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Video Sunday: Politics and Poker (50 points for anyone who gets the reference)

Video Sunday: Politics and Poker (50 points for anyone who gets the reference)

October 19, 2008 by Betsy Bird

Last week’s videos were just so fabulous that I have to admit I haven’t much for you this week.  So when video times are tough I like to turn to the Drawn blog for inspiration.  This piece is a combination of stop animation with pixelated cut-out images by a Joseph Mann.  For me it highlights the importance of good sound quality in any video.

Taller Than Trees from Joseph Mann on Vimeo.

Politics.  There’s no escaping it.  Now the group Authors & Illustrators for Children has tossed its hat into the ring, supporting one of the two candidates.  I’ll give you three guesses who it is and the first two don’t count.


Thanks to Jen Bryant for the link.

Speaking of politics, the other day Matt and I were surfing the web looking for a good three-minute encapsulation of the last presidential debate.  What we found instead was this.


Eerie, ain’t it?  The more things change the more they stay the same.  Thanks to The Daily Dish for the link.

And for our random but fun video of the week, observe the awesome power of the 7-year-old spinner.  About the time she starts using the drop spindle I’m in utter awe.  I still can’t get the hang of those damnable objects.


Thanks to Mom for the link.

Filed Under: Videos

National Chocolate Cupcake Day

October 18, 2008 by Betsy Bird

Today is national chocolate cupcake day.
Celebrate by sending me cupcakes.


(stands to one side and wonders if this will work)

Thanks to Jaime Temairik for the Cupcake Monster image.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Review of the Day: Wonder Bear by Tao Nyeu

October 18, 2008 by Betsy Bird

Wonder Bear
By Tao Nyeu
Dial Books (a division of Penguin)
$17.99
ISBN: 978-0-8037-3328-2
Ages 4-8
On shelves now

As far as I know there are no hard and fast rules that govern an illustrator’s debut picture book. No guidelines on what to do or what to avoid are written down for easy reference. If an illustrator were to ask me, however, I would probably advise against going wordless your first time out. The general buying public is comfortable with certain wordless books, all right. Anno’s Journey and The Red Book and The Snowman, for example. But these are award winners or literary classics. By and large the general purchasing public isn’t entirely certain what to do with the wordless. How on earth does one “read” when there is nothing to be “read” in the traditional sense of the word? But you know who didn’t ask for my advice on the matter? Tao Nyeu. Ms. Nyeu just went out there and created the biggest, brightest, most imaginative wordless picture book I’ve seen in all of 2008. She did it without taking a drop of advice from me, and I’m bloody well glad she did. So artists everywhere, I implore you! Never listen to a single syllable that falls out of that gaping hole I dare to call a mouth. Whether the marketplace is ready for it or not, Wonder Bear is a remarkable debut appearance by a special creator adept at tuning into that portion of the brain directly connected to childhood.

A boy and a girl plant a garden. Not a particularly extraordinary event in and of itself, but as they lie dreaming that night a beanstalk, as thick and lush as any Jack ever climbed, shoots out of the ground to flower the next morning. Emerging from one such blossom is a white bear with a blue top hat. From this hat the bear pulls out a troop of high-spirited monkeys, bubbles that take the shape of wild animals, flying creatures that normally are relegated to the deep blue sea, and more. After a day of adventures the boy and the girl fall deeply asleep and tucked into bed by the bear and the monkeys before they themselves take off for parts unknown.

I found the color palette itself mildly fascinating. I’ve decided that deep green just doesn’t get the attention it deserves. Nyeu gives the hue its due, alongside other colors I might not instinctively reach for myself. Deep blues I see a lot of, but oranges and yellow/oranges? That stands not within the prospect of belief! Much of the action, including the cover, is set against a pure white sky, the bear only distinguishing himself through his own outline. This could come off as dull and uninformative as a Eyewitness book, but fortunately Nyeu shakes things up enough by shifting backgrounds, angles, distant shots, and close-ups so that the read never comes off as stagnant. Really, these changes in perspective give the reader a sense of flying with the characters. Speaking of which, the characters in the book are fun, though it is clear that the monkeys steal the show. Nyeu is not averse to slipping in a little monkey-related detail here or there (check the back endpapers), and kids will have fun following the orange critters’ adventures throughout the story. Sharp eyed readers will also spot a blue top hat on the seeds the boy plants (and the watermelons on the girl’s side are full grown by the tale’s end).

