Kids Lit
Books and More for Children and Teens

 

February 7, 2008
Stephanie Meyer's Big Year



Little, Brown Books announced today that Breaking Dawn, the fourth and final book in Stephanie Meyer's Twilight Saga will be released on Saturday, August 2nd at midnight. 

Meyer's first adult novel The Host will be released on May 6th. 

And to complete the year, Twilight will be made into a movie and released December 12th. 

A huge year for Meyer and her fans!  To keep informed on all of the developments, check out Meyer's website

 

Robie Harris and Freedom

 

I was lucky enough to get to participate in this week's blog tour with Robie Harris.  For years, I have been in awe of her courage to create books that others would shrink from and also to have moved from those to a series of picture books that capture children at points where they are not cute and sweet.  Robie's books are about freedom both for her readers and herself.  My series of questions for her focus on that freedom:

Kids Lit:

Recently, I have seen articles about the topics of children’s books and had people ask me in person about them. There is some concern that books for children are crossing a line into topics better left to older readers. Through your books, you often show a more honest and less saccharine version of childhood. How would you address complaints that children’s books should show only the best behavior and the best aspects of childhood?

Robie: 

Here’s how I would address this type of complaint: As a children’s book author, I believe one of my major responsibilities is to be honest when writing both the nonfiction books and the picture books I write. And of course, in particular with my books on sexual health, along with the responsibility for honestly comes the need to make sure the material one is writing about is age-appropriate and accurate and that is something I have always done. If one only writes about what some people feel are the best aspects of childhood, we would not be honest with our audience — the result being that our words will have no credibility for our audience. Our children do not grow up in bubbles, so they already know about a lot about risky behavior. However, they also have a lot of misinformation about what is risky and what is not. That’s why they need to have an honest understanding and not a sugarcoated understanding of sexuality. And I believe that is what serves our
children and teens best.



I would also add that if a piece of information or drawing in a book is “too old” or “too much” or “too overwhelming” for a child, children of all ages will either stop listening to the book the adult is reading to them, or if they are reading a book on their own, they will put down the book, and read no further. We have to respect the fact that kids, most kids, know in one way or another what is too much, and “tune out” when they have had too much. In my newest picture book, MAYBE A BEAR ATE IT!, a book about how a child feels when his or her favorite book of the moment goes missing, worries that maybe a bear really did eat it. Should I not put in that worry because it would be best for a child not to be afraid? I don’t think so. Children do have fears. In a forthcoming picturebook, MAIL HARRY TO THE MOON!, the older brother strong feelings about baby brother Harry burst out as he yells, “Throw Harry in the trash!” Should this child not have feelings of jealously and displacement about his new baby brother and should I not write about those feelings. I don’t think so. And in another forthcoming picture book, THE DAY LEO SAID, ‘I HATE YOU!’, should the young child in this book never, ever say I HATE YOU!, or have or express those kinds of strong feelings?

Kids Lit:

The American Library Association often comes under fire for its defense of the Freedom to Read for children. What do you see as the importance of children being able to read what they want?

Robie: 

I too hold dear the concept that it matters big-time that our children have the freedom to look for books the give them the information or reassurance they need or want, or come across by happenstance in a library. Here is a case in point and I quote from a 1997 Philadelphia Inquirer Sunday Magazine article: “As it happens,” the article states, “IT’S PERFECTLY NORMAL was indirectly involved in a case of child abuse… Last year, a 10-year-old girl in Delaware showed her mother… [the chapter on sexual abuse] and said, “This is about me.” The girl’s comment led to a criminal investigation. In September, her father was convicted in Superior Court of Wilmington of multiple counts of unlawful sexual intercourse, and two months later sentenced to 62 years in prison.”



