What I’ve Been Reading (Part 1)…

Are you on your way to your 2018 reading goals?

I’ve currently reached 13 out of 61 books for 2018 (Check out What is your 2018 Reading Resolution? for ideas on setting your own resolution). To track my books, I’m trying out keeping a reading journal with the list of books I’ve finished, plus any quotes I’ve marked with book darts, short descriptions, and a “To Be Read” list.  I was inspired to try this after listening to Sarah Mackenzie’s podcast episode on “Delightful, Simple Reading Journals for Kids”. I also still add a batch of books into Goodreads every so often to have a digital record. Do you have a way to track your reading that works for you? I’d love to hear it!

Here are some of the books I’ve added to my reading journal lately:

 

AtHomeinTheWorldAt Home in the World is a travel memoir from Tsh Oxenreider, a writer who spent a year traveling the world with her husband and three young kids. This book is the perfect inspiration for parents who haven’t gotten the travel bug out of their systems and want to continue to explore and have adventures with their families–which could even just mean taking a short road trip. You may have heard of Tsh from her work on the “Women’s Work” or “Simple Show” podcasts, which I only realized were the same creator after devouring the book and looking to see what else she had written. It is a wonderful feeling to finish a great book and then realize you have a whole backlog of the author’s podcasts, articles and books you can catch up on.

 

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Hello Universe by Erin Entrada Kelly was this year’s Newbery winner. Give this middle-grade title to fans of Wonder by R.J. Palacio or Because of Mr. Terupt by Rob Buyea. Told from alternating points of view, at its core this is a relatable coming-of-age story with a lot of heart. It’s the start of summer for four neighbors who are all trying to find their way in the world, from fitting in and accepting themselves, to navigating relationships with their parents. Their stories become intertwined when something goes terribly wrong in the woods near their houses. I enjoyed this one so much I suggested it for my school’s next parent/child book club. Empathy building, thought-provoking middle grade fiction at its best.

 

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Green Eggs and Ham was voted my school’s favorite Dr. Seuss book this month, but The Lorax was a strong second and the one students’ kept begging to hear read aloud.  This is a crowd pleasing read aloud, from the littlest ones up through at least fifth grade. Children are captivated by this story and now more than ever we could use some inspiration to take care of our environment–truffula trees, bar-ba-loots, and humming-fish might just do the trick!

 

 

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Mom & Me & Mom was a wonderful audiobook experience that I was able to enjoy during commutes or while cleaning up the house. The book centers on Vivian Baxter, Maya Angelou’s complicated, strong mother. The book is read by Angelou herself and it feels like you’re sitting in a room with her, hearing the story of her life. This book is beyond inspiring as you see the depth of a mother’s love, together with Vivian Baxter’s stumbles, and for me it shed light on how Maya Angelou overcame astounding adversity and took a winding path to become the wise, successful poet we now know.

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Annie and the Wild Animals by Jan Brett is the perfect book to curl up with on a snow day (as are many of Jan Brett’s books–you may know her as the author of The Mitten). Annie’s cat, Taffy, has gone missing and she’s very lonely. Annie tries to lure a nice new pet to her home with corn cakes, but wild animals like bears and a moose keep showing up instead. An adorable read aloud and the boardbook version is perfect for my little bookworm, who still wants to nibble the pages!

What have you been reading lately? Leave a comment below to share a recommendation. And stay tuned for Part 2 of “What I’ve Been Reading”.

10 Bookish Reads to Cozy Up With Next

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Is there anything better than “books about books”? This is a genre I can’t get enough of. Turning the pages and spotting references to favorite books and authors, finding out the characters inhabit bookstores or libraries each day, and reading loads of dialogue between characters about the titles they love––heaven!

Here are 10 Bookish Reads for you and the little ones in your life. Happy reading!

ajfikry1. The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin

If you are on the lookout for your next bookish read and have not yet picked up this gem of a book, place your library requests or bookstore orders immediately! This is a reading experience to be treasured. I grabbed this book and curled up on the couch with it anytime my daughter was asleep one rainy Saturday and alternated between laughing out loud, reaching for the tissues, and looking for another book dart to mark a passage I loved. A young toddler comes into the life of a thirty-something widower bookstore owner, changing the course of not only their “stories”, but also the entire community’s. Bookish references abound in this one and great reads are at the center of the characters’ lives. This book was also a wonderful fictional look at raising a reader. A.J. Fikry has certainly zoomed to the top of my list of recent favorites–highly recommended.

