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
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: 90 Second Newbery, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 21 of 21
How to use this Page
You are viewing the most recent posts tagged with the words: 90 Second Newbery in the JacketFlap blog reader. What is a tag? Think of a tag as a keyword or category label. Tags can both help you find posts on JacketFlap.com as well as provide an easy way for you to "remember" and classify posts for later recall. Try adding a tag yourself by clicking "Add a tag" below a post's header. Scroll down through the list of Recent Posts in the left column and click on a post title that sounds interesting. You can view all posts from a specific blog by clicking the Blog name in the right column, or you can click a 'More Posts from this Blog' link in any individual post.
It only comes but once a year. But when it comes, boy howdy is it cool!
The press release below reveals everything you need to know, but I just wanted to add that the new website with its searchable capabilities is awesome. Plus, I just saw this adorable El Deafo video and had to share:
90-SECOND NEWBERY FILM FESTIVAL OPEN FOR SUBMISSIONS
Festival for kid-made films enters its sixth year
CHICAGO, IL—The 90-Second Newbery Film Festival—an annual celebration of kids’ creativity in which young filmmakers create short movies telling the entire stories of Newbery Medal and Newbery Honor books in roughly 90 seconds—is now open for submissions for its sixth year. The deadline for entries is January 7, 2017 (special deadlines for San Antonio, TX (12/2/2016) and Asheville, NC (2/8/2017)).
The film festival was founded by children’s author James Kennedy(The Order of Odd-Fish) and screens every year to packed houses at libraries and theaters in Chicago,New York, San Francisco, Boston, Portland, Minneapolis, San Antonio, and other cities.
Ever since 1922, the American Library Association’s Newbery Medal has been recognized as the most prestigious award in children’s literature. Standout honorees include Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time, Louis Sachar’s Holes, and Katherine Paterson’s Bridge to Terabithia. But according to Kennedy, “it turns out that any book, no matter how worthy and somber, becomes hilarious when it’s compressed to only 90 seconds.”
The goal, says Kennedy, is not for kids to create mere book trailers or video book reports. The challenge is to compress the entire plot of the book in under two minutes, often with a transformative twist. Past entries include Beverly Cleary’s Ramona and Her Father done in the style of a James Bond movie and E. B. White’s Charlotte’s Web reimagined as a horror movie. Kids use many other styles as well, including claymation, puppet shows, musicals, silent films, and Minecraft. Filmmakers may adapt any Medal– or Honor–winning book. Participants should be under 21, but help from enthusiastic adults is allowed.
For the past six years, the best 90-Second Newbery movies have been shownat special-event screenings at venues such as the New York Public Library, San Francisco Public Library, Minneapolis Public Library, and elsewhere. These screenings are co-hosted by Kennedy and other children’s authors. This year, James will be joined at many screenings by Keir Graff, whose latest middle-grade novel, The Matchstick Castle, publishes on January 10. Graff, the Executive Editor of Booklist, is a frequent 90-Second Newbery co-host and collaborator.
The Chicago screening will be April 1, 2017 at 3pm at the Vittum Theater (1012 N. Noble).
More details may be found at www.90secondnewbery.com. The website features many of the videos received throughout the last five years, as well as further resources for teachers and filmmakers. To receive more information, or to schedule an interview with James Kennedy, call James Kennedy at 773-351-7452 or email him at [email protected].
January 21, 2017 – SAN ANTONIO, TX
Hosted by James Kennedy and Nikki Loftin (Wish Girl). At the Charlene McCombs Empire Theatre (224 E. Houston St., San Antonio, TX). 3 pm.
February 11, 2017 – TACOMA, WA
Hosted by James Kennedy, Doug Mackey, and Keir Graff. At the Tacoma Public Library (1102 Tacoma Ave S). 3-5 pm.
February 12, 2017 – PORTLAND, OR
Hosted by James Kennedy, Keir Graff, and Dale Basye (Heck: Where the Bad Kids Go series). At the Hollywood Theatre (4122 NE Sandy Blvd.). Sponsored by Portland Community Media. 4:30 pm.
February 17, 2017 – OAKLAND, CA
Hosted by James Kennedy, Keir Graff, and Marcus Ewert (Mummy Cat). At Rockridge Branch of the Oakland Public Library (5366 College Ave, Oakland, CA). 7 pm.
February 18, 2017 – SAN FRANCISCO, CA
Hosted by James Kennedy, Keir Graff, and Marcus Ewert (Mummy Cat). At the San Francisco Public Library main branch (100 Larkin Street) in the Koret Auditorium. 4-6 pm.
February 25, 2017 – MINNEAPOLIS, MN
Hosted by James Kennedy, Keir Graff, and Kelly Barnhill (The Witch’s Boy). At the Minneapolis Central Library (300 Nicollet Mall) in Pohlad Hall. 3-5 pm.
March 11, 2017 – NEW YORK, NY
Hosted by James Kennedy, Keir Graff, and a co-host TBA. At the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building (5th Ave at 42nd St., New York, NY) in the Bartos Forum. 3-5 pm.
March 12, 2017 – BROOKLYN, NY
Hosted by James Kennedy, Keir Graff, and a co-host TBA. At Central Library (10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, NY) in the Dweck Auditorium. 2-4 pm.
March 19, 2017 – ROCHESTER, NY
Hosted by James Kennedy and Charles Benoit (Snow Job). At the Dryden Theatre at the Eastman Museum (900 East Ave, Rochester, NY). 2-4 pm.
April 1, 2017 – CHICAGO, IL
Hosted by James Kennedy and Keir Graff. At the Vittum Theater (1012 N Noble St.). 3-5 pm.
April 22, 2017 – ASHEVILLE, NC
Hosted by James Kennedy and Alan Gratz (The League of Seven series). At the Pack Memorial Library (67 Haywood St., Asheville, NC). 1-3 pm.
April 30, 2017 – BOSTON AREA
Hosted by James Kennedy and M.T. Anderson (Feed, The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing) and Jack Gantos (Dead End in Norvelt, Joey Pigza Loses Control). At the Brookline Public Library (361 Washington Street, Brookline, MA). 2-4 pm.
0 Comments on Press Release Fun: 90-Second Newbery Film Festival Open for Submissions as of 10/31/2016 2:22:00 AM
Good morning, my fine and frisky young denizens of this sphere upon which we make our homes. I’m particularly chipper today as I’ve just returned from a lovely trip to Boston where I attended the Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards and managed NOT to lose my glasses in the process. More on that tomorrow, but today I’ve a whole heaping helpful of fun videos for your perusal.
First up, I’m happy to announce that last weekend I conducted a Literary Salon with James Kennedy and Eti Berland on the subject of 90-Second Newbery. The fun doesn’t really get started until the five minute mark, but that’s the wonders of live streaming for you. A million thanks to James for figuring out how to get the new YouTube streaming feature to work on his computer at all. Phew!
Now we’ve a very cool video up next. Do you like John Steptoe? Do you like Sesame Street? Then behold this very early Sesame Street when Gordon-with-hair read Stevie to the viewers. This is something I’d love for current day Sesame Street to pick up again. Wouldn’t it be great if Chris (you can see that I’m hip to the current cast) read Last Stop on Market Street to Telly? It could happen.
In other news, we’ve an election coming up. Or didn’t you know? Well I had the distinct pleasure of interviewing Aaron Reynolds for a new little show I’m participating in called LadyBird & Friends. If you want to bypass the whole Betsy talking element to the proceedings, skip to the 18:20 mark where Aaron reads aloud President Squid. It will be the funniest damn thing you see all day. The man is a natural performer.
And speaking of natural performers, how did I miss this promotional video for Robo-Sauce when it first came out? My bad.
Now welcome to New Zealand, where librarians have more fun. Don’t believe me? This synchronized . . . I’m sorry. This synchronised shelving proves it. Thanks to Jean Reagan for the link.
And for our final off-topic video today . . . AUGHHH!!!!!
Does the clownfish remind anyone else of the Goldfish from Mars Evacuees? Anyone? Anyone? No?
Just me then.
