Archive for the ‘Children’s books’ Category

“Belle, the Last Mule at Gee’s Bend”

Monday, January 16, 2012

“Belle, the Last Mule at Gee’s Bend”

Authors: Calvin Alexander Ramsey and Bettye Stroud

Illustrator: John Holyfield

Publisher: Candlewick Press

“Belle, The Last Mule at Gee’s Bend” is a timely picture book related to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the civil rights era and Black History Month (coming up in February).

In this depiction of true historical events, Alex, a boy of elementary school age, is bored.  He sits and waits on the porch of a rural store in Gee’s Bend, Alabama, as his mother shops. There is nothing to do except watch a mule graze in a garden across the road.

When Miz Pettway, a native “Bender,” joins him on the bench, she tells him the mule, Belle, is hers. She adds, Belle is a hero and allowed to eat anything she wants in the garden.  Alex asks how a mule can be a hero and Miz Pettway explains: Belle had the honor of being one of two mules chosen to pull the farm wagon holding the casket of Martin Luther King Jr. And the story unfolds.

As unlikely as it seems, this picture book about the Civil Rights Era and the efforts to organize voter’s registration in Gee’s Bend, Alabama, tells the painful truth in a soft heartfelt way without being morbid or dwelling on the civil wrongs of the era.

West Virginians will be pleased to note the illustrator, John Holyfield, is a native of Clarksburg.  In addition to producing fine art in his Virginia studio, he illustrates picture books about the black experience.

Myers named National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature

Thursday, January 5, 2012

To call Walter Dean Myers a West Virginian, you have to rely on a somewhat narrow definition of the phrase. He was born in Martinsburg, but his mother died when he was a toddler and he was taken to Harlem to live with a couple there. The New York City area is the setting for many of his books, and he lives now in Jersey City.

In this photo from December 2010, author Walter Dean Myers takes a look around his old Harlem neighborhood. AP photo.

But when you get a national honor like Myers just did, everyone wants a piece of you, and we’ll happily claim our share.

Myers was announced as the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature on Wednesday, the third person to hold the position since it was created in 2008. He’ll formally accept the post in a ceremony next week at the Library of Congress, whose Center for the Book was one of two groups to choose Myers. The other was an arm of the Children’s Book Council, a trade group of children’s book publishers.

As ambassador — which The New York Times described as “a sort of poet laureate of the children’s book world who tours the country for two years, speaking at schools and libraries about reading and literacy” — Myers, 74, follows “Bridge to Terabithia” author Katherine Paterson (who also spent some time living in West Virginia) and “Time Warp Trio” author Jon Scieszka (who, I don’t know, probably drove through the state at some point).

Myers is very different from those authors, and from many young adult authors writing today. As Julie Bosman wrote in the Times:

The choice of Mr. Myers represents a departure from his predecessors and is likely to be seen as a bold statement. His books chronicle the lives of many urban teenagers, especially young, poor African-Americans. While his body of work includes poetry, nonfiction and the occasional cheerful picture book for children, its standout books offer themes aimed at young-adult readers: stories of teenagers in violent gangs, soldiers headed to Iraq and juvenile offenders imprisoned for their crimes.

While many young-adult authors shy away from such risky subject material, Mr. Myers has used his books to confront the darkness and despair that fill so many children’s lives.

But he does so, critics say, with a sense of possibility. Writing in The New York Times Book Review in 2008, Leonard S. Marcus praised Mr. Myers’s body of work. “Drugs, drive-by shootings, gang warfare, wasted lives — Myers has written about all these subjects with nuanced understanding and a hard-won, qualified sense of hope,” Mr. Marcus wrote.

He’s certainly got the resume for the job: two-time Newbery Honor winner (“Scorpions” and “Somewhere in the Darkness”), three-time National Book Award finalist (“Monster,” “Autobiography of My Dead Brother,” “Lockdown”) and numerous other awards. Still, it might sound strange to have a 74-year-old man hailed as someone who can relate to today’s teenagers in his books.

But Myers knows what he speaks of: he dropped out of high school, spent a few dead-end years in the Army, and worked a succession of jobs before finding his footing as a writer. In a profile last year by The Associated Press, he said:

“I know what falling off the cliff means … I know from being considered a very bright kid to being considered like a moron and dropping out of school.”

