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Lita Judge
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76. My Muses

I was just interviewed on a fantastic blog called Seven Impossible Things before Breakfast and one of the questions was, “Is there something you wish interviewers would ask you — but never do? Feel free to ask and respond here.” So here’s what I asked and answered.

Question: Tell me about your muses

My favorite muse is my cat, Pu. She is the inspiration behind many of my characters!

And then there is the grizzly bear I grew up watching with my parents (they are wildlife photographers). I knew someday I’d have to do a story with this bear.

Since the bear lives out in the wilds of Montana Pu finds it necessary to supervise my projects.

If you’re interested in the art and creators of picture books please read this blog. It’s the best one out there. Thanks to Jules Danielson for creating and working so hard on such an awesome blog for us all to enjoy!

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77. Emerging

I feel a like I stepped off a 1000 foot cliff at the beginning of this year and began a dreadful impersonation of humpty dumpty. Some of you may have heard I was laid low, very low, with an autoimmune illness, a complication from a bad case of mono that actually began last year. I’m still battling to regain strength, but a loving husband, caring friends, good doctors, and a bitter dose of chemo drugs applied every week have begun to put the pieces back together. Like humpty, I’ll never be quite the same, as I am reminded each and every week I face down that last bit – the chemo, and struggle to get my joints moving, my hands working, and my feet walking, but I am beginning see bigger and bigger pieces of my old self shining through the rubble. I’ll never be smooth and flawless, my scars will forever show, but perhaps all this time and energy spent gluing back my health will make me stronger in a way, autoimmune illness and all. I’ve had an awful lot of time to think about life and art in the last 9 months. I see that I spent the first 40 years racing through life, always trying to get somewhere faster. I was impatient with myself and burned through energy like it was an endless resource. But a little wisdom has seeped in over the many months I’ve had to lie flat on my back mostly, and I appreciate every small gift that life has to offer.

It feels like it was ages ago that I finished my upcoming book, Red Sled, but I just received my first copy of the book from my editor at Athenaeum. Turning through the pages reawakened the delight I had in creating this book and I am reminded and overwhelmed at what a gift it is to create my stories. I still feel like I’m that earnest little 4 year old who was so moved at seeing my first picture book. I was forever changed and sculpted by it. That first picture book not only fueled my imagination, it gave light to a lifelong passion for creating art. From the day I opened the very first book, I knew I wanted to make my own, even if I couldn’t imagine how I’d ever make that dream come true. Red Sled was a story that began long ago, around that time my imagination was first startled awake. In my childhood musings and daydreams the characters of this book kept me company. It took years for me to grab their abstract elements out of the ether and put them to paper. But I’m grateful for all the happy hours I spent chasing them down in the wandering paths of my imagination, before setting them down in just the way I would have loved as that 4 year old girl. Somewhere in this sore, achy body that little girl is smiling bright.

So I am very excited by the fact that Red Sled is soon to be coming out – November 1st to be exact! I wish I was fully recovered and could charge on ahead with life, working hard on new stories, and hitting the road to share this book with my readers. But for now, I must persevere with my treatment and embrace all the kindness that comes my way when readers reach out to me and send me well wishes. I hope readers find this book. It’s creation was such a celebration for me. And I was thrilled when my editor sent me the first review – a STARRED REVIEW from Kirkus!

Here it is:

Red Sled

Written by Lita Judge
(Atheneum; ISBN: 9781442420076; November 2011; Fall catalog p. 31)

Judge’s latest may be virtually wordless, but it packs a powerful visual punch that will stick with readers long after the final page is turned. At the end of a winter day, a child props the titular sled outside a cozy cabin. A bear finds it there and sets off to enjoy the ride of all rides, joined in turn by some other forest denizens. As each joins the ride, the animals’ positions change: The bear is on his back with the rabbit perched on his feet, then he is atop the moose’s antlers,

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78. hiatus

Hello all,

I hope everyone is having a good summer. Some of you may have noticed a lapse in my blog posting over the last several months. I’ve been taking a bit of a hiatus to recover for health reasons, but hope to be on the mend soon and look forward to being much more consistent with postings in the near future!