0 Comments on Video Sunday: *knock knock* Land shark as of 10/2/2016 1:48:00 AM
In just 9 days the Children’s Literary Salon at EPL will be up and running again. And, as ever, you can watch the proceedings live from your very own home computer right here.
This month, we’re celebrating the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival in all its shameless glory. Explained thusly:
Even better news, the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival now has a full-featured website of its own. It indexes and makes searchable all the great movies received over the years, complete with judges’ commentary. The new website also features event listings, links to further moviemaking resources, contest rules, a gallery of the best submissions, a press page, and more.
Do you have kids who might be interested in participating? Well, the deadline for the sixth annual 90-Second Newbery has been set at January 7, 2017!
See you then!
1 Comments on Children’s Literary Salon: 90-Second Newbery Film Festival!, last added: 9/16/2016
That would be Kadir Nelson’s tribute to the Schomburg Library in NYC. A couple things to note about it. First, in an amazing bit of research you can see that he includes both the old Schomburg Library (now overrun with ivy) and the new Schomburg together at the bottom. Second, the inclusion of Langston Hughes front and center is particularly clever since Langston is practically the first thing a person sees when they enter the building. Or rather, Langston’s words which are embedded in the very floor. I do miss the Schomburg. This brought all that back.
In all the talks we’ve heard from people about A FINE DESSERT and A BIRTHDAY CAKE FOR GEORGE WASHINGTON, I sometimes feel like we haven’t heard enough from the teachers about how they teach topics like slavery. That’s why posts like Monica Edinger’s In the Classroom: Teaching About Slavery are so important. If you read no other link today, read this one.
This one’s for the librarians. Want to know all the different rates publishers charge libraries for ebooks? A handy dandy chart explains all.
Travis Jonker knew not what he hath wrought when he posted about The Most Annoying Board Book Ever. I know precisely what book he’s talking about (as does anyone else who has encountered it). I never get rid of books, as my household will attest, but THAT book I gave away with a flourish when I moved. I wasn’t going to use precious box space cluttering it up with that monstrosity. One of the buttons that’s supposed to sound like snoring actually sounds like Darth Vader. And believe you me, you do NOT want the unsettling feeling that Vader is lurking around your house.
Speaking of radio, have you guys all heard James Kennedy (of 90-Second Newbery and The Order of Odd Fish fame) on Matthew Winner’s Let’s Get Busy podcast? If you listen to no other interview on that show (and I include my own when I say that) listen to this one. The two guys basically hit it out of the park right at the start when James mentions the plethora of The Call stories as they relate to ALA Award committees. The dog church bit . . . seriously, you just have to listen. And not just because an Oakland newspaper said of James that, “Between his wardrobe choices and excited mannerisms, he had the familiar air of Professor Gilderoy Lockhart in the Harry Potter film adaptations, only he was not a braggart.” I always think of him as more a Xenophilius Lovegood type, but maybe that’s just the Rhys Ifans talking.
Man. I gotta apologize. Somebody somewhere alerted me to the Booktoss piece Say It With Me: Intersectionality and I’ve forgotten who they are. Mea culpa. In any case, this is a great piece of writing. From Beyonce at the Superbowl to Ben Hatke’s Little Robot. Not an easy connection, but Laura Jimenez manages it. Kudos.
I think I failed to post this before, but Mike Lewis did a killer rundown of the CTTCB’s Social Media Institute in his piece Exiting the Echo Chamber. I am, however, a little jealous at the title. Wish I’d thought of it myself.
Why, yes. I would like to attend a Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry exhibition at the Brooklyn Public Library. However did you know? But quick question: When did Wendell Minor illustrate the series? It makes me happy but I want to see that work.
Things I’m Surprised More Publishers Don’t Do With Their Backlist: This. I guess it helps if you have a big recognizable name, but still. Now can we PLEASE discuss doing this with William’s Doll? You want money? I have money. (Fun Fact: I don’t have money – I just want to see it brought into the 21st century)
Pooh and friends pre-2008
Though it contains an image of the original Winnie-the-Pooh toys that has to be more than eight years old (Donnell Library!), the Huffington Post article Christopher Robin Was Real, And Other Facts About Winnie-The-Pooh’s Author has some nice items in it. Particularly point #2. H.G. Wells? Really?
Here’s another one for the librarians. Booksellers too, as it happens. According to a recent Nielsen Report, Social Omnivores And Book Placement Majorly Influence Children’s Book Buyership. No surprises there. What is surprising is that when it comes to selecting books, “The shelf has more influence than the promotional table, window display, bargain bin, etc. combined by a very wide margin.”. Yep. Your displays may look all kinds of pretty, but nothing beats good old fashioned shelving when it comes to checkouts/sales. Who knew? Thanks to Carl Schwanke for the link.
Word I Don’t Use Enough: Ostrobogulous. Disagree on peril of defining it (though this may help). Thanks to Phil Nel for the link.
“Where are the children’s books that celebrate working-class values and voices?” is not a question being asked by many folks here in America. It is, however, being asked in The Guardian by Elen Caldecott. And it is a question I would very much like us to start answering over here as well.
Ashley Bryan, the patron saint of children’s literature (as I mentally refer to him) is popping up all over New York City. Lucky lucky New York City.
Daily Image:
Alison Morris, currently working as the Senior Director of Collection Development & Merchandising at First Book, is the cleverest crafty person I know. Years ago she showed me how to make F&Gs into birdhouses. Now she’s making classic children’s characters into marble magnets.
Want to make your own? Instructions can be found here. Cheers, Alison!
6 Comments on Fusenews: “I was at dog church!”, last added: 2/19/2016
Thanks for mentioning my post. I’m going to do a follow-up post soon with specifics about how the actual sessions have been going. Just to show how incredibly observant we need to be when doing this with kids, to never assume, to find ways to check in, and so forth.
Here’s one example (and sorry for the length of this). As part of a lesson that featured a look at Bunce Island (a fort off the coast of Sierra Leone where enslaved rice farmers were especially desired to bring to Charleston) I showed the children a primary source image of an ad for a sale (http://hitchcock.itc.virginia.edu/Slavery/details.php?categorynum=6&categoryName=&theRecord=71&recordCount=75) that states “”To be sold. . . a cargo of ninety-four prime, healthy Negroes”; men, women, and children from Sierra Leone.” I heard gasps and discovered it was because of the word “Negroes.” It was then I realized some had not encountered the word before, some thought it was the n-word they’d vaguely heard about.
And so yesterday I followed up, discussing where the word came from (Spanish and Portuguese — one student who speaks Spanish knew this immediately), read excerpts from speeches of famous folk over the years containing the word (from Wade Hudson’s excellent Powerful Words), we talked about what it means to define people by words this way, and more. At one point we were discussing other words for white and a child whispered something that I couldn’t hear and the child who knew Spanish next to him laughed. I took him aside later and at first he was reluctant to tell me what he had said. Finally he whispered to me, “Blanco.” I told him that was a good word to have said, not a bad one at all. And then I spoke to the little girl who had laughed, wanting to be sure to validate her response too. Her laughter had been one of surprise and nothing more. All was fine, but it made me realize yet again that I need to pay such close attention, check in regularly, and follow-up anytime I sense confusion. (Btw, I have a fairly diverse class, so kids of all ethnicities and backgrounds are engaging with this, each in their own way.)
Nina Lehman said, on 2/19/2016 5:47:00 AM
I am always uncomfortable with aged lists. As I scrolled down the Brightly list I was struck by the fact that the vast majority, but not all, were books that my children read and enjoyed at much younger ages.
Elizabeth Bird said, on 2/19/2016 10:31:00 AM
You will note, then, that there was a huge range in reading levels there. Picture books as well as chapter books like Charlotte’s Web. That’s what I like about the list. It’s for kids of all reading levels but with age appropriate content.
James Kennedy said, on 2/19/2016 11:53:00 AM
It’s always a treat to get mentioned on Fuse #8 — but it’s a double treat when my ramblings make it into the headline. Thanks, Betsy! (And thanks to Mr. Winner for having me on his podcast!)
