ill. They eventually meet their grandfather, James Alden, who is a kind and wealthy man. The children agree to live with him. James moves the beloved boxcar to his backyard so the children can use it as a playhouse. In the subsequent books, the children encounter many adventures and mysteries in their neighborhood or at the locations they visit with their grandfather.”

Who defends it?  Well me, for one. I have vivid memories of the book, having had it read to me in school.  Cleaning the silverware.  Hiding from the authorities.  It was simultaneously gripping and comforting all at once.  Add to that the fact that it’s not every book that lasts from 1924 onwards.

Lest you forget, a prequel to the series as written by Patricia MacLachlan called The Boxcar Children Beginning is due out this coming September.

  • You can learn more about Ms. Warner here.
  • And you can download an activity guide here.

In terms of covers, it seems fitting to show a special 60th anniversary edition that was released

7 Comments on Top 100 Children’s Novels Poll #99: The Boxcar Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner, last added: 5/15/2012

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4. Guest Post: Inside The Zombie Project!

by Anastasia Suen

Whenever I visit schools the children always ask, “Where do you get your ideas?” It’s one of my most frequently asked questions. They always seem surprised when I say that ideas are everywhere. I find ideas at home, in school, and in books, magazines, and newspapers. I also find them on the television and the internet. There is always something interesting that can be used in a story. So what did I use in this story? The clues are on the cover….

I love how the cover of my first Boxcar Children Mystery tells the story at a glance. You see the four Aldens working together. It’s a classic Boxcar Children moment! That’s why I loved these books as a child. The Aldens don’t sit around worrying – they make things happen! What are they up to this time? The title is our first clue…this book is called The Zombie Project.

Zombies?

Why did I choose a zombie for this book? Zombies are scary, but not too scary. After all they walk slowly, so you can get away…usually! It’s the chance that you might not escape that makes it interesting. Furthermore, zombies are dead, but they’re not. They’re “undead.” Zombies used to be people like us, but now they’re trapped between life and death because of voodoo or some sort of nasty virus. So they look like us, but not quite. Instead, they’re all gory and disgusting, making them the perfect bad guy for a mystery. If you look closely at the cover, you can see the zombie walking past the river.

Things that go bump in the night

You can see a cabin in the woods on the book cover, too. It’s right behind the zombie. I’ve never seen a zombie up close, thank goodness, but I do know about camping and staying in cabins in the woods. It’s so nice to get away from the lights of the city and see all the stars at night. Oh, but those noises…those strange noises in the woods…they can keep you awake at night. Who is really out there?

Our family has had some interesting experiences camping in the woods. One night in the middle of a thunderstorm, we heard a loud cracking sound. It was a massive lightning strike, one that shut off the cabin’s power for hours. As Snoopy would say, “It was a dark and stormy night.”

Another night we heard a noise outside the cabin and when we looked out the window, it was a bear! A young bear was wandering around knocking over trash cans looking for something to eat. There was nothing to eat in our trash can, so it moved on.

Fishing

On the book cover you can also see Henry holding a fishing pole and a bucket. The Aldens aren’t just fishing for clues; they’re fishing in the water. This is something that our family always does whenever we go camping in the woods. Fishing is a must.

My father taught me to fish when I was Benny’s age. I learned how to fish in the river, just like the Alden children do in this book. When my children were young, we taught them how to fish, too. It can be hard to sit there quietly and wait, but when you feel that tug on your pole, ah, sweet reward.

A campfire

There’s nothing like eating a freshly caught fish cooked over a campfire. Yum! Cooking over an open flame makes the food so tasty. Later, as the fire dwindles down, it’s time for campfire stories. The sun has set, so the woods all around you are dark…and then someone tells a scary story. It’s a campfire tradition.

It is by the campfire that Henry, Jessie, Violet and Benny find out more about the Legend of the Winding River Zombie. They know the story isn’t true, it can’t be. Everyone knows that zombies aren’t real.

