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By:
Aline Pereira,
on 9/13/2011
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latino authors and illustrators,
Extreme Yum: The Zing of Sharing Bookjoy & Growing Día,
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REFORMA, the National Association to Promote Library and Information Services to Latinos and Spanish Speaking, is celebrating it’s 40th anniversary and will be holding it’s 4th National Conference this week. The four day conference starts Sept 15 (which coincides with the start off National Hispanic Heritage Month) at the Westin Hotel in Denver, CO, USA and is expected to draw over 500 participants. The theme for the conference is “Elevating Latino Services to a Higher Level: Juntos in the Mile High City!” and a plethora of events have been scheduled including seminars, author readings, continuing education workshops, enlightening panel discussions, and vendor exhibits.
If you are in the Denver area and interested in attending, you should know that you don’t have to be a member of REFORMA to attend. Non-members can still register and are welcome to come participate as well as purchase exhibit only passes. Click here to download the schedule and see what might appeal to you.
Among the many great events planned is an author luncheon with award winning author and literacy advocate Pat Mora on Sept 16 from 12:30 – 2:00 pm
Extreme Yum: The Zing of Sharing Bookjoy & Growing Día
A former teacher, university administrator, consultant, and the author of many award winning children’s books, Pat is the also the founder of the family literary initiative El día de los niños / El día de los libros, Children’s Day / Book Day (Día), now an initiative of at the American Library Association. The year-long commitment to linking all children to books, languages and cultures, and of sharing what Ms. Mora calls “Bookjoy,” culminates in Día events across the country. Día celebrated its 15th Anniversary in April 2011.
To learn more about Pat Mora read our interview with her here.
PaperTigers’ September 2007 and September 2008 issues focused on National Hispanic Heritage Month and include interviews, articles, books and artwork that capture the Hispanic temper of our times.
By:
Aline Pereira,
on 4/26/2010
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Book Fiesta!: Celebrate Children’s Day/Book Day; Celebremos El día de los niños/El día de los l,
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Children’s Day/Book Day, also known as El día de los niños/El día de los libros (Día), is a celebration of children, families, and reading held annually in the USA on April 30. The celebration emphasizes the importance of literacy for children of all linguistic and cultural backgrounds. Founded by author Pat Mora in 1996, Día is now hosted by the Association for Library Service for Children (ALSC) along with founding partner REFORMA, the National Association to Promote Library and Information Services to Latinos and the Spanish-Speaking.
Visit the ALSC’s Dia Celebrations website to see what is planned this year. You can register your library’s Día program, print brochures, use the interactive map to see what other communities are doing to celebrate as well as access the updated list of books and list of Web sites for Día 2010.
Other great ways to get into the Día spirit are to visit Pat Mora’s blog Bookjoy! and also to read Pat’s book Book Fiesta! Celebrate Children’s Day/Book Day: Celebremos El día de los niños/El día de los libros. Illustrated by Rafael López and dedicated to the members of REFORMA and ALSC, “who connect children and books,” Book Fiesta! is a vibrant bilingual homage to the importance of reading and books in children’s lives. The book includes a letter from Pat about why she founded El día de los niños/ El día de los libros, and suggestions for celebrating the occasion creatively and with gusto. Read PaperTigers’ review Book Fiesta here.
Interested in learning how you can get a Día celebration organized in your community? Click here for information on upcoming educational sessions such as the one to be held June 28, 2010, during the ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. entitled “Día is Diversity in Action”.