Elizabeth Bird said, on 2/19/2016 12:49:00 PM
Thanks, James. It is, upon retrospect, an odd little title. Hopefully folks understand that it comes from your interview.
Lou Hunley said, on 2/19/2016 6:45:00 PM
The Daily Image with the marble magnets has a pattern below it that makes me think of Sophie Blackall’s work. The pattern is the same one used in Finding Winnie.
Are you aware of the Cozy Classics board book series? How about the felted board book versions of the original Star Wars movies? The other night I had dinner with Cozy Classics creator Holman Wang and we talked about his process. Turns out, the felted characters are needle felted entirely. A lawyer by trade, Holman learned how to felt through YouTube videos. Now what goes around comes around as you watch this oddly soothing time lapse YouTube video of his process. It’s an old video (as the dates at the end attest) but that doesn’t make it any less neat.
And as for the aforementioned Star Wars books, here’s Holman himself talking about his various techniques:
Also at that dinner, someone in attendance mentioned that Larry Wilmore on The Nightly Show had covered A Birthday Cake for George Washington. Come again? Yes, you truly know that a book has left our little orbit when it ends up a discussion topic on a Comedy Central evening show. I wouldn’t exactly call this one workplace appropriate, but I would call it funny. Nice too that while he talks about the book he does not speculate about the creators.
Book trailer time. N.D. Wilson has always created the best book trailers. Remember the one he did for Ashtown Burials? Or Boys of Blur? Well, the latest premiered on Entertainment Weekly very recently:
Thanks to Aaron Zenz for the link.
So I ask James Kennedy the other day to name his favorite 90-Second Newbery Film Festival co-hosts. And he rattles off a bunch of names but one that he was particularly impressed by? Nikki Loftin, author of Nightingale’s Nest. Don’t believe me? Then check out this killer opening Nikki and James did together. That woman has pipes!
Of course, I already had insider knowledge to Nikki’s singing prowess. Two years ago she created a video for Jules Danielson and myself and . . . well, if you just can’t get through your day without seeing a children’s author belting out classic Rogers & Hammerstein on a roof, then are YOU in luck!
And finally, for our off-topic-but-not-really video, I bring you information from beyond the grave. We all know Michael Jackson, and many of us know Bob Fosse. Now see how eerie it is when you put one on top of another. If The Little Prince movie did nothing else, it gave us this:
1 Comments on Video Sunday: I Have Felt It, last added: 2/9/2016
So today is the last day of National Library Week. In celebration, enjoy this delightful video from Common Craft for your average non-library literate layman. If you are a librarian, show this video to those members of your family who heard you had to get a Master’s degree and asked you, “What? So they teach you how to put your hair in a bun and go ‘Shh’ all day?”
There is a saying in my family: A music video isn’t viral until soldiers perform a version of it. Admittedly it’s a relatively new saying. The same might also be said for librarian parody videos, though. When they’re doing a song you haven’t heard of, you best be looking that puppy up. Case in point . . .
The moment he’s reading Beloved sort of stands out. Otherwise, perfectly fine. The ending is pitch perfect. Thanks to Melanie for the link.
One more. This time with a Taylor Swift-centric vibe. Author Patricia Hubbell ought to be well pleased:
In other news I was so pleased to see James Kennedy and his 90-Second Newbery shenanigans appear on this recent episode of Kidlit TV. You should watch it if, for no other reason, the fact that you get to see Ame Dyckman briefly prance. And prance she does!!
Next up, the Mazza Museum! I love that place, but the smiling blonde is way way way perky.
Speaking of perky, Scholastic ups the ante with a professional announcer talking up their summer reading challenge. Not a bad idea. Offer kids the chance to be in a world record and watch your participation numbers skyrocket.
And for our off-topic video, this week this post alerted me to the existence of this movie scene from the film Bedazzled. This constitutes my new favorite thing.
3 Comments on Video Sunday: “You fill me with inertia.”, last added: 4/20/2015
Peter Cook! Dudley Moore (in his early days)! Haven’t seen the original Bedazzled in years, but boy did I love it (and them) way back when.
James Kennedy said, on 4/19/2015 9:44:00 PM
Ha! Another Mallory Ortberg fan! I *thought* that video looked familiar… yet another thing we have in common!
melanie hope greenberg said, on 4/20/2015 8:31:00 AM
Thanks for posting that library funk video. Surprised no one else sent it. Had the pleasure of seeing Dudley Moore and Peter Cook on Broadway many a moon ago.
About a week ago the 90-Second Newbery premiered at New York Public Library (PW did a nice write-up of it here) and the afternoon was a stellar success. My Lit Salon went over so I didn’t have a chance to see much of it, but fortunately James Kennedy, who created the darn thing, did me a favor and curated some of the best little videos of the year.
First off, what may well be my favorite video. Claymation has always done the 90-Second Newbery proud. Now they’re all the prouder with a Claymation version of Steve Sheinkin’s Bomb: The Race To Build–And Steal–The World’s Most Dangerous Weapon by Jennings Mergenthal of Tacoma, WA.
Extra points for the Tom Lehrer at the end.
Then it’s Ramona And Her Father done as a musical by the kids at Northwestern University’s Center for Talent Development. I felt very proud that as an adult I could identify all but two of the tunes they were singing.
How about that father doing The Snake? Kid’s got moves! Plus this had the advantage of making me want to read that book again.
But why watch just one? In today’s economy a story about a dad losing his job has special significance. This Ramona And Her Father is done as a James Bond movie by a different set of kids at Northwestern University’s Center for Talent Development.
What’s particularly interesting to me is that both Ramonas used very similar stock images of suburban houses between their shots. I also love that in this one they decided to pay attention to the details and put the driver on the British side of the car.
I love too clever teenagers. So this ominous foreshadowing ridden version of Bridge To Terabithia by Rochester Community Television in Rochester, NY appeals to the 15-year-old in me.
And finally . . . MORE stop animation! This time it’s the Atwater’s Mr. Popper’s Penguins courtesy of Girl Scout Troop 2539 from Urbana, IL.
I told you I had a weakness for that stuff.
For our off-topic video, this has nothing to do with 90-Second Newbery and everything to do with House of Cards. It’s the Sesame Street parody. Seemed fitting in an odd way. We’re all about the homages today.
2 Comments on Video Sunday: 90-Second Newbery Edition, last added: 3/16/2015
Thanks for highlighting these videos from the 4th annual 90-Second Newbery, Betsy! Hey teachers and librarians and families and filmmakers, it’s never too early to start helping your students and kids make their own 90-second (ish) movies of Newbery Medal (or Honor) winning books for the 5th annual 90-Second Newbery. Deadline December 14 2015! Rules and details here: http://www.90secondnewbery.com
:Donna said, on 3/15/2015 10:09:00 PM
Thanks for sharing the videos, Betsy The teenagers with Terabithia cracked me up! And I love anything “Sesame Street”
Here in New York we’re getting very excited. The 90-Second Film Festival is coming!! And soon too! Here’s a PW interview with James Kennedy about the festival and for those of you in the NYC area you can see it at NYPL on Saturday, March 7th at 3:00 p.m. In fact, now that I think about it, you could begin your day at NYPL at 2:00 p.m. at my Children’s Literary Salon Blurred Lines?: Accuracy and Illustration in Nonfiction. We’ll be hosting Mara Rockliff (author), Brian Floca (author/illustrator), Nicole Raymond (editor), and Sophie Blackall (illustrator/author) as they discuss the responsibility of an illustrator when working on a piece of historical nonfiction for kids and whether or not words garner closer scrutiny than pictures. Should be a fabulous day.
We all know on some level that when a book is adapted into a movie the likelihood of the strong female characters staying strong is negligible. There are always exceptions to the rule, but by and large it’s depressing not to be more shocked by the recent Cracked piece 6 Insulting Movie Adaptations of Strong Female Characters. I was very pleased to see the inclusion of Violet from A Series of Unfortunate Events too. Folks tend to forget about her.