And I wanted to thank all of the students and teachers who have sent well wishes over the spring. Thank you. It means a lot to me!

Lita

1 Comments on hiatus, last added: 6/10/2011
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79. Strange Creatures Discussion Guide

We just posted a new Strange Creatures discussion guide on Lita’s web site.

It contains projects and activities for Vocabulary, Music, Art and Science, and includes an author interview. The guide was created by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer, a reading specialist and children’s author (visit her Web site here).

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80. Strange Creatures in the News

We’re back again after taking a brief blog break since the end of last year. We just received our first box of STRANGE CREATURES from the publisher and were psyched to see a nice review of  STRANGE CREATURES in the Wall Street Journal this weekend. [WSJ Review]

And last week we heard that STRANGE CREATURES was picked as a featured elementary biography selection of the Junior Library Guild!

Here are a few things we picked out of the reviews so far:

“There’s much in Walter Rothschild’s story for a tyke to like, particularly the timid boy’s end run around his father’s ambitions, and Judge makes the most of the battle of wills in her humor-tinged watercolors. Wild animals pop up all over the swanky estate while portraits of ancestors glare down from their frames in disapproval of the family ado. A final note comments on Rothschild’s contribution to the burgeoning field of zoology and on the way collection practices and wildlife study have changed over the past century and a half. Primary-grade children who are encouraged (assigned?) to read a biography will find Rothschild to be one of the most engaging guys they’ve never heard of.” BCCB

“In richly colored paintings Ms. Judge shows readers …  nautiluses and octopuses, lizards and kiwis, okapis from the Congo, capybaras from Colombia, and marabou storks.” WSJ

“Energetic, expressive paintings, many with unusual perspectives, fill the pages. Not surprisingly, the odd creatures that fascinated Walter are among the most engaging characters, like the giant lizard that peers out from Walter’s mother’s lily bed. Human characters are more sketchily drawn, which emphasizes Walter’s preoccupation with the natural world… Kirkus Reviews

“Judge’s picture-book biography of the shy genius may encourage readers to follow their own creative ideas…” School Library Journal


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81. Primary Sources

In anticipation of my new book, STRANGE CREATURES, which will be released in Feb 2011, I decided to focus a few of my upcoming blog entries on the process and challenges of writing and illustrating a non-fiction historical biography.

STRANGE CREATURES is about Walter Rothschild and the museum that he created, and the bugs, butterflies and animals that he collected, starting from when he was just 7 years old! It seems logical to begin where the process begins – with the researching and gathering of information about my subject.

Primary Sources:
Very little has been written about Walter Rothschild. The challenge to bringing this character to life was to not only record the invaluable contributions to science that he made, but to honestly capture his eccentric charm and incredible will.

As an author I love the challenge of digging up interesting sources and uncovering the facts about my subject. To learn about Walter Rothschild I was able to travel to the museum that Walter created – now called The Natural History Museum at Tring — which is about an hour northwest of London. It was a fantastic adventure to travel to England. I viewed the public collection at the museum and then was fortunate enough to get an appointment with the Museum Manager and with the Director of Education. They generously opened up the world of Walter Rothschild to me.

I stepped into the museum archives, searched through old documents, photo albums, and the extensive collection that Walter left behind. I walked along the grounds of his family home, and thought about what it must have been like to be the son of a Lord, heir to a banking empire, but more interested in bugs, butterflies and the natural world.

(The two pictures above are of the Natural History Museum at Tring and the present day grounds around the former Rothschild Estate at Tring, which is now a school.)

Walter’s life was a contradiction of privilege and wealth alongside an overbearing amount of expectation that was placed on his young shoulders. And though few are alive who remembered Walter, I was even fortunate enough to speak to people who remembered family stories about him. These direct sources were invaluable in creating a story of the life of this complicated character. And since I’m also the illustrator, everything I learned and saw also went into the pictures in the book.

