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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: melvin burgess, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Are you #Borntowrite?


Save the Children have teamed up with author Melvin Burgess to bring the first ever charity-run blogging conference. The event takes place in London on Saturday 26th February, and will be packed with exciting workshops and multi-media training sessions, and a keynote speech by Melvin Burgess, award winning children’s author, about the power of the written word.




Save the Children have launched their biggest ever campaign No Child Born to Die to stop millions of children from dying from preventable illnesses such as diarrhoea and pneumonia.

Save the Children is urging the the public to think of their individual talents or 'what they are born to do', and to use that to help save children’s lives.

The #Borntowrite blogging conference is aimed at inspiring bloggers, the increasingly powerful army of online commentators, to take part in their campaign by doing what they do best, and help spread the word.

Their keynote speaker is Melvin Burgess, one of today’s most controversial children’s authors.

 Melvin Burgess, said:
Of all skills, being able to write well is perhaps the most fundamental today. It is something that has only increased in importance in the digital age. All stories, all reportage, nearly all thought-out communications begin with the written word, and the ability to communicate well. Not just our thoughts but our feelings, beliefs and passions, are the first thing anyone wanting to participate in this society at any level needs to learn.


Win a masterclass with Melvin Burgess

Melvin Burgess, best selling author of Junk, has recently returned from a trip to the Congo with Save the Children.

Win this fantastic opportunity to learn some top writing tips from one of the UK's best selling authors.

To win a place

To celebrate Save The Children's campaign, No child born to die, write a blog post about what you were born to do and why.
It could be that you think you were born to travel and want to write about a recent trip or holiday experience. Or maybe you were born to blog – in which case you could submit your favourite blog post to date.
It’s very open to interpretation – so flex those creative muscles and get writing

There are eight places on the masterclass to be won and it will be judged by Melvin Burgess.

Limited spaces are available and bloggers are urged to apply online for a free space at the conference. Bloggers from all areas are invited and sessions on the day will include something for everyone.

Register online<

1 Comments on Are you #Borntowrite?, last added: 2/15/2011
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2. Neil Gaiman Experiments with Twitter Fiction

Neil Gaiman and Melvin Burgess are the latest authors to explore the potential of storytelling in 140-word bursts. Check it out here.

       

0 Comments on Neil Gaiman Experiments with Twitter Fiction as of 12/3/2009 3:56:00 PM
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3. Great YA lit for guys - it really exists!!!


After all this time, it looks like I may be the last blogger for this course - what a ride it has been. In the two years that I have been working in children’s and youth services at a public library, I have managed to read a number of great books for guys. When I took the job, I was dreading actually having to read YA stuff so that I could be “in tune” with our core users; I was used to reading adult mysteries and lawyer novels and didn’t think that I would find anything of interest in the YA library. Well, I was wrong!

My first discovery was Scott Pilgrim, the Canadian manga created by Bryan Lee O’Malley. I had seen hundreds of these digest-sized manga books when I worked on the adult Circulation desk, but I figured it was just a fad, like Pokemon and Teletubbies. One of the first journals I looked at in my role as a youth librarian was a best comics of the year for 2006, and that is where I first heard of Scott Pilgrim. In the brief snippet I read, I noticed Scott wearing a Plumtree t-shirt, and I was stunned - a friend of mine from high school had actually moved to Halifax because he was obsessed with Plumtree (especially their lead singer). I took this as a sign and proceeded to purchase all of the Scott Pilgrim books for our collection. Needless to say, these are highly recommended by me, especially if you are into the whole indie rock scene in Canada, or just want to see a skinny slacker have to beat-up his girlfriend’s 7 evil exes to win her heart (it all makes sense when you read the books - the fifth in the series is coming out in February of ‘09).

Another thing that initially irked me about reading YA lit was that I was going to have to temper my expectations for books with lots of sex (we’re all adults here, so we can be honest, right). Boy, was I wrong about this! When I was in high school (wayyyy back in the 80’s, man), the YA books we had to read were tame to the point of “zzzzzzz”. Now, I find myself recommending modern YA books to friends my age because they are edgy and the sex in these books is often as racy as what you would find in an adult novel. One very intriguing novel in this vein is Boy Toy by Barry Lyga. In it, the main character, Josh, is forced to face his demons of five years past when an old girlfriend tries to re-enter his life and his old teacher/ex-lover is released from jail (I’ll let you guess why she was in jail, but remember, this is a YA novel, so the main character is in HIGH SCHOOL). I admit I picked it up because it sounded kind of interesting/kinky, but it was one of those books that you just can’t put down, and I found myself staying up late for a couple of nights so I could find out what happened. A truly compelling read, and I also recommend Lyga’s other novels, The Astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl and Hero Type.

I know that there are many novels that deal with teenagers having disablilities and they go on some sort of quest to prove something, and they meet up with a crochety senior citizen who teaches them all sorts of life lessons and then the obvious happens and we all puke - well, I was sure that Mary Hershey’s The One Where The Kid Nearly Jumps To His Death and Lands in California was going to be one of those books, but I have to admit I very nearly shed a tear at the end (I didn’t really - it just sounds better if I say I did).  The main character, Stump, has a prosthetic limb (hence the name Stump) and is sent to stay with his estranged father in California for the summer. Of course, Stump would rather be anywhere but with his father, but he endures, learns how to swim competitively from a salty old high school swim coach, and has a near-fatal episode swimming in the ocean, but all is well in the end. It might be a little sappy and old-fashioned, but it had me hooked right away and should also hook many a guy-reader looking for something a little different.

So, if you end up working in a YA library and you see a guy in there looking for something to read and he looks like he is about to pick-up an old standby like Hatchet or Lord of the Flies, slap his hand and tell him to put it down and give him one of the books mentioned above. You’ll be doing him a favour!

Some other recommendations that I’ve read (or I’ve heard are great for guys):

  • An Abundance of Katherines by John Green (it kinda lags in the middle, but the ending was great)
  • Notes From the Teenage Underground by Simmone Howell (lots of YA lit comes from Australia, as does this one - very insightful for guys who might want to learn about how girls really treat each other when they’re supposedly best friends)
  • Notes From the Midnight Driver by Jordan Sonnenblick (it has the same basic plot as the Mary Hershey book, but is a great read, too)
  • Doing It by Melvin Burgess (the basis for that short-lived Kelly Osbourne TV show from a few years back, this one is about boys and sex - DUH - but it was more interesting and well-written than I expected. His book Smack is another provocative one that gets adults all upset, but it is an award-winner - it was recently out of print in Canada but that may have changed)

And one that I most whole-heartedly DO NOT RECOMMEND TO ANYONE:

  • Slam by Nick Hornby (don’t fall for the glowing reviews on his site, this was one of the biggest disappointments I ever read. You’d think Hornby + YA = Gold but you’d be wrong. If you see someone taking this out of your library, you have every right to put that person in a chokehold until they put it down)

That’s all for now - be back tomorrow with more blogging…

Posted in Reading and Literacy, YA Literature   Tagged: barry lyga, books for guys, hornby, manga, mary hershey, melvin burgess, plumtree, scott pilgrim, sex   

1 Comments on Great YA lit for guys - it really exists!!!, last added: 12/5/2008
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