At the beginning of February I had the infinite pleasure of hosting a Children’s Literary Salon at NYPL on Collaborating Couples. I invited in Ted & Betsy Lewin, Andrea and Brian Pinkney, and Sean Qualls and Selina Alko. You can read the PW round-up of the talk here, but before we hit the stage I had to ask Sean about this incident that occurred involving his book with Selina, The Case for Loving and W. Kamau Bell’s treatment at Berkeley’s Elmwood Café. We didn’t touch on it during our talk since it wasn’t pertinent to this particular discussion, but if you haven’t read the article I suggest you give it a look.
If I’m going to be honest about it, this perfectly encapsulates what I’ve always personally felt about the Elephant and Piggie books. This is because growing up I was the child that wanted everyone and everything in the universe to pair up. Sesame Street fed this desire to a certain degree but the only time Mr. Rogers got close was during the opera episodes. And don’t even get me STARTED on Reading Rainbow (no sexual tension = no interest for 4-year-old Betsy). Hence my perverse desire to see Gerald and Piggie become a couple. I know, I know. Clearly I need help.
Moomins! Ballet! Moomins in ballet! Sorry, do you need more than that? Thanks to Marci for the link.
It’s fun to read this look at the Mary Poppins Hidden Relationships Fan Theory, but I’ve a bone to pick with it. Correct me if I’m wrong but doesn’t the book of Mary Poppins make it very clear that yes indeed Mary Poppins WAS Bert’s nanny back in the day? Or am I just making stuff up? I thought this was cannon. That other stuff about Bert’s relationships is particularly peculiar as well.
Perhaps you feel, as I do, that you’ve read every possible Harry Potter related list out there devised by the human brain. Still and all, while I had seen a bunch of these, there are still some lovely surprises in the BuzzFeed list 21 Times “Harry Potter” Was the Cleverest Book Series Ever.
Speaking of Harry Potter and BuzzFeed, new term alert: Racebent. Didn’t know it, but this piece has actually convinced me that it is entirely possible that Hermione Granger isn’t the white-skinned schoolgirl she’s often considered to be. Recall if you will that it was only ever made explicit that Dean Thomas had dark skin when the Harry Potter books were brought over to America (a fact that is not usually mentioned in these stories).
Oh, what the heck. May as well get as Harry Potterish as possible today. Look! Cover animations!
For years I’ve yearned to go to TLA (the meeting of the Texas Library Association). State library meetings are always fun, but Texas takes their own to another level. So far I haven’t had an excuse, but I was reminded of this desire recently when I read the rather delightful piece on how an abandoned Texan Walmart got turned into the ultimate public library. McAllen? You’re good people.
Let It Be Known: That every author and illustrator out there that makes school visits on a regular basis should take a very close look at Nathan Hale’s School Visit Instructions and replicate PRECISELY what he has done on their own websites. Obviously you cannot all draw so in terms of visuals he has you beat. However, this information is perfect and you could certainly write it down in some form yourself. Let it also be known that his upcoming book about Harriet Tubman, The Underground Abductor, is AMAZING. Here’s the cover:
David Wiesner created an app? Yep, pretty much. It’s called Spot and it is now on my To Buy list.
Oh! I don’t know if any of you folks actually know about this. Were you aware that there is a major children’s book award out there for math-related titles? Yep, there is. It’s called the Mathical Award and it’s a project that has come out of a collaboration between The Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI) and the Children’s Book Council (CBC). Those of you producing such books should look into it. Could be very very useful to you.
Daily Image:
I’ve been meaning to get back to work on updating my post of the Complete Listing of All Children’s Literature Statues in the United States for a while here. There are definitely some sections that need work. However, one image I will not be adding is this statue of what might be the world’s creepiest Cat in the Hat. Not because I don’t like him (oh, I do, I do) but because it’s on school rather than public property. That doesn’t mean I can’t share him with you anyway, though.
Many thanks to Paula Wiley for bringing him to my attention. Wowzah.
9 Comments on Fusenews: Starring the World’s Creepiest Cat in the Hat!, last added: 2/26/2015
I really wish I lived in NYC for stuff like this. I attended a Salon a few years ago and it was fantastic! I just can’t do the tolls and parking all that often. I HATE missing this great stuff. You mentioned the Feb. one with the Lewins and Pinkneys, now this great panel on April 11th. Salivating! lol
kim baker said, on 2/23/2015 8:41:00 AM
I got to see the McAllen Library last month while I was there for some school visits. It’s completely awesome. And going by the librarians I met on my trip, TLA must be ridiculously fun and inspiring. Can’t wait to go someday,
Nathan Hale said, on 2/23/2015 1:30:00 PM
Thanks for the plugs! My author visit comic is a month old and it already needs an update. After working with my publicist, and hearing complaints from more than one school that they “didn’t have iPad connector dongle or a 20 foot cord” I realized these instructions were still confusing. Revised clarifications incoming.
Carl in Charlotte said, on 2/23/2015 1:45:00 PM
You got a disruptive child in your classroom? You want to make him/her behave? Sit that child in that chair next to that Cat for half an hour with those eyes staring at him or her. That child will be an angel the rest of the year! (would probably work for adults too!)
Genevieve said, on 2/24/2015 6:28:00 AM
I don’t think the Mary Poppins books allude to Mary having been Bert’s nanny. I read them all as a kid, and re-read them, and that does not ring a bell.
Mara said, on 2/24/2015 6:56:00 AM
I always thought the Cat in the Hat was pretty terrifying, actually.
So excited to see the 90-Second Newberys after our panel! And James Kennedy! And Ame Dyckman!
Elizabeth Bird said, on 2/24/2015 6:59:00 AM
Right-o. Apparently my brain was aligned with this particular fan theory, then.
Kirsten said, on 2/24/2015 8:59:00 AM
Thank you very much for sharing the incident that happened in Berkeley with W. Kamau Bell.
And for these always enlightening, entertaining posts. I don’t miss one!
Kirsten
Sondy said, on 2/26/2015 3:46:00 PM
A math book award! A math book award! I wonder how I would go about getting on that panel… Though perhaps instead I should work on writing a book that would be eligible….
2014 marked a distinct increase in attention spent on children’s books with diverse characters. However, this is not to say that all books with diverse characters got the same amount of attention. Take, for example, Saving Baby Doe by Danette Vigilante. It was one of the only middle grade books in 2014 to sport a Latino boy protagonist (go on . . . name me two others in 2014). It had great writing as well, so why has almost no one talked about it? NYPL put it on their 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing list and recently our local station NY1 interviewed Staten Island resident Ms. Vigilante about the book in our Stapleton branch. Watch carefully and you may see me in my cameo role as “New York Public Library” itself.
You better watch out, you better not cry. You better not pout, I’m telling you why. 90-SECOND NEWBERY FILM FESTIVAL IS COMING TO TOWN!!! You can see the full listing of where the festival is headed here. In the meantime, here’s one of the new videos. Is it bad that it actually scared me? It’s a bunch of kids doing The Graveyard Book (The Dance Macabray as kickline = inspired) but I had the same reaction to it that I had to Shaun of the Dead. I honestly found parts of it (the sleer) scary. I is wimp!!
Maybe I’ve been reading The Lorax to my kiddo too much but you know what this is, don’t you?
It’s a Thneed! Thanks to Aunt Judy for the video.
Have you seen the latest trailer for a new version of The Little Prince? For the first 30 seconds or so of this you’re going to be confused, possibly angry. Stick with it. Please.
Beats Bob Fosse as The Snake, anyway. Then again, points docked for not having any Gene Wilder. (Fun Fact: Most movies are docked points for this very reason)
No no no no no. Not allowed. I call foul. Illustrators have enough talent as it is. They are NOT allowed to also be excellent authors and even if they happen to be precisely that they are NOT allowed to have pitch perfect voices that can read selections from their books with all the vocal skills of the highest paid celebrity. Back you go, Chris Riddell. Ply your magic dulcet tones elsewhere.
At this point there are too many fantastic 2015 picture books out there to tell you about. Thank goodness some of them make book trailers, then. For example, have you heard about Kathi Appelt’s fabulous When Otis Courted Mama, illustrated by Jill McElmurry? If not then remedy is at hand:
Now another trailer. As blurbs go, “This book smells great” may be my pick of the week.