By:
Aline Pereira,
on 4/1/2009
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(Click on event name for more information)
National Poetry Month~ Canada and USA
Growing Up Asian in America Art and Essay Contest Winners Announced~ San Francisco, CA, USA
Exclusive Books Children’s Book Festival~ ongoing until Apr 4, South Africa
Toronto Festival of Storytelling~ongoing until Apr 5, Toronto, ON, Canada
7th Bangkok International Book Fair & 37th National Book Fair~ ongoing until Apr 6, Bangkok, Thailand
20th Annual Children’s Book Illustrator Exhibit~ ongoing until Apr 18, Hayward, CA, USA
Bologna Children’s Book Fair Events in the City~ ongoing until April 30, Bologna, Italy
Discovering Ethnic Minorities - Storytelling Workshops for Children~ ongoing until May 31, Hong Kong
Exhibition of Prize Winning Works of 16th Noma Concours (2008) “Palette of Dream Colours IV”~ ongoing until Jul 5, Tokyo, Japan
Fay B. Kaigler Children’s Book Festival~ Apr 1 - 3, Hattiesburg, MS, USA
Ethiopian Children’s Book Week~ Apr 1 - 7, Ethiopia
International Children’s Book Day~ Apr 2
Desi Teens and Muslim Migration: Personal Journeys from the Asian Diaspora
~ Apr 2, New York, NY,
USA
25th Annual Virginia Hamilton Conference on Multicultural Literature for Children and Young Adults~ Apr 2 - 3, Kent, OH, USA
Conference: What’s New in Children’s Books~ Apr 4, Boston, MA, USA
Young Poets Week~ Apr 6 - 12, Canada
Children’s and Young Adult Literature Festival: Read Green~ Apr 15 - 16, Salisbury, MD, USA
National Library Week~ Apr 12-18, USA
15th Celebration of Children’s Literature~ Apr 18, Berkeley, CA, USA
15th Annual Border Book Festival~ Apr 17 - 19, Mesilla, NM, USA
Congreso Iberoamericano de Libreros~ Apr 18 - 20, Buenos Aires, Argentina
London Book Fair~ Apr 20 - 22, London, United Kingdom
Global Action Week: Open Books, Open Doors~ Apr 20 - 26
Camara Chilena del Libro Book Fair~ Apr 21 - 28, Santiago, Chile
Blue Metropolis Montreal International Literary Festival and Children’s Festival~ Apr 22 - 26, Montreal, QC, Canada
World Book and Copyright Day~ Apr 23
Cambridge WordFest~ Apr 23 - 26, Cambridge, United Kingdom
35th Buenos Aires International Book Fair~ Apr 23 - May 11, Buenos Aires, Argentina
27th Annual Spring Festival of Children’s Literature~ Apr 24 - 25, Frostburg, MD, USA
SCBWI New England’s Annual Conference: Many Voices~ Apr 24 - 26, Nashua, NH, USA
Los Angeles Times Festival of Books~ Apr 25 - 26, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Lecture: The Reconfiguration of Children and Children’s Literature in a Globalized World~ Apr 27, Drumcondra, Ireland
5th Annual PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature~ Apr 27 - May 3, New York, NY, USA
Jane Addams Children’s Book Award Winners Announced~ Apr 28, New York, NY, USA
El Día de los Niños/El Día de los Libros~ Apr 30, USA
Frances Lincoln Diverse Voices Children’s Book Award Winner Announced~ Apr 30, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
John McGrath built and maintains Wordie.org, a collaborative dictionary and social network for logophiles. By day he’s a software developer at Curbed.com. McGrath has kindly agreed to be the first in our series of guest language bloggers.

Through what must have been a series of clerical errors akin to Major Major Major Major’s promotion by an “IBM machine with a sense of humor,” OUPblog has asked me to write a guest post.
I’m manifestly unqualified to do so–I’m a programmer, and am closer to being that IBM machine than a lexicographer. To paraphrase Lloyd Bentsen, I am no Ben Zimmer. (more…)
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By: Ben Zimmer,
on 9/6/2007
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What’s your favorite word? On Wordie.org, a website launched last year by John McGrath, you can post lists of “words you love, words you hate, whatever.” So far, about 4,800 users (”Wordies”) have posted a total of 264,000 words, 90,000 of which are unique. In this efflorescence of logophilia, what word strikes the fancy of the most Wordies? Topping the list of the “most wordied” words is schadenfreude, submitted by 250 users. This German loanword, defined by the New Oxford American Dictionary as “pleasure derived by someone from another person’s misfortune,” easily outpaces runners-up like quixotic, serendipity, loquacious, and plethora. (If defenestrate and defenestration joined forces, that handy term for throwing someone out a window would come in a close second.) What does it say about Web-savvy language lovers that the word they find most notable describes malicious mirth in the misery of others? Are we all just a bunch of sadists?
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