The book was used in the trial. The judge said there were two heroes in this case. The child and our book. I respectfully disagreed with the judge and thought there were three heroes in this trial — 1) the mother who allowed her child to choose what she wanted or needed to read, 2) the child, 3) and the child’s school librarian who believed that kids and teens have the right to have access to information they may want or need. I believe this could have happened with any book for kids and teens that included sexual abuse. But the fact that Michael’s and my book may have helped in some tiny way in making this child’s horrific and traumatic life better is why I continue to work on books that I hope are honest. And I am sure that the same kind of thing has happened with many who work with children, that something a person may have written or did that made a huge difference in a child’s life, and that person may not even know that words they wrote or said to a child had a major positive impact on a child’s life. So a resounding YES, to your question. It can and often does matter that children be free to read what they want or seek out or come across in a library.

Kids Lit:

In follow up, should the decision of what to read be in the hands of parents and adults or do children themselves have an unalienable right to read what they wish? Are there certain ages you would see that right starting?


Robie:


Every parent has the right in his or her home to decide what his or her child can read and when his or her child is ready for a particular book or type of book. So that is a decision I would leave with a child’s parent.

Kids Lit:

With that in mind, what role should a community play in deciding what children should be able to have access to?

Robie:

My view is that as citizens, we should respect the professional judgments of our children’s book librarians — be they librarians in public libraries, public school libraries, or independent school libraries — to choose those children’s and young adult books for their library collections and for their communities that are well reviewed, responsibly written and illustrated. And I would add that I think we should respect the librarians choices of individual books that a librarian may decide should be in his or her library collection no matter what the reviews say, because that book would be in the best interest of that community. And if any citizen, and that includes any parent, disagrees, most every children’s book librarian’s has a system in place, so that a citizen can ask for a library board hearing to discuss a complaint about or the removal of a particular book from that particular collection.

Kids Lit:

As a librarian, we often struggle with what books to select for our community. One aspect of that, sadly, for many librarians is how many complaints a book will generate, especially when selecting for children. Yet the Freedom to Read is especially powerful for our youngest readers who are looking for information on their world. How would you address the concerns of librarians worried about defending your titles in their collections?


Robie:


First of all, let me say loud and clear, that I believe that our librarians are the real heroes in our democracy. They are the keepers of our democracy by allowing children, teens, and adults to choose the books they want to read or may randomly come across in a library. This allows them to have access to ideas and information they may seek, or need, or come across by happenstance. Every librarian is on the front line of his or her community — defending that freedom. As a children’s book author, I am only in front of my computer.

And then I would say to every librarian that you do not have to be alone in the time-consuming and often stressful job of defending the books I write, that organizations such as ALA, to PEN American Center, The Authors Guild, The National Coalition Against Censorship, and others will be happy to help you in any way they can, along with my publisher, Candlewick Press. I am always happy to talk with the librarian and the press in support of the librarian. In addition, in every community where there is a book challenge, there are most often as many, or almost as many citizens, who do not want other citizens to decide what books they find acceptable for their children to read and do not want books taken out of their librarian collection because one citizen thinks it not be in the collection.

Kids Lit:

The Freedom to Write is directly tied to our Freedom of Speech. Some of your books have been challenged in libraries. How do you defend your right to express yourself in the face of such focused opposition? Is it directly connected to your audiences’ right to read?

Robie:

I feel no need to defend my right to create any of the books I write or any topic I write about despite the fact that some of my books, the books on sexual health, are opposed by some groups and some individuals. As a citizen in our democracy, I have the right to speak out, and/or write what I think is in the best interests of children in the form of children’s books, no matter what others think. I would never ever say that every family, or school, or library, or health organization, or religious groups must have the books I write. But those who choose to should have the right to that choice. And yes, all the work I do is also connected to not only to my right to read and write, but to children’s and teens’ right to read.



A huge thank you to Robie Harris for participating in the blog tour and for her obvious appreciation of librarians.  What a treat for me to be able to interview one of my heroes in children's literature and to find out in turn her respect for my profession. 

To tune in to the rest of the blog tour head to the following blogs:

Monday:  Fuse #8 talked about Fiction & Nonfiction

Tuesday:  Book Buds talked about Writing with Honesty for Children

Wednesday:  MotherReader talked about Writing from the "Child's Eye-View"

Friday:  Bookshelves of Doom talks about Challenged Books





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February 4, 2008
Robie H. Harris Blog Tour This Week!