And for the off-topic video of the day, it’s a Swing vs. Hip Hop dance off from Montreal. As my friend Marci put it, “the first swing round is sort of meh but it gets better.”
Thanks to Marci for the link.
7 Comments on Video Sunday: Meeting All Your Sleer n’ Thneed Needs, last added: 1/12/2015
Worth noting in that dance-off that for the first rounds they’re dancing to each other’s music. Hip-hop to swing music suddenly looks like the Mills brothers!
Kathi Appelt said, on 1/11/2015 11:11:00 AM
Betsy! Thank you so much for featuring OTIS on Video Sunday. It feels a lot like being in the run down to the Oscars!
KA
Kathi Appelt said, on 1/11/2015 11:22:00 AM
Also, Latino male protagonist, middle grade: Gabe Fuentes in Will Alexander’s new book, AMBASSADOR.
Just saying.
KA
Elizabeth Bird said, on 1/11/2015 11:57:00 AM
Yes! That was the other one. I always leave it off. So there were two. Two, folks. Two.
Danette Vigilante said, on 1/11/2015 12:55:00 PM
I’m so very honored! Thank you!
James Kennedy said, on 1/11/2015 3:29:00 PM
Thanks for sharing about the 90-Second Newbery, Betsy! Looking forward to seeing you in New York come March!
Donald Lemke said, on 1/12/2015 12:02:00 PM
Thanks for featuring the BOOK-O-BEARDS trailer! The book does smell pretty good (although I think most books do!). — Lemke (& Lentz)
Here we are in the glory of spring. With all the beauty just ah-popping outdoors, what better time to sequester ourselves inside to watch mad videos about children’s literature related affairs?
So first and foremost, you may have seen me make mention of the fact that I had a podcasting-related Children’s Literary Salon last weekend. My Lit Salons are monthly gatherings of children’s literature enthusiasts who come to the main branch of NYPL to watch me finagle different topics out of incredibly interesting people. People often ask me to record these, but at this time there is no place online for such talks to live. Happily, that problem was solved recently when Katie Davis (Brain Burps About Books) , John Sellers (PW KidsCast), and Matthew Winner (Let’s Get Busy) came over and Matthew recorded the whole dang thing. This is, insofar as I know, the very FIRST time a moderated event has covered this particular topic (children’s literature podcasts). With that in mind, enjoy!
“John Newbery ate every single book he ever read”. That was going to be my subtitle for today’s blog post. I may still have to use it at some point because it’s one of the highlights of this James Kennedy / Libba Bray interaction at the recent 90-Second Newbery show here in NYC. For years, I’ve been sitting on my laurels with my Randolph Caldecott music video. Now I’ve been royally trumped and it’s all thanks to the song “What Would John Newbery Do?” I can’t top this.
And now, with the approach of the Children’s Book Week Awards, time to break out the big guns. And these, ladies and gents, are some SERIOUSLY big guns!
Turns out the CBC collected a whole CHUNK of these videos and they’re just out there! Like this one starring two of my favorite author/illustrators, Amy Ignatow and Brian Biggs. You must be SURE to stick around for the ghost of David Wiesner. And it backs up my theory that every person in my generation has one rap song memorized. Mine’s “Shoop”.
Nice use of “Rock Lobster” too.
We’re about three days away from El día del niño, otherwise known as the day of the child. Unfamiliar with Dia? Not anymore. Here’s a quickie recap for those of you who are curious:
Día means “day” in Spanish. In 1996, author Pat Mora learned about the Mexican tradition of celebrating April 30th as El día del niño, the day of the child. Pat thought, “We have Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. Yes! We need kids’ day too, but I want to connect all children with bookjoy, the pleasure of reading.” Pat was enthusiastically assisted to start this community-based, family literacy initiative by REFORMA, the National Association to Promote Library & Information Services to Latinos and the Spanish Speaking. El día de los niños, El día de los libros/Children’s Day, Book Day, also known as Día, is a daily commitment to link all children to books, languages and cultures, day by day, día por día. Many resources and an annual registry are available at the Association for Library Services to Children (ALSC), a division of the American Library Association (ALA). Every year, across the country, libraries, schools, and community organizations, etc. plan culminating book fiestas creating April Children’s Day, Book Day celebrations that unite communities.
Join us!
Interested in participating? It’s not too late. Best of all, here’s a video from previous years of what folks have done in their libraries. Viva Dia!
We’ve sort of an embarrassment of riches this year in terms of trans boy picture books (see the 7-Imp recap of this very thing here). Now one of those books, Morris Micklewhite and the Tangerine Dress, has a book trailer that hits on the tone about right. Let’s put it up on the big board!
Thanks to Fred Horler for the link.
This next one is a fictional tie-in to a nonfiction subject. Which is to say, a CCSS dream. I’m not usually on board with rhyming picture books, but this one actually gets away with it!
And for the off-topic video of the day, we all love Neil deGrasse Tyson. This is the video of him slowed down ever so slightly. He loves it. Shows it at his talks sometimes.
And for fun, you can watch the original here:
0 Comments on Video Sunday: Met the ghost of David Wiesner at the Hotel Paradise . . . as of 4/27/2014 4:39:00 AM
No reason in particular I wrote that word. I just like to say “Zounds!” from time to time. Onward!
I initially misread this post as “Summer Reading Takes a Hit From Online Scanning and Skimming Researchers Say” (which shows you where my mind is these days). It’s not “Summer” but Serious Reading Takes a Hit From Online Scanning and Skimming Researchers Say. I am not dead to the irony of linking to such a piece within a post where the entire purpose is to skim and scan. That said, I’m just grateful that summer reading isn’t taking that hit. Now THAT would be a catastrophe. Thanks to Wayne Roylance for the link.
This is somewhat related. The New York Times put out an article talking about the necessity of literature for the very young. Called Books, and Compassion, From Birth it won’t say much that you don’t already know, but hopefully it’ll get some readers aware of what needs to be done. It also ties in quite beautifully with author Jason Boog’s delightful July release Born Reading: Bringing Up Bookworms in a Digital Age — From Picture Books to eBooks and Everything in Between. In the interest of transparency, I wrote the introduction for that book, but the content is all Boog. Consider it the most necessary bit of parental instruction you’ll find. Hand to folks at baby showers. Please.
I’m about a week behind in all my news, so you probably saw this long ago. But just in case you didn’t I was amused by this mash-up of Syd Hoff/Richard Scarry and some very adult novels. Here’s the link and here’s one of the images in question:
Awesome.
It wouldn’t be the first time Mac Barnett and Daniel Handler have appeared on the same panel. Heck, it probably wouldn’t even necessarily be the best time but there’s nothing like an imminent birth to make a person want to attend the 2014 ALSC National Institute. Aside from the great guests, folks get to go to a place called Children’s Fairyland. I went to see whether or not I’d added the attractions there to my Complete Listing of All Public Children’s Literature Statues in the United States and found that I had not yet. I think on maternity leave I go back to updating that post. It’s 75% done. Just need to keep adding on suggestions (and I see that the Albany Public Library turned it into a Pinterest board, which is rather fascinating in and of itself).
I was fascinated by the recent ShelfTalker post To Host or Not to Host? The gist of it is that local authors will often ask a bookstore to host an event for their book. No big surprise there, except what do you do when they’ve published through Amazon? The back and forth in the comments is worth your time and money.
Good old Rocco Staino wrote up the recent celebratory 90-Second Newbery hosted at NYPL. The gist of the article is quite clever too. I had noticed vaguely, but without putting it together, that this year’s film festival featured a lot of forgotten Newbery book winners. I mean, does anyone at all remember The Old Tobacco Shop: A True Account of What Befell A Little Boy in Search of Adventure? And I blush to say it, but I had no idea that Anne Carroll Moore won a Newbery Honor back in the day. Wowzah. How is THAT fact not better known?
Yay, Tea Cozy! Liz Burns does a really good and in-depth look at a recent Entertainment Weekly article that discussed the sheer lack of diversity in our child and teen books these days.
