PaperTigers.org, a great website

One of the reasons I love Children’s Literature Roundtables is all the info that gets sent your way.  For example, this morning, I received a recommendation for a website that is an awesome resource.  PaperTigers.org was chosen by the ALA as one of the great websites for teachers, librarians and parents.  It’s chalk-a-block full of good stuff like:  interviews, book reviews, an illustrator’s gallery, info. on outreach programs, and a blog with a calendar of children’s literature events and a place where you can participate in conversations on multiculturalism, world literacy, literature and more.  Drop by today!

More on Family Literacy Day

The Children’s Book Centre wants to help you celebrate family literacy today and all year long with an annotated list of fabulous books to inspire reading.  Check it out.  Family Literacy Day (January 27, 2012) | Canadian Children’s Book Centre.

Happy Family Literacy Day

In honour of Family Literacy Day, ABC Life Literacy Canada offers five suggestions on how you can embrace daily learning opportunities:

  1. Attend a local Family Literacy Day event in your community. Visit http://www.FamilyLiteracyDay.ca for event listings.
  2. When making your grocery list, have your child write out the items you need to buy.
  3. When cooking dinner, involve your children in measuring the ingredients. This helps them understand fractions and measurements.
  4. In the car, sing along to songs on the radio. Singing encourages learning patterns of words, rhymes and rhythms, and is strongly connected to language skills.
  5. When playing a board game, read the instructions aloud to each other or count how many spaces to travel around the board.

A Monster Calls

 

I read A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness based an idea Siobhan Dowd had when she was dying of breast cancer.  I loved everything about it.  But be warned, you’ll want to have a box of tissues handy when you read it.

I don’t want you to think this is a one note band sort of book.  It’s a complex story about family, friendship, and bullying in addition to exploring the way in which young  people come to terms with death.  It’s a story that embraces realism as well as the dreams and the interplay and tensions between the two.

I am disappointed that this wonderful book hasn’t received more attention, but I’m not all that surprised. For starters, it’s about thirteen year old Conor whose mother is dying of cancer.  This is a difficult subject, and one that does not speak to every reader. It’s also an illustrated text, which some young adult readers may be inclined to shy away from, yet the story is rich and complex. This in turn leads to the question as to which category this powerful story best fits into; middle grade or young adult. It really is a book whose point of view is firmly grounded in childhood even while the main character is on the cusp of being a young adult. I’m sure that the question of where to shelve it has been much discussed in both libraries and bookstores.  I suspect that creative booksellers and librarians shelve it in both spots, but most books don’t cross over quite so well when it comes to awards.

Still, A Monster Calls is one of the most compelling books I’ve read recently and I do hope it finds it’s way into the hands of young people on both sides of the intermediate and young adult spectrum. Awards are wonderful for bringing a book to the attention of readers. But, this is one of those books that probably won’t win many awards even though it is brilliantly written and illustrated. Instead, it will likely be reliant on astute librarians, teachers, and other adults to put it into the hands of young readers who will most benefit from it.

Teachers and copyright

Not long ago a teacher on a list serve that I belong to raised concerns about some of her colleagues whom she felt may be crossing copyright laws.  This was my response:

As an author, I’m thrilled when teachers find my books useful in a classroom setting. I’ve seen such creative teaching strategies over the years…from found poems using phrases from a book typed and put into a basket for children to choose and piece together, to new stories being written from the point of view of one of my characters, to a story being read with a student-created soundscape reflecting the setting.  I don’t object to my words being copied for this sort classroom use. In fact, I applaud it.

However, like many other authors, I draw the line at copying for the purposes of income.  If you are making money using my work, you are infringing on my copyright.  I also object to copying a book electronically so that additional purchases are not necessary.  I’ve seen some of my picture books scanned and read to an entire school so that a library only need purchase one copy.  While I understand that libraries are being squeezed, this approach really hurts creators.  Most people are not aware how little authors and illustrators make (5% each of the retail sale price of a book).  We have to sell a lot of books to earn a living, and if you copy  our work, we aren’t even making that small amount.  Writers and illustrators want to write more books for you and your students to enjoy. Please let these teachers know that our work is our livelihood. We can only continue to create if we can earn a living doing it.

Thanks for listening to my rant.

Sheryl

Tell American Television Networks That They’re Wrong

Shame on American television networks who don’t believe that the winners of the most prestigious children’s book awards in the U.S. are newsworthy.  This is the second year that the major networks have declined to carry segments with the Caldecott or Newbery Award winners despite ALA’s media staff’s outreach efforts.  No wonder reading is on the decline.  Kids are being told in all sorts of subtle and not so subtle ways that books, even award-winning books, don’t have value.

Now if every one of you who does value kid’s books and reading were to write to the major television networks to tell them otherwise, there is no telling what might happen…

Serendipity 2012: Children’s Literature Conference

 Vancouver Children’s Literature Roundtable Presents:

Year of the Dragon: Asian Themes for Young Canadian Readers

Saturday, February 25, 2012; 8:30 am – 3:30 pm (includes lunch & snacks) The University of British Columbia, Neville Scarfe Building; Room 100

***Featuring***

                                 Paul Yee

                                  Lisa Yee 

                                  Allen Say

 ***With Special Guests***

                                   Tanya Kyi,  2011 Information Book Award, winner

                                   Marjorie Coughlan Papertigers.org editor

                                   Corinne Robson Papertigers.org editor

                                    Joseph Wu, origami master and

                                    Shiamak’s Bollywood Dancers

Registration Fees

Early Bird Rates (through January 31, 2012): Members $125 Non‐members $140 Students $75 Regular Rates (beginning February 1, 2012): Members $150 Non‐members $165 Students $100

Visit us at www.vclr.ca for more information or to register

Karen Rivers on January 16th

CANCELLED

Young adult author, Karen Rivers will be at the Victoria Children’s Literature Roundtable meeting on Monday January 16th to talk about how she found her “dream job” as a writer. Her books are funny, quirky, sad, and impossible to put down.   I’ve never read one I didn’t like.

If you happen to be in the Victoria area,  drop by the Nellie McClung Branch Library, 3950 Cedar Hill Road for an awesome program. Doors open at 7 pm & you can browse the bookseller’s table until 7:30 when the program starts.

The VCLR is open to the public. Members free, drop-ins $5, students $4.

www.victoriachildrensliteratureroundtable.blogspot.com for more info.  Or check them out on Facebook.

Books available at the event through Tall Tale Books.

Books and joy

I stayed up late reading, as usual.  Books bring such pleasure into my life.  Here’s a little video that speaks of a more whimsical sort of joy.  Enjoy!

Instructions for Helping the World

Instructions for Helping the World is my favorite poem of 2012.  I know.  I know.  The new year has just begun!  But still.  It’s an awesome poem.  It’s written by Greg Pincus, a kid’s lit blogger who is as prolific as he is talented.

Instructions for Helping the World is short (only 10 lines), but it packs a serious punch and should be required reading for all those “Back to The Three R” types out there.

Thanks Greg …  I would add that help might also come in the form of a warm bed, enough to eat, clean water and love but that’ll keep for another poem.

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