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82. October in the City

Dave and I just got back from NY. What a fantastic trip! We went to hear the Battle of the Bands at the NY Public Library. My editor, Namrata, is the lead singer for the Effin’ G’s. What a blast!! It was a loud, raucous Friday night event in the belly of the library. All three bands (Effin G’s, Mr. McGregor, Tiger Beat) were terrific and did a fantastic job, but you’ll excuse me if I thought Nami was extraordinary. There are a few other recaps of the evening at the Fuse8 blog and here. I’m so lucky to have an editor with so many talents.

The next day, Dave and I did one of my favorite things – went to the Natural History Museum to draw dinosaur skeletons.

I’m working on my new book – How Big Were Dinosaurs? with Roaring Brook Press. The museum was pretty crowded, which is always a mixed blessing as it makes drawing more difficult, but I love seeing all the excited kids and adults exploring the wonders of the museum. So I embraced the crowds, and I did find some quiet corners to draw T-rex towering over all of our heads, tiny Protoceratops that were the size of border collies, the even smaller Psittacosaurus, and all my other favorites dinosaurs. This book is an exciting challenge because I want to break the myth that all dinosaurs were the size of skyscrapers and show how big they really were. There is no better way to learn than to draw the skeletons. A lifetime of daydreaming in front of dinosaurs skeletons has led to this latest project.

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83. Monadnock Open Studio Art Tour

We love the fall! We’ve got the winter wood pile stacked. The maples, birches, blueberry bushes and ferns in the yard have all turned color. And before we know it,  Columbus Day Weekend arrives and we’re again opening up our house and studio as part of the 15th Annual Monadnock Open Studio Art Tour. The Tour is on Oct 9th and 10th, from 10am to 5pm. During the last Art Tour there were 50 open studios with 58 artists participating. And it looks like the weather will be perfect this weekend!

Lita will have some of the original artwork from all her books and lots of studies and sketches (many for sale) along with various watercolor paintings she’s done over the last few years during our travels. And she’ll be signing books too! It’s quite a nice tour — below are a few pictures of Lita at work in her studio, and a beautiful barn in Hancock.

Please drop in and visit in case you find yourself in our neck of the woods (we’re in Peterborough, NH — number 20 on the tour map — and the tour is also in Hancock, Dublin, Jaffrey, Harrisville, and a few other towns around Mt. Monadnock). Maps are available here. Monadnock Art / Friends of the Dublin Art Colony presents the Art Tour each October during the peak of the colorful foliage season in southwestern New Hampshire. The Tour is self-directed, and it’s free!

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84. Cybils Middle Grade/YA Non-fiction

(Written by Dave) I’ve been a judge with the annual Cybils awards, which honor various categories of children’s books, since 2008.  And I’m doing it again this year! The Cybils themselves started in 2006. Lita’s One Thousand Tracings was a finalist in non-fiction picture books in 2007.

Anybody can nominate a book (starting on October 1st), and all the books that are eligible, and deemed to be in the proper category, go to the first round judges. (Actually quite a few publishers fail to send us books so I usually get them through library loan.) Last year I was a 2nd round judge for Middle Grade/YA Nonfiction — we got to pick the one winning book from the group of finalists picked by the round 1 judges. Two years ago, I was  a panelist (round 1 judge) for non-fiction picture books, and this year I’m a round 1 judge for the Middle Grade/YA Non-fiction category. I’m thinking a lot of books will be nominated this year — seems like the numbers go up every year — so I’ll be doing a lot of reading. Last year there were some great books in this category — but amazingly, the Sibert Award winner was not even a finalist. Of course the Cybils finalists are picked before the Sibert is announced, and the criteria are different (here is the Sibert criteria).

Anyway, I grabbed this list of all the round 1 and 2 judges for Middle Grade/YA Nonfiction from our panel organizer, Susan Thomsen at Chicken Spaghetti. It includes panelists’ Twitter feeds, marked with an @ — follow them and keep up with book news and conversation.