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5. Guest Blog: Author Susan Grigsby

by Susan Grigsby

Susan Grigsby, author of In the Garden with Dr. Carver, spent the weekend at the Museum of Transportation in St. Louis. She had a wonderful (and windy) experience sharing her enthusiasm for George Washington Carver with the kids.

This past weekend, the Museum of Transportation in St. Louis, MO hosted their second annual Train your Brain – Read! event.  In addition to all of their regular attractions, the sprawling grounds filled for two days with entertainment for all ages, including car shows and craft tents.  All of the children’s activities were connected to books, including (by a wonderful coincidence) The Boxcar Children series. 

This was the first big outdoor festival of this nature that I’d been invited to and it was great fun.  In the Garden with Dr. Carver is my first children’s book and I learned a lot by participating in this festival.  My new Author Visit motto is “Lean into the Wind!”  So, here’s some of what I learned:

  • The weekend prior to the festival, it snowed four inches.  The weekend of the festival, it was 91 degrees and the winds gusted to 44 miles per hour.  We could have moved inside, but that would have meant giving up a highly visible spot at the entrance gate.  The tent had to come down, but thanks to the assistance of a wonderful museum employee named Jamie, we stayed outside and not a single crayon or paper escaped.  We used lots of rocks, dried beans (in the crayon cups), ribbon, and some very snazzy party table weights that Jamie found hiding in a museum closet.  Lesson learned: be flexible and creative, and gracefully give up on your hair staying anywhere near where you’d like it to be.  Bonus:  Kids love a table full of rocks and snazzy glittery party weights!
  • Find a connection to the festival you’re attending.   When we first met, the museum director noticed the Jesup Wagon in the book.  So, we decided to feature Dr. Carver’s moveable school.  I made a huge poster which we lassoed down and it drew people that might otherwise not have stopped by.  The photos covered the transportation modes of the moveable school over several decades and the old photos caused many to stop and talk about their memories of those times. 
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6. Boxcar Children’ Prequel Planned for 2012

Newbery Award winner Patricia MacLachlan (pictured, via) has signed up with Albert Whitman & Company to write a prequel for Gertrude Chandler Warner‘s popular kidlit series, The Boxcar Children.

The not-yet-titled project will be released in September 2012 for the 70-year anniversary of the book’s debut. An eBook version will be published simultaneously from Open Road Integrated Media.

MacLane gave this quote in the press release: “Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny are kind to one another and embody the true sense of family. They are resourceful and positive. I find them both true children and true heroes at the same time. It occurs to me that perhaps their parents were the same. I’m looking forward to exploring that idea and more.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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7. Adventures in Boxcar Land

Maybe you’ve just read about our plans to publish a Boxcar Children prequel written by Patricia MacLachlan. It goes without saying that we’re excited—after all, the world of that very first book is so enchanting that we’re looking forward to having Patricia return to that world and explore how it all began for the fictional Alden children.

It’s also exciting to explore where it all began in real life, too. Which is why we picked Putnam, Connecticut, the hometown of Gertrude Chandler Warner, as a place to meet Patricia earlier this week. Josalyn and Michelle have visited Putnam and the Gertrude Chandler Warner Museum (housed in a boxcar!) in the past year, but this was my very first visit.

I flew into Providence, Rhode Island, on Monday morning and drove woodsy two-lane highways all the way to Putnam. The museum doesn’t have a formal address, but I followed the GPS directions to a nearby business and was able to spot the boxcar —right across the tracks from the old railroad station!

Only one set of tracks runs by the boxcar now.  When Gertrude Chandler Warner was a young girl, there were at least six tracks here. She lived just up the street and used to stand on a ridge a few hundred yards from this spot and watch the trains go by.

After taking artsy pictures of the boxcar I wandered around town a bit and then met up with the director and the founder of the museum, Barbara and Fred.  They took me on a tour of places where Gertrude lived, taught school, and went to church.  One of my favorite spots was her grandfather’s house.

Gertrude wrote her first stories for Grandfather Carpenter, who lived a few miles outside of town. I’ve always imagined Grandfather Alden’s house looking like this.