A quick word on the size of the book. Librarians will often groan when a publisher decides to put out a picture book of unusual dimensions. Yes yes, we understand the artistic inclinations at work here. Fellow artist Mo Willems can explain at length why Leonardo, the Terrible Monster is tall and thin while Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed is long and wide. That said a library’s shelves are not eternally malleable things. We like our books to fit, you see. The oddly shaped or incredibly tall are too often doomed to the “OVERSIZED” section of the children’s room where no one ever sees them and where they are bound to lay forgotten, maligned, and alone. Wonder Bear is eye catching and tall with a creamy whiteness and selectively shiny cover that is dazzling to the eye. This will serve it well in bookstores, where catching the eye is the whole point of the game and where shelves are flexible objects. In children’s rooms in libraries, however, do not be surprised if it is difficult to find this book right off the bat. This is definitely an example of when art comes in conflict with use.

Artistic considerations aside (no small task) the easiest way to describe this book to parents would be to call it The Cat in the Hat meets The Snowman. Consider it. You have your top hatted animal character that pulls wild things from its headwear and takes two children (a boy and a girl) through remarkable adventures. That’s a credit to Seuss. Then on the other side of the equation you have a large white, friendly polar entity coming to life and flying about through a dark night sky. Tip of the hat to Mr. Briggs. However, Nyeu eschews the near calamity and anarchy of The Cat while also not getting near Briggs’ surprisingly sad ending. The result is a picture book as light and fluffy as a soap bubble without an emotional core. It’s a comfort book, not a story with a greater purpose. Not all tales for children need this unsettling undercurrent, but maybe a little jolt or hint of conflict would not have been out of place here. Maybe.

My knowledge of the children’s literary marketplace outside of America wouldn’t fill half a flea’s eardrum, y’know. Still, the international possibilities of this book cause one’s jaw to drop slowly to the floor. I mean, the title itself already has the feel of a wordless import. It reads more like The Adventures of Polo than Jeannie Baker’s Window. Some may not care for the title’s systematic stream of consciousness while others wish it packed more of an emotional or narrative punch. I like it quite a bit, though I acknowledge that it does feel like a first book. But Ms. Nyeu is clearly a name to watch as her books grow and change over the years. Her sense of wide-eyed wonder is something no one will ever be able to copy or steal. A beautiful object and a very fun book. A visual winner, through and through.

Other Blog Reviews:

  • Every Day Is Like Wednesday
  • The Children’s Book Review
  • Kids Lit
  • Muddle Puddle Musings
  • Pink Me
  • Booktopia
  • Working Dad
  • mamaroots


Other Online Reviews:

  • Cookie Magazine
  • Publishers Weekly


Misc:

  • Tao is the Recipient of the Society of Illustrators’ 2008 Founders Award.
  • You may find her website interesting.
  • And to see more of Ms. Nyeu’s art, check out her interview over at yorkrules.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: 2008 picture books, 2008 reviews, picture book reviews, Tao Nyeu

Hanging Out With Mem Fox and Helen Oxenbury

October 17, 2008 by Betsy Bird

And by "hanging out" I of course mean "seeing them speak in a large auditorium with a host of other fans".  Same dif.

Anywho, if you know me then you know that at heart I am a penny-pinching old miser who would rather reuse a Ziploc bag for my sandwiches for weeks on end rather than pluck a new one from its box.  I am also exceedingly spoiled and pretty much will refuse to see an author speak if it means shelling out cold hard cash.  My saving grace is that I do make exceptions from time to time and one such exception was when I heard that The Bank Street Center for Children’s Literature was inviting author Mem Fox and illustrator Helen Oxenbury to speak in conjunction with the center’s 99th birthday of the Children’s Book Committee.  The mind boggles when it considers whom they may have for the 100th.