Panelists (Round I Judges):

Karen Ball, Mrs. B’s Favorites

Sarah Mulhern Gross, The Reading Zone @thereadingzone

David Judge, Adventures at Wilder Farm

Jessica Leader, Jessica Leader @JessicaLeader

Susan Thomsen, Chicken Spaghetti @C_Spaghetti

Judges (Round II):

Edi Campbell, Crazy Quilts @crazyquilts

René Colato Laínez, René Colato Laínez, La Bloga @renecolato

David Gutowski, Largehearted Boy @largeheartedboy

Colleen Mondor, Chasing Ray

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85. National Book Festival

The Center for the Book at the New Hampshire State Library will feature the work of Lita Judge at the National Book Festival in Washington, D.C. — here’s part of the press release from the New Hampshire State Library:

For Immediate Release
Contact: Mary Russell , 603-271-2866
September 20, 2010

Alongside representatives from all 50 states and the District of Columbia, the New Hampshire Center for the Book will promote the Granite State at the National Book Festival in Washington, D.C. on Saturday, Sept. 25, 2010.

In the festival’s Pavilion of the States, the New Hampshire Center for the Book will feature the book Born to be Giants: How Baby Dinosaurs Grew to Rule the World, written and illustrated by Lita Judge. The New Hampshire table will also provide information about visiting the Granite State and about our literary heritage. Lita Judge lives in Peterborough, New Hampshire. Her books have been chosen as Junior Library Guild selections, ALA Notable Books, Smithsonian Notable Books for Children, and have been nominated for various state book awards. Her book, Pennies for Elephants, won the New Hampshire Outstanding Work of Children’s Literature Award in 2009. You can learn more about Lita Judge at her website, http://www.litajudge.com.

More info is at the New Hampshire State Library website.

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86. Fenway Park

(Written by Dave)
Not being a native New Englander, I’ve never before been to a Boston Red Sox game at Fenway Park. But I finally got there this week and watched the Red Sox get clobbered 14-5. Lita had suggested I staple some red sox to my shirt to show my team support, but I never quite got around to that plan. It was a beautiful, warm, fall night and the fans seemed to get more into the game as the other team (Tampa Bay Rays) scored more and more runs — even the Kazoo Man (who had stapled sox to his hat and/or ears) came out late in the evening. Unfortunately a lot of people had already left by that time and didn’t get the opportunity to hear his rallying calls…

But it was such fun to see Fenway Park after Lita had done so much visual research into how it looked in 1914 during the Pennies for Elephants story. Here’s how things look now from the bleachers just past the right fielder:

And here are a few pictures (from the Library of Congress and Boston Public Library photograph collection) during the 1912-1914 time period:

In Pennies for Elephants, the kids of New England raised the money to buy three retiring circus elephants for the Boston’s Franklin Park Zoo. To introduce the elephants to the city, there was a huge event at Fenway Park. Here’s the newspaper headline, and a cartoon of the elephants from the Boston Post, and a newspaper image of Elephant Day at Fenway:

One of Lita’s images of the elephants at Fenway Park has been used for the 1 Comments on Fenway Park, last added: 9/10/2010

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87. Painting Moran’s Yellowstone

I  just returned from a fantastic Moran-related trip to Yellowstone! I instructed a painting workshop (called Painting Moran’s Yellowstone) through the Yellowstone Association Institute — it was an amazingly fun experience! The Yellowstone Association puts on some incredible classes, teaching about the wildlife, botany, and the land. I was honored to be a part of it this year.

We stayed at the Lamar Buffalo Ranch which is the place where they regenerated the existing Buffalo herd from just a few survivors back in the 1920s. It’s a rustic place with a couple of classrooms and a kitchen in the main Bunkhouse, and small cabins for the students, instructors, and volunteers. Each night the Buffalo herd migrated from lower in the valley, through the camp, to higher ground. In the morning, we painted as the sun rose and sand hill cranes called from nearby. Coyotes howled and yipped at night and we saw nine bears!

We felt so lucky to stay in this enchanted place within Yellowstone, and so immersed in the land and surrounding wildlife. Dave and I have already decided to return next year, to teach and spend more time in a place that we love.

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88. Strange Creatures

(Written by Dave) We just received a shipment of F&Gs for Lita’s next book—Strange Creatures: The Story of Walter Rothschild and his Museum. This book is with Disney-Hyperion Books and is scheduled for release on Feb 1st, 2011.

