Here's what Booklist says about Kristin O'Donnell Tubb's middle grade historical, WINIFRED OLIVER DOES THINGS DIFFERENT: "Tubb’s inventive heroine comes across as a female version of familiar characters, such as Gary Paulsen's Harris or Robert Newton Peck's Soup. This homespun tale,f ull of folksy humor and based on historical fact, will appeal to young fans of Deborah Wiles' and Ruth White's books."Book Chic loves Debbie Reed Fischer's Young Adult, BRALESS IN WONDERLAND. Read the interview here.
SWIMMING WITH THE SHARKS also by Debbie Reed Fischer was given the Gold Star Award for Excellence by TeensReadToo.com. Here is the review.
Guess what independent booksellers for children across the nation are recommending?
THE MAGIC THIEF by Sarah Prineas and THE POSSIBILITIES OF SAINTHOOD by Donna Freitas
Check out the catalog.
GO GANG!
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Swimming with Sharks, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4

Blog: 2k8: Class Notes (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: debbie reed fischer, donna freitas, sarah prineas, braless in wonderland, kristin o'donnell tubb, Autumn Winifred Oliver Does Things Different, the magic thief, Swimming with Sharks, The possibilities of sainthead, Add a tag

Blog: 2k8: Class Notes (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Nancy Viau, My So Called Family, Book Expo America, debbie reed fischer, donna freitas, Courtney Sheinmel, Samantha Hansen Has Rocks in her Head, Jon Scieszka, Cheech Marin, Swimming with Sharks, Add a tag
Here are a few pictures from the first day at BEA, Friday May 30th (which also happened to be my grandmother's 93rd birthday -- Happy Birthday, Grandma!):
Nancy holding up a copy of our friend Debbie Reed Fischer's book, Swimming With Sharks, which was prominently displayed in the Flux booth.
Donna and me, posing in front of the poster for her excellent book, Possibilities of Sainthood, in the FSG booth, and later Donna signing in the autographing area (the guy in the yellow shirt in the far right is Cheech Marin).
Children's book ambassador Jon Scieszka holds up a copy of my book, My So-Called Family, right after I finished signing copies of my ARC.
Donna met me in the autographing section of the convention hall right after my signing. We went to Nancy's signing for Samantha Hansen Has Rocks in Her Head -- I can't wait to read it! Then we walked back to our hotel together. We meant to take a cab, but there were no cabs, so we carried ALL the books and galleys we had collected over the course of the day. I mean, bags and bags of books. It was about a mile to our hotel, but it seemed like 10 miles. The whole not getting a cab thing was kind of my fault because I made Donna leave through a different exit than the one she wanted to use. But she says she forgives me and that we're still friends. Anyway, it was a great workout.

Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: links, Blogs, nytimes, cookies, philip, slate, oupblog, golden, steinem, globes, pullman, Add a tag
I am so excited about Mickey Edwards and Judith Luna’s articles today that I almost don’t want to post my links of the week. I want you to stay on the blog and read all the great content we had this week. Seriously, how often do I get to post Philip Pullman, John L. Esposito and Patricia Aufderheide in one week! Okay, enough gloating. Links are below but please think twice before clicking away.
Can you help the New Yorker redesign Eustace Tilley?
Will you watch the Golden Globes press conference?
Gloria Steinem’s now famous Hillary crying op-ed. Slate’s snarky response. (more…)

Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: books, history, Poetry, Film, oxford, lost, Media, A-Featured, Prose, A-Editor's Picks, World History, philip, paradise, oupblog, milton, pullman, restoration, bodleian, doubtless, golden, compass, Add a tag
Every once in a while I get a blog piece from an author that I am so excited about I am compelled to post it immediately, today’s piece fits that bill. Philip Pullman, best known as the author of The Golden Compass, which is in theaters now, also wrote the introduction to the Oxford edition of Milton’s Paradise Lost. Today, it is my great honor to post Pullman’s thoughts on Milton in 2008. Enjoy!
Four hundred years after the birth of John Milton, he still lives, his example still inspires, his words still echo. Paradise Lost is played on the stage, is sung to music, is choreographed for a ballet; it is an audiobook, it is the subject of countless theses and dissertations, and on the very morning that I’m writing this, an invitation arrives to the private view of an exhibition of paintings and prints called The Fall of the Rebel Angels, whose iconography is unmistakable. (more…)
Hey, I recognize that book! Thanks, Nancy! So glad you're a camera-holic. And what great photos. Wish I could have been there. Maybe next year . . . :)
Cool pics! I love seeing BEA shots. I'm SO there next year!
Courtney, thank you for all the photos. Looks as though you guys had a great time!
We DID have fun!!
-Nancy