There are certain authors on this good green globe that make the world a more interesting place by simply being here. Years ago when I read Kate Milford’s The Boneshaker, I knew she was one of those few. The fascinating thing about Kate is that she’s always writing. Even when her characters aren’t making it into books published by traditional publishers, they’re living their lives in books funded by Kickstarter. Now Kate’s got a new book on the horizon called Bluecrowne that I’d be dying to read, and at the same time she has a book that’s kinda sorta related coming out in August called The Green Glass House. I really need to read that August title, but I’d love to see her publish the Bluecrowne book as well. So if you’ve some jingle in your jeans and like her work (or even if you’re just simply interested in what she has going on) check out her Kickstarter project here.
Thanks to a push in Britain to stop promoting gendered toys for kids, the focus has moved a bit to books for kids as well. I know I’m not the only person in the world who shudders every time she sees a book spell out on its cover that it’s just “For Boys” or “For Girls”. Just as I grind my teeth when the toy store tells me the same dang thing. A not so hotso article in a Philadelphia magazine yielded a pretty darn good conversation in its comments. The article itself is one of those rabble rouser pieces that throw words like “Orwellian” around higglety pigglety. The comments from Let Toys Be Toys focus everything and keep the conversation civil. Thanks to PW Children’s Bookshelf for the link.
And speaking of gender . . . Anyone out there familiar with Sheila Hamanaka’s picture book I Look Like a Girl? I wasn’t and I only knew Ms. Hamanaka’s name because of her All the Colors of the Earth. Well over at Bank Street College of Education’s school the kids got a little passionate about the messages they get from books sometimes. Here’s the part one and part two of the kids and their reactions/interpretations. Wowzah.
Some folks know that before I decided to become a children’s librarian I played with the notion of heading into conservation instead. Now my worlds collide as I present to you a recent NYPL post on what it takes to take care of Winnie-the-Pooh and friends. Stuffed Animal Husbandry, for the record, is the perfect title.
Daily Image:
I’m actually doing very well on Daily Images these days. Perhaps too well. I was all set with the image for today but that was before I saw this. It’s a link that will instruct you on the finer details of creating your very own one-of-a-kind Hobbes doll.
I ain’t crafty but that, my friends, is just about the cutest thing I’ve ever seen.
4 Comments on Fusenews: All you need is love (and books before the age of 3), last added: 4/10/2014
Hm. Regarding the NYTimes piece on “Books, and Compassion, From Birth” : I’m of course all for universal pre-K, and books, too for that matter! But it’s interesting to read the underlying assumptions of this piece in light of the recent conversation between Ta-Nehisi Coates and Jonathan Chait about “the culture of poverty.”
Amy M said, on 4/9/2014 7:24:00 AM
Hooray, ALSC Institute 2014! Hooray Oakland! I live just around the corner from Fairyland–I love that in my adult life, that is a thing I get to say.
Elizabeth Bird said, on 4/9/2014 10:40:00 AM
The comments to the piece remark on something along those lines, so I’d highly recommend reading those as well for that very purpose. Thanks for mentioning this.
Kate Milford said, on 4/10/2014 6:07:00 PM
Oh shucks, I want those Syd Hoff/McCarthy Early Readers SO BAD. And thanks so much for that wonderful mention, Betsy!
Some weeks can go by without a single solitary interesting video in sight. Other weeks, you drown in brilliance. This week inclines far more towards the latter than the former.
I could not lead off today with anything other than the latest bit of Bookie Woogie brilliance. You keened to their 90-second rendition of Where the Mountain Meets the Moon. You hooted to their Black Cauldron encapsulation. And you had to rewire your jaw after it smashed to the floor after seeing their Frog and Toad Together video. Now behold the wonder that is . . . Charlotte’s Web!!!
Naturally this was created for James Kennedy’s 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. Those of you in the Chicago area will want to reserve your (free) seats for the February 1st screening here. If nothing else I urge you to check out the posters that Aaron Zenz created in conjunction with this.
Aw, shoot. I know for a fact I never put THIS 90-Second Newbery video up either (you see what happens when you try to post just one?). This is my favorite, bar none, version of The Giver. If I were a producer on a comedy show I would hire this kid NOW NOW NOW.
From this awesomeness we now turn to the ultimate delight. Self-deprecation. Marc Tyler Nobleman had a brilliant notion. He was watching Jimmy Kimmel Live! and saw the bit where celebrities read insulting tweets about themselves. It gave him an idea – what if children’s authors did the same with bad Amazon reviews? Though my temptation is to post all three videos here, I’m going to be a good pooky and only post one. If you would like to see the other two (which are just as good and feature just loads of famous folks) go to Marc’s blog right here. Here’s part one:
In book trailer news, or rather live-action book trailer news, Lorie Ann Grover’s YA novel Firstborn is coming out and the trailer looks pretty darn strong. To the point, well shot, the works. Love the brevity of it. Well played, folks.
If you like your trailers a little more nonfiction picture booky, try on for size this one for Patricia Hruby Powell’s Josephine about you-know-who:
And in this corner, stealing prodigiously from fellow SLJ blogger Travis Jonker (if you read his Morning Notes you’ll do wonders for my conscience), here is Kate DiCamillo fresh outta National Ambassador of Young People’s Literature-ship, on the PBS Newshour.
The only cool video I could NOT find this week was something appropriately off-topic. So here’s a cat failing a jump. The internet, if nothing else, is good for a couple of these. Plus the cat’s clearly okay at the end.
3 Comments on Video Sunday: At the speed of light, she arrives just in time . . ., last added: 1/13/2014
It’s been a good week and it’s only Thursday! I’ve cooed and oohed and aahed over NYPL’s 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing 2013 list before. Nothing new to say . . . or is there? I don’t suppose you happened to see NPR’s interactive booklist consisting of their Best Books of 2013 (in a rare moment of bliss, I like all their children’s book choices though some diversity wouldn’t have been out of place). Well, NYPL took one look at that list and thought, “Heck. We can do that.” And so they did! Meet the Interactive Books List of NYPL. It’s gorgeous. It’s user friendly. It’s the only place you can find animated Melissa Sweet. Overall, I rather love it. Hope you do too.
In other best book news, Colby Sharp and Donalyn Miller teamed up at BuzzFeed and produced a list of 20 of the Best Children’s Books 2013. And AGAIN I like all the choices. Do you know how rare this is? Extra points for including Donner Dinner Party. Love that thing. Love anyone who includes it on a list.
Having trouble keeping track of all the Best Of lists out there? Mr. Schu’s your man. Thanks to him, we now have a nicely compiled 2013 Best Books Lists posting. It’s very attractive. Of course, if you want the most complete listing out there, there’s no better place to go than Chicken Spaghetti. The information is AMAZING over there.
A lot has been said lately about how big Best lists of children’s books this year have neglected to include any Latino characters (NPR and The New York Times most notably). Perfect timing then for the 2014 Reading Challenge suggested by Latin@s in Kid Lit. Take a look at the guidelines and join, but seriously? One book a month? I think you can handle that. They even have some suggestions to start you off (yay, Nino!).
And, of course, if you read only one Best list, read the 100 Scope Notes highly hilarious Year in Miscellanea. Plus he mentions my superfluous little cupcake. Quoth he it’s, “the Axl Rose Hair Metal hair of picture book cover cupcakes.” You’re just going to have to read his piece to understand what that means.
I had this lovely Children’s Literary Salon earlier this month involving dolls in children’s literature, which got a little write-up in Publishers Weekly (thanks, Matia!). One of my guests was Krystyna Poray Goddu. She, in turn, created this kind of awesome booklist of dolls in books for kids. It’s really rather cool.
Tempted to see Saving Mr. Banks in the theater this holiday season? Feel free but be aware that the film may be throwing P.L. Travers under the bus in the process. A great piece from Jerry Griswold, former Director of the National Center for the Study of Children’s Literature.
GAAAAAAAHHHHH!!!! Well, geez. Most evil baby gift ev-ah.
