Carolyn Conahan is the author and illustrator of several picture books, including The Twelve Days of Christmas in Oregon (Sterling), and The Big Wish (Chronicle), which was awarded the 2011 Oregon Spirit Book Award for Picture Books by the Oregon Council of Teachers of English.
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Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Music, Ages 4-8, Picture Books, Illustrator Interviews, Taro Gomi, featured, Kim Norman, John Burningham, Carson Ellis, Barry Moser, Carolyn Conahan, Lisbeth Zwerger, Illustration Inspiration, Song Books, Books About Vehicles, Maggie Rudy, Add a tag
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 9-12, Tove Jansson, Chapter Books, Illustrator Interviews, Lemony Snicket, Taro Gomi, featured, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Trenton Lee Stewart, Carson Ellis, The Mysterious Benedict Society, Tomi Ungerer, Ivan Bilibin, Ben Shahn, Blexbolex, Colin Meloy, Illustration Inspiration, Fantasy: Supernatural Fiction, Martin Provensen, Florence Parrie Heide, Leo Leonni, Wildwood Chronicles, Add a tag
Carson Ellis is an award-winning illustrator who has provided art for bestsellers such as "The Mysterious Benedict Society" by Trenton Lee Stewart, The Composer Is Dead by Lemony Snicket, and the "Wildwood Chronicles" by her husband, Colin Meloy.
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Blog: Playing by the book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Friendship, Seasons, Maps, Taro Gomi, Babies, Transport, Buses, Add a tag
Do you know anyone who’s expecting a baby soon? If the answer is yes, then forego another babygro and give the new baby a book – baby and parents will get much more enjoyment out of the gift, and it may even stay with them their whole life
But what book to give?
Peepo! and The Baby’s Catalogue, or an Eric Carle book are all popular choices, but me? The next baby I’ll be giving a book to is going to receive the new Taro Gomi Board Book Boxed Set which is made up chunky versions of Spring is Here, My Friends and Bus Stops.
Spring is Here tours the four seasons but what makes it different from many other books about the seasonal change is that the story appears to take place on the back of a young calf! This may sounds strange, but it’s actually an effective way of showing that the change from spring to summer and so on is not just as a cycle abstractly repeating itself but also physical time moving forward. As the seasons change the calf (and by extension the reader) grow up and older.
My Friends is a playful appreciation of friends in all forms and what we learn from different sources of inspiration. The text is like a beautiful poem, for example:
I learned to watch the night sky from my friend the owl.
I learned to sing from my friends the birds.
I learned to read from my friends the books.
And the final lines of this poem are the loveliest I’ve read in a long time in the often-too-saccharinny world of love-makes-the-world-go-round type children’s books. This little book brings a tear to my eye and makes me (even after repeated readings) hug which ever child I’m reading to.