This week I am participating in my very first blog tour.  It's not that I've never been asked before, but it takes a very special author to make me want to participate in something this structured. 

And who may that be?  Well, Robie H. Harris, author of the amazing It's Perfectly Normal and subsequent books that explain puberty, sex and childbirth with humor and straight-forward talk. 

You will see my interview with the wonderful Robie H. Harris on Thursday, but you can enjoy Fuse #8's interview today.

Here's the week's schedule:

Today:  Fuse #8 talks about Fiction & Nonfiction

Tuesday:  Book Buds talks about Writing with Honesty for Children

Wednesday:  MotherReader talks about Writing from the "Child's Eye-View"

Thursday:  I talk with Robie about Freedom to Read/Freedom to Write

Friday:  Bookshelves of Doom talks about Challenged Books

 

December 13, 2007
Terry Pratchett Announcement



It has been announced that Terry Pratchett has a rare form of early Alzheimer's disease. 


"Frankly, I would prefer it if people kept things
cheerful," he continued, saying it was "too soon to tell" if the
condition was immediately life-threatening.

Sad news for a great author of the hysterically funny Discworld series. 

 

November 2, 2007
2007 Charlotte Zolotow Lecture

Check out the 2007 Charlotte Zolotow Lecture at the CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center) by Patricia MacLachlan.  Wonderful stuff and, nicely for those of us who are more visual, it has a video file to watch. 

 

August 23, 2007
Sad News



Siobhan Dowd, author of the incredible A Swift Pure Cry, died on August 21st from breast cancer at age 47.  If you haven't read her poetic, powerful novel for teens, you really should.  Sad that there won't be many more books like this coming from her, she had a real gift.

 

August 13, 2007
Bruce Wood Dies



Children's book illustrator, Bruce Wood is dead at the young age of 34.  Son of Audrey and Don Wood, he has collaborated with his mother on a series of concept books.  He has also seen success on his own with a series of alphabet books.  Wood specialized in illustrations using the computer and led both of his parents to start using computers for illustrations. 

 

August 9, 2007
The Twilight Saga



Stephanie Meyer's Twilight series has a new look for its website.  Check out Meyer on ABC's Good Morning America too.

 

July 27, 2007
More Potter News

BBC News reports that JK Rowling is back at work writing already. 

"I'm sort of writing two things at the moment," she said. "One is for children and the other is not for children."


Rowling, 41, said she expected to drop one of her two
new books, which is what happened when she started writing Harry Potter
and the Philospher's Stone in the 1990s.


"The weird thing is that this is exactly the way I started writing Harry," she said.


"I was writing two things simultaneously for a year
before Harry took over. So one will oust the other in due course, and
I'll know that's my next thing."

As a reader of children's fiction, can I just put in my fervent wish that the one for children wins out!  C'mon Jo, think of the kids!


 

July 25, 2007
Set Your TiVos

JK Rowling is going to appear on the Today Show on Thursday and Friday.  Other portions of her interview with Meredith Viera will be on Dateline NBC on Sunday.  The article online tells us who the character was that JK Rowling decided not to kill:

“Mr. Weasley, he was the person who got a reprieve,” Rowling said.
“When I sketched out the books, Mr. Weasley was due to die in Book 5.”

Boy am I glad she spared him!

Rowling also talks about her plans to write a Harry Potter Encyclopedia which will reveal details of characters that were left out of the books.  So prepare your libraries and book stores for another round of Harry Mania!


 

June 20, 2007
Continuing Saga of the Bears



PhillyBurbs.com has the news that despite Stan Berenstain's death in 2005, the Berenstain series will continue.  Son Mike Berenstain is an illustrator who writes most of the series now.  In the article, he talks about how Dr. Seuss changed his parents' work:

It was Geisel who advised Mike's parents, Stan and
Jan Berenstain — primarily cartoonists — to make the Berenstain Bears a
series rather than a single book. The couple had intended to write
about penguins next.

Imagine that!

