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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Morris Lessmore, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Friday Studio Links!

Today's tour will be all about links. So sit back, click, and follow some fun. In honor of the upcoming Caldecott Award announcement on Monday, I'm putting in my vote for favorite picture of 2012. It is The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore, by William Joyce.



Take a tour studio office space and the creative team Joyce has put together at:
Moonbot Studios

You'll find more Morris Lessmore here:
morrislessmore.com

Here you'll find an interview about the app.

You can read about the Academy Award winning short film version, and even watch the film's trailer  here.

Follow this link to see a few thumbnails and the creators of this story.

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2. Cybils App Organizer Interviews Author William Joyce

Morris bookThe organizer for the Cybils Book App category, Mary Ann Scheuer, just posted a fabulous interview on her blog with William Joyce, author of The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore. Mary Ann also shares a speech that William Joyce gave about his inspiration for the story, which is currently number one on the New York Times Bestselling Children's Picture Books list. The app version of the book was a shortlist title for the Cybils this year. 

Mary Ann says:

"I was so honored to be able to sit down with him and talk about the way new technologies like the iPad can be used to share stories with children.

Thank you to Bill Joyce, for sharing these stories with us and for taking the time to talk with me. Thank you to Simon and Schuster for arranging the interview. This interview was first shared on Katie Davis's fantastic podcast, Brain Burps About Books."

We hope that you'll take a few minutes to head over to Great Kid Books to listen. 

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3. And the Oscar Goes To… Children’s Lit!

Say what you will about the ceremony itself (I actually found it to be refreshingly tender and dignified, for the most part), Sunday night’s Academy Awards were a tribute to Oscar’s own medium – the history, customs, elders, and influence of cinema.  From the retro popcorn girls in the aisles and the live band in the balcony, to the themes of the films and the longevity of the careers that were saluted, Oscar celebrated his own crib and the significant contribution the film industry has made to our lives.

For many of us, though, there was another medium honored throughout a surprisingly large portion of the evening – children’s books.  Back in January, Publishers Weekly noted that 21 of the nominations were ‘nods for films based on kids books,’ specifically Hugo (11 nominations), War Horse (6), Harry Potter & the Deathly Hallows (3), and Tin Tin (1).

I would argue the number to be 24, if you count Puss in Boots, Jane Eyre (now widely considered to be a YA novel) and The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore, a children’s book app as well as a short film, that in and of itself celebrates books and reading.

This is great news for children’s book authors of all stripes (though it would have been nice – and politic – to hear Brian Selznick’s name mentioned at least once over the course of the evening’s 5 awards given to Hugo.)  It demonstrates the enduring appeal of stories for and about young people, from classic fairy tales, novels and comics to the richness of today’s middle grade and YA fiction and the exciting possibilities that new media represents for the entire genre.

But for me there was a subtler connection at play between the mediums of film and childrens literature on Sunday night.  The films on offer this year were notably less snarky, trendy or cynical than those of recent years. Those familiar Hollywood qualities were largely replaced by conscience, compassion and – dare I say it – hope.  What’s going on?  Even in the darkest realms of YA, these are the universal themes of childrens lit!

Whatever it is, I like it. Let’s hope it sticks around awhile… or at least for as long as some of Sunday night’s honorees have.

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4. Trailer Tuesday: The Hunger Pains, Fair Coin, and Bewitching


Before we get to the trailers, did any of you watch the Oscars Sunday night? The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore won for the best animated short film and rightly so. I had the pleasure of seeing this short on the big screen at the Detroit Institute of the Arts a couple weeks ago. It is a fantastic piece of animation and showcases how books truly do color our world.

You can watch the short for free here: http://www.theguardiansbooks.com/FlyingBooks/ for a limited time. I highly recommend it!

Now on to this week's trailers. We have hilarity, we have magical spells, we have enchanting coins. What more could you want?


The Hunger Pains by The Harvard Lampoon
Release Date: February 7, 2012
Click here to read or write reviews for this book.





Bewitching by Alex Flinn
Release Date: February 14, 2012
Click here to read or write reviews on this book.




Fair Coin by E.C. Myers
Release Date: March 6, 2012
Click here to read or write reviews on this book.

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