J reading My Fr
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Blog: Where The Best Books Are! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Christmas books, Taro Gomi, 2010, Becky Baines, This Book Made Me Do It, children's books for play, John Woodward, Play All Day, fun activity books, kids journals, Action Journal, Add a tag
As with her wildly popular Scribbles and Doodles coloring books, Gomi keeps instructions spare, as if to say: Be spontaneous and self-inspired! Yet the toy projects are all so straightforward that only the youngest crafters will need a helping hand, perhaps to slide in tabs to make a box, slip buildings into a cityscape or string their ornaments for the tree. Need an all-in-one activity to keep your child happy on a slow day? This is it! Now all we need is a Taro original, punch-out toy box.
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Art, Klutz, Taro Gomi, Activity Books, Ages Four to Eight: Books for pre-school to second grade, Goodie Bag: Books to share and give, Ages Nine to Twelve: Books for third through sixth grade, Reluctant Readers: Will be begging for more, Book Lists: Specialty picks, Ages Baby to Three: Books for infants and toddlers, Interactive: Appeal to the senses, Victoria Kann, Creativity for Kids, Mike Herrod, Museum of Modern Art New York, Add a tag
By Bianca Schulze, The Children’s Book Review
Published: December 7, 2010
The holiday season can bring out the “Martha” in all of us. Unfortunately, ’tis the season to zap away the time required to be a “Martha.” So … this book list (or book-ish, at least) can be used a few different ways:
- The obvious: You are shopping for a budding artist or crafting enthusiast.
- The handy: Use some of these books to entertain your children while you get busy baking cookies, writing Christmas cards, or putting your feet up while you sip on some spiked hot apple cider.
- The clever: You like to give books, but the kids you are buying for can’t sit still long enough to read or be read to. Art and craft books are like reading trickery: The craft keeps fingers busy while the instructions keep minds reading.
by Museum of Modern Art New York
Reading level: All Ages
Diary: 128 pages
Publisher: Chronicle Books (October 27, 2010)
Publisher’s synopsis: With eye-catching interiors and playful activities, this open-ended sketchbook encourages would-be artists of all ages to look at the world around them and take chances expressing what they see. Inspiring and colorful graphic design will unleash the artist in anyone.
Add this book to your collection: MoMA Make Art Mistakes: An Inspired Sketchbook for Everyone
by Taro Gomi
Reading level: All Ages
Paperback: 116 pages
Publisher: Chronicle Books (September 1, 2010)
Publisher’s synopsis: Taro Gomi invites children to punch out more than 60 fantastic playthings, including ring-toss games, finger puppets, boxes, picture frames, a zoo’s worth of animals, and more! Packed with Gomi’s fun, accessible artwork and a delightful variety of games and toys, this book will appeal to children of all ages, engaging their imaginations and entertaining them all day long.
Add this book to your collection: Play All Day
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Blog: Children's Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Taro Gomi, Add a tag

Blog: B is for Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Taro Gomi, Everyone Poops, Little People: Ages 4 to 8, Munchkins: Ages Baby to 3, Tickled Pink & Silly Willie, Weird and Wonderful, Add a tag
(Insert awkward giggling.) I’m sure you’re not anxious to hear my p_ _ p stories. (Is anyone else feeling flushed?). What?!? Everyone does it. (Insert more awkward giggling.) Read more after the jump. Critics can be harsh. A book review can say a lot about the reviewer’s personality, beliefs, generation, cultural and social values. On the [...]
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Blog: DRAWN! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Taro Gomi, Creative Thinking, jochen gerner, Illustration, Drawing, Cartooning, Add a tag
I have admired the work of Jochen Gerner for a while now. His style is pure cartooning — taking the complex, and abstracting it into something simple. This minimalist, geometric approach to drawing is not limited to just the design of characters and objects, but also to the layout of the illustrations themselves. The illustrations become diagrams, allowing the viewer to take in a lot of information at a glance.
Looking through his sketchbooks reveals the mind of an artist constantly honing his illustrative shorthand, and his own cartooning vocabulary.
His experiments in abstraction and subtraction is no more evident than in a series of modified IKEA catalogue pages:
When I visited the Owlkids booth at TCAF this year, I was pleased to see that their publishing imprint had released a fun book of drawing activities for kids called ARTastic!: 200+ Art Smart Activities. It’s a colouring book with puzzles, challenges, and creativity-sparking activities all drawn in Gerner’s simple, chunky, kid-friendly lines.
It’s quite similar to Japanese artist Taro Gomi’s equally awesome and art-smart Scribbles, Doodles, and Squiggles drawing books for kids — books that encourage creativity and thinking by requiring one to colour outside the lines.
Posted by John Martz on Drawn! The Illustration and Cartooning Blog |
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Tags: Cartooning, Creative Thinking, Drawing, Illustration, jochen gerner, Taro Gomi

Blog: Happy Healthy Hip Parenting (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: book lists, parents, Taro Gomi, tony ross, potty-training, I Want My Potty, everyone poops, Add a tag
Parents magazine has put together a list of their 14 Favorite Potty Training Books - picture books to share with a child as well as books geared towards mom and dad. Guess which of our books made it to the list? Both Everyone Poops and I Want My Potty, of course.
Check out all the book lists on their site which are put together in a lovely little slide show. I personally couldn't get past the ads bouncing on the screen, but for those of you who have more patience than I, head on over to see which of your favorites made it to the lists.