Here’s a short description of Walter’s story:

Walter was born in 1868 and was the son of Lady Emma and Lord Nathan Rothschild. The Rothschilds were a family of bankers and Walter was expected to someday take over the bank. But Walter wasn’t interested in the bank. Instead, he loved every creature that crawled, slithered or flew. He began collecting bugs and butterflies at the age of seven. The family also knew explorers who traveled the world to bring back animals for the London Zoo, and soon Walter started collecting more exotic creatures like kangaroos and kiwis. From there his collection grew and grew, until it threatened to take over the Rothschild estate. Lord Rothschild eventually lost patience with Walter’s hobby and insisted that Walter become a banker, like everyone else in the family. Reluctantly, Walter obeyed, but his dream couldn’t be dimmed.

Eventually Walter created the largest zoological collection gathered by one man and was respected throughout the world for his contribution to science. He wrote 1200 books and scientific papers and named 5000 new species. Animals that now bear the name Rothschild include butterflies, fish, a millipede, a fly, a lizard, a porcupine, a wallaby, a bird of paradise, and even a giraffe. The painfully shy boy who never made a good banker forever changed our understanding of the world’s diversity of creatures.

Lita actually has a strange connection to Walter. Lita’s grandparents, Fran and Frederick Hamerstrom, were ornithologists who cared for birds of prey. One of their scientific mentors was Ernst Mayr, who began his career on an expedition collecting for Walter Rothschild. Later he became curator of Rothschild’s collection of birds, now housed in New York’s American Museum of Natural History.

The picture above is Ernst Mayr with Sario, one of his Malay assistants, in the former Dutch New Guinea in June 1928. The picture below is Lita at Walter Rothschild’s Tring Museum in June 2009.

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89. Back from England

Lita’s last event of the 2009-2010 school visit season was on May 19th, and on the 21st we took off for a vacation in England and Scotland. We flew into Edinburgh and drove down to the Lake District (about 3 hours) where we had rented a lovely cottage near the village of Hawkshead. The cottage was built in the 1600s and was just above the village.

Also just above the village, through the sheep pastures on the path of our walk into Hawkshead, sits a beautiful old 17th Century church.

Hawkshead is the home of The Beatrix Potter Gallery, which is in a building that was once the office of the local solicitor William Heelis, who married Beatrix in 1913. They lived at Castle Farm in Near Sawrey, a couple of miles down the road. Beatrix’s Hill Top Farm is also open to the public and is a fun place to visit.

The main activity in the Lake District is walking. One of our favorite hikes is in the Borrowdale Valley.

And another beautiful walk is in Grasmere, the home of William Wordsworth’s Dove Cottage.

We ended up in Edinburgh — here just below Edinburgh Castle — and the weather turned dark and stormy…

The other main activity in England and Scotland is visiting pubs. Up near Edinburgh Castle we found a pub called The Jolly Judge, a good place for a pint of beer and a cup of soup!

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90. Born to be Giants Released!

We’re so excited that the release date for Born to be Giants has arrived, so we’re rolling out our new Born to be Giants mini-website!

Born to be Giants by Lita Judge

Lita has produced an expanded group of dinosaur coloring pages (download them from here) , based on the images in Born to be Giants and her earlier D is for Dinosaur.

And we have some pages that show the sketch to painting process for this book, and some pictures from Lita’s first dinosaur dig with the Royal Tyrell Museum of Paleontology.

