It’s always difficult to narrow down the teetering pile of “Books I Loved” and the tottering pile of “Books to be Read” to a manageable number. Here are just a few middle grade novels author Sarah Dooley loved, and a few more she's looking forward to reading.
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Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: J.K. Rowling, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, featured, Wendy Lamb Books, Jacqueline Woodson, Arthur A. Levine Books, Polly Horvath, Middle Grade Books, Laura Shovan, Sarah Dooley, G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers, Teens: Young Adults, Nancy Paulsen Books, Best Kids Stories, Speak Books, Square Fish Books, Add a tag
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Nancy Paulsen Books, My Writing and Reading Life, Books Set in Alaska, Books Set in Wisconsin, Travel, Ages 9-12, Garth Williams, Chapter Books, Author Interviews, Laura Ingalls Wilder, featured, Books for Girls, Carole Estby Dagg, Katherine Patterson, Kate Morton, Pioneer Books, Add a tag
Sweet Home Alaska, by Carole Estby Dagg, is an exciting pioneering story, based on actual events, and introduces readers to a fascinating chapter in American history, when FDR set up a New Deal colony in Alaska to give loans and land to families struggling during the Great Depression.
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JacketFlap tags: Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Chronicle Books, The New York Times, featured, Jacqueline Woodson, Rick Riordan, Best Sellers, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Middle Grade Books, John Rocco, Melissa de la Cruz, Disney-Hyperion Books, R.J. Palacio, Nancy Paulsen Books, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books, Best Selling Books For Kids, Alli Arnold, Sarah O’Leary Burningham, Add a tag
This month, Girl to Girl: Honest Talk About Growing Up and Your Changing Body (Chronicle Books), a must-have for every girl navigating her way through the preteen years, is The Children's Book Review's best selling middle grade book.
Add a CommentBlog: Design of the Picture Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, color, balance, composition, line, shape, andrew kolb, nancy paulsen books, Add a tag
by Andrew Kolb (Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin, 2015)
A book cover nodding to old travel postcards feels like a good place to end up, right? Also, study that thing closely as you read, because I’m pretty sure you’ll find each of those locations in the letters inside the book.
There’s a moment in this book where Edmund’s parents reel him in and roll him up, and I relate so much to this right now. I’m about to bounce over to the other coast, from vacation and back to school, and I feel like my tangles are going to take a lot of reeling and rolling.
But like this book says, the end is actually a beginning, and like Edmund, I’ll try my best to keep it together.
This little ball of joy, Edmund, is yarn. And when Edmund grow bigger, he can sally forth to farther spots.
(click any images in this post to see them larger.)
This book’s shape is expertly constructed in order to explore what happens when the edge of Edmund is far from where his heart is, and a rectangle is perfect to fit so much of that journey. Note all the horizontal lines and the compositions that highlight that stretch.
And the shapes within that shape are simple, but tell such story. The cats are particular favorites of mine, how the slightest line adjustment for eyebrows soaks story into those black circles. Do you see?
A tomato pincushion! A bust! An unfolded map and some modern art, all made up of shapes.
This book is bouncy and cheery and playful and brave, but it’s tender and bittersweet too. There are two sides to adventures: the one who leaves and the one who’s left behind.
And here, even the endpapers make us feel that. On my first read, I thought, “Oh, Edmund is heading into this book, into the pictures.” And at the end, he’s going back towards the book, back towards his travels. Perhaps this is what the team behind this story intended, but isn’t it also about going forward and returning home? There’s something especially beautiful here about the tug of home pulling you back.
Heading off to college soon? Get this for your parents. They might unravel a little at the sight of it.
This is Andrew Kolb’s first picture book. I hope he makes more.
PS: Speaking of yarn, have you heard about The Yarn, a new podcast from Travis Jonker and Colby Sharp? They are in the middle of an 8-episode season right now, investigating Sunny Side Up from the many hands who made it possible. Check it out!
