Carnegie and Kate Greenaway Medal short list announced

The short list for the UK’s Carnegie Medal for children and young adults was announced.

THE WEIGHT OF WATER, Sarah Crossan
A GREYHOUND OF A GIRL, Roddy Doyle
MAGGOT MOON, Sally Gardner
IN DARKNESS, Nick Lake
WONDER, R. J. Palacio
MIDWINTERBLOOD, Marcus Sedgwick
A BOY AND A BEAR IN A BOAT, Dave Shelton
CODE NAME VERITY, Elizabeth Wein

Also announced was the Kate Greenaway Medal shortlist for illustrated children’s books. Both winners will be named June 19:

Lunchtime, Rebecca Cobb
Again!, Emily Gravett
Oh No, George!, Chris Haughton
I Want My Hat Back, Jon Klassen
Pirates ‘n’ Pistols, Chris Mould
King Jack and the Dragon, Helen Oxenbury (illustrator) and Peter Bently (author)
Black Dog, by Levi Pinfold
Just Ducks!, Salvatore Rubbino (illustrator) and Nicola Davies (author), Walker Books

If you’re looking for a good kid’s or teen book, these are the best of the best in the UK this year.

Canadian Children’s Book Centre Writing Contest

I’ve been reading stories from grade 4 kids across Canada all week as part of the Canadian Children’s Book Centre’s writing contest.  Some of these kids have wonderful imaginations and it’s been a treat. But, I have a lot more reading to do before I choose a winner and two runner ups.  

If you haven’t sent your story in already, it’s too late to participate this year.

But, it’s never to early to start working on next year’s entry.  The contest is free, and all you have to do to qualify is be a Canadian student in grades 4-12 and send  your story in to the Canadian Children’s Book Centre. And there are great prizes too! So don’t miss out next year. 

Stories by home-schooled students are welcome.

Celebrate International Women’s Day by making a micro loan to a woman or group of women through KIVA today.  $25 can go a long ways toward helping a group of women gain economic stability.  You won’t regret it.

Wear Pink today, but be on the alert to bullying every day

Today is National Pink Shirt Day, a day to rally for anti-bullying.  I appreciate that we’re moving in the right direction, but it seems to me that every day should be about zero tolerance for bullying.  Bullying has become more subtle these days, and it can happen right under the noses of the adults who insist they won’t tolerate it.  In my day, the bully was easy to identify. They were the ones who shoved you into lockers, stole your lunch money, or followed you home and beat you up.  These days the bully is just as likely to have been your best friend who dumped you for the popular crowd and bullying is often about isolating someone. The pervasiveness of social media makes being a victim even worse because bullying can be 24-7. It follows you home from school in the form of phone calls, text messages, and Facebook. Today’s bully wants you to know that you’re being excluded, and they don’t want you to forget it. The other thing that’s really disturbing is that victims of bullying often become bully’s themselves. It’s a survival tactic that perpetuates the cycle.  

It’s time to take a stand.  it’s time to say no to bullying.

2 March colloquia on children’s literature at UBC…free

The School of Library, Archival and Information Studies is pleased to announce that Helene Høyrup, Ph.D., of the Royal School of Library and Information Science in Denmark, will be joining us as the inaugural Dodson Visiting Professor. She will be in the position from February to April 2013.

Dr. Høyrup is Associate Professor in children’s literature and digital literacy at RSLIS n Copenhagen. She is an international scholar in children’s literature studies and has published extensively in the field. She is particularly interested in the theoretical development of children’s literature scholarship, the interface between children’s literature, art and literature for adults, and the situation of children’s literature and its studies in different nations and regions. Additionally, Dr. Høyrup is an international Hans Christian Andersen scholar and a partner in several Danish, Scandinavian and European research projects on children’s literature and canonicity, and on theories of informal learning with digital media.

Wednesday, March 6th, 5:00 to 6:00 pm, Dodson Room, Room 302, Level 3, Chapman Learning Commons, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, 1961 East Mall, University of British Columbia.

“The Cultural Construction of Literature for Youth in Denmark – An Insider’s Historical Reading”

It has been suggested that children’s literature is “an intersection of two powerful ideological positions: our ideas about childhood and our ideas about literature, ideas often conflicted beyond our knowing” (Lundin 2004: 147). In this talk I shall give an outline of the contextual history of children’s literature in Denmark. In the lack of literary canonization (or, as German researchers phrase this process: decanonization) Danish children’s literature became a cultural battlefield reflecting different agents’ views of childhood and of literature. My talk will give an outline of this contextual history from Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tales to the postmodern cross-generational aesthetics of today.

Wednesday, March 20th, 12:00 to 1:00 pm, Lillooet Room, Room 301, Level 3, Chapman Learning Commons, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, 1961 East Mall, University of British Columbia.

“Literature between Bookspace and New Literacy Space: Towards a Connective Ethnography of Children’s Literature and Digital Media”

How can the meeting between “old” and “new” media become a fruitful encounter? In the 20th century children’s literature research developed into a theoretically reflexive investigation of the relation between children, childhood and texts. It could be said to have undergone the linguistic “turn”, which has often been seen as a parallel to the emergence of digital media.

Digital media, however, challenge the paradigm of print culture and the theories developed under previous media ecologies. The field of New Literacy has emerged as an interdisciplinary movement aiming at analyzing the processes and “texts” of the emerging digital knowledge system. New Literacy, from a Cultural Studies point of view, can be defined as socially recognized ways of creating, communicating and negotiating meaningful content, as mediated by texts and embedded in d/Discourses (Knobel & Lankshear). The mediation between media, text and user is here studied from primarily a socio-cultural perspective.

The concept of aesthetics, as developed in theories of play, hermeneutics, linguistics, literature and “everyday” aesthetics, seems oddly absent in New Literacy research. With picture books as a case, my paper suggests that children’s literature studies and New Literacy research should be seen as a converging theoretical field. Whereas children’s literature research needs to strengthen its concepts of materiality and mediation, New Literacy research should develop its concept of “text” to also encompass the aesthetic and critical view of knowledge following the linguistic turn

This lecture is inspired by my research in the concept of knowledge media (with colleagues at RSLIS) and by the current planning of a research network on advanced literacy skills and textual competences in the new media age with participation from researchers in children’s literature and literacy from Sweden, England, Germany and Denmark. The lecture will also connect its theoretical points to trends in the development of library services for children and young adults in Denmark (e.g. based on the governmental committee work “Fremtidens biblioteksbetjening af børn” [Future Library Services for Children], in which Helene was a research member).

Children’s Literature Event

Author Caitlyn Vernon
Monday Feb. 25th, 7:30 pm
at the Victoria Children’s Literature Roundtable
Debut author Caitlyn Vernon, winner of the 2012 Bolen Books Children’s Book Prize, will tell us about her uplifting ecology book, Nowhere Else on Earth: Standing Tall for the Great Bear Rainforest, and how she got started as a writer.

Caitlyn Vernon grew up on British Columbia’s Pacific Coast and now calls Victoria home. She will never be too big to wade in the ocean in her gumboots, poke around in tide pools, explore coastal forests or climb trees and mountains. Caitlyn has a background in biology and environmental studies and is currently a campaigner with Sierra Club BC, working to protect the Great Bear Rainforest. Nowhere Else on Earth is her first book.

The VCLR is open to the public. Members free, drop-ins $5, students $4. Meetings are held at the Nellie McClung Branch Library, 3950 Cedar Hill Road. Come early and browse CanLit for Kids Books’ table, and bring a friend! Doors open at 7 pm.
For more information about the Roundtable, call 250-598-3694, find us on Facebook, or visit:
www.victoriachildrensliteratureroundtable.blogspot.com.

I have this great idea for a kid’s book…

I hear it a lot. At the park, at schools and libraries, even at parties…

“I have this great idea for a kid’s book.”

I’ll bet you do! But, ideas are not stories.  They are a beginning.  You actually have to write the story, revise it, figure out who the appropriate publishers are to send it to, hope you make it out of the slush pile, likely get rejected, revise some more, then repeat the cycle all over again.  Welcome to the business of writing for kids…

For most of us,writing is a life long pursuit both in terms of staying on top of the ever shifting world of publishing, and perfecting our craft. The learning curve is big people, and if you really want to develop that idea, there’s no better time to get with the program than now.  Harold Underdown’s The Purple Crayon is a good place to start. He offers all sorts of articles that range from manuscript preparation, to tips for getting out of the slush pile.

Flowers and chocolate are just a bonus

I love Valentine’s Day.  When my kids were young, we used to get out the glue, red, purple, pink and white construction paper, paper doilies and glitter.  We’d spend every evening for a week making all of our valentines cards. Often we baked and decorated cookies to go with them.  It was so much fun, and cost next to nothing.  Valentines Day doesn’t have to be commercial. It can just be about doing something with someone you love.  Curing up on the couch and reading a story together, making someone’s favorite dish for dinner, taking a few minutes out of a busy work day to call and say those three little words we all like to hear. Flowers and chocolate are nice, but they’re just a bonus.  The real gift is having people in your life that you love.

Happy Chinese New Year

Happy Chinese New Year, and welcome to the “Year of the Snake.” I was born under the snake sign, more years ago than I care to admit. According to several websites I visited, individuals born under the snake sign tend to be smart, very protective of their families, and often wealthy.  Hmmm, I don’t know very many children’s book writers who are wealthy…I’m sure not.  Actually, I only know of one wealthy children’s book writer…I wonder when J.K. Rowlings was born? I wonder if it was during a year of the snake?

Whatever sign you were born under, here’s wishing you a wonderful and creative year ahead.

 

More good news in BC Publishing

Saved at last!  Yep, PW reported that Harbour Publishing, the small but sturdy BC publishing house, has stepped up to rescue the sinking Douglas & McIntyre Imprint.  BC writers, illustrators, and readers thank you Howard and Mary White.  Douglas & McIntyre will not go under after all.  A big big sigh of relief.

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