- So the big news this week was that a writer at Slate decided that now was an ideal time to take a potshot at adults reading young adult books. And, as you might expect, everyone got quite hot under the collar about it. To arms! To arms! Considering that this sort of thing happens pretty much every time a new YA book hits the mainstream I wasn’t quite as upset as some. Honestly, I thought Roger Sutton’s piece Why Do We Even Call It YA Anymore? was much more along my own thinking. I could not help but enjoy Marjorie Ingall’s response as well.
It’s one of those stories that’s just so crazy you don’t quite believe it at first. So about a year ago I attending a lovely dinner for Stephan Pastis, author of the book Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made (as well as the other Timmy books that would follow). Stephan was one of those fellows just filled to the brim with stories. And, as luck would have it, his stories were about syndicated cartoonists; one of my favorite things in the world to talk about! I heard him wax eloquent on the subject of Gary Trudeau, Berkeley Breathed, you name it. He even had ties to Charles Schulz (a fact that served me well when I interviewed Sparky’s wife Jean). But when I dared to ask if he’d ever met the elusive Gary Larson or Bill Watterson (of Far Side and Calvin & Hobbes fame respectively) he confessed he had not, though Watterson had once sent him a nice note about one of his comics. Well bust my buttons, but recently Pastis got a lot more out of Watterson than a mere note. He got three illustrated comic strips! Read this post to learn how he did it and why this is as extraordinary a fact as it is. Wowza!
- I was very sad to hear about the recent death of legendary children’s book editor Frances Foster. Read this remarkable interview with her from Horn Book, conducted by Leonard Marcus to get a sense of the woman we just lost. PW provided a very nice obituary for her here.
- Essentially, this is kind of a real world case of Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, but with a dark dark twist.
- The voting may be over, but I can’t help but love the collection of different Penguin Random House logos that dared to combine the publishing behemoth. My personal favorite? Right here:

- I’ve oohed and cooed to you about the fact that Shaun Tan’s rather brilliant picture book Rules of Summer has an accompanying app with music by the amazing and fantastic Sxip Shirey. However, when I mentioned this fact before the app was not available for purchase. Now it is. Go get that thing then. You can even hear a selection of Sxip’s music for it here.
- Speaking of Rules of Summer, did you see Travis Jonker’s predictions of what he thinks will win the New York Times Best Illustrated Awards? Sort of a brilliant list to predict (and I think he’s completely and utterly dead on with his selection).
- Brain Pickings recently featured a selection of photographs of fictional meals from your favorite books. The photos are from the book Fictitious Dishes: An Album of Literature’s Most Memorable Meals. Though not strictly limited to children’s literature, it contains a handful of tasty treats worth noting. Be sure to check out the meals of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, The Secret Garden, Heidi, and a Chicken Soup With Rice that will knock your socks off.
- Just a quick shout out to my fellow metropolitan librarian Rita Meade who just sold her first children’s book. Go, Rita, go go go!
- One minute he’s winning a Tony. The next minute he’s turning The Dangerous Book for Boys into a television show. Wait . . . say what now?
- Did you guys happen to see Grace Lin’s rather remarkably good Cheat Sheet for Selling Diversity? Selling, heck. This should be disseminated into all the MLIS programs in the States. Future children’s librarians should be memorizing it by heart. THIS is how you handsell to a kiddo or a parent, guys. And Grace did all the work for you!
Daily Image:
Fairly brilliant!

Thanks to Marci for the link.

This picture book was a huge favorite with my husband when he was a little boy. We still have his tattered and battered copy. This is the board book version of this wonderful story. It is also available as a
picture book
.
Virginia Lee Burton
Board Book
Ages 4 to 6
Houghton Mifflin, 1967, 0-618-840192
Mike Mulligan has a red steam shovel whose name is Mary Anne. Mary Anne and Mike have been working together for years, and they have worked on all kinds of projects including canals, highways, and cellars for skyscrapers. However, nowadays new electric and diesel motor shovels are being used for construction work, and no one wants to use steam shovels any more. Poor Mary Anne and Mike are very sad, and they are worried about their future What on earth are they going to do?
Then Mike reads that the town of Popperville is going to build a new town hall. He knows that the hall will need a basement, and he decides that he will offer his and Mary Anne’s services to do the digging.
The two friends go to Popperville, and when they get there Mike says that he and Mary Anne will dig the basement for the town hall in just one day. Can Mike and Mary Anne keep this promise?
This picture book was first published in 1967, and it has lost none of its charm. It still has the ability to make children cheer for the red steam shovel who has a big heart, and for her driver who loves her far too much to let her get broken up for scrap. Wonderful drawings, and the perfect solution to a sticky problem perfectly compliment a delightful story. Best of all children discover that even when people – and steam shovels – are past their prime, they still have a great deal to offer us all.
It has become a holiday tradition on the OUPblog to ask our favorite people about their favorite books. This year we asked authors to participate (OUP authors and non-OUP authors). For the next two weeks we will be posting their responses which reflect a wide variety of tastes and interests, in fiction, non-fiction and children’s books. Check back daily for new books to add to your 2010 reading lists. If that isn’t enough to keep you busy next year check out all the great books we have discovered during past holiday seasons: 2006, 2007, 2008 (US), and 2008 (UK).
David L. Bosco is an Assistant Professor in the School of International Service at American University. A graduate of Harvard Law School, he is a former
Senior Editor at Foreign Policy and has been a political analyst and journalist in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and a deputy director of a joint United Nations – NATO project in Sarajevo. His most recent book, Five To Rule Them All: The UN Security Council and the Making of The Modern World, tells the inside story of this remarkable diplomatic creation, illuminating the role of the Security Council in the postwar world, and making a compelling case for its enduring importance. Read Bosco’s previous OUPblog posts here.
For those who love history and politics, it’s tough to do much better than Edmund Morris’s The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt. It helps of course that TR was a compelling, larger-than-life character, but the book is one of the best I’ve read. I particularly remember Morris’s description of TR as police commissioner, skulking around the city trying to catch snoozing cops unaware. The narrative ends as Roosevelt–who was hiking a mountain–learns that McKinley has died and that he will become president. I still go back to the book from time to time just to enjoy the writing.
There are two children’s books that I adored as a kid (and, come to think of it, I need to get them both for our seven-month old son). One is
Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. Written in the 1930s, it’s a wonderful tale about man and machine struggling together against obsolescence. The other is
One Morning in Maine, by Robert McCloskey. My family used to spend summers in Maine and this one really resonated.
Thousands of you have already voted and shared the books and memories that made you a reader. Check out some of the great comments we’ve received. Is your favorite book listed?
If not, make sure to vote today and share your story of how you got hooked on reading! We’ll post more comments throughout the next several weeks.
Ramona the Pest by Beverly Cleary
“It was the first book I could read and understand myself. I grew up in a household of 8 siblings. I would hide in a closet with a flashlight and read an entire chapter.” – Vanessa
Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel by Virginia Lee Burton
“I loved the book, I would have my parents read it over and over until they finally wouldn’t read it any more that day.” – Craig
Where The Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak
“I just remember the pictures and the little boy seemed unafraid of anything. I really wanted to be Max. Plus, what a cool set of p-j’s!” – Paul
Now We Are Six by A.A. Milne; Make Way for Ducklings by Robert McCloskey; and The New Zoo McGroo Zoo
“Sorry! I could not pick just one. These three books still bring back fond memories of my room in my grandmother’s house, snuggled in my bed and having an expressive rendition of such old favorites.” – Ellen
Happy Birthday to You by Dr. Seuss
“I got the book in second grade and could read it MYSELF! Books have always taken me on adventures, allowed me to be someone else and encouraged me to ‘fly.’” – Carolyn
In this show:
All about Podcamp EDU 2007
Andy from the Andycast, Gretchen from Mommycast, Stephanie Stockman of Adventures in Earth and Space , Nick Guzman from Red Bloguera, Whitney Hoffman host of LD Podcast
Andy Carvin , Joel Mark Witt, PodcampEDU participants
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Thanks so much, Betsy!
I humbly submit that this response is funnier than mine: http://www.nerve.com/books/a-young-adult-authors-fantastic-crusade-to-defend-literatures-most-maligned-genre
I want Kathleen Hale’s article to be rewritten as a postmodern novella by Cathrynne M. Valente. And then I want Francesca Lia Block to write a story inspired by that novella, and so on until we have an entire genre of fiction inspired by the original story.
Done! Next?
Thanks for the shout-out! I appreciate the support!