And thanks to Penguin and Andrew Kolb for the images in this post!
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: National Geographic Children's Books, Sharon M. Draper, Kwame Alexander, Christina Balit, R.J. Palacio, Nancy Paulsen Books, Best Kids Stories, HMH Books for Young Readers, Best Selling Books For Kids, HarperCollins, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Greek Mythology, featured, Donna Jo Napoli, Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Jacqueline Woodson, Katherine Applegate, Best Sellers, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Middle Grade Books, Add a tag
It's true TCBR readers are fans of Greek myths! That's why, this month, the National Geographic Treasury of Greek Mythology is The Children's Book Review's best selling middle grade book.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Best Kids Stories, Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Jacqueline Woodson, Katherine Applegate, Jeff Kinney, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Middle Grade Books, Little Brown Books for Young Readers, Sharon M. Draper, Chris Tebbetts, R.J. Palacio, Best Books for Kids, Nancy Paulsen Books, Best Selling Books For Kids, Cory Thomas, HarperCollins, The New York Times, James Patterson, featured, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Best Sellers, Amulet Books, Add a tag
This month, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Book 1, by Jeff Kinney, is The Children's Book Review's best selling middle grade book.
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JacketFlap tags: HarperCollins, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, The New York Times, featured, Jacqueline Woodson, Katherine Applegate, Best Sellers, Knopf Books for Young Readers, Middle Grade Books, Abrams Books, Mac Barnett, Yearling Books, R.J. Palacio, Best Books for Kids, Kid President, Nancy Paulsen Books, Dave Shelton, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books, Best Selling Books For Kids, Robby Novak, Add a tag
This month, A Boy and a Bear in a Boat, by Dave Shelton, is still The Children's Book Review's best selling middle grade book. And we're very happy to add the very popular Kid President’s Guide to Being Awesome and The Terrible Two to our selection from the nationwide best selling middle grade books, as they appear on The New York Times.
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JacketFlap tags: Historical Fiction, Slavery, featured, World War I, Military, Jacqueline Woodson, Roaring Brook Press, Middle Grade Books, Random House Books for Young Readers, Michael Morpurgo, Equal Rights, Steve Sheinkin, Scholastic Press, Deborah Wiles, World War 2, Sharon M. Draper, Lea Wait, Freedom Summer, Ku Klux Klan, Islandport Press, Nancy Paulsen Books, Military Stories, Feiwel & Friends books, Sharon Lovejoy, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Black History Month, Civil Rights, Books for Boys, Atheneum Books for Young Readers, Award Winners, Books for Girls, African American History Month, Teens: Young Adults, Cultural Wisdom, Poetry & Rhyme, Add a tag
February is African American History Month. Sharing these books with young readers comes with the responsibility to discuss ... progress towards equality.
Add a CommentBlog: Susanna Leonard Hill (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Perfect Picture Book Fridays, Nancy Paulsen Books, Lori Nichols, Maple & Willow Together, Add a tag
Whoopee! It's the first Perfect Picture Book Friday of 2015!
Isn't it wonderful to look forward to all the books we're going to share this year? Think of all the new titles that will come out! Sadly, mine will not be one of them, as it has been pushed back to Summer 2016, but that just gives me something special to look forward to next year :)
I have a lovely book to share today, one that those of you who have just spent a couple weeks with all your kids home for the holidays may find especially appropriate :)
Written & Illustrated By: Lori Nichols
Nancy Paulsen Books/Penguin, November 2014, Fiction
Suitable For Ages: 3-8
Themes/Topics: sibling relationships, family, fighting/making up
Opening: "Maple and her little sister, Willow, were always together. It was hard to remember a time when the girls weren't together. In fact, their parents even wondered if the girls had their own language. And in a way, they did."
