Saturday, December 13, 2008

From the NCBLA to YOU!

The Holidays
A Perfect Time to Share Stories!

by Mary Brigid Barrett, NCBLA president and executive director


Story is a tie that binds us to one another. Escape the rush of the holiday season and turn off the television and the video games. Do what has become an increasingly rare occurrence in a stress filled world; sit down with your children, parents and stepparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, friends, and neighbors and talk to one another. Sing songs. Play silly games. Recite poetry and verse. Read traditional stories aloud. Share secrets. Tell each other