 

You can also check out this interview with the author, Gabrielle Zevin from NPR:

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2. First Impressions: A Novel of Old Books, Unexpected Love, and Jane Austen by Charlie Lovett

I got this book recommendation from a wonderful “Lifetime mother-daughter book club” episode of my favorite reading podcast, “What Should I Read Next” with Anne Bogel. (If you haven’t listened to this book recommendation podcast, this would be a great episode to start with. This book was recommended by the mother and daughter on the show sharing their favorite reads and getting book recommendations.) First Impressions is a bookish mystery for Jane Austen fans and Anglophiles, that alternates between Jane’s perspective and modern day Sophie Collingwood’s, a recent Oxford graduate about to take on the greatest literary puzzle she could imagine. Bonus–it will inspire you to re-read Pride and Prejudice. 

 

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3. The Wilder Life by Wendy McClure

Little House on the Prairie fans, this is the book for you! Wendy McClure shares her account of immersing herself in the world of the series and embraces all things Laura Ingalls Wilder. I’m fascinated by how Wilder,  like L.M. Montgomery, and Louisa May Alcott blended the real stories of her upbringing and family life with fiction. Like Avonlea and Orchard House, the setting of the various Ingalls’ homesteads is also such a rich part of the story and McClure makes pilgrimages to them all–from the Big Woods of Wisconsin, to Plum Creek, and South Dakota. This is a delightful literary travel memoir and reflection on the series. For a more scholarly look at the world of Laura Ingalls Wilder and reality versus fiction in her work, you can also check out Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder by Caroline Fraser.
onetrueloves4. One True Loves by Taylor Jenkins Reid

If you’re a fan of Liane Moriarty or Jojo Moyes and haven’t picked up a Taylor Jenkins Reid book, I highly recommend this author. She writes smart, tug-at-your-heartstrings women’s fiction that is impossible to set down. In One True Loves, Emma Blair has spent her twenties with her high school sweetheart Jesse, traveling the world and having adventures far from their small Massachusetts hometown. After being married for only a year, tragedy strikes and Jesse’s helicopter crashes somewhere over the Pacific. Emma moves back home to rebuild her life and takes over her parents’ bookstore. After several years, she falls in love again with Sam, an old friend, and becomes engaged. When Jesse is found alive, Emma’s world is turn upside down. Keep the tissues handy as you’ll be as torn as Emma about how to choose between the husband she lost and the fiancé she has built a life with. This book also dives into Emma’s complicated relationship with her family as well as the world of the bookstore, which she rebelled against growing up.

 

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5. The Losers Club by Andrew Clements

The wonderful Andrew Clements has done it again with another funny, relatable, middle-grade school story–and in this one, he celebrates being bookish! This has taken the top spot as my new favorite Clements book and was a hit when I helped choose it as the 4th and 5th grade parent/child book club pick at my school. Alec is a lifelong bookworm who is actually constantly being sent to the principal’s office for reading too much at school. (Which breaks my librarian heart!) In the after-school program, he’s forced to sign up for a club, but he just wants to spend his time reading. His solution–call the club “The Losers Club” and hope no one else wants to join so he can read in peace. When things don’t exactly go according to plan, Alec makes some interesting discoveries about himself and the people around him. Clements weaves in a stellar book title every few pages and even includes a full list of books read by Alec and his classmates at the end of the story –the young readers in your life will devour this title.

 

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6. Another Day as Emily by Eileen Spinelli

This is a quick read that completely warmed my heart. I read it in a few hours one afternoon and couldn’t wait to recommend it to students. Eleven-year-old Suzy researches Emily Dickinson as part of a summer program at the public library. When things don’t seem to be going her way, she decides to channel her inner Emily and live like a 19th-century recluse. Her experiment exasperates her parents and baffles her friends, but left me charmed. This book was in my reading pile because it’s part of this year’s Massachusetts Children’s Book Award program. 4th, 5th and 6th graders across the state are presented with 25 nominated books. If they read 5, they are eligible to vote for their favorite. Many states have reading programs for elementary kids, and the nominee lists are great places to seek out new books for the little ones in your life.

