What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Posts

(tagged with '2013 librarian previews')

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
<<June 2024>>
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
      01
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: 2013 librarian previews, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 2 of 2
1. Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

lerner 300x109 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)Sometimes you just want to get your hands on some reliable nonfiction.  The other day I was in the office and we’d spread out the vast quantities of nonfiction samples we’d been sent from a variety of publishers (all of whom shall remain nameless).  And while some things were okay and other things were tolerable, so little of it was of the “Wow! Awesome!” variety.  It would be disheartening if we didn’t have folks like Lerner to fall back on.  And I’m not saying this to be all chummy with them.  I honest-to-goodness really like their books.  Are all Lerner books created equal?  Of course not!  But they fill gaps in my collection while at the same time providing books on subjects it would never have occurred to me to buy.  And it tends to be reliable.

So!  With that in mind, here’s how the Spring ’14 season is looking for ole Lerner Books these days.

ExtinctMammals 228x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)First up, the Lightning Bolt Books series and their latest topic: “Animals in Danger”.  We’re talking Endangered and Extinct Bird, Endangered and Extinct Mammals, even Endangered and Extinct Invertebrates.  The lure is that a lot of these contain a heartening comeback story at the end of each book of some animal or critter that nearly went belly-up and then was saved at the last minute.  I know plenty of kids that have to do endangered animal units for school, so it seems to me this makes for a much needed topic and category.

AmIGoodFriend 300x247 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)Speaking of requests I hear a lot, this is one that I wish to high heaven would go away and yet it never will.  I’m talking about “character building” books.  Books that by dint of even being read will miraculously transform your child into a better person through their cheery texts.  Terrible, horrible, no good, very bad books of this ilk are assigned to children every day in schools.  So while I loathe and abhor them, I am infinitely grateful to Lerner for at least doing a couple decent ones on the topics we’re used to being asked for.  Case in point, the “Show Your Character” series.  They’re multicultural and act as a slightly older version of Stuart J. Murphy’s “The Way I Act” series.

AncientEgypt 235x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)So here’s the deal with Common Core.  I’ve nothing against it myself.  Just the way it’s implemented some of the time.  But even as I say that, there are aspects to CCSS that are difficult to deal with.  I’m thinking in particular of the areas that are required and need written material, but where there’s very little in the marketplace.  Particularly in the case of early civilizations.  Second and third graders are supposed to be learning about China or Mesopotamia, but where the heck is the series written at an earlier reading level?  Meet the new Searchlight Books series “What Can We Learn from Early Civilizations?”  Each book is written on a easier level than a lot of books out there, and they cover everything from how these civilizations influence us today to folklore beliefs associated with those civilizations.  Plus anything that touches on Ancient Egypt is all good with me.

NeilDegrasseTyson 235x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)In the biography part of the world, finding stuff on contemporary scientists is a bit slapdash.  The “STEM Trailblazer Bios” series covers a range o’ folks, from robotics developers to game designers.  And there are even some women!  I don’t usually write out all the titles when I cover a series, but in this case I’ll make an exception.  In this series you’ll find the books:

  • Alternate Reality Game Designer Jane McGonigal
  • Flickr Cofounder and Web Community Creator Caterina Fake
  • Google Glass anId Robotics Innovator Sebastian Thrum
  • iPod and Electronics Visionary Tony Fadell
  • YouTube Founders Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim
  • And FINALLY, after all these years, Astrophysicist and Space Advocate Neil deGrasse Tyson.  I’ve been waiting for a Tyson bio for years and years and the fact that no one has done one yet just baffles me.  Glad to see someone somewhere picked up the slack!

HipsterFashion 212x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)I’ll confess to you that in many ways this round-up is mighty NYC-centric.  Because New York kids care diddly over squat about monster trucks and rally cars, I have chosen not to mention series like the “Dirt and Destruction Sports Zone” series.  By the same token, kids in this city have a thing for fashion.  Go figure.  All the more reason then that they might like the “What’s Your Style?” series coming out.  Basically everything from boho to edgy to pretty to streetwear gets its own book.  Knowing next to nothing about fashion myself, I trust Lerner to do right by my kids.