Blog: Happy Healthy Hip Parenting (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: picture books, boys, booklist, male, Taro Gomi, first fiction, jack russell, the team, jack russell, the team, first fiction, Taro Gomi, male, Add a tag
Dan from Dan's Angel:
A Detective's Guide to the Language of Paintings

Taro Gomi's nameless son from I Lost My Dad!

Kali from Kali and the Rat Snake

Jonathan from The Key to My Heart

Mustafa from My Father's Shop

Paul from Paul Needs Specs

Paul and Sebastian

Unnamed hero from Samsara Dog

Sebastian from Sebastian's Roller Skates

Norman from The Short and Incredibly Happy Life of Riley

Sosu from Sosu's Call

Tibili from Tibili:
The Little Boy Who Didn't Want to Go to School

Troy from Troy Thompson's Excellent Peotry Book

Eddie from What Eddie Can Do

Unnamed narrator from What's Going On?

Wilfrid from Wilfrid Gordon McDonald Partridge

Little Sala from Brush

Marc from Marc Just Couldn't Sleep

Kevin from:
Kevin Spends the Night
Kevin Takes a Trip
Kevin Goes to School
Kevin Goes to the Hospital




Harvey from The Team series:
The Soccer Machine
Top of the League
Soccer Camp
Superteam

Blog: AmoxCalli (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fantasy, YA fiction, fairytales, romania, juvenile fantasy fiction, Add a tag
Wildwood Dancing
Author: Juliet Mariller
Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers
ISBN-10: 0375833641
ISBN-13: 978-0375833649
Recommended for grades 8 and up
Wildwood Dancing is the amazing and spellbinding tale of five Transylvanian sisters that sneak out of their old Romanian castle – the Piscul Draculi on the full moon to go dance in the world of fairy. They dance the night away with trolls, giants, dwarves and other fantastic creatures.
It’s an interesting twist of two classic fairytales – The Twelve Dancing Princesses and The Frog Prince.
16 year old Jenica is the sensible sister who’s beloved pet frog Gogo sits on her shoulder and goes with her everywhere. It is Jena who narrates the tale and her voice is captivating. From the first page she captures you and brings you into the two worlds – hers and that of the fairy.
When the girls were very young, their father bought Piscul Draculi and set about restoring it. Jena and her sisters by accident found the portal that leads to the other world and for nine years they have come and gone with no one being the wiser.
This time however, something is different. They find that the Night People have come to dance and these scary people are very vampiric and monstrous. Jena immediately worries for her sisters but one of them Tati, is already in love with one of them, a sad eyed man named Sorrow. Jena is determined to keep her sisters safe and contemplates not letting them attend on the next full moon.
At home, not everything is as it should be either. Jena’s father is ill and must go away for the winter to warmer climes on doctor’s order. Capable Jena is left to run things with her cousin Cezar to help. Immediately upon her father’s departure, Cezar begins to try and dominate. He’s really a creep. He’s completely overbearing, chauvinistic and pushy. Jena is thwarted at every turn as he insidiously tries to take over.
Wildwood Dancing is a captivating read. Every page pulls you in and you care desperately for Jena and her sisters. I was on the edge of my seat all through the book dying to know what would happen while not wanting it to end. I loved the descriptions of the wild wood, the Night People, and the fairy dances. The story is one of intrigue, love and so much more. There’s a mystery to solve as well and I got so caught up in that. Nothing in this book is as it seems and everything is wonderful.
I would like to trade places with your girls for a day, please!! Your day sounds amazing! And I had to laugh- my post tomorrow will be about reading to babies- there must be something in the air!
Hi Stacey, we certainly had a fun day and were lucky with the weather. I shall look out for your post..
What a lovely day out and yes I do know someone who’s expecting a baby soon – my son and daughter-in-law. Lots of excitement in our house! Thanks for the review.