No matter what else was going on in his teenage life, though, Myers continued to read — and he says he wants to instill the idea that reading is not optional in today’s parents. The Times reported:

“I think that what we need to do is say reading is going to really affect your life,” he said in an interview at his book-cluttered house here in Jersey City, adding that he hoped to speak directly to low-income minority parents. “You take a black man who doesn’t have a job, but you say to him, ‘Look, you can make a difference in your child’s life, just by reading to him for 30 minutes a day.’ That’s what I would like to do.”

 

A holiday tale: “The Secret Stars” by Joseph Slate

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

The Secret Stars

By Joseph Slate; illustrations by Felipe Davalo

“The Secret Stars,” by noted West Virginia author Joseph Slate, is a refreshingly simple picture book for children. Illustrated by Felipe Davalos, it tells the story of an American Hispanic family’s celebration of Three Kings Day, or the Epiphany.

According to tradition, Jan. 6 is the date the Magi, or Three Kings, completed their journey to find the baby Jesus. Their gifts to the babe established the tradition of giving gifts to commemorate the occasion of his birth.

In this story two children, Pepe and his sister Sila, live with their grandmother on a ranch in the state of New Mexico.  On the Night of the Three Kings the children are snuggled in bed, one of each side of their grandmother. Suddenly they awaken to the sound of icy rain pounding their tin roof; it is raining so hard the stars are hidden. The children begin to worry, without stars how will the Three Kings find their farm and the gifts the family left for them: hay for their horses and figs? If the Three Kings get lost there will be no gifts for Pepe and Sila?

Grandmother swaddles them tighter in their large quilt and quietly tells them stories about the secret stars, stars the Three Kings can use as guides. As she tells the stories the quilt takes flight and they find themselves on a magical journey around their farm to see secret stars.

The next morning they rush to the barn to see if the secret stars did guide the Three Kings. Sure enough, in the barn the hay is gone and so are the figs. In their places the Three Kings left the children candy, and a doll for Sila, and a belt for Pepe. As the children return to the house they notice three sparkling pine trees on a nearby hill. The branches shine like stars and remind the children to thank the Three Kings for their gifts.

The story of the Three Kings is one way to acquaint young children with the varied cultures of the United States and to perhaps minimize the commercialization of the season.

Christmas is coming, and so is Jan Brett

Friday, November 4, 2011

Jan Brett's Christmas tour bus, coming to Beckley next week.

The work of a longtime children’s author and illustrator is on display in West Virginia right now — and the author herself is coming next week to join in the celebration.

Jan Brett and friend.

“The World of Jan Brett,” an interactive exhibit featuring the words and illustrations of the award-winning storyteller, has been at the Youth Museum of Southern West Virginia in Beckley since July. Brett released her latest book, “Home for Christmas,” last week. She’ll be in Beckley on Nov. 9 at 4:30 p.m. to talk about that book — and another collaboration, “The Night Before Christmas Deluxe Book and DVD Edition with the Boston Pops Orchestra.”

That’s a natural, since her husband Joe has played the double bass for 50 seasons with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, as the Gazette’s Sara Busse reported last month.

She brings props, too — including one used by the main character, Rollo the runaway troll, in “Home for Christmas.”

“I’ll bring the antler we found,” she said, referring to a moose antler that she discovered on a research trip to Sweden. “It takes a long time to get up the mountain, but whoosh, Rollo can get down the mountain more quickly if he has the antler to ride on. I’m fascinated by an act of physics that kinda changed things.”

Brian Floca and “Ballet for Martha”

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Occasional blog contributor Mona Seghatoleslami of West Virginia Public Radio scored an interview with children’s author/illustrator Brian Floca, who’ll be at the West Virginia Book Festival on Saturday afternoon.

As Mona notes, Floca’s projects include a variety of subjects, including music and dance:

One of Floca’s recent projects was illustrating the book “Ballet for Martha: Making Appalachian Spring.” His images help to tell the story of the artistic collaboration between choreographer Martha Graham, composer Aaron Copland, and set designer Isamu Noguchi.

“I felt like I needed to learn the dance, well enough to give it to the readers in my visual ‘voice’ if you will. The most interesting and exciting part of that process for me was I got to go sit in on rehearsals by the actual Martha Graham Dance Company that exists today in New York and watch them perform … and that, it’s … I’ve really benefited so much over so many books with people’s willingness to share their own interests and concerns and process to help me, a total outsider, to make a book.