Anyone who has ever attended one of James Kennedy’s 90-Second Newbery Film Festivals will attest that they are a bundle of fun. Just the most delightful little films, created by kids, turning Newbery winners into concise 90-second films. Some are, understandably, better than others but there’s nothing cooler than sitting in a theater next to a kid who gets to see their film projected on a big screen for the first time in their young lives. Want to join in? The deadline for the next 90-second films is January 20th. So get cracking, young geniuses! For lots more information about the events and the showings, go here.
Awww. This is so sweet. Over at Mocking It Up, Rebecca did me a solid and created this simply gorgeous infographic on the books that are topping the Mock Newbery lists around the country (she compiled results from 19 different Mocks). That’s a ton of work but the results are simply gorgeous. Wowzah! Well done, madam.
Our good buddy James Kennedy alerted me to the fact that after his magnificent 90-Second Newbery show left New York City for other library systems in other states he received additional, incredibly funny and insane submissions that are worth seeing. What we have here is a Tacoma-based Frog and Toad Together take on the story “The List”. As James describes it it’s “done in the style of a French ye-ye music video or Wes Anderson movie.”
All right. We’re gonna present this day by cheering you up, breaking your heart, and then piecing it back together a bit at a time. That’s the kind of Sunday I’m dealing with here. Now I don’t know if you read the recent SLJ article Kid Lit Authors, Illustrators Visit Sandy Hook Elementary School but you should. And as it happens our roving reporter in the field Rocco Staino took some videos of the aforementioned authors and illustrators. This one is of Bob Shea. The very normality of it destroys me. Utterly.
Now let’s do something nice. In lieu of Kid President (which, correct me if I’m wrong, a whole great big swath of us have already seen) here’s “Obvious to you. Amazing to others,” coming at you via The Styling Librarian.
I’m not going to read too much into the fact that I live in Harlem and yet, until I heard from a Ms. Nicole Roohi this week, I had totally missed this whole “Harlem Shake” craze, as it were. Fun Fact: Not from Harlem. In any case, turns out there are a BUNCH of videos of this thing filmed in libraries across our fair nation. You can find some here and here and here and here and here. The one I will feature today, however, is from Goldenview Middle School in Anchorage, Alaska.
As Ms. Roohi told me, “The video production class filmed it, and the security guards starred in it (well, along with my assistant and myself). The principal, teachers, students and even a bus driver joined in.” Thanks for the link, Nicole!
In keeping with the peppy music today, if I lived in a world where every person had their own theme song that followed them around throughout the day, the tune that is featured in this trailer for Jesse Klausmeier & Suzy Lee’s Open This Little Book would be mine. Granted, it would bug people, but I’d only turn it on when I was marching down the street. Marching, I say.
And finally, since we seem to be all trendy trendy today, let’s just end with something Downton Abbey-ish. The fact no one else has done this yet is amazing to me.
Though I would take issue with that Lady Crawley line near the end. Doesn’t he mean she loves ‘em?
3 Comments on Video Sunday: I’m only gonna break break your, break break your heart, last added: 3/3/2013
Thanks for highlighting those great contributions to this year’s 90-Second Newbery Film Festival, Betsy! They’re getting better every year. For those of you interested in submitting short movies for the third annual festival, the deadline is December 10, 2013. All the details are here: http://www.90secondnewbery.com.
Elizabeth Bird said, on 3/3/2013 9:08:00 AM
Well there you go. Whence the current reboot, I wonder?
Missed posting this last week. Those Peacekeepers really look spot on, don’t they? We’ll see how it goes but this trailer gives us a sense that The Hunger Games may be worth watching. Would have liked to see a little Haymitch, of course.
So! We never filmed the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival at NYPL, but fortunately Chicago had a couple cameras in the wings. James Kennedy has posted a great little piece about all the madness that occurred, including this fabulous song by Abraham Levitan about twenty of the Newbery books featured at this festival:
The other day About.com asked me to recommend some children’s books to them. Particularly (and this is an adorable kinda old-fashioned request) books to read after Harry Potter. So I whipped out a list of great 2011 fantasies for kids. Particularly, The Dragon’s Tooth by N.D. Wilson, The Floating Islands by Rachael Neumeier, Kat Incorrigible by Stephanie Burgis, Small Persons With Wings by Ellen Booream, and The Ogre of Oglefort by Eva Ibbotson:
And finally, for our off-topic video of the day, Metafilter called this a “children’s book for adults”. If you’ve been complaining that I don’t give you enough Polish filmmaking, consider your prayers answered.
Thanks to Kathi Appelt for the link!
0 Comments on Video Sunday: Sleepy post-Thanksgiving posting as of 11/27/2011 9:01:00 AM
I hope you all took the time to notice the magnificent One Shot World Tour: City Living conducted by any number of our best bloggers in the biz. I had every intention of participating and then lost my head. Fortunately there are folks out there far more reliable than myself for this kind of thing. From historical London to alternate London, from trees in Brooklyn to blackouts there, this thing was awesome. Chasing Ray has the round-up. Enjoy.
Well sir, the National Book Award was announced two days ago. Once again a children’s book rather than a teen novel won. Interestingly, that book was not Gary Schmidt’s fabulous Okay for Now but the rather awesome in its own right Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai(a title that to my mind win’s The 2011 When You Reach Me Award for Most Difficult Title to Remember). Of course, Leila Roy called what would happen when someone won. Doggone it.
Ah, Nancy Drew. Folks just can’t stop talking about you, can they? If they’re not speculating about what might be playing on your iPod then they’re sending you back in time to the Salem Witch Trials. Buck up, kid. It could be worse. You could be Cherry Ames.
Re: Racism and colonialism in Pippi Longstocking, what she said.
Fun Fact: The American Folklore Society has an award. It’s called The Aesop Prize and it’s awarded by the Children’s Folklore Section of the society. This year the award went to Trickster: Native American Tales – A Graphic Collection, which I agree was extraordinary. So naturally I was curious about what the previous winners had been. Amusingly in 2010 the award went to Joha Makes a Wish by Eric A. Kimmel. In 2009 it went to Dance, Nana, Dance (Baila, Nana, Baila) by Joe Hayes, and in 2008 it was Ain’t Nothing But a Man: My Quest to Find the Real John Henry by Scott Reynolds Nelson. You can see the full list, and the many honorable mentions, here if you’re curious. For that matter, if you’ve a children’s work of folklore published in 2011 or 2012 and you want it to be considered for this prize, check out the Prize Review Criteria.
0 Comments on Fusenews: “Don’t Let the Pigeon Die Alone” as of 1/1/1900
If you’ve read my blog in the last year you may have heard me mention a little something called the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival. Said aloud it sounds like The 92nd Newbery Film Festival (which is not too far off since 2012 will be the 90th Newbery Award). However the entire premise was this: Kids from around the world (yes world) filmed 90-second or so versions of various Newbery Award and Honor books. They sent these books to YA author James Kennedy (of The Order of Odd-Fish) and he collected, curated, organized, tightened, and generally got them into working order. Now James received more than 100 entries, so those were culled down to a select few that he is showing in three theatrical showings. Here in New York our film festival this past Saturday was the first and played in the main branch of the library system. Subsequent showings will be held in Chicago and Portland, Oregon.
For this performance, James had a difficult job ahead of him. Essentially he had to take the best aspects of what you get at your average school play and avoid the pitfalls such performances normally contain. He also had to wrangle some special guests and actors because a festival of just films might be fine, but it wouldn’t be kickin’.
So it was that co-master of ceremonies Jon Scieszka, Newbery Award winner Rebecca Stead, author Ayun Halliday, her hugely talented children India and Milo, and the kids of Writopia Labs all gathered together to put on what I can only call a helluva show.
My job in all of this was simple: Bring water to performers. Keep the calm. Don’t panic. Don’t let the auditorium fill to above capacity.
Well, three out of four ain’t bad, right? Turns out that while I excelled in the calm/no panic/water area, I had a hard time coming down on the auditorium rule. How could I help it? James’s show was clearly a hit. Here’s what it looked like before the latecomers started sneaking in:
I would have been displeased if I hadn’t been so thrilled.