To explain why I actually plucked my lazy carcass up and walked over to the center I have some good reasons:

1.  It was at The Bank Street Center (naturally) which is a 13 block straight shoot south of my home.

2.  It was not in Brooklyn.  Do you know how many friggin’ events happen on weeknights in Brooklyn?  Suffice it to say, if it ain’t in Brooklyn I am 75% more likely to attend.

3.  It was Mem Fox and Helen Oxenbury TOGETHER at long last.  Lisa Von Drasek called them the "children’s literature supergroup" and she isn’t wrong.

Well naturally they were there to promote the book.  It’s a cute little thing called Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes though I haven’t actually gotten around to reviewing it yet.  Simple books like this one are a bugger to review, you know.  There is nothing worse for a reviewer than an exceedingly sparse and perfect little picture book with a very young readership in mind.  I have infinite respect for the reviewer who can find something original to say about such a title that is seemingly without flaws.  Nine times out of ten I just end up flapping my jaws and calling it a day.

We were greeted first and foremost by Elizabeth D. Dickey the relatively new President of Bank Street.


And here is Alice B. Belgray, Chair of the Children’s Book Committee, who due to my fine photography skills looks as if she is mere moments from pitching sideways off the end of the world.


She was followed by Bank Street’s librarian extraordinaire Lisa Von Drasek who did the introductions. And then Mem Fox and Helen Oxenbury spoke.

I am ill at ease at the prospect of describing the talk. In graduate school I was taught thoroughly and well that Mem Fox is akin to God in some way. I was not taught what way that might be (both God and Mem have three letters in their name, perhaps) but I knew right off the bat that it had something to do with her mode of speech. Apparently she’s good at it. This turned out to be true too, though I was pleasantly baffled at the start.  You see, Ms. Fox hails from Australia and Ms. Oxenbury from England.  All well and good, but I spent the first few minutes lazily pondering how odd it was that the English and Australian accents are so similar.  Later it was explained that Ms. Fox had spent copious amounts of time in England and that was why she spoke the way she did, though I would not have consciously picked up on it had she not pointed it out.


Fox did most of the talking, but Oxenbury could put in her two cents if she cared to.  Right from the start she stated dryly, "The trouble is that Mem doesn’t think illustrators can talk.  The trouble is that she’s right."  Yes, well.  There was no denying that the writer had a way with words.  Fox had made certain that the proceedings would progress smoothly by saying that when she works she cannot hear so much as a fly or she will be distracted.  When she hears a fly she finds it and she kills it.  You want to see how she does so?  Regarding mobile phones we were told, "I will make you come down here.  And I will kill you."  Right-o.


Actually, the talk was particularly nice because after reading us the book together, Fox and Oxenbury (can I just say Fox & Ox to save time?) had the audience read it aloud as well.  We were not as stylish in our reading but they seemed to be in a forgiving mood.  After all was said and done they then signed all our books and I got one for my little niece and one for little me. I do not know where they will appear next, but if you happen to see that they are in your neighborhood do shell out the green stuff to see them. They really are quite worth it.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Press Release Fun: School Librarians and Free Stuff (two great tastes, etc. etc.)

October 16, 2008 by Betsy Bird

Any contest that begins with the sentence, "School librarians rock" has got my attention, certainly. The Class of 2k8, those intrepid newbie authors and illustrators of middle grade and YA fic, are offering up some nifty prizes to the hardworking school librarians of the world.  Check it out, cuties:

Enter the Class of 2k8 Fall Contest!

After you read below, we dare you not to enter!

School librarians rock, and we know it! Help us spread the word about the Class of 2k8’s new fall contest, just for some of our favorite people on Earth. It’s easy to enter and fun!

School librarians can enter by sending us an anecdote about books, reading, or life in the school library, or a snappy quote about books and writing. We’ll be posting our favorites on our Class blog during November, but winners will be chosen randomly from among all entries. In addition, if you pass this on to other school librarians and they mention the referral, you and your school will be entered in the drawing twice–double the chance to win!

Prizes include:

First Prize: Your choice of a full set of Class of 2k8 books OR a free author visit from a Class of 2k8 author in your region (if available)!

Two Second Prizes: A $50 gift certificate from Indie Bound (formerly BookSense) plus three books from the Class of 2k8 to add to your school library.