Born to be Giants by Lita Judge

Here are some snippets from the reviews for Born to be Giants:

“Eye-catching illustrations and the combination of two perennially popular topics make this book a sure hit.”
-Kirkus, March 15, 2010

“..insightful book filled with fascinating details…expressive paintings make artful use of dimension and scale while bringing the compelling creatures to life.”
-Pulishers Weekly, March 29, 2010

“The text is a model of logical reasoning…The detailed, richly colored illustrations, which often place readers at baby-dinosaur eye level, take the same care in balancing accuracy and imagination.”
-Horn Book Magazine, May/June, 2010

“..a full measure of visual appeal.” -Booklist, March 1, 2010

“A surefire hit for dinophiles.” -School Library Journal, May, 2010

“No one has presented some of these findings to children yet. Nor have dinosaurs been presented in quite this way before. Judge’s approach is one that celebrates the scientific method, first offering facts scientists have ga

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91. North Country New Hampshire

(Written by Dave) It was a humid 85° three days ago in New Hampshire, but last week Lita visited schools and libraries in Berlin, Gorham and Randolph, New Hampshire, and it snowed several inches — on April 28th! I haven’t been up that way for several years so I decided to come along.

On April 27th, Lita’s new book Born to be Giants was released, and she signed a few copies at the White Mountain Cafe and Bookstore in Gorham. Below is a picture of Lita with the first book store copy sold.

The community was so welcoming — there were signs for Lita all over:

The kids at Berlin Junior High School made a fantastic poetry circle, with poems written on the foot tracings, that emphasized what it’s like to be in other people’s shoes around the world. It was really well done!

This was Lita’s last group of March and April school visits. She did more than 40 presentations during the last three weeks of April. Here she’s in the Library at Berlin Junior High School.

And at the the Randolph Public Library — shown a beautiful drawing of a turtle.

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92. Massachusetts Book Award

Pennies for Elephants is a finalist for the Massachusetts Book Award!

You can download the full list of finalists — books in Children’s/Young Adult Lit here.

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93. Born to be Giants Sketches

This entry was posted on the Mackids Blog last week, but I wanted to re-post it here so I could include larger images–click on any of the images below to see the larger versions.

One of the challenges I enjoyed about this book was capturing the immense difference in size between baby dinosaurs and their parents. I started the illustration process by sketching loose thumbnail sketches, exploring different compositions to convey the scale of dinosaurs.

Then I began refining these ideas into detailed drawings and final art.

Throughout the sketch process, I try to keep ideas fluid. In this case, I thought an aerial view of a parent next to 5 school buses would show the immense size of a mother Argentinosaurus. But I thought there might be even a better to way to show her scale. Then I calculated that a parent weighed as much as 17 elephants. I love drawing elephants, and thought the idea was better than the first.

Originally I sketched backgrounds around the dinosaurs. But the thing I wanted to emphasize the most with each illustration was life-like gestures of the dinosaurs. My editor, Deirdre, and my art director, Danica, suggested I try a white background around the art. I loved it!

The negative space also helped tie the layout of the book together. The book has a pattern of 2-page spreads. The first offers clues (or facts) that scientists have discovered. The second is a full spread conveying educated guesses about how baby dinosaurs and their parents behaved. Combining all these details worked with this layout.

I loved creating illustrations that demonstrated how dinosaurs must have behaved like animals alive today. The challenge was to tie illustrations of living animals with dinosaurs and show their similarities.

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94. The Bird Talk Tree

We have a spindly tree on the way to our front door that seems to mysteriously get decorated when we leave the house, most recently with a Bird Talk theme!

This isn’t the first time. Even before the tree was in the ground we came home one afternoon to find some strange objects on it.

Hmmmm. It all looks strangely similar to our friend Kim Cunningham’s found object art.

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95. Congratulations to South Elementary in Jackson, Missouri

I was speechless after receiving this lovely letter from South Elementary in Jackson, Missouri. With the librarian’s permission I’d like to share it:

Dear Lita,

I am a school librarian at South Elementary in Jackson, Missouri. After the recent earthquake in Haiti, I used your book One Thousand Tracings for a text-to-world connection. The students were asked for ways they can help the people of Haiti just as the children after WWII helped the Germans. The students then cut out their footprints and signed each with their own way of helping the earthquake victims. Many brought money for the American Red Cross. This morning over $1200 was turned in to the Red Cross. Attached is the picture of the presentation.

Thanks for sharing and know others have benefited from this story.

WOW!! I’m still speechless. Congratulations to South Elementary for such an amazing effort!!