HandleWithCare 300x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)Have you guys seen that Blue Apple Books series where you follow a single object, be it a sphinx or dino bones or an asteroid from discovery (or in some cases, rediscovery) to their place in museums?  How the Sphinx Got to the Museum is one such example.  Well full credit to the upcoming book Handle with Care: An Unusual Butterfly Journey, since it takes a similar, if distinctly more biological, trip.  Starting in El Boxque Nuevo in Costa Rica we see a place where farmers grow butterfly pupae.  Why?  To ship to museums around the world, of course.  What, you think those butterfly exhibits grow themselves?  Written by Loree Griffin Burns with photographs by Ellen Harasimowicz, we follow a single butterfly pupae, and then go through all the requisite butterfly lifecycle details.  In a market where all the butterfly books kind of blend together, this one’s going to stand out.

PlasticAhoy 300x251 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)We all love the Scientists in the Field series, bar none.  I love that series.  You love that series.  But let’s fact it, they’re not the only scientists out there with books to their names.  Plastic, Ahoy! Investigating the Great Pacific Garbage Patch by Patricia Newman (photos by Annie Crawley) at first sounded nothing so much as Tracking Trash: Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean Motion.  The difference is the focus.  In this book we follow a research expedition studying the accumulation of plastic in the Pacific.  Through this story we see a lot of prepwork, including how to live on a ship, sea sickness, cooking, etc.

SecretsSkyCaves 300x251 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)I’m a big fan of children’s or teen books that do original research not found in adult titles.  It’s unclear to me, but this may fall into that category.  Secrets of the Sky Caves: Danger and Discovery on Nepal’s Mustang Cliffs is written by Sandra K. Athans.  The focus, however, is on her brother, Pete Athans, the mountaineer.  Pete’s the kind of guy who climbs Mt. Everest on a regular basis (seven times as of this post) but this book focuses on what happened when he decided to explore the caves of Mustang (pronounced moo-stang).  Apparently they’re near impossible to get into, located in remote Nepal.  In this book you get to see his discoveries including (and here I’ll quote the catalog text) “murals to ancient texts to human remains”.  And they say there’s nothing left to explore anymore . . .

EveryBodysTalking 300x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)When I was in high school I had an English teacher who let us in on a little secret.  Certain movements of the body could be translated to explain what a person was thinking or feeling (God only knows what this had to do with English literature).  He showed how showing a palm might mean one thing or where your eyes automatically go when you’re lying.  I felt like this was the secret to the universe and if I just knew all these secrets I could rule the world (or, at the very least, become the next Sherlock Holmes).  Sadly, there was no book I could find that explained these things.  Now Lerner has produced Every Body’s Talking: What We Say Without Words by Donna M. Jackson.  It is PRECISELY the book I wanted when I was young.  For librarians, this will be the world’s easiest booktalk.  Hey, kids!  Want to know how to effectively lie to your parents?  It’s all here!  My co-worker Amie, upon hearing about this book, pointed out that it might actually be of a lot of use to autistic kids or those on the spectrum, since decoding physical bodily clues make up a lot of their existence.  Smart thinking there.

So you know how I continually vow that I’m not going to report on any YA these days in these previews?  Well, that lasts just about as long as it takes to discover awesome YA nonfiction.  After that point I’m a puddle.  I melt.  I am helpless in the face of awesome YA nonfiction.  Probably has something to do with the fact that there’s so little of it to choose from.  Or, it could be that Lerner comes up with the BEST ideas for books.

Example A: The World Series: Baseball’s Biggest Stage by Matt Doeden.  The World Series has a century long history, so it’s fitting that there should be a book out there that looks into it in depth.  It covers everything from the wacky moments (“the bloody sock” may mean something to some of you) to the heroic ones.  Baseball on the field has pretty much remained the same over the decades.  But off the field?  The climate has completely changed for the players.  Watch the changes take place here.