 

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7. Our Story Begins: Your Favorite Authors and Illustrators Share Fun, Inspiring, and Occasionally Ridiculous Things They Wrote and Drew as Kids, Edited by Elissa Brent Weissman

I flipped through this book gleefully as I saw how many author contributed, from the author of my childhood favorite Ella Enchanted, Gail Carson Levine, to authors and illustrators of incredible contemporary titles like Wonder (R.J. Palacio), One Crazy Summer (Rita Williams-Garcia), Escape from Mr. Lemencello’s Library (Chris Grabenstein), and Where the Mountain Meets the Moon (Grace Lin). This is a fascinating look at the varying journeys of accomplished authors and illustrators–the childhood sketches, attempts at novels, and encouragement from teachers and parents that got them where they are today. A truly inspirational and entertaining read for kids and adults alike.

 

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8. A Library Book for Bear by Bonny Becker

This delightful picture book makes kids of all ages laugh out loud. Bear is a bit of a curmudgeon and has all the books he could ever need (seven to be exact). Why would he possibly want to go to the library with Mouse? A sweet, funny tale about being open to trying new things and discovering your next favorite book at the library.

 

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9. Reading Makes You Feel Good by Todd Parr

Why does reading make us happy? Is it being able to read the signs at the zoo? Or sharing a story with a friend? Todd Parr explores the many wonderful reasons why “Reading Makes You Feel Good”. A perfect book to share with the littlest readers in your life. I love to ask my K-2 students why they love to read after sharing this title. They always come up with adorable reasons!

 

TheLibrary10. The Library by Sarah Stewart

Elizabeth Brown was born a bookworm. Her piles of books are her constant companions. She even creates a check-out system for lending books out to friends when she is away at school. (I love that she conducts “midnight raids” to take overdue books back from classmates). When others are out socializing, she’s staying in content with her book. She also reads while grocery shopping and vacumming (if only she’d had access to audiobooks!). As she gets older and moves into a house of her own, the piles of books become towers until she eventually runs out of room. The solution? Create a public library for her town. This is a fun bookish read aloud for kids of all ages and certainly pleases us bookish introverts!

Happy Birthday Dr. Seuss!

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Friday, March 2nd is Dr. Seuss’s birthday and Read Across America Day! I’m celebrating all week long with Seuss read alouds and activities in the library and Seuss bedtime read alouds for my little one. I’ve also invited teachers and students to vote for their favorite Dr. Seuss book with stickers on a display outside the library.

Here are some of the top picks so far, which you might want to share with the kids in your life to celebrate Dr. Seuss’s birthday!

 

My favorite Dr. Seuss book is Oh The Thinks You Can Think, which makes a great read aloud for any age.

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I love the way Dr. Seuss encourages us to use our imaginations in this one and I emphasize how cool it is that he makes up so many interesting creatures, places, games, and even food in the story. For the older students, we make the connection that this is what some of our favorite fantasy authors do, for example JK Rowling’s creation of “Quidditch”, “Hogwarts”, and “Bertie Bott’s Every Flavor Beans”. After we read, I like to challenge students to make up their own words, like Dr. Seuss did, at one of our centers. It’s been so fun seeing what they come up with!

On Friday, we’ll have a special “breakfast for dinner” for our Seuss celebration at home. I’m going to make this green eggs and ham recipe from 100 Days of Read Food. I like that I don’t have to go out and buy green food coloring for this one, she just blends in some kale.

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Green Eggs and Ham Recipe from 100 Days of Real Food

I hope you have fun celebrating! Happy Birthday Dr. Seuss!

 

Update: If like me, you realize you are short a few shopping ingredients, you can improvise and do green eggs with avocado and bacon!

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18 Ways to Celebrate Little Women’s 150th Anniversary Year

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I recently discovered with much excitement that 2018 is the 150th anniversary of the publication of Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. The world of the March sisters-Jo, Meg, Beth, and Amy-is one I have revisited countless times and it ties with Avonlea and my beloved Anne of Green Gables as my all time favorite. There is something so comforting about escaping into the heartwarming pages of this story and each time I reread I’m struck by different character or lines. I’m know I’m not alone in imagining myself as Jo and drawing strength from this smart, courageous heroine as a young girl. Now, as a mother, I also find in Marmee inspiration for the kind of wise, loving parent I hope to become. Whether you’re taking up Little Women for the first time or the fourteenth, it’s a wonderful time to celebrate this incredible story.