That night we had dinner at The Courthouse Restaurant (in the building where Gertrude’s father served as a judge!), and in the morning I drove back over to the Boxcar to meet Patricia for the first time. Although the museum doesn’t open for the season until May, Barbara and Fred let me explore the inside, full of photos, memorabilia, and displays inspired by the book.

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8. China’s Visit Brought Trade Opportunities

Recently, a frozen Chicago welcomed a delegation of over 400 Chinese business owners which traveled with Chinese President Hu Jintao.  This U.S.-China Trade and Economic Cooperation Forum was co-organized by The Chicago Council on Global Affairs and China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Machinery and Electronic Products (CCCME).  The event was held at the Chicago Hilton and Towers and highlighted the business relationship between the two countries.  The program was opened by honorable guests including Chen Deming – Chinese Commerce Minister, Gary Locke – US Department of Commerce Secretary, and Pat Quinn – Illinois Governor.

US-China Economic and Trade Cooperation Forum

Prior to several panel discussions focusing on various trade topics, a ceremony for contract signings took place between multiple Midwestern based companies and their Chinese partners.  Due to the large number of contracts being signed, this portion of ceremony was broken down into five sections, grouped by the respective industries.  The main industries were agriculture, energy, and machinery.  Companies such as Caterpillar and Cargill, which are experiencing steady grown in the Chinese market, are optimistic about expanding this success in the years to come.    

Chinese Commerce Minister - Chen Deming's Opening Remarks

As a representative of the Chicago publishing industry, it was very timely for Albert Whitman & Company to attend this forum, as part of our growth strategy is to grow our international business.  We are currently finalizing a partnership with a Chinese publisher to publish the Chinese language of The Boxcar Children© Mystery series in China.

Another sign of good Chinese – Chicago relations? — Did you know that Chicago has two sister cities in China – Shanghai and Shenyang?


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9. Digital Adventures of the Boxcar Children

You may have seen the big news: a few weeks ago, just in time for the 2010 Christmas season, the first 19 books of the Boxcar Children Mysteries became available as ebooks, thanks to our partnership with the digital content company Open Road Media.

The digital transition has come with some memorable moments—won’t forget the little rush of excitement I felt when I reviewed the ebook files just before the launch and saw, for the first time, the classic L. Kate Deal silhouette art of Book 1 appearing on an iPad. And when I spot-checked the Kindle previews I had to keep myself from getting too absorbed with the storylines of Surprise Island and The Yellow House Mystery to do my job. They weren’t just “digital files”—they were books.

Then there’s the bonus material that the folks at Open Road have created for the launch. This fall, a film crew visited Putnam, Connecticut, Getrude Chandler Warner’s Home town, to shoot footage of the Warner museum (housed in a boxcar!) and interview museum volunteers and Ms. Warner’s former students. The film clips accompany the box set of the first 19 Boxcar Children ebooks, and there’s a wonderful preview on the Open Road Site. On Barnes & Noble’s Unabashedly Bookish blog, Rachel Chou of Open Road shares her experiences of the Putnam visit along with some photos of the museum.

(For even more pictures of the museum, see Josalyn’s account of her trip here on the Whitman blog.)

More Boxcar ebook titles will become available in 2011, so stay tuned!

Exterior of the boxcar (before it's recent paint job)



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10. The Boxcar Children Bookshelf: A Photoshoot and Special Offer

We decided last summer to create a new Boxcar Children corrugated display. This one would be smaller and easier to ship, but also more durable than previous displays. The display includes paperback editions of the first 12 titles in the series, as well as a bookmark (with checklist), poster, and activities. In addition to created these materials (Thanks, Nick!), we also needed descriptive copy for side of the display (removable), so that parents and grandparents could see what the display would like like all set-up.

What we really needed were some cute kids — and stat! We had an amazing day when Lauren and Brian came to the offices for a photo shoot. They worked really hard and we got some great shots.