 

June 18, 2007
Lowry Interview

School Library Journal has an interview with Lois Lowry in their latest magazine (it is also available online.)  Lowry is one of my favorite authors, as I have probably mentioned here before.  Her Giver and Gossamer are both truly stunning novels that open young readers up to new worlds.  The interview focuses primarily on The Giver, which is a real treat.

 

May 29, 2007
Clyde Robert Bulla Obit



Clyde Robert Bulla, author of The Chalk Box Kid and many other novels for children, died on May 23rd at age 93

I think this quote from his obituary article sums up his approach to writing for children:

"I'm reaching children at very impressionable age levels — third to
sixth grade, 8 to 11 years old," Bulla told The Times' Charles
Hillinger in 1973. "I have to be very careful what I write about."

 

May 22, 2007
Louisa May Alcott

Check out this great site on Louisa May Alcott which was created to accompany a PBS documentary on her life.  The site offers information on her life, times and works as well as two image galleries filled with historical photographs.  My favorite is in the second gallery and features the sistes of Little Women as manga superheroes.  Go Jo!

 

May 18, 2007
Lloyd Alexander Dies

Lloyd Alexander died yesterday at age 83.  His Chronicles of Prydain were some of the first fantasy books I read.  I devoured the entire series.  Then Disney came along and messed with it.  I was always thrilled that that did not become one of the Disney classics like Little Mermaid where my skin would have to crawl each time it was re-released on DVD. 

Alexander will be remembered fondly by many readers.  You can head to his amazing website about Prydain, the books and himself.

 

May 11, 2007
Personal Side of LM Montgomery

For any fans of LM Montgomery and the glory of Avonlea (which I frankly found much more fun as a television show than a series of books, something I rarely say) this is the site for you.  Picturing a Canadian Life offers glimpses into Montgomery's personal journals, scrapbooks, and more.  View a gallery of her book covers, read about her interest in fashion, and discover her passion for collecting.  Even someone like me, who appreciates her storylines more than her writing, will enjoy the site. 

Was that blasphemy?!

 

February 16, 2007
Philip Pullman News

Big A Little a links to an interview of Philip Pullman by the Guardian. As thrilled as I am to hear that he loves the Moomin books too, and as lovely as the rest of the interview is, the big news is at the very end.  He says that he is writing a sequel to His Dark Materials!  Amazing!  Thrilling!  And he says that it is long too!  Even better!

 

January 10, 2007
Liz in Ink

Liz In Ink is the name of the delightful blog from author Liz Garton Scanlon that offers glimpses into her writing process and the fast pace of her family life.

 

January 3, 2007
Phillipa Pearce, Remembered

Philippa Pearce, author of 'Tom's Midnight Garden' has died. I vividly remember reading Tom's Midnight Garden and realizing that I adored fantasies with a British feel.

 

December 22, 2006
Adele Geras

Blogcritics Magazine has a really nice interview with author, Adele Geras: 'Write the Best Book You Can': An Interview with Poet, Novelist and Children's Author Adele Geras. She is amazingly prolific, having written 90 books for children, as well as novels for teens and adults!

You can also visit her website, which has incredible images from some of her picture books. The Sleeping Beauty ones by Christian Birmingham are particularly stunning.

 

December 18, 2006
Mo Willems



Way cool!  Mo Willems has a blog filled with doodles, letters from children, and art galore.  I particularly like the Kung-Fu pigeons and the suggestion for a new Pigeon title. 

Thanks to A Fuse #8 Production for the link.

 

November 27, 2006
Julius Lester Blogs

Julius Lester, amazing author of books like Day of Tears has announced that he is now blogging. His blog, A Commonplace Book, has amazing photography mixed with insightful essays. This is certainly one that should take the children's lit blogging world by storm.

You can also visit his website to learn more about his writing. My favorites are his great folktale retellings and his work with Jerry Pinkney.

 

October 6, 2006
Trueman at the National Book Festival



Watch Terry Trueman's 2006 National Book Festival webcast on the Library of Congress website.  Charming and funny, he reads some of his writing which is a real treat.  Great stuff.

 

October 3, 2006
Maurice Sendak Interview

The Today Show had a feature on Maurice Sendak.  You can view the video here.  Just scroll down to Friday's videos and select the Maurice Sendak one. 