Here are eighteen ways you can celebrate all things Louisa May Alcott in 2018:

  1. Read Little Women on your own or aloud to the little ones in your life. 

Annotated Little Women

If you’re rereading, try The Annotated Little Women edited by John Matteson. I recently bought this enormous, amazing edition and it is positively loaded with interesting historical notes, Alcott trivia, and photographs to enhance your reading experience. Some of my favorites so far are photographs of Anna Alcott’s wedding dress and a page of Little Women’s original manuscript, a Norman Rockwell illustration of Jo, and Abigail Alcott’s recipe for sugar gingerbread.

2. Read this board book, Little Women: A Playtime Primer, the perfect bedtime story for your baby or toddler.

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3. Visit Orchard House, in Concord Massachusetts.

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I’m lucky enough to live a mere 20 minutes away from the home in which Louisa May Alcott  wrote Little Women and based the story. If you’re not so fortunate, Orchard House, now a museum, is still well worth the pilgrimage for any Alcott fan. I brought my daughter for the first time last weekend and was amazed once again at how lovingly preserved the Alcott’s home is. On a guided tour you can stand in Louisa’s bedroom and look at the desk where she wrote Little Women. You get to see the sketches May (Amy) drew on her bedroom walls and her many paintings created on trips to Europe. There’s Abigail’s (Marmee’s) family china, Anna’s (Meg’s) marriage certificate in the room where she married John Pratt and so much more. The guides are incredibly knowledgeable about all things Alcott and there is a shop that will surely break the budget of any Little Women fan with all of the wonderful books, ornaments, and memorabilia available. Orchard House has also created a Little Women Sesquicentennial  website. So far they have put up a great photo gallery and it looks like there will be a calendar of events and a blog.

4. While you’re in Concord, check out the Concord Bookshop. 

Stock up on Alcott titles and the works of local literary figures who were Louisa’s neighbors: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau and Nathaniel Hawthorne.

5. Read this biography of Louisa May Alcott by Harriet Reisen and learn about “The Woman Behind Little Women”. 

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I picked up this book when it first came out in 2010 and found it impossible to put down. Reisen brings Louisa to life and it is because of this book that I became just a tad (ok, a lot) obsessed with Alcott herself and the ways her life intersects with the fictional Jo March.

6. Read Eight Cousins, my other favorite book by Louisa May Alcott. 

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Meet Rose, another unconventional heroine whose family life and world you’ll want to inhabit. You can also visit Eight Cousins bookstore in Falmouth, Massachusetts, named after the children’s book classic.

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Their website says they are currently renovating, but should open this spring.

7. Read the first book in the wonderful middle grade series, “The Mother Daughter Book Club” in which a group of girls living in Concord read Little Women with their moms and become friends.

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I recommend this middle grade series in the library all the time. It’s stellar realistic fiction and as a bonus, it often inspires students to read the book club books which in addition to Little Women include Anne of Green Gables, Betsy-Tacy, Pride and Prejudice and more.

8. Check out the website and blog Louisa May Alcott is My Passion by Alcott enthusiast Susan Bailey.

9. Pop some popcorn, get the kleenex ready and watch the classic 1995 Little Women movie adaptation starring Winona Ryder, Susan Sarandon, Claire Danes, and Christian Bale. 

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10. Read Marmee and Louisa: The Untold Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Mother by Eve LaPlante. 
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Learn about Abigail Alcott’s backstory growing up in the wealthy May family in Boston and the inspirational role she played in Louisa’s life.

11. Pair Marmee and Louisa with a reading of Eden’s Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father, for a look at the complicated Bronson Alcott. eden's outcasts

This is a fascinating look at Louisa’s father, a philosopher, teacher, and writer whose financial ineptitude and strict beliefs often led to much more challenging circumstances than the fictional Marches faced.

12. Visit Fruitlands Museum in Harvard, Massachusetts to see where Bronson Alcott moved the family for an experiment in “communal living”.

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Photo credit: Tim Grafft/MOTT

If you’re from Massachusetts, check to see if your library has a museum pass for discounted admission. Fruitlands is one of the 116 properties you can visit with a  “Trustees of the Reservations GO Pass”.

13. Become a member of the Louisa May Alcott Society. Yes, this is real! I just discovered it and am signing up immediately.

14. Order yourself some Little Women swag to get in the spirit. 

15. Read the fantastic new historical fiction book The Other Alcott by Elise Hooper. 

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Walk in the shoes of May Alcott as she contends with her portrayal as Amy, the March sister no one wanted to be, while trying to make it as an artist in Boston and Europe and come out from the shadow of her famous sister.