1 Comments on Congratulations to South Elementary in Jackson, Missouri, last added: 2/16/2010
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96. Bird Talk

I don’t think I’ve mentioned it to a lot of people, but I have another book lined up with Roaring Brook/Flash Point for 2011! The book is called BIRD TALK and it’s a 48 page non-fiction picture book about the different ways that birds communicate, and why. I’ve been working on a finished dummy and thought it’d be fun to share a few images (click on any image to see it larger).

Bird Talk 1

Bird Talk 2

Bird Talk 3

Bird Talk 4

Bird Talk 5

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97. Pencil Sketches

(Written by Dave) We were just updating several of the pages on Lita’s website and thought we’d post a few pencil sketches. These are part of a story that’s currently percolating. (Click on any of the images to see them larger)

B-Hound

Acrobats

playing ambulance

cat circus

More sketches are here and more illustrations are here.

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98. Born to be Giants

My next book will be released three months from now! Born to be Giants is a 48 page non-fiction picture book with Roaring Brook/Flashpoint Press.

Born to be Giants

Born to be Giants by Lita Judge

This book fills a lifelong dream to investigate paleontologists’ understanding of baby dinosaurs and their parents. It was an exciting book because scientists have made many great new discoveries of fossilized baby dinosaurs, nests, and eggs in recent years. I wrote and illustrated the book in a format with hypotheses about dinosaur behavior following clues to engage young readers in the scientific method.

Here’s an example of the format of the book. First we see some clues. These are things that are known about dinosaurs based on fossil evidence along with observations about animals, like crocodiles, that are alive today. (Click on any of the following images to see them larger.)

Born to be Giants by Lita Judge

Then we see a hypothesis of possible dinosaur behavior.

Born to be Giants by Lita Judge

Born to be Giants is a Junior Library Guild Selection and will also be available at Scholastic Book Fairs! The release data is April 27th.

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99. Winter in New York City

(Written by Dave) We just got back from a few cold days in New York City and had a great time there. We made a quick stop at the Children’s Center at the New York Public Library and I got a picture of Lita out front with one of the Library Lions.

Lita Lions

After the library and a quick hello to Betsy Bird, we had lunch with Lita’s wonderful agent at Metrazur on the balcony above Grand Central Station. It was really fun! Then we visited lots of great book stores, like Books of Wonder, Barnes and Noble at Union Square and The Strand. We wanted to get up to the Bank Street Books (Children’s Bookstore) but never quite made it up that way.

I just saw an article in the NY Times which said the number of visitors in the city was down a few percent in 2009, but we saw unbelievably huge crowds at the Natural History Museum and at the Met. At the MOMA people were lined up outside the building all the way to 6th Ave. We never did get in there — didn’t even try. At Rockefeller Center, in the early evening, there was a human traffic jam like nothing I’ve ever seen before. I can’t imagine fitting more people into the space.

The window decorations at Bergdorf Goodman were pretty good this year:

Bergdorf Goodman

Good trip overall, but now we’re glad to be back in New Hampshire!

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100. Smithsonian Notable Books for Children 2009: Yellowstone Moran

Just a few days ago the Smithsonian Magazine put out an annual list called the Smithsonian Notable Books for Children 2009. Here’s how they described their list last year: “… at Smithsonian Magazine, we’re reviving a tradition: our annual selection of outstanding books for children, a compendium of surprising, inspiring titles—everything from picture books and novels to memoirs—for youngsters and the grownups who read to, and with, them.”

2009 Smithsonian Notable Books for Children

For the 2009 list, they said, “This year’s titles range across cultures, into the past and toward the future. Their creators have relied on humor to touch our hearts; documentary accounts to bring history alive; biography to convey the true meaning of courage; poetic language to demonstrate the power of the written word—and the artist’s brush or camera to create ravishing illustrations.”

We were excited to see Yellowstone Moran included on the 2009 list!

Yellowstone Moran

And here’s what they said about Yellowstone Moran: “In 1871, a young artist joined an expedition of scientists setting out to explore the West. The monumental canvasses based on his travels would become iconic images that are now part of our nation’s heritage.”

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