Sendak talks about his "one theme" of "surviving danger" as well as his own childhood that he describes as "D-A-R-K."


 

September 29, 2006
Prelutsky Interview

Seattle PI has a nice piece: A Moment With ... Jack Prelutsky, America's first children's poet laureate. It is a short interview with Prelutsky, but it does remind all of us that poetry and kids do mix!

 

September 26, 2006
Maurice Sendak Interview

NPR has a great interview with Maurice Sendak, plus a fantastic audio slideshow featuring his work: Why Maurice Sendak Puts Kid Characters in Danger. Sendak's new book is a popup, which will turn off many libraries from ordering it, but I hope that some of you brave it.

 

August 28, 2006
Westerfeld on Apocalypse

Publisher's Weekly has an article with Scott Westerfeld: Looking at the Last Days. Westerfeld talks about the use of apocalypse in his novels, like his brand new The Last Days, which is a sequel to Peeps. Last Days is one of those books that I will bump everything on my reading pile to read.

 

August 17, 2006
William Sleator's Work

Adam Cadre has written an impressive article on William Sleator's body of work: 25 books by William Sleator. Sleator is great writer to recommend to teen boys who like some science fiction or strangeness in their novels. Well, Cadre writes it much more clearly than I can, and offers a synopsis of each title.

 

August 16, 2006
Sheryl McFarlane

Canadian author, Sheryl McFarlane has Sheryl McFarlane's Book Blog as well as a website that features information on her writing. Her blog offers reviews of other author's books and she has a great list to the side that shows all of the authors she has reviewed in the past.

 

August 14, 2006
Mary Higgins Clark Writes for Kids

Mary Higgins Clark Ships Off to Children's Books announces that the famous author of suspense novels has written her first children's book. It is illustrated by Wendell Minor. Alarm bells went off in my head when I read her quote: “I thought it would be a daunting project, but with six grandchildren and 11 step-grandchildren, I’ve been telling stories to children for a long time.” Sigh. Yeah, children's books are easy-peasy, remarkable how difficult it is to do one WELL.

 

August 7, 2006
Rosoff Interview

The Guardian has a great interview with Meg Rosoff called Don't call me lucky. Hopefully you have all read the amazing How I Live Now, which was Rosoff's first novel. Her new one is just coming out, Just in Case. It is certainly on my too-be-read list and will be fast tracked as soon as libraries in the area purchase it. This article just serves to get me even more interested in reading more by Rosoff.

 

August 2, 2006
Howe on Fears

Writer says kids need support

Howe said, "The more I've lived, the more I believe this: There are these basic existential fears we all carry. They're the fears of mortality, aloneness and not belonging.

"This is a very, very primal feeling," he said, "the monster under the bed."

 

June 30, 2006
Eric Carle Profile

Expatica's German news in English: The man behind the caterpillar

His target group are those children starting school at a time which Carle describes as the "leap from home and security, from the world of play and the senses to the world of the mind, abstraction, order and discipline."

 

June 29, 2006
Lanagan in the House

Margo Lanagan, author of Black Juice, has been blogging as the Writer in Residence at Inside a Dog.  Yes, I am just discovering this now and her month as Writer in Residence is almost finished!  But her writing is superb in both her books and on the blog.  A new author will be in residence in July.  This is one that you will have to travel to, there is no RSS feed that I can find.

 

June 28, 2006
Bedtime Stories

Independent Online Edition has an article on some of the top-selling children's book authors in Britain (and around the world.) The names are all familiar, or if the names are not, then the characters they have created are. What is nice is that each author has a nice series of paragraphs about their background and how they became such a success. The authors include Lucy Cousins, Katherine Holabird, Judith Kerr, and Lauren Child.

Speaking of Lauren Child, I have now seen the Charlie and Lola show and recommend it heartily. It takes the graphics of the books and creates a living world. Charlie and Lola are just as charming and wonderful as they are in the books and if it leads more children back to the book series and Clarice Bean as well, then it is doing a great job.