WorldSeries 300x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

Example B: Chasing the Storm: Tornadoes Meteorology, and Weather Watching by Ron Miller.  Ron, for the record, actually traveled with a group of storm chasers to figure out how they did their work.  We’ve tons of fiction in our collections that talks about storm chasers (the “Storm Runners” series by Roland Smith comes to mind) but very little in the nonfiction department.  This book shows you not only how to become a storm chaser, but includes information on things like making your own weather station in your backyard.  Nicely done.

ChasingStorm 353x500 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

Example C: When a big event takes place and you wonder which major publisher will produce the first really good title on the topic, Lerner’s usually the first to come to mind (check out how quickly they made a book about the latest Pope when he was named last year).  In Curiosity’s Mission on Mars: Exploring the Red Planet by (again) Ron Miller, the book looks at Mars from a cultural perspective.  Chock full of diagrams and images as well as mentions of past and future missions, this’ll make a nice little companion to books like Cars On Mars and other Mars-centric selections.

CuriosityMissionMars 393x500 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

Example D: K-Pop: Korea’s Musical Explosion by Stuart A. Kallen.  This is one of those cases where you don’t notice a phenomenon until it’s pointed out to you.  If you’d asked me prior to the publication of this book to name the top South Korean performers out there, I would have been hard pressed to answer.  But there’s Psy and, of course, Rain (whom I think of every time I hear someone mention that current CW show Reign).  Historically The Korean War was how American soldiers with their rock and roll introduced the form to the nation.  Now it’s huge, and has a book of its very own.

KPop 391x500 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

Example E: Years ago I saw this great documentary of found footage called The Atomic Cafe.  Oddly, it was the very first place where I learned about the Bikini Islands and what we did to them post-World War II.  No books in school ever touched on the topic and no textbook mentioned it.  Now Bombs Over Bikini: The World’s First Nuclear Disaster has been written by Connie Goldsmith thanks in large part to a information that was just recently declassified.  Between 1948-1956 the United States released 67 nuclear bombs.  This is the book that discusses what happened and the accidents that occurred as a result.

BombsOverBikini 391x500 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

Example F: Traumatic Brain Injury: From Concussion to Coma by Connie Goldsmith (who, for the record, is a nurse) is probably as timely as timely could be.  But this isn’t just another book about the wide and wonderful world of football related concussions.  This book has a much broader approach, looking at the science behind what a concussion is and the different types that occur.  Since 52,000 die each year from them (not including all the unrecorded traumatic brain injuries), 1.7 million Americans have been diagnosed with TBI each year.  This is the book that looks into what happens and why.

TraumaticBrain 370x500 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

Okay.  Enough of that teen stuff.  Let’s get some firm footing in the world of children’s books instead.

ScarlattisCat 253x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)There is a legend that surrounds the 18th-century composer Scarlatti (which, in and of itself, is a marvelous name).  The story says that his most famous melody was created after he heard his cat walk across the keys of his harpsichord.  Scarlatti’s Cat by Nathaniel Lachenmeyer (illustrated by Carlyn Beccia) follows the legend to its logical end.  Pulcinella is the cat in question and she dreams of playing her own compositions.  It’s not until the timely appearance of a mouse, however, that she gets her big chance.  There’s a nice twist at the end on who gets the cat after Scarlatti gives her away.  Cute and musical.

Mumbet 300x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)2014 appears to be the year of Mumbet.  Next year Harper Collins will produce the young reader’s edition of Founding Mothers: Remembering the Ladies by Cokie Roberts (illustrated by Diane Goode) and there is a brief mention made in that book of Mumbet, a woman I’d never heard of before.  Now in Mumbet’s Declaration of Independence by Gretchen Woelfle (illustrated by Alix Delinois) we hear her story.  In 1781 a slave in Massachusetts just named Mumbet went to court for her freedom (and her daughters’ for that matter).  The amazing thing is that she won the case!  Here’s her story.