50 years of “The Phantom Tollbooth”

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Ever wonder what kind of book leads someone down the path toward becoming a serious reader? For blog contributor (and Gazette editorial page editor) Dawn Miller, it was “The Phantom Tollbooth” by Norton Juster, with illustrations by Jules Feiffer. She writes:

It was such tough going at first I thought it was a grown-up book, which made me more determined to read it. Eventually I read as far as the spelling bee. The Spelling Bee was an actual man-sized insect that could spell anything, A-N-Y-T-H-I-N-G. He got into a fight where market stalls and people were toppled. In the disturbance, the main character, a boy named Milo, was knocked over and fell on the bee. The bee shouted, “Help! Help! There’s a little boy on me.”

To my 9-year-old ear, that was the wittiest thing I ever read. I was hooked.

In The New Yorker recently, Adam Gopnik talked with Juster and Feiffer as they, too, recalled their work of a half-century ago.

National Book Award finalists announced

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

From The Associated Press:

NEW YORK — Debut novelist Tea Obreht, longtime poet Adrienne Rich and Malcolm X biographer Manning Marable, who died on the eve of his book’s publication, were among the National Book Award finalists announced Wednesday.

The list of 20 nominees, five each in four categories, included several published by small presses, from TriQuarterly to Graywolf. Fiction finalist Edith Pearlman’s story collection “Binocular Vision” was released through Lookout Books in Wilmington, N.C., while Andrew Krivak’s “The Sojourn” came out from Bellevue Literary Press, based at the famous hospital in New York and the publisher of Paul Harding’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “Tinkers.”

The 26-year-old Obreht was cited for “The Tiger’s Wife,” a haunting novel about displacement that has already won Britain’s Orange Prize for best fiction by a woman. Others in the fiction category were Julia Otsuka’s “The Buddha in the Attic” and Jesmyn Ward’s “Salvage the Bones.” Another widely praised first novel, Chad Harbach’s “The Art of Fielding,” was not selected. Neither was Jeffrey Eugenides’ “The Marriage Plot,” his first novel since the Pulitzer-winning “Middlesex.”

In nonfiction, Marable was nominated for his long-awaited “Malcolm X,” on which the Columbia University professor had worked for 20 years, only to die just before the book came out. A Harvard University scholar, Stephen Greenblatt, was a finalist for “The Swerve,” his story of the Renaissance-era rediscovery of Lucretius’ “On the Nature of Things” and the Latin poem’s influence on Western thinking. The other nominees were Deborah Baker’s “The Convert” and two biographies of married couples: Mary Gabriel’s “Love and Capital: Karl and Jenny Marx and the Birth of a Revolution,” and Lauren Redniss’ “Marie & Pierre Curie, A Tale of Love and Fallout.”

Manning is not the first posthumous nominee. In 2004, Donald Justice was a finalist for his “Collected Poems.”

The National Books Awards are chosen by separate panels of writers for each retrospective category. Judges looked through 1,223 books in all.

While fiction judges focused on lesser-known authors, the poetry panel selected some of the biggest names in the field, including the 82-year-old Rich (“Tonight No Poetry Will Serve: Poems 2007-2010”), Carl Phillips (“Double Shadow”) and Yusef Komunyakaa (“The Chameleon Couch”). The other finalists were Nikky Finney’s “Head Off & Split” and Bruce Smith’s “Devotions.”

The young people’s literature finalists were Franny Billingsley’s “Chime,” Debby Dahl Edwardson’s “My Name Is Not Easy,” Thanhha Lai’s “Inside Out and Back Again,” Albert Marrin’s “Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy” and Gary D. Schmidt’s “Okay for Now.”

The award’s sponsor, the National Book Foundation, had initially reported that Lauren Myracle’s “Shine,” not Billingley’s “Chime,” was a nominee.

Winners, each of whom receive $10,000, will be announced at a Nov. 16 ceremony in New York hosted by actor-author John Lithgow. Honorary prizes will be presented to poet John Ashbery and Florida-based bookseller Mitchell Kaplan.

 

Where Are They Now?: 2010 W.Va. Book Festival edition

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Nicholas Sparks — remember him? — comes out today with his latest book, “The Best of Me.” Judging from the book’s description, Sparks fans will enjoy this one as well:

High school students … fell deeply, irrevocably in love. Though they were from opposite sides of the tracks, their love for one another … unforeseen events would tear the young couple apart … twenty-five years later … neither can forget the passionate first love that forever changed their lives … Can love truly rewrite the past?

I’m guessing yes.