Brief Synopsis: Maple and Willow do everything together, which works out just fine most of the time. But sometimes big sisters can be bossy, and sometimes little sisters want to do things their own way, and sometimes that leads to trouble. In the end, though, Maple and Willow would rather be together than apart :)
Links To Resources: Story Hour Activity Kit from Lori Nichols, and here's the trailer: (at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXhe9jvpVds in case it doesn't embed properly! :))
Why I Like This Book: Although Joanna beat me to reviewing Maple for PPBF, I am a huge fan. This book is the sequel, and it's equally sweet and touching - a spot-on glimpse of sibling relationships. The description and depiction of Maple and Willow's time together is lovely and evocative - very true to childhood. When they inevitably get into a fight (because really, would you believe a sibling relationship where they never fought? :)) their anger and hurt are clear. But it doesn't take much time apart before they're longing for each other's company again, the fight over and forgotten. For any child who has a sibling, this is a nicely done reminder that arguments are normal, that it's okay to be mad sometimes, and that ultimately it's wonderful to have a sibling to be with. (P.S. I just realized that Joanna also beat me to reviewing this one, so apologies for duplicating!)
For the complete list of books with resources, please visit Perfect Picture Books.
PPBF bloggers please be sure to leave your post-specific link in the list below so we can all come visit you! I can't wait to see what's on your favorites list this week!
Have a wonderful weekend, everyone! :)
Blog: Welcome to my Tweendom (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Nancy Paulsen Books, family, history, poetry, writing, religion, NYC, civil rights, best books, Ohio, South Carolina, multigenerational, Add a tag
I was lucky enough to hear Jacqueline Woodson speak about and read from Brown Girl Dreaming during the School Library Journal Day of Dialog last spring. If any of you have seen Woodson before, you know she is charming, and dynamic and funny. She read a few poems from the book and spoke of her family and writing life. Like the rest of the librarians, I waited in line to speak with Ms. Woodson and have an arc signed, but 10 minutes or so into the wait I knew this arc wasn't going to be for me to keep. Instead, I had it signed for a student and gave it to her when I saw her next. So like so many others, I waited for the book birthday to get my hands on the hard cover copy on the day of its' release.
I'm not sure I can add much to the conversation around this book, as I agree with the buzz. Brown Girl Dreaming is more than a book or a memoir....it is a gift. We follow Jacqueline and her changing family from Ohio to South Carolina and up to NYC and each poem is a revelation of sorts that brings the reader through the timeline of Woodson's life. From the "how to listen" haikus to poems like "sometimes, no words are needed", "stevie", and "as a child, i smelled the air" I found myself closing the book to pause again and again.
I had posted a photo of "stevie" on Instagram and commented that I was swooning over this book, and a friend commented that her copy is so dog-eared that she isn't going to share it with her students. It made me comment back that this is the kind of book you carry around with you. I will take the dust jacket off, and place it in my school bag. And when the world gets to be a little too much, I will open the pages and gift myself with a little bit of magic.
Blog: Design of the Picture Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: design, space, book trailer, concept, rhythm, giveaway, scale, penguin, trailers, sophie blackall, composition, spot illustrations, white space, proportion, nancy paulsen books, full bleed, the baby tree, Add a tag
published 2014 by Nancy Paulsen Books, at Penguin KidsAbout a year ago, I heard Sophie Blackall give a keynote at SCBWI Western Washington. She wears great tights and shoes and is a total riot. She had this effervescent spirit that had the whole room in stitches. It felt like watching one of her illustrations bounce right off the page and into the room.
See, I’m a big fan. Ivy and Bean are soul sisters. I gushed about The Crows of Pearblossom and The Mighty Lalouche over at Design Mom, and still stand by this tweet from the end of 2013.
Her work has sprinkles of fairy dust or something in it – something enchanting and mysterious and compelling and darn beautiful.
And this, her latest offering, is both calming and humorous, sweet and sassy. It’s a bound and beautiful answer to the dreaded where do babies come from?