16. Attend the 2018 Summer Conversations series at Orchard House July 15th-19th: “Little Women in the 21st Century: Celebrating 150 Years of Inspiration” . More details are still to come, but according to the website “Speakers and participants in this year’s Summer Conversational Series will examine why Little Women is still important in the 21st century, what difference it has made over time in the world of literature, and what it means to readers today.” Lectures by Little Women experts and discussions with devoted fans of the book? Sign me up!

17. Watch the Masterpiece adaptation of Little Women coming to PBS in May. I’m normally hesitant about new movie versions, but the trailer looks wonderful!

18. Last but not least, introduce a future Alcott fan to Little Women. Recommend the book or gift a copy to an adult or child in your life!

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Nothing makes me happier than recommending Little Women to one of my students in the library and then finding out they loved the book. My ten-month-old daughter also has a growing collection of Alcott books ready and waiting for her!

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Get Ready for the Oscars of Children’s Books

 

 

Book award season is here! This is such an exciting time of year. The American Library Association (ALA) Youth Media Awards take place on Monday, February 12th. These are essentially the Oscars for children’s books! Many prestigious book awards will be announced including the Caldecott Medal, Newbery Medal, Coretta Scott King Awards, and more. There is a livestream of the event beginning at 10am EST, which I will definitely be watching! I will also make sure to post a link to the recording of the event. Watching the awards with the little ones in your life can be a great way to build enthusiasm around books and reading.

After the awards are announced, sales of the books skyrocket and authors’ and illustrators’ lives are forever changed. Taking a look at award lists, past and present, is a fantastic way to find your next book to read.

To get in the award season spirit, you and your child could check out some of the past winners from your local library and read them together over the next two weeks. These books are the best of the best!

Each medal in the list below has a link to the American Library Association page, with more information about the medal and access to a full list of the winning books:

caldecottThe Caldecott Medal is awarded “to the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children.” The list of amazing Caldecott winners you’ll want to read aloud to your kids is a mile long: This is Not My Hat (2013),  A Sick Day for Amos McGee (2011), Jumanji (1982), Where the Wild Things Are (1964), The Snowy Day (1963), and many more.  You have probably seen the gold medal, or the silver Caldecott Honor medal on many of your favorite picture books. 

 

I do a mock Caldecott with my 3rd graders where they get to vote for the book they think should win the Caldecott. If you’re looking for more books to get in the Caldecott spirit, you could read some of the books they are giving high ratings this year:

 

 

 

newberyWhile the Caldecott focuses on a book’s illustrations, the Newbery Medal is for the writing and is awarded “to the author of the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children.” There are so many incredible Newbery winners to add to your To Be Read list including Last Stop on Market Street (2016), The One and Only Ivan (2013), The Tale of Despereaux (2004), Bud, Not Buddy (2000), Number the Stars (1990), From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (1968) and many more.

 

 

The Caldecott and Newbery medals are the ones I get the most excited to see revealed each year. I was lucky enough to attend the ALA Youth Media Awards in 2016 when the ALA Midwinter conference came to Boston:

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I waited in line with hundreds of librarians at 6am to get a good spot for the award announcements. Awards are chosen by committee and there are no nominees or information shared ahead of time, so there is extra anticipation. I took videos of the 2016 Caldecott and Newbery announcements. The quality isn’t great, but you can see the exciting atmosphere in the room for yourself:

Caldecott Announcement 2016 Video

Newbery Announcement Video 2016

 

Here are some of the other very prestigious awards:

coretta scott awardThe Coretta Scott King Awards are given “to outstanding African American authors and illustrators of books for children and young adults that demonstrate an appreciation of African American culture and universal human values.” Some of the wonderful past winners you could check out are Elijah of Buxton (2008), My People (2010), Heart and Soul (2012), and Firebird (2015).

 

 

 

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The Pura Belpré Award is given “to a Latino/Latina writer and illustrator whose work best portrays, affirms, and celebrates the Latino cultural experience in an outstanding work of literature for children and youth.” Some of the past winning titles include Juana and Lucas (2017)Drum Dream Girl (2016), I Lived on Butterfly Hill (2015), and The Dreamer (2011).

 

 

Geisel_200The Theodor Seuss Geisel Award is given, “to the author(s) and illustrator(s) of the most distinguished American book for beginning readers published in English in the United States during the preceding year.” Past winners you might want to check out with your beginning reader are We Are Growing! (2017), The Watermelon Seed (2014), Up Tall and High (2013), and Bink and Gollie (2011).