IfItRainsPancakes 235x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)In the past I’ve said that fairytales and folktales are the hardest books to find in a given year.  Well, thanks to the efforts of small publishers I no longer believe that to be the case.  Now I lament the lack of poetry on our shelves.  Poetry, good poetry, is danged hard to find so whenever I hear of something I take note.  Lerner has just started the Poetry Adventures series, and they’re kicking off with Brian P. Cleary’s If It Rains Pancakes: Haiku and Lantern Poems.  It’s a continuing series, so we’re bound to find more than just these, but they make for a good start.  The rules are clearly stated for each poem and the pictures keep things fun.

WaterCanBe 300x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)Laura Purdie Salas and Violeta Dabija paired together back in 2012 to make the soft and simple A Leaf Can Be . . .  Now they’re back with Water Can Be . . . which follows much along the same lines.  This goes through the roles water plays and since it’s incredibly simple (“Water can be a . . . Tadpole hatcher / Picture catcher”) it’s ideal for very early units on water.  Basically it does for water what Picture a Tree did for trees.  They’ve also paired with Water Aid, so that’s where some of the profits will go.

TaoPranks 235x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)Poetry is hard to find.  Graphic novels?  Less so.  Yet I’m still amazed that more time isn’t spent trying to find great ones for the kiddos.  Granted, the good ones can take years and years to make.  Still, there are ways around that.  I was then very happy to see a new GN series coming out of Lerner.  Tao, the Little Samurai by Laurent Richard (illustrated by Nicolas Ryser) is basically a very young Naruto.  A boy who excels in pranks and jokes dreams of someday becoming a martial arts master.  My only question?  How do you pronounce the hero’s name?  Is it Tao or Dao?  Questions, questions . . .

JackCastaway 212x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)We have lots of middle grade books featuring deadbeat parents, but it can be hard to find just the right balance between stupidity/slime and real affection for their kiddos.  The new series “The Berenson Schemes” by Lisa Doan (illustrated by Ivica Stevanovic) takes an interesting tack.  In Jack the Castaway a boy has two parents obsessed with get-rich-quick schemes.  Perfect.  Ideal for fourth graders, it reminds me of nothing so much as “The Unseen World of Poppy Malone” series (parent-wise anyway).  Oh.  And Jack ends up shipwrecked on a tropical island avoiding a shark.  So there’s that too.

Last but not least, here’s a smart idea for a very different fiction series.  Called “The Cryptid Files” these books by Jean Flitcroft, these stories are of cryptozoology, much as you’d find in Suzanne Selfors’ “Bigfoot Terror Tales”.  In each book (starting with The Lock Ness Monster) our heroine Vanessa globe trots trying to finds and prove that cryptids exist.

CryptidLochNess 213x300 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

And that’s the long and the short of it folks!  Many thanks to Lindsay Matvick for sitting down with me and showing me her wares.  Here’s a long and nonfiction heavy 2014!

printfriendly Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)email Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)twitter Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)facebook Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)google plus Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)tumblr Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)share save 171 16 Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014)

3 Comments on Librarian Preview: Lerner Books (Spring 2014), last added: 12/4/2013
Display Comments Add a Comment
2. Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

minedition1 Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)I do declare that it has been something like a year since I did a good old-fashioned Librarian Preview.  Where has the time gone?  For a bit I was so overwhelmed by the sheer amount of work such a preview requires that I cut them out of my diet, cold turkey.

Well that ends today.  From here on in we’re doing our Librarian Previews like it’s nobody’s business.  Today’s is a perfect example of why.  I’m sure you have all sorts of outlets for learning about minedition and their amazing books, but today I’m the one shining the spotlight.  And what I see pleases me immeasurably.