She’s so in tune with the vast (and sometimes creepy!) imagination of a youngster, and look at how that plays out in this art. Real life is a spot illustration, surrounded by white space and unknowns. But the what if bleeds to the edge of the page, filling every millimeter with color and wonder and possibility. Not only is it stunning to see, it’s intentional storytelling.Hat tip, always, to Jules at Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast for the interview that revealed that delicious tidbit. Check out her interview (and more art!) with Sophie here.
Sophie works in Brooklyn with other illustrators Brian Floca, Ed Hemingway, John Bemelmans Marciano, and Sergio Ruzzier. Can you even imagine spending an hour in that studio, soaking it all up and trying not to faint and fall in it? Dream field trip, for sure. Their kinship and support of one another has always been so apparent. Look here, and here, and here to see what I mean.
But also, look inside The Baby Tree for a glimpse at their love and support of one another. What’s our pajama-clad wonderer reading with Mom and Dad, all cozied up in bed? I won’t spoil it for you, cause it was a gasp-moment for me. If you’ll bust without knowing, check out Danielle’s post over at This Picture Book Life about allusions in picture books. (And stay there a while even once you see what I’m talking about, cause how brilliant is that?!)
You’d like a copy, right? Penguin has two to give away to you! (And you!) Just leave a comment on this post by Monday at noon PST, June 2nd. I’ll pick two, and have the stork deliver The Baby Tree right to your doorstep. Good luck!
Review copy provided by the publisher, all thoughts and love my own.
Tagged: book trailer, composition, full bleed, giveaway, nancy paulsen books, penguin, sophie blackall, spot illustrations, the baby tree, white space Add a Comment
Blog: Susanna Leonard Hill (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Perfect Picture Book Fridays, Nancy Paulsen Books, Marie Harris, Vanessa Brantley-Newton, giveaway winner, synesthesia, contest announcement, Add a tag
Boy, oh, boy are we going to have tons of fun today!
(Which is good because we're back in sub-zero temperatures around here and I might get cranky about that if not for all the fun! :))
First of all, it's Perfect Picture Book Friday, and what's not to love about that?
Second of all, we have a winner of today's book from our meet the author post on Monday! (You can see the post HERE if you missed it.)
Finally, someone around here, who clearly cannot be left unsupervised for a second!, has been hatching a hare-brained scheme, and I suppose it's about time I let you in on it :) But first - our perfect picture book!
Written By: Marie Harris
Illustrated By: Vanessa Brantley-Newton
Nancy Paulsen Books, September 2013, Fiction
Suitable For Ages: 3-8
Themes/Topics: synesthesia, differences, acceptance, perception, five senses
Opening: "Jillian loved the world with all her five senses. She loved the tickling touch of her bunny's whiskers on her cheek. She loved the taste of warm maple syrup on waffles."
Brief Synopsis: When Jillian hears a dog barking, she sees red. When she rings her bike bell, she sees silver. The wind in the pines is soft gray, and the rain, light purple. Jillian has synesthesia - a way of perceiving that causes sound to have color. But when the kids at school tease her, suddenly it doesn't feel like such a great thing to have. It takes a special teacher to help them all see it for the gift it is.
Links To Resources: The back of the book has information about synesthesia. Neuroscience For Kids has information about synesthesia as well as a test you can try. Science News For Students also has a lot of information. HERE is a test to see if you might be a synesthete. Talk about what it would be like to hear colors or taste sounds. Are there times when experiencing the world like that would be an advantage? A disadvantage?
Why I Like This Book: I always like books that encourage acceptance and tolerance. There is too much variety in the world for any one way to be the "right" way to be or believe or perceive. So I like this book for that reason. But it's also a beautifully written story that any child who has ever felt different will relate to. The language is poetic (not surprising since it was written by a New Hampshire poet laureate :).) And synesthesia itself is absolutely fascinating. I finished this book and found myself wishing I could be a synesthete for a day, just to see how cool it would be to experience the world that way!