Three Third Prizes: Three books from the Class of 2k8 to add to your school library.

Anecdotes and quotes must be e-mailed to us at contests (at) classof2k8 (dot) com. Pleas be sure to include your name and contact information at your school with your entry. Entries will be accepted from October 1- November 10, and the winners will be announced November 24.

We’re looking forward to hearing from you!

Filed Under: Press Release Fun

Fusenews: Press Release Thursday (so to speak)

October 16, 2008 by Betsy Bird

Right now my library is on the brink of becoming a reality. I can say no more except to hint that it will be, in the words of Barney Stinson, legendary.  More info to come as I get it.

  • Oo!  Ooo!  The National Book Award finalists have been announced!  The Young People’s Literature category includes:


The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart (Hyperion)
The Underneath by Kathi Appelt (Atheneum)
Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson (Simon and Schuster)
What I Saw and How I Lied by Judy Blundell (Scholastic)
The Spectacular Now by Tim Tharp (Knopf)

A very hearty thank you to Read Roger for the news. 

  • Now, today is October 16th.  Maybe you live in the greater New York area.  Maybe you are sitting at home, facing yet another evening of dull dreary repetitive life and living.  Perhaps you would like to kick things up a notch.  If so, do be so good as to check out this and pass it along to any teenagers you might know.  I don’t usually talk up YA stuff, but John was one of the first Hot Men of Children’s Literature, so for old time’s sake note this info:


PAPER TOWNS
is officially available on October 16th and to celebrate John Green will be at the Tribeca Barnes and Noble for the kickoff event of his publicity tour. I thought some of you might like to attend and please pass this event information along to ALL INTERESTED TEENS! This will be a Nerdfighter event and John’s brother, Hank will be there with his guitar as John’s opening act. It should be a lot of fun and I hope to see you there.

 

Thursday, October 16

 

7:00 pm                                                                        BARNES AND NOBLE

                                                                                    97 Warren Street (at Greenwich Street)          

                                                                                    New York, NY 10007

  • I was a fan of Wabi Sabi, a picture book that Ed Young contributed art for.  Some of you may have heard the dramatic story behind the art’s disappearance and Young’s subsequent path to publication with all new illustrations.  Well, the book’s editor Alvina Ling has been chronicling the story in four parts.  Read parts 1, 2, 3, and 4 for the complete tale.  She includes pictures and everything.


  • When my sister wrote me and said that some news story with the title Holocaust Love Story would be right up my alley I was inclined to think that perhaps she’d vastly misjudged my taste in AP headlines.  But as it turns out, she was right on the money.  It’s a story that has, " inspired a children’s book, ‘Angel Girl.’ And eventually, there are plans to turn it into a film, ‘The Flower of the Fence’."  We shall see what we shall see.  Thanks to Kate for the link.


  • From Cynopsis Kids come two very different children’s literature related items:

Chorion inks further deals for the 3D CGI animated preschool series, Olivia , which is based on the kid books by author/illustrator Ian Falconer. 

And

The recently announced 3D animated series Le Petit Nicolas (52×12), based on the 1959 book by author Rene Goscinny and illustrator Jean-Jacques Sempe, has been acquired by broadcasters in Greece, Poland, Turkey and Latin America, per Variety .  The series is a co-production between M6 Studio, Method Animation, Luxanimation and DQ Entertainment.

  • Are you a librarian who’d like to get a little more involved in professional library business?  If so, check out this message from ALSC on how you can get in on the action.  From the press release:

Whatever your driving passion is in your own library service to children, there is an ALSC committee that will interest you. We have dozens of committee opportunities to prove it! If you are a member of ALSC, please fill out ALSC’s volunteer form found here:

Don’t miss my personal favorite checkbox: "Will serve where needed!" Those ALSC members receive appointment opportunities first!

We know that members aspire to serve on award committees, but consider that in serving on ALSC’s other committees you won’t just be volunteering, you’ll be building a name and a resume for yourself that will make ALSC leaders sit up and take notice!


  • Daily Image:


Oh, sweet pad of my heart where have you been all my life?


Thanks to BB-Blog for the link.

Filed Under: Fusenews

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