But first, the basics.  Mainly: What the heck is minedition?  For some of you the name is vaguely familiar.  It rings a distant bell.  Well an explanation is easily found on their website.  To quote: “Five years ago michael neugebauer edition was newly founded after the publisher Michael Neugebauer ended his affiliation with the Swiss Nord Süd Publishing.”  The very word “minedition” is a combination of the letters “mi” from Michael, “ne” from Neugebauer and “edition”.  He’s a fascinating feller too.  His father was a calligrapher (one of the best in the world, it seems) who gave his son a unique appreciation for fonts, layouts, and design. Michael himself went on to do many things before minedition, including serving as Jane Goodall’s favorite photographer.  You know that picture at the end of Me…Jane that just rips your heart out of your chest?  Michael took that.

But it’s this statement on the website that I like the best: “When children are exposed to exceptional books, if they have the chance to discover amazing books, they can develop much more than just a deeper appreciation of word and art. Such books can foster understanding and a greater appreciation of the multi-cultural world in which we live.”

Amen to that. So enough with the chitty chat.  Let’s see what minedition has put on the table.

First up: The board books!

WeLoveEachOther Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

This would be We Love Each Other by Yusuke Yonezu (ISBN: 9789888240562).  Now I appreciate a publishing company, particularly an artsy one like minedition, that understands how very difficult it is to make a good board book.  A good board book is a like a homemade loaf of bread.  On the surface it seems like it would be easy to make but there are subtleties involved.  Thus far the author Yusuke Yonezu is unknown to our fair shores but I expect all of that to change soon.  First of all, this book is pretty much brilliant.  It shows animals apart who, when put together, make different shapes.  Circles, squares, triangles, you name it.  The art is bold, colorful, simple, funny, sweet, touching, all that stuff.  And it’s just a friggin’ board book!  The additional good news is that it’s not the only one this year:

YumYum Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

Yum Yum, also by Yusuke Yonezu (ISBN: 9789881595355 ) isn’t out until the spring.  Various healthy foods are presented and with a flip of a page you get to see various animals eating them.  A mouse likes cheese, a pig likes an apple, a rabbit likes carrots, etc.  Get to the end, though, and a human kid is there.  And instead of a single food, he likes to eat everything that was already mentioned.  It’s sort of a subtle good food message, but with these adorable illustrations.  I mean seriously.  Look at that cat up there.  Can you resist that?  Really?

From board books we travel to the world of fairy tales . . .

TalesBrothersGrimm Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

This would be Tales from the Brothers Grimm, selected and illustrated by Lisbeth Zwerger (ISBN: 9789888240531).  Now if you’ve been in the business at all and looked at the people who are regularly illustrating fairy tale classics, you simply cannot have that conversation without mentioning Ms. Zwerger.  I mean, she’s the Paul Galdone of the 21st century.  As childscapes.com put it, “She has been recipient of virtually every recognition an illustrator can be given including the most prestigeous of all, The Hans Christian Andersen Medal as well as special recognition at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair.”  Darn tootin’.

Now the thing to know about this collection of Grimm tales is that it’s a mix of things that had already been published in the States alongside stories that have never seen our sunny shores.  There’s also a nice melding of the familiar (The Bremen Town Musicians) with the unfamiliar (The Poor Miller’s Boy and the Little Cat).  There are eleven in total and it’s nice to see a good collection of this sort for this year.  Lord knows nobody really tackles Grimm like this anymore (can you think of any 2013 that do?).

Along the same lines . . .

PiedPiper Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

The Pied Piper of Hamelin by Lisbeth Zwerger (ISBN: 9789881848543). Now this pretty thing isn’t coming out until the spring but we can wait a bit.  Isn’t that a stunner of a cover?  Zwerger’s Pied Piper has never been published in America before.  Now the art is beautiful to begin with.  Rats actually scurry around the margins of the tale until the Piper lures them away (the last you see of them are the tips of their bare pink tails).  Then there’s the cover image you see here.  That red hat is the Piper’s hunting hat, and already you can see a child enticed by what he’s playing.  There’s also a fantastic Afterword by Renate Raecke that discusses how strange this Grimm story is.  Unlike the tales that begin “Once upon a time” this one begins with the exact date of when this incident occurred (June 26th, 1284).  Here’s my favorite part: “Historians have been fascinated by this mention of a specific date, and by the handwritten entry, in an old chronicle of the town of Hamelin, recording the children’s disappearance, although it is thought to have been added decades after the event.” It then goes on with alternate theories about what happened to the kids, including the plague.