Anyway, today seems like a good time to catch up with the other people who helped make last year’s West Virginia Book Festival a success:

| Diana Gabaldon has the latest installment in her Lord John series, “The Scottish Prisoner,” scheduled for release on Nov. 29. She also a 20th anniversary edition of “Outlander,” the novel that started it all for her, in July. And, she recently announced on her blog that the eighth “Outlander” novel will be called “Written In My Own Heart’s Blood.”

| Carmen Deedy, as we mentioned last month, has a new young adult novel out, “The Cheshire Cheese Cat.” She also has a sequel to her 1994 book, “The Library Dragon,” coming out next April, called … wait for it … “The Return of the Library Dragon.” Michael R. White illustrates the book, as he did the original.

| James Robertson, longtime Civil War scholar, retired after more than four decades as a professor at Virginia Tech. That doesn’t mean we’ve heard the last of him. He’s the author of “The Untold Civil War: Exploring the Human Side of War,” which comes out next week. He’s also the co-editor of “Virginia at War, 1865,” a look at the mother state at the end of the Civil War, due out on Nov. 3.

| Meredith Sue Willis released a collection of stories, “Re-Visions: Stories from Stories.” Her newsletter, Books for Readers, remains a great resource for people who love reading.

| Jim Benton’s twelfth in the Dear Dumb Diary series, “Me (Just Like You, Only Better) was published in June. Because each book covered a month in diarist Jamie Kelly’s life, you might think that’s the end of the series. Not to worry, the first book in the “Dear Dumb Diary, Year Two” series is out on Jan. 1. Also, Benton’s Happy Bunny book, “Love Bites,” gets a special edition release on Dec. 1.

| Did you hear Ken Hechler is 97? Come wish him a belated happy birthday at this year’s Book Festival.

| Jayne Anne Phillips continues as director of the Master’s of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program at Rutgers-Newark — she’s reading in the school’s Writers at Newark Reading Series on Oct. 25 — and was featured in “We Wanted To Be Writers,” an anecdotal history of the Iowa Writers Workshop published in August.

| Sarah Sullivan, Charleston children’s book author and longtime friend of the Book Festival, released “Passing The Music Down” to general acclaim in May.

| John J. Fox III, Civil War historian, writes:

My project due out late spring 2012 is about how JEB Stuart became famous – his June 12-15, 1862, ride with only 1,200 Confederate cavalrymen around George McClellan’s entire Union army that threatened to capture Richmond. Stuart only lost one man during the operation, but the intelligence he brought back gave Robert E. Lee the green light to go on the offensive and launch the Seven Days’ Battles that saved the Confederate capital.

| Heidi Durrow had her novel “The Girl Who Fell From The Sky” chosen as the city of Portland’s “Everybody Reads” book for 2012. Durrow, the daughter of an African-American father and a Danish mother, also appeared as part of CNN’s “Dialogues” series, in an event on “The 2010 Census and the New America.” She continues to co-host the weekly “Mixed Chicks Chat,” available on iTunes.

| John Antonik remains new media director for the WVU athletic department, and writes the Campus Connection blog on MSNsportsNET.com.

W.Va. children, adults go for reading record

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Schoolchildren, parents and teachers across West Virginia will be part of a group trying to set a national reading record on Thursday morning. Children (and adults) around the world will read “Llama Llama Red Pajama” by Anna Dewdney.

Among the readers will be state Superintendent of Schools Jorea Marple at Jayenne Elementary School in Marion County, and acting first lady Joanne Tomblin at West Side Elementary School in Charleston.

More, from the state Department of Education:

Many other schools have plans in the works for the  Read for the Record Day, including Barrackville, Blackshere, Rivesville and White Hall elementaries in Marion County.  At Steenrod Elementary in Ohio County,  the Parent-Teacher Association purchased the book for every teacher.  Bridgeview and Piedmont elementaries  in Kanawha County, as well as Belmont Elementary School in Pleasants County also are participating.

In Upshur County,  Union Elementary in Upshur County has invited community volunteers to read …

“Reading well is one of the most important skills a child needs to learn,” Marple said. “When children become good readers in the early grades, they are more likely to perform well in other subjects and all through their school days. Read for the Record raises awareness about the importance of reading and makes it a priority.”

For information, contact the West Virginia Department of Education’s Office of Communications at 304-558-2699, or visit the campaign website at www.readfortherecord.org and www.wegivebooks.org.

Video of the Week: Fran Cannon Slayton

Friday, September 30, 2011

One of the latest additions to next month’s West Virginia Book Festival is Fran Cannon Slayton, who’s going to use her 2009 young adult novel “When The Whistle Blows” to show how writers can use their family stories to break into writing.

If you don’t want to go into her session without knowing about her book, well, you should read the book … or, barring that, you could check out this week’s Video of the Week: