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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Steven Salerno, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. An Acerra on the high school baseball team for 22 years in a row!

I read Brothers at Bat yesterday. I love this true story, told with Audrey Vernick's warm, concise writing, and Steven Salerno's strong, modern/retro illustration.  

Read about Audrey's visit to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y!


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2. Stampede! Poems to Celebrate the Wild Side of School

By Laura Purdie Salas
illustrated by Steven Salerno
$16, ages 4-8, 32 pages

"Exactly" is the word that comes to mind while reading these rollicking rhymes about what it's like to be at school.

In this clever collection, Salas relates a child's experiences at school to characteristics of animals, and along the way captures how a child feels deep inside.

"Playground Sparrows" evokes the exhilaration of letting loose on recess and how abruptly free time can come to an end.

 "In one wave, we fly the coop. / We flood the field, we slide the loop. / We flock together, shout and whoop. / Then the school bell rings, and -- / no / more / group!"

Salas also does a marvelous job capturing embarrassing and awkward moments.

In "Blush," a girl hears a whisper spreading through school that someone has a crush on her and suddenly she can feel her cheeks burn and the urge to run, as she blazes away like a cardinal.

Other poems compare a child's hunger at lunchtime to a dog pouncing on food and echo a boy's frustration with his penmanship, as he looks down and sees chicken scratch where letters should be.

In school, there are so many things to think about, from rules for walking down the hall to what your classmates think of you, and Salas seems to know each one.

This is a great book for deflating children's worries about school and showing them that everyone feels like they do at one time.

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3. Bebe Goes to the Beach

Sometime my method of picking picture books at the library is just 'What can I grab before my toddler destroys the place'. That was how I selected Bebe goes to the Beach, written by Susan Middleton Elya and illustrated by Steven Salerno. I look to the new book racks and grab what catches my eye in a split second.
It's a timely beach story, with a spanglish twist. The rhyming text by Susan Middleton Elya is lively and really fun to read aloud, even 20 times over. The artwork is just as lively, and Salerno has done a beautiful job of transitioning scenes within spreads and mixing up silos, spots, and spreads in a really natural way.
Salerno has an awesome blog, full of all the tidbits we illustrators love to see - work in progress, sketches, technique. He has a long list of other picture books, all as lush looking as Bebe (the sequel to Bebe goes Shopping).

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4. Hot Men of Children's Literature

Over a year ago, our German author / illustrator Sebastian Meschenmoser appeared on A Fuse #8 Production blog as one of the Hot Men of Children's Literature that Betsy so generously shares with the kidlit world.

Our spring 2008 books are finally visible on line, which means our authors and illustrators appear now as well. Don't miss the
video featuring Felice Arena reading from his new book: Sally and Dave, A Slug Story. Felice Arena is a very talented - not to mention handsome - author and illustrator from Australia. I'd say he'd make a great addition to the HMOCL collection! (Are nominations still open?)

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