Friday, June 14, 2013

This Had Me at the Cover

Printz winner, Myers (Monster), delivers another excellent character-driven novel, this time focusing on the strength and encouragement that come from a trusted friendship. 

Harlem teenager, Darius, a writer, wants to get out of his neighborhood and make it to college, but his grades aren't good enough. He's hoping that if he can get a story published, he might nab a college scholarship. His best friend Twig is a track star, and sees athletics as his escape. Both are skeptical of the hype they are fed about how hard work pays off, and they face obstacles ranging from school bullies and unsupportive parents to indifferent educators and classmates who don't want others "to get away from the crappy little universes they had created for themselves." 

Myers homes in on the intimacy between Twig and Darius and their struggles at writing and racing, without letting the oppressiveness of their neighborhood or their home lives either fade to the background or into cliché. Ages 13–up.

-Publishers Weekly

Thursday, June 13, 2013

The Challenge of Reading to Children on a Daily Basis

  Books All Around!

Reading to children on a daily basis is important. The challenge is to find the time. This can be overcome by having books within reach. Having books everywhere leads to reading everyday.
Weekly Challenge:

  • Establish a reading corner with at least two books per child on a child accessible shelf.
  • Make sure every child has a library card.
Suggestions:

  • Place books on a low shelf.
  • Have books in every classroom.
  • Create a reading corner.
  • Have at least two books per child.
  • Designate a place to store library books (a shelf, a basket, or a bag).
  • Keep books everywhere (car, bathroom, kitchen, bedroom).
  • Have a book bag for each child.
  • Schedule library visits.
  • Check library events for book festivals, storytimes, and more!
-from Richland County Public Library.  For more information click HERE .


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Reading With Dad


In honor of Father's Day (Sunday, June 16), here's a link to a list of children's lit featuring dads.  Scroll to the bottom of the page for a complete, printer-friendly list.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Happy Birthday, Maurice Sendak!

 
Happy Birthday, Maurice Sendak!
June 10, 1928 – May 8, 2012

 
Maurice was never interested in supplying children with momentary distractions or reliable soporifics; he wanted to make rich, complex, even dangerous art for them. He risked everything and dared anything, even failure, to uncover truth. He pushed at the boundaries of his form to expand its expressive capabilities, its capacity for generating meaning. He was protean, and over the years, his books became stranger, darker, more complex and more magnificent. He was a very serious artist. With a depth of feeling and intensity that might seem odd in an author and illustrator of children's books, Maurice believed in art.

His grateful readers and adoring friends loved him because he told us the truth; he warned us, in book after book, that death divides the living from the loved, and also, impossibly, that love lasts even when life doesn't. Do we believe him? Somehow, through some potent magic he possessed, we do.

-from an article by Tony Kushner
published in The Guardian, December 22, 2012

Nancy Drew Books

Remember these?  How many do you have?

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Liar & Spy

Short chapters make for a fast read until the middle of the novel.  That's when I started wondering if anything was actually going to happen.

Like a story.

Stead's novel feels like the shadow of something instead of something:  an only child moves to a new apartment, makes a friend, navigates middle school, spies on a neighbor, finds out things may not be what they appear to be, takes it all in stride.

I really liked Stead's Newbery winner, "When You Reach Me".  This low-key, lightweight narrative was melancholy and dissatisfying.  

Oh well.



12 Books on Parenting for New Moms

-from hpb.com