For the complete list of books with resources, please visit Perfect Picture Books.
The next item on our agenda of excitement today is to let you know who won the book so generously donated by Marie. Random.org has chosen our winner and it is Tracy Campbell! Woo-hoo, Tracy! Come on down! Your prize is a signed copy of THE GIRL WHO HEARD COLORS! Please email me with your address (which I probably have but can't find! :)) and I'll get it right out to you!
And now, one last item before we all head off for the weekend....
It's been a long winter.
We've had a lot of snow, and more is coming Sunday into Monday (according to the local weatherman who seriously needs to be replaced by a new weatherman with better news!)
It's been bitterly cold, day after day, for weeks on end.
The icicles have icicles!
I think it's time for some fun!
And it seems to me, we haven't had a writing contest in nearly 3 months...
SO, boys and girls, hold onto your hats, because we're taking Hare-Brained Scheme to a whole new level!
Announcing
*as in wild and wacky, not angry :)
Now. The really hare-brained part of all this is that it will be followed by a related Illustrator Contest in April!!! (to be announced and elaborated on later! :))
I know!!!
That kind of excitement bowls you right over, don't it? :)
And with that, I wish you a lovely time perusing the rest of today's perfect picture books! PPBF bloggers, please leave your post-specific links in the list below.
Have a great weekend, everyone!!! (And fire up those thinking caps!)
Blog: Welcome to my Tweendom (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: family, Friendship, quilting, chickens, farming, grandparents, abuse, school life, farms, arc from ALA12, 8/12, Nancy Paulsen Books, Add a tag
Prairie is unhappy when her grandmother up and announces that it's time she moves home. After all, Grammy is much more than simply a grandmother to Prairie; she is her friend and her teacher as well. Especially since they moved up to New Paltz, NY from North Carolina.
Prairie's family inherited the farm from her mama's side of the family. New Paltz is where she grew up, and now the Evers family are trying to make a go of life by living off this small portion of land. Folks in town seem to have lots to say about this whole situation.
When Prairie and her mama are in town to pick up Prairie's new chicks, her mama leaves her in the malt shop while she runs some errands. While Prairie is sitting at the counter top, she overhears some women mention her mama's name. The women go on to talk all kinds of foolishness about her family-- how Prairie probably can't even read and isn't in school -- how her family probably doesn't have two pennies to rub together -- and it is everything Prairie can do to sit put and not give those women a piece of her mind.
One of those insults, however, is soon unfounded. Prairie's folks tell her that she has to enroll in school. Grammy has always taught Prairie before. They were explorers, learning about things that are interesting. How can she ever go to a school where she is trapped inside all day? How can she ever learn to raise her hand when she has something to say? Or not to blurt out an answer?
School is only made bearable by the one friend that Prairie sets on making. Her name is Ivy Blake. She's clearly a loner and a pretty quiet one at that, but Prairie seeks her out and soon they are spending lots of time together, and Prairie actually starts to feel happy. But as she slowly peels back the layers of Ivy's existence, Prairie realizes that things are not always as they seem.
Ellen Airgood has written a story of family, friendship and loss that while sad in measure is buoyed by an overarching feeling of hope. Even though Prairie and Ivy are misfits on their own, together they are strong and they even each other out. Ivy's family story is an intense one and is buffered by the Evers' family's cohesiveness. There is a Southern feeling to this story despite the setting, and while the idea of the importance of making family is loud and clear, the story never gets eclipsed by it. Prairie is a strong protagonist and readers are likely to admire her even as they cringe at her adjustments to school life.
Thanks for reviewing this. Ellen is a local author in my area, but I haven't read her books yet. Plus, I deal with a lot of home-schooled kids at one library, and kids transitioning from home-schooling into public schools at my other, so it sounds like I really should look into "Prairie Evers." :)