 

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The Robert F. Sibert Medal is given, “to the author(s) and illustrator(s) of the most distinguished informational book published in the United States in English during the preceding year. ” Some past winners for nonfiction fans to checkout include Giant Squid (2017 Honor Book), Funny Bones: Posada and His Day of the Dead Calaveras (2016), Balloons Over Broadway (2012), and We are the Ship (2009).

 

If you’d like to see more of the past winners so you can add to your To Be Read pile, visit the ALA Youth Media Awards page.

I will be posting a full list of the 2018 ALA Youth Media Award Winners on the blog and remember, you can check out a live stream of the event on Monday February 12th at 10AM EST. I’ll also link to the recording of the award ceremony if you can’t watch it live. Get the popcorn ready for your viewing party!

 

 

 

Jacqueline Woodson is the New National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature

Exciting news about an incredible author! Jacqueline Woodson is the new National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature!

 

According to the Library of Congress, in this position her role will be to ” raise national awareness of the importance of young people’s literature as it relates to lifelong literacy, education and the development and betterment of the lives of young people.” Ambassadors have a two-year term and past ambassadors include Gene Luen Yang, Kate DiCamillo, Walter Dean Myers, Katherine Paterson and Jon Scieszka.

The inauguration ceremony was held on January 9th and presided over by Librarian of Congress Carla Haden:

 

This is a great time to read a Jacqueline Woodson book, on your own or with the little ones in your life. She has many amazing titles, but here are two favorites of mine I’d recommend starting with.

Her picture book “Each Kindness” is so thought provoking and would be a great read aloud for elementary-age children.EachKindnessI’ve read this one to many classes and it sparks wonderful discussions about the way we treat each other and the impact our kind acts can have in the world.

Her incredible memoir “Brown Girl Dreaming” is technically middle-grade, but I would definitely recommend this one to adults and kids alike:

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This book in verse is a beautifully written account of what is was like to grow up in the 1960s and 1970s in South Carolina and New York–told in a series of poems.

One of the reasons I’m so excited about Woodson taking on this role is I’m hopeful the “We Need Diverse Books” movement makes even more progress while she is ambassador. It is so important that kids see themselves in the books they read and that they also are able to put themselves in others’ shoes. More on that to come in the next few posts!

As Woodson said during the inauguration, “I think that books can change us. They can help us begin to have the bigger conversations. They can help us see worlds and identities and ideas that we’d never thought about before…”

You can watch the Inauguration Ceremony here:

 

It’s a long video and there are a lot of introductions. If you skip ahead to 29 minutes you can see Woodson receive the medal. She is then interviewed by the Librarian of Congress, shares her remarks, and takes questions from children in the audience.

To learn more about Jacqueline Woodson and her books, you can check out her great author website.  The librarian in me loves that she gears sections of it toward what children really want to learn about an author during research: “What is your favorite color?”, “Why do you love writing so much?”, “What are/were some of your favorite books?”, and “What is your favorite food?”. She even has a lengthy list of fun facts about herself. I’ll definitely be sharing this with the kids in my life.

A Bookish Outing to Your Local Independent Bookstore

Do you have a great independent bookstore where you live? I’ve been spoiled in the past by having amazing bookstores a stone’s throw from places I was living or working. Some of those favorites are The Strand Book Store in New York City, Brookline Booksmith in Brookline, MA, and the Harvard Bookstore in Cambridge, MA. If you find yourself in any of those areas, they’re fantastic places to discover new books or check out an author event.

If you don’t know of an independent bookstore near you, one place you could search is the Indie Bookstore Finder.  I have two bookstores about twenty minutes away (which I know is still pretty good!), The Concord Bookshop, which I’d been to before and the Andover Bookstore which I decided to check out this past weekend. It was a fun bookish outing to take with my family on a below zero Massachusetts day. I loved getting a peek at the latest books, particularly in their middle grade section. It’s a great way to add to my “To Be Read” list. And it seemed meant to be when I noticed this book on display:

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After just learning of the Harry Potter: A History of Magic exhibition coming to New York, I was so excited to find the book that delves into the current exhibition at the British Library. (For more information on that exhibition you can check out my post Harry Potter Twentieth Anniversary Year). I had to buy this one and it’s been a fantastic read so far. I love getting to learn more of the backstory behind the evolution of the book from an idea JK Rowling came up with on a train, to the phenomenon the books became. It’s fascinating to see JK Rowling’s plan for the list of subjects the Hogwarts teachers would teach, a sketch of the Hogwarts grounds, or the synopsis she wrote of The Sorcerer’s Stone to pitch it to publishers. This book would be the perfect gift for the Harry Potter fan in your life (or yourself!).

