In Australia we’re in the midst of Summer, although here in Melbourne we’ve already had all four seasons in one, sometimes even in one day! A great way to familiarise children with all that the season encompasses is through engaging language experiences. That means providing children opportunities to see, do, touch, listen, read and think […]
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Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Book News, friendship, seasons, beach, shaun tan, Claire Saxby, recycling, Alison Lester, Walker Books, Sue Whiting, Random House Australia, dianne wolfer, Fremantle Press, Lothian, Allen & Unwin, reassurance, Karen Blair, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Tom Jellett, Granny Grommet and Me, Seadog, Rules of Summer, Romi Sharp, A Swim in the Sea, Kyle Hughes-Odgers, On a Small Island, Meredith Thomas, Noni the Pony Goes to the Beach, Add a tag
Blog: PaperTigers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Australia, Alison Lester, books about Australia, Australian children's books, Australian young adult literature, Cultures and Countries, Australian children's book authors and illustrators, National Year of Reading Australia, Australian Children's Laureate, Boori Monty Pryor, Add a tag
Australian Children’s Laureate Press release: Dec 6, 2012
Double the Stories, Double the Fun as Two Champions of Aussie Storytelling Announced as Inaugural Laureates
Much-loved children’s authors Alison Lester and Boori Monty Pryor are being announced today as the first Australian Children’s Laureates at the launch of the initiative in Adelaide.
Both are talented and award-winning storytellers who bring a wealth of experience and creativity to the role – Alison as a renowned author and illustrator, and Boori as a celebrated author, performer, dancer and poet.
This prestigious national honour, the first of its kind in this country, is to be awarded at the launch by the Hon. Grace Portolesi, SA Minister for Education and Child Development and iconic children’s presenter Noni Hazlehurst, and is the culmination of the work by the Australian Children’s Literature Alliance (ACLA) to promote the transformational power of reading, creativity and story in the lives of young Australians.
ACLA Chair Marj Osborne says, “We are delighted to announce Alison and Boori as our joint inaugural Australian Children’s Laureates for 2012 and 2013. In them we found not one but two incredible individuals with the creative and passionate spirit we were looking for, so we made the unusual but exciting decision to appoint both.”
During their appointment Alison and Boori will act as national and international ambassadors for Australian children’s literature and will separately visit every state and territory inspiring young people to tell their own stories.
Click here to read the entire release and click here to see the events planned for Australia’s National Year of Reading 2012.
Blog: PaperTigers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Children's Books, Young Adult Books, Authors, Picture Books, Bob Raczka, Whitney Stewart, Alison Lester, Are We There Yet, Art Up Close, Learning to Swim in Swaziland, travel books for children, Where in the World, Add a tag
If you’re making plans to visit another culture with children, here’s a multi-genre multitude of resources, from guides for family travel to a pre-teen’s memoir of moving to Africa. Books, sites, lists… something to inspire and ease your travel with children and enrich their multicultural upbringing in the best possible way: experiencing new territory for themselves. Happy travels!
David Elliot Cohen’s One Year Off: Leaving It All Behind for a Round-the-World Journey With Our Children, in the Traveler’s Tales series, provides an ambitious starting point. Annotated travel-related children’s book lists, organized by country, await you at Travel for Kids. Along with books for young travelers, the Goodlittletraveler website suggests helpful advice about traveling with children. The Pennywhistle Traveling with Kids Book offers vehicular orientation for parents and kids traveling by car, plane, train or boat.
In Alison Lester’s Are We There Yet? 8-year-old Gracie narrates a family vacation all around Australia. Headed to the Caribbean? Here’s a book list. Along with many Fodors guides for kids traveling in Europe and U.S., Madallie: A Children’s Travel Store stocks an around-the-world adventure guide. Exploring Chinatown: A Children’s Guide to Chinese Culture is a great guide to any Chinatown, wherever in the world you’re headed. Four Corners Publishing puts out YA novels for and about young travelers, including guides to Sydney, Mexico, and Israel. In Learning to Swim in Swaziland by Nila K. Leigh, an American 11-year-old describes her life in Africa, where she moved when she was 8.
Introducing young children to international art classics in preparation for travel? Art Up Close makes helpful suggestions. And Bob Raczka’s Where in the World? takes Alighiero e Boetti’s tapestry map of the world as starting point for a world tour of great art–good fun for armchair and hit-the-road young travelers alike.
Blog: Neil Gaiman (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: birdchick, Lund Fantastic Film Festival, John Bauer, What on earth is this mystery about something happening in the crypt?, Theodor Kittelson, Theodor Kittelsen, Add a tag
Actually, the plane wasn't to Stockholm. It was, rather counter-intuitively, to Copenhagen. Where we were driven over an enormous bridge to Sweden, and were deposited in Lund.
Which is an astonishingly pretty University town, filled with green spaces and pretty buildings. There's a John Bauer exhition in the Museum I'm going to try to get to if I get any time tomorrow that isn't interviews or signings...
(Here's a Bauer painting. I was going to put up a Kittelson picture as well, because Norwegians know what trolls look like too, but I couldn't see any of the ones I wanted in a quick scan of the web and I'm standing in a hotel lobby typing...)
The Stardust signing and Q&A tonight is sold out, but the signing tomorrow at the Lund Town Hall at 2:30 is open to anyone, and I suspect that the mysterious event in the crypt of the Cathedral at 4:30 is likewise....
...
For those of you who are wondering (as I was) how and what my dog is doing, the Birdchick has posted some information about herself, the bees, giant puffball mushrooms, and my dog (who can be seen both investigating puffballs and being sympathetic as Sharon gets her First Bee Sting over at)
http://www.birdchick.com/2007/09/favorite-moment-of-beekeeping-thus-far.html
http://www.birdchick.com/2007/09/brrrrrr.html
http://www.birdchick.com/2007/09/hello-bee-sting-goodbye-dignity.html
which are the sort of things that I'd be posting if I wasn't on tour. Sigh.
[…] Where in the World?, aimed for middle school kids, is packed with fascinating details about the art and how it was made. As always, Raczka presents significant works of art without pretense. Kids experience the work for themselves while enjoying the geography along the way. And for more travel (plus art) books for children, click here. […]