The show started off with a bang. Scieszka and Kennedy brought to mind the old vaudeville acts of old. In their pseudo-tuxes the two managed on the spot to create two characters out of thin air. Jon, the gleeful worldly New Yorker with a gleam in his eye. James, the hardworking up-and-comer form Chicago with a chip on his shoulder in the face of Jon’s smugness.
The show began with James’s version of A Wrinkle in Time, that magnificent video that went viral (90,400 views of it on Vimeo alone). After it ended James reminded everyone that this is going to be an annual film festival. “So if you’re inclined, start thinking about what 90-second Newbery films you might want to do for next year’s film festival. You’ll be thinking, ‘I can do that, but a million times better.’ DO! You don’t have to have a dance party at the end.”
Thanks for the fantastic recap and pictures! Sounds like it was a blast. We’re hoping to make it to the Chicago showing… Can’t wait!
James Kennedy said, on 11/7/2011 7:02:00 AM
Thank you so much, Betsy, for making all of this possible! (And thanks especially for writing this masterful recap!)
Brooke Shirts said, on 11/7/2011 7:47:00 AM
I’m still sad that I never finished my family’s version of Frog and Toad. That’s what having a baby will get you. Any rumors on whether there will be another festival next year?
DaNae said, on 11/7/2011 7:49:00 AM
Waaa, all the videos are being blocked by my overprotective school district. I will need to wait until I get home. Thanks for sharing this, but I wish I was there.
James Kennedy said, on 11/7/2011 7:52:00 AM
@Brooke There will be another festival next year for sure! Looking forward to your FROG AND TOAD!
The 90-Second Newbery submissions keep coming in!! Remember, there’s still lots of time to have your talented kids/students/neighborhood gamins submit their own shortened versions of Newbery classics. James Kennedy and I will be presenting them at New York Public Library in the fall, but we’d love more titles like today’s musical take on that William Pene du Bois title 21 Balloons. That book goes out like crazy from my library at this time of year due to its appearance on summer reading lists. And while I’m not allowed to have 90-Second Newbery favorites, this one is right up there. More info over at James’s blog.
Well, it was a good week for links I think. Some weeks you can’t find a decent video to save your soul. Other weeks you’ve a virtual embarrassment of riches. For example, you might be sent a trailer for a documentary (due out in 2012) about the profane and wonderful Tomi Ungerer. Warning: May not be work appropriate at times (much like Mr. Ungerer himself).
Big time thanks to Jules Danielson for the link.
There was also this accurate encapsulation of the flaw in the Hogwarts house system:
Thanks to Jonathan Auxier for the link.
Another great It Gets Better video was released recently. This time it’s coming from the employees of Abrams.
And to round out this day of delights with a video of the off-topic variety, The Onion A.V. Club has been inviting bands in to record and reinterpret a variety of different songs. Aside from They Might Be Giants (who do a strangely accurate cover of Tubthumping) I really didn’t know any of the bands invited. That didn’t stop me from watching a whole slew of the videos, though. My favorite thus far:
Thanks to Phil Nel for the link.
5 Comments on Video Sunday: “It was just full of mouthwash”, last added: 7/10/2011
Love the hogwarts video. But wasn’t Cedric Diggory a Hufflepuff? Maybe it’s just that they’re all drop-dead gorgeous.
Ellen Booraem said, on 7/10/2011 6:38:00 AM
On the opposite end of the spectrum, just watched the Ungerer one. Wow. The documentary may be an unlikely screening in rural Maine, but as soon as it’s on Netflix, we’re in.
Brooke Shirts said, on 7/10/2011 9:36:00 AM
My children LOVE the 21 Balloons video. Personally, my favorite part is when, at the end, the actors take off their costumes. My 6-year-old jumped up when she saw this, and cried, “Ah-HA! I KNEW those beards were fake!”
Colleen said, on 7/10/2011 6:00:00 PM
I always figured the Hufflepuffs were the logistics people. Gryffendors are brave, Ravenclaws are intellectual, Slytherins are ambitious, but Hufflepuffs are the ones who excel behind the scenes — they’re the stage managers. Talent is all well and good, but you’ve got to have someone to wrangle the egos.
James Kennedy said, on 7/10/2011 11:04:00 PM
@Brooke I’m so glad to hear it! And I had the same reaction as your six-year-old. I’m not so easily fooled!
Honestly, when I saw this I was speechless. I am completely wowed by the Bookie Woogie Bloggers' creation! Not only are the shadow puppets so beautifully done, the pacing, script and music is great, too. This is the perfect movie to show students before and after they read the book.
The Bookie Woogie Bloggers even created a separate blog chronicling how they made the movie. It's great fun to see the sketches, the storyboarding--and very helpful if you want to attempt a movie of your own. After reading it, I'm thinking about making my own 90-second Newbery with my niece.
Anyway, take a look and let the Bookie Woogie creators know what a wonderful job they did!
Oh, wow. Just . . . wow. Some of you may already be aware of the Boogie Woogie blog, run by author/illustrator Aaron Zenz and his three kids. The fact that it may be the best blog out there in which kids participate in the discussion of children’s literature is evidenced by nothing so much as today’s video. I hope you stayed for the credits. This is their contribution to the James Kennedy 9o-Second Newbery Film Festival (to be held in my library in November) and if it doesn’t rock your socks off, nothing will. Failing that, James received some more submissions on his blog the other day, including this magnificent take on The Witch of Blackbird Pond from Mrs. Mrs. Powell’s 5th grade class at Laurelhurst School in Portland Oregon.
Remember, folks, to get you kids’ classes involved! Have them make a video of their own and submit! I admit that the bar is high, but there’s a lot of great stuff going down. We’d love more submissions. Keep ‘em coming!!!
Speaking of contests, I was tipped off about this fantastic video contest the Ottawa Public Library held for its teens. The Teen Tech Video Contest may sound like it’s YA fare, but many of the videos submitted were definitely of children’s books. And of the children’s books they covered, my favorite (hands down) was this take on The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe:
It came it second to The Outsiders which, this being Ottawa, says that they are on the “outside” of society in a delightfully Canadian way. Be sure to check out some of the other videos going on there. These Ottawa teens have some mad talent. Big time thanks to Jane Venus for bringing these to my attention.
Picture book trailer time. I think the genius behind this take on the Katie Davis book Kindergarten Rocks is the first child featured here. Methinks the the child doth protest too much. In any case, if your cute kid quotient is low for the day, here is the perfect cure:
Kids officially make the greatest videos ever. Why do we bother letting grownups make movies at all?
James Kennedy said, on 5/15/2011 12:34:00 PM
Another wonderful video roundup, Betsy! I loved the Star Wars videos in particular.
JINX — I blogged about that shadow-puppet “Where The Mountain Meets the Moon” today too, heaping it with well-deserved praise and pairing it with a “Walk Two Moons” I received from some undergraduates at Longwood University ( http://bit.ly/ja7ql3 ). I’m getting more and more excited for this film festival!
Elizabeth Bird said, on 5/15/2011 1:01:00 PM
Oh! And you even included background info on the Boogie Woogie vid. Well played, sir.
I should probably confess to you that I am using my librarian superpowers to delay the birth of your child so that she might arrive on the same date as my own. If I can make Heather late and myself earlier then my nefarious plan will come to fruition soon. Mwah-ha-ha!!
It's from Elisa Gall's 4th and 5th grade volunteers at Orrington School in Evanston, IL and it's great! I think it was particularly clever the way they used paper puppets--kind of an homage to Chinese shadow puppets as well as getting around budget restraints of hiring a green tiger and building a well:
Isn't that great? Thanks so much, Elisa Gall and Orrington School Students! I'm sending you a print from my etsy shop as a small thank you. I hope you like it!
And I also hope this encourages others to make a 90-second film for the festival. I'd absolutely would love to see more interpretations of my book, as well as other Newbery books!
1 Comments on on screens now!, last added: 5/5/2011
Thanks so much for having us at the Children’s Literary Salon, Betsy! I’m really looking forward to it!