 

May 30, 2006
Frank Portman

Dr. Frank's What's-it is Frank Portman's blog. Portman is author of the very hot King Dork, which is on my list to read. His blog is witty and great fun and filled with pictures of all types of people reading King Dork.

 

May 28, 2006
Pat Mora

Pat Mora's website is a bright, sunny place filled with information on her many books, news and herself.  I enjoy that the information on each book is accompanied by reviews as well as a synopsis.  Very handy. 

 

May 15, 2006
Library of Congress Webcasts

The Library of Congress has Webcasts that focus on poetry and literature. Some of the featured authors are children's book authors! They include Mary Pope Osborne, Neil Gaiman, R. L. Stine, Meg Cabot, Sharon Creech, Patricia Reilly Giff, Walter Dean Myers, Pat Mora, Jack Gantos, and Jerry Pinkney. Hours and hours of webcast pleasure for you to enjoy!

 

May 12, 2006
Mo Willems

Yahoo News has an article: Mo Willems draws on the funny side of failure. It is a sweet and funny article on Willems, author of Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus and Knuffle Bunny, two of my all-time favorite children's books. Willems captures exactly what children love, pure fun and humor with an ironic twist. They are books that beg to be read again and again and books that simply MUST be shared aloud.

 

Kevin Henkes

The Wisconsin State Journal has a warm and appreciative article on Kevin Henkes and his marvelous new book, Lily's Big Day. I am a real Henkes fan from his wonderful mouse characters to Olive's Ocean. He has a remarkable talent and from what I read here in this article and see in his books a real affinity for children.

 

May 9, 2006
Patricia Polacco Stands Strong

An interesting letter from Patricia Polacco describing why her appearance at the International Reading Association Conference in Chicago last week was cancelled.  It appears that the all-powerful McGraw-Hill of textbook and test fame was interested in keeping Polacco from speaking out about her concerns over the No Child Left Behind program.  Polacco refused to adhere to their conditions that her speech be "upbeat, non-controversial, and non-political."

 

May 5, 2006
Shannon Hale

Squeetus is the official site for author Shannon Hale, recipient of a Newbery Honor for Princess Academy.  The site offers information on her books, biographical information, games, events, and a rolling blog along the side.  It is very nicely done. 

 

May 3, 2006
Popup Kings

The Guardian has interviewed Robert Sabuda and Matthew Reinhardt: Pop-up world. I love getting some background on why people create the books they do, and this article gives readers just that. I also appreciated the fact that they take the pair to task for the heaviness of the Dinosaur popup book they did. It had too much text for the space in my mind too. But hey, who can resist popup books? Especially when they are done with the artistry and magic that this pair creates.

 

May 2, 2006
Artemis Fowl

Artemis Fowl has a very cool new site. Its interface is like hacking into Artemis' computer. You can read a blog by Eoin Colfer, find out about news and upcoming events, meet the characters, subscribe to the fanzine, or enjoy online games and downloads. Sweet!

 

April 28, 2006
Ed Emberley

Ed Emberley has an amazing website. It is filled with information on him and his books. But best of all, it has animations and drawing pages to inspire kids to try art, and pdf files for printable activities. Click on the month you want, and you will find all sorts of things to do from paper airplanes, to mazes, to coloring sheets. And best of all, throughout the entire site, the feeling of an Ed Emberley book is maintained. Nicely done!

 

March 23, 2006
The Edge Series

'The Edge': Two British dads create fantasy worlds for young minds is a fascinating look at how an author and illustrator collaborate on The Edge series. Their friendship certainly shines through their work.

 

March 12, 2006
Faith Ringgold Article

Essence: You gotta have faith: a children's book author delves into her girlhood in a masterful memoir is a nearly poetic article on Faith Ringgold. This is an article that demonstrates the impact one children's book author can have.

Here is my favorite line:

"Ringgold says that although she seeks to explain some of the disturbing elements of slavery and prejudice through some of her children's books--a dozen in all--these stories have always been more about the importance of instilling in our youth the belief that they can change the world."

 

January 31, 2006
Printz Award Photos

John Green's blog, Sparksflyup.com has a great photo essay about the phone call he got when he won the Printz for Looking for Alaska.

 

January 28, 2006
Sandra Boynton

Sandra Boynton has a homepage that is silly, fun and sweet, just like her books.  Find out more about her and her work, share with other fans, and play online games.

 

January 18, 2006
Libba Bray

Teen Angels is a nice piece from Newsweek on Libba Bray, author of A Great & Terrible Beauty and Rebel Angels. If you haven't read this series, it is very gothic, very fantasy, very cool.

 

January 11, 2006
Rowling Has Written Non-Potter Book

Digital Spy says that JK Rowling has confirmed in an interview with Tatler Magazine that she has completed a non-Harry Potter book for children.

"It is what Rowling describes as a "political fairy story" about a monster and is aimed at children younger than those who read Harry Potter."

 

December 13, 2005
Jeanne Birdsall Article

The Boston Globe has an article: A storybook beginning on the recent winner of the National Book Award, Jeanne Birdsall. Her first novel, The Penderwicks, is an old-fashioned tale set on Cape Cod. The article tells about Birdsall's personal story. A series of installments following The Penderwicks are in the works.

 

December 12, 2005
Rowling on the Radio

Living with Harry Potter is an interview on BBC Radio 4 with J K Rowling. The interview is wonderfully conducted by Stephen Fry, who reads the books on the audio versions in the UK. Rowling speaks about the value of scaring children in books, how the audio books have affected her writing, the secret ending, and much more. Wonderful stuff!

And I must admit I am very jealous that the radio in England plays Harry Potter books as treats around Christmas time. What a wonderful gift for children.

 

December 9, 2005
Robert Sabuda

Wausau Daily Herald - Kids' book illustrator creates books that pop is an article on Robert Sabuda, one of the great artists of pop-up books. My favorite part of the article is the end where he says:

"Parents are busy. They want time with their kids to be well spent. ... There's greater attention to children's books now as a backlash to the technology in kids' lives. Parents feel the need to give an alternative to all the media saturation."

 

November 30, 2005
Stan Berenstain Dies

Sad news that Children's book creator Stan Berenstain dies at age 82. He and his wife have written more than 200 Berenstain Bear books.

 

November 29, 2005
Wisconsin Authors & Illustrators

Wisconsin Identification Record 2004 is compiled by the CCBC and lists Wisconsin authors and illustrators who do children's books. This is a great resource for librarians in the state who are looking to book an author and can immediately see who lives nearby.

 

November 26, 2005
Walter Dean Myers Interview

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The Wisconsin State Journal has an interview with Walter Dean Myers focusing on his new book The Autobiography of My Dead Brother, why he became a writer and the responsibility of authors for young people.

 

November 22, 2005
Tony DiTerlizzi

Tony DiTerlizzi's IMAGINOPOLIS is the new official site for this author of the Spiderwick Chronicles and my favorite, Ted. It has news, information about Tony, shop, and FAQ. But best of all it has a glimpse into his art process and a books section where you too can download Ted wallpaper for your computer.

 

Julie Hearn

jool1.jpg

Julie Hearn, author of The Merrybegot or The Minister's Daughter in the US, has a site with information on her books, a FAQ, her writing, and appearances.

 

November 20, 2005
Kerry Madden

The LiveJournal of Kerry Madden is named for her book: Gentle's Holler. Here you will find tales of her travels to promote the book, links to great sites, and much more.

 

November 10, 2005
Mary E. Pearson

mary e. pearson's journal ~ ~ ~ ~ what's new . . . is her Livejournal that gives us a glimpse into the life of this author of A Room on Lorelei Street, which is a fabulous book.

 

Chachibachis

Cachibachis is author, illustrator Amy Moreno's blog about children's illustrations and writing for children.

 

November 9, 2005
Picture Book Junkies

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Picture Book Junkies is a group of children's picture book authors and illustrators who share one site. Participants include: Patrice Barton, Holli Conger, Roz Fulcher, Jenny B. Harris, Mary Haverfield, Paige Keiser, Laura Logan, Heather Powers, and Janee Trasler.