Of course, Albert Whitman staffers lingered around the shoot all morning – providing unsolicited advice and entertaining the kids between takes.

The Bookshelf is now available for sale in many major online and brick-and-mortor retailers. We’re also offering 20% off and free shipping on our website (use Promo Code: 2010BXS).

Just visit our homepage for more details.


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11. AWC Podcast Series: Ghostwriting and a Pumpkin Head
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By: Melissa Ackerman, on 11/3/2010
Blog: Albert Whitman & Company Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:  pumpkin head, The Boxcar Children, Children's Book Publishing, Author Podcast, Boxcar Children, ghost writing, theresa golding, Add a tag

We would like to expand upon last week’s podcast topic, ghostwriting, and here with us is Boxcar Children ghostwriter Theresa Golding to give us more insights into how she spins new stories for the eighty-plus-year-old-series.  Click below to listen to our conversation.

 

In addition to ghostwriting The Pumpkin Head Mystery and The Vampire Mystery for The Boxcar Children series, Theresa Golding is the author of including such books as Abby’s Asthma and the Big Race, Memorial Day Surprise, Kat’s Surrender, The Secret Within, The Truth About Twelve, and Niner.

Her books have been nominated for and received numerous honors including The Mark Twain Award, The Rhode Island Teen Book Award, The Georgia Book Award, VOYA Top Shelf Fiction, Society of School Librarians International Honor Book, PA State Library Association Top Forty Fiction, Keystone State Reading Award, YALSA 2009 Best Books for Young Adults, and Kansas State Reading Circle Recommended Reading.


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12. AWC Podcast Series: Ghostwriting The Boxcar Children
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By: Melissa Ackerman, on 10/27/2010
Blog: Albert Whitman & Company Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:  The Boxcar Children, Author Podcast, cupcake caper, children's books, rhody cohon, stacia deutsch, Publishing, Add a tag

Today we are talking with Stacia Deutsch and Rhody Cohon, the ghostwriters behind many of The Boxcar Children books, including the recent Cupcake Caper. We talk about the rewards of writing characters for long-running series, screenplays of upcoming blockbusters, and cupcakes (as well as a certain secret ingredient that is so secret you’ll just have to find out when you read the book).  Click below to listen.

 

Stacia Deutsch and Rhody Cohon are the #1 New York Times best-selling co-authors of more than thirty children’s books. In addition to their award winning creative chapter book series entitled, BLAST TO THE PAST (Simon and Schuster), Stacia and Rhody have also published non-fiction texts, a young adult romantic comedy calledIN THE STARS (Simon and Schuster), and HOT PURSUIT, a civil rights story (Kar-Ben/Lerner). Their works have won them the Teacher’s Choice Award, the Arizona Glyph, and a SCRIBE award. Stacia and Rhody have also written several licensed properties, including NANCY DREW AND THE CLUE CREW (Simon and Schuster) and THE BOXCAR CHILDREN (Albert Whitman).  They have also written junior movie tie in novels for summer blockbuster films, including BATMAN, THE DARK KNIGHT(HarperCollins) and CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS (Simon and Schuster).  Stacia Deutsch, an ordained rabbi, lives in Irvine, California with her three children. Rhody Cohon, a college math teacher, lives with her three children in Tucson, Arizona. They talk on the phone a hundred times a day.

 


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13. Ask Gertrude Chandler Warner: How old are those Alden kids, anyway?
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By: Wendy in Editorial, on 9/2/2010
Blog: Albert Whitman & Company Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:  Book News, Albert Whitman history, The Boxcar Children, Add a tag

Gertrude Chandler Warner

Gertrude Chandler Warner, author of The Boxcar Children books, passed away in 1979, when she was nearly 90 years old, but we often still get mail for her from Boxcar fans.  In this occasional blog feature, we’ll answer frequently asked fan questions, such as…

Q: How old are Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny Alden?

It sounds like an easy question, but you’d be surprised at how complicated it gets. See, in The Boxcar Children, the very first book, Henry is fourteen, Jessie is twelve, Violet is ten, and Benny is five.

But well, he’s only five until he has his birthday in Surprise Island, the second book in the series. And when you get to Book #8, Lighthouse Mystery, you’ll noticed that Henry is about to go off to college. By Book #19, Benny Uncovers a Mystery, Benny is working a summer job in a department store. But if you crack open Book #20 and check the children’s ages, it will tell you that Henry is fourteen, Jessie is twelve, Violet is ten, and Benny is… six.

So what gives? Is Henry one of those genius kids who goes off to college early? Is Benny breaking child labor laws? Why are the Aldens older in the early book in the series and younger in the later books? You can see how all this leads to further questions. Are the Aldens shape-shifters? Or maybe vampires? Could the uranium mines at Aunt Jane’s Mystery Ranch have something to do with all this?!

If Gertrude were here, she would tell you to calm down. If there’s one thing the Boxcar Children can teach us, it’s that anything that seems spooky and weird has a perfectly reasonable explanation!  In the first 19 books in the series, the Aldens gradually grow older. After Gertrude Warner passed away in 1979 (just a few years after Benny Uncovers a Mystery was published) there were no new books in the Boxcar Children series for many years. In the 199os, though, the Aldens returned in a big way with new stories. We realized that most people remember the first books the most, so for these new adventures it was decided that the Aldens should stay the same age as they were in that earliest book.  After all, it’s hard to solve mysteries when you have college midterms.

So yes, it’s a little confusing, but when you read the books, it’s clear that the Boxcar Children are really ageless. No matter how old they are, they’re always wise beyond their years.


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14. Search for Boxcars
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By: Melissa Ackerman, on 8/30/2010
Blog: Albert Whitman & Company Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:  Gertrude Chandler Warner, classroom photographs, Children's Books, The Boxcar Children, Add a tag

I loved reading The Boxcar Children so much that I once created a shoebox diorama version of my own boxcar, chock full of pine-needle beds and a swimming hole outside the car.  Unfortunately the diorama did not withstand the test of time.

Fortunately, however, this little gem has. Last fall we came across this photo of a Bloomington, Indiana classroom’s real-life interpretation of Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny’s boxcar home.

So we are wondering, do you have any boxcar photos??  We would love to see all the dioramas, life-size boxcars, every and any interpretation, large or small.  Send them to us at [email protected] or link them to our Boxcar Children Facebook page.

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15. Teachingbooks.net (Or, My Life as Gertrude)
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By: Wendy in Editorial, on 8/2/2010
Blog: Albert Whitman & Company Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:  Book News, Other Sites, Miscellaneous, Resources, audio, The Boxcar Children, TeachingBooks.net, Gertrude Chandler Warner, Add a tag

If you read about my recent trip, you’ll remember it included all kinds of  author encounters, both real and imaginary.  Not only did I meet living writers (which of course is part of my job), but I also got to talk with a couple of impersonators of classic children’s book authors (namely, Laura and Maud). But what about Gertrude? Who stands in for the late author of the Boxcar Children books when readers want to find out more about her?

Cool!

Well, I do. No, I don’t dress up as Gertrude Chandler Warner (though I would love an excuse to get some glasses like hers.) But in my years as an editor on the Boxcar Children Mysteries, I’ve answered fan letters written to Ms. Warner, ghostwritten stories under her “created by” byline, and even visited a third grade class via Skype to talk about the Boxcar books.

One of my favorite “playing Gertrude” moments happened recently for TeachingBooks.net, a multimedia company that offers audio excerpts of children’s and YA books for use in the classroom. While the audio clips are often recorded by the books’ authors themselves, this wasn’t possible in Ms. Warner’s case, so the job of reading aloud a few pages from The Boxcar Children fell to me.

Luckily I love doing this sort of thing (weird fact: I am the voice of Albert Whitman & Company’s automated phone system!), and thus spent an afternoon in June on the phone with the TeachingBooks studio technicans to make the recording. I tripped up a few times (“Henry—I mean, Benny!”), but the audio techs managed to edit out my flubs. Finally, a few weeks ago, Danika from TB emailed me the links to the audio files and invited me to share them as a free sample of TeachingBooks.net’s services:

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16. Ask Gertrude Chandler Warner
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By: Wendy in Editorial, on 7/27/2010
Blog: Albert Whitman & Company Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Gertrude Chandler Warner

Gertrude Chandler Warner, author of The Boxcar Children books, passed away in 1979, when she was nearly 90 years old, but we often still get mail for her from Boxcar fans.  In this occasional blog feature, we’ll answer frequently asked fan questions, such as…

Q: How old were you when you wrote your very first book, Gertrude?

Kids love to ask this question, and there’s more than one way to answer it:

1.) She was nine! In 1900 she wrote a story about going to the zoo, which she illustrated and gave to her grandfather as a Christmas present. Her subsequent childhood efforts include a story called The Mumps and another called 13230 Gold Dollars (best title ever!).

2.)  She was twenty-six! In 1916 she published The House of Delight with Pilgrim Press in Boston, a book about her childhood dollhouse, complete with photos. You can see the cover here, and a closer look here. Only a thousand copies were ever printed, which makes the book extremely rare. Today an intact copy of The House of Delight is no doubt worth a lot, maybe even 13230 gold dollars.

3.) She was fifty-two! In 1942, the version of the The Boxcar Children that we all know and love was first published, after Gertrude had spent years reading the story to her elementary school students. For most kids today, The Boxcar Children probably seems like Gertrude Chandler Warner’s first book, since it’s the first of her books that they read. But of course there’s always more to the story, and more than one way to answer a question.

Answers come from the book Gertrude Chandler Warner and the Boxcar Children, by Mary Ellen Ellsworth.


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17. : WILD :
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By: Ginger*:)*, on 1/7/2008
Blog: Picture Bookies Showcase (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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18. Happy Holidays!
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By: Wendy in Editorial, on 12/20/2007
Blog: Albert Whitman & Company Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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The past month seems to have gotten away from us here at Uncle Albert. We’ve been so busy making books; books and, ahem, gingerbread cookies. But we’ll be back with more frequent updates in the new year. Here’s a little holiday greeting from Robert Papp, our Boxcar Children illustrator. Merry Christmas from the Alden children and from all of us here at Albert Whitmam!

(Can you guess which one is Violet?)

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19. ILLUSTRATION FRIDAY ~ ZOO
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By: Ginger Nielson, on 11/24/2007
Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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From an interior spread for the book I just illustrated and now available from Stagger Lee Books "Song For A Giraffe"
It took almost a year to complete the illustrations for this book and this image is actually much larger as the giraffe and the text for this spread aren't included here. The research was one of the best parts of the whole experience. I learned so much!
©Ginger Nielson2007
PS... if you want to hear what the animals are singing, just go to my PROFILE section on this blog and play the Audio Clip.

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20. Flying Hippo
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By: rick winward, on 11/20/2007
Blog: Sugar Frosted Goodness (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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We've started to listen to Christmas music at our house. My kids love the song "I want a hippopotamus for Christmas" That is where this idea came from.
When I was a kid I didn't want a hippopotamus for Christmas, but a flying one might have changed my mind.

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21. Song for A Giraffe
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By: Ginger Nielson, on 11/5/2007
Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I received the first few copies of the book I illustrated for Stagger Lee Books in the mail today. I was delighted to see that the colors transmitted with very little change from my originals to the printed copies. The book will be available in 2008, but I will share a few images with you from time to time until then.

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22. ILLUSTRATION FRIDAY~Discovery
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By: Ginger Nielson, on 7/13/2007
Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Isn't everything you can discover at the Zoo... a wonderful thing! It really doesn't matter which side of the fence you are on either.


©Ginger Nielson 2007

Your comments below are truly appreciated, or you can Email Me ~ at
Ginger*:)

25 Comments on ILLUSTRATION FRIDAY~Discovery, last added: 7/20/2007
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