SantaClausAllAboutMe Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

Santa Claus: All About Me by Juliette & John Atkinson (ISBN: 9789881512658) is what you would get if ever Candlewick felt like creating something along the lines of Christmasology.  But the book is far more factual than the “ology” books, even if the format is similar.  It explains the origins of everything from Christmas trees to “The Sleighway Code”, and there are lots of fun doodads and pop-ups inside (even a little sixpence that looks awfully real).  In a hat tip to librarians, many of the flaps are fancy post-its, which can come off without damaging the book itself.  Ta!  And speaking of Christmas . . .

MessageoftheBirds Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

The Message of the Birds by Kate Westerlund, ill. Feridun Oral (ISBN: 9789888240555) is a straight up Christ child Christmas story.  The tale itself involves the birds of the world and a song they learned long ago that they want to sing to every child that they find.  The real lure is the art, however.  Particularly the various birds, most that you won’t find in North America.

GiftMagi Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

You could be forgiven for thinking that The Gift of the Magi by O.Henry, ill. Sonja Danowski (ISBN: 9789888240579) was the work of Robert Ingpen, P.J. Lynch, or Roberto Innocenti.  Heck, that’s what I thought when I saw it.  In fact it’s by Sonja Danowski, a German artist who is as beautiful as the woman in this story.  I’ve not seen her work before but apparently she illustrated Streams and Dreams and Other Themes, which was another minedition title.  The story is set in a turn of the century New York apartment.  As we read, the stencil of a flower grows and grows until it becomes an all encompassing riot on the endpapers.

AesopsFables Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

Well I am happy to report that Aesop is having a banner year in 2013. I was already aware of Aesop in California by Doug Hensen (which is GORGEOUS and which you really must find on your own), Aesop’s Fables by Ann McGovern, and Arctic Aesop’s Fables: Twelve Retold Tales by Susi Gregg Fowler. Add now to the list Aesop’s Fables by Aesop, ill. Ayano Imai (ISBN: 9789888240524).  A book meant to be read vertically, there are thirteen tales here in total.  Each one a stunner, with the slyest little details bedecking the edges of the bottom pages.  I love them all but it’s The Lion and the Mouse here that has my heart.  I don’t know why no other illustrator has ever considering trapping not just the lion but other animals and creatures in nets, but Imai has and it’s brilliant.  Imai, for the record, was born in London but eventually moved to Japan.  It was there that she developed her love of painting, a fact that is reflected in her work.

And finally, I save the best for last.

HanselGretel Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

Hm. That jacket, for all that it’s cool (can you see the squirrel?) isn’t doing this book justice. Here. I’ve posted this video before for the French edition but I’m going to do so again for the American. Behold! It looks exactly like this:

The book is Hansel and Gretel by Sybille Schenker (ISBN: 9789888240548) and it is a wonder.  First off, admire that spine, tied with twine.  Then as you page through it’s like the inventiveness of Bruno Munari has been combined with a classic Grimm sensibility.  Partially transparent papers give the sense of walking through the foggy woods, so that the gingerbread house emerges like a vision in the gloom.  I have never encountered a book that could evoke the feeling of claustrophobia better than this.  Without a doubt, it is the most beautiful fairy tale I’ve seen this year.

And that’s that!  Thanks so much to Michael Neugebauer for sitting down with me to show me the season.  Thanks too to Deborah Sloan for the images and the ISBNs.  Great grand stuff.

printfriendly Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)email Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)twitter Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)facebook Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)google plus Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)tumblr Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)share save 171 16 Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014)

3 Comments on Librarian Preview: minedition (Winter 2013 / Spring 2014), last added: 9/15/2013
Display Comments Add a Comment