What independent bookstores are on your list to visit this year? Check out that Indie Bookstore Finder if you’d like to research the stores in your area. An Unlikely Story in Plainville, MA is at the top of my list. This bookstore is owned by Jeff Kinney, the Diary of a Wimpy Kid author and it looks like a stellar indie bookstore with great community events.

 

Books to Curl Up With this Winter

Here in New England it is currently a balmy -2 degrees outside. The fun and excitement of the holiday season is over and the routines of school and work are about to begin. Rather than feeling let down, the prospect of some cold, quiet months coming my way actually sounds perfect.

The past few years I’ve started to really embrace those winter hibernation months of January through March. There are less social obligations, a shorter household to-do list (no more presents to buy!), and more time to be a homebody and enjoy those indoor hobbies. If you’re a bookish introvert like me, it’s a great time to recharge your batteries. This winter I’m looking forward to doing lots of sewing, baking, and of course reading.

Here are a few books to curl up with this winter for you and the kids in your life:

 

The Inspector Gamache series

by Louise Penny

Still Life

The Inspector Gamache series by Louise Penny is a new favorite seasonal read for me. I received this recommendation from the wonderful Anne Bogel who hosts my favorite book podcast, What Should I Read Next and writes the Modern Mrs. Darcy blog. I would never have thought of murder mysteries as cozy, but these are. They take place in a tiny village in Quebec that reminds me of Stars Hollow from Gilmore Girls. There are so many scenes of villagers and Inspector Gamache warming themselves by the fire, sipping cafe au lait and eating crossaint–while trying to figure out who the murderer is of course. I’m not normally a mystery person, and certainly not murder mysteries, but these are more than plot, they’re smart and filled with observations on life and human nature you’ll want to slow down and re-read. I dove in with the newest book, Glass Houses, which I enjoyed, but it was a bit confusing keeping the characters straight. I think it’s best to start at the beginning. The first few books are good, I just finished number 3, but I’ve heard they get better and better.

 

The Hired Girl

by Laura Amy Schlitz

The Hired Girl

If re-reading Little Women or Jane Eyre is on your list this winter, add The Hired Girl by Laura Amy Schlitz to your reading pile. This Young Adult book was published in 2015, but fourteen-year-old Joan Skraggs feels like a classic heroine. It’s 1911 and Joan is facing a life of endless drudgery on a Pennsylvania farm with her brothers and cruel father who has denied her an education and even burned her beloved books. A new life begins when she decides to run away to Baltimore, changes her name, and become a “Hired Girl”. She winds up working for a wealthy Jewish family in this completely absorbing coming-of-age story. I absolutely loved this book, to the point where I was setting my alarm to 5am each day to have time to read it before school. Highly recommend.

The Long Winter

by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Long Winter

Feeling like you have a bit of cabin fever? Look no further than The Long Winter from the Little House series. Laura Ingalls and her family are living in De Smet, in the Dakota territory when they must face seven (yes, seven!) months of blizzards from October to April during the terrible winter from 1880-1881. Snow is up to the rooftops and trains can’t reach the town to bring food or fuel. The family is houseband and has to try to band together and make the best of it. Almanzo Wilder (Laura’s future husband) decides to make a perilous journey to get wheat for the starving town. Several days trapped at home at home isn’t seeming so bad now, right? This is part of one of my all time favorite series, the Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder.  If you have never read these books before, go back and start at the beginning with Little House in the Big Woods. 

 

Brave Irene

by William Steig

Brave Irene

Brave Irene by William Steig would be a great picture book read aloud with your little ones this time of year. Irene’s mother is a dressmaker and has spent hours upon hours making a dress for a duchess, but catches a cold and cannot deliver it. The duchess is counting on wearing that dress to a ball tonight, what can be done? Irene decides to brave a snowstorm and sets out on a journey to deliver the dress for her mother. This is such a sweet story and little Irene is a great example of perseverance. The duchess also reminded me of Lady Grantham from Downton Abbey, which is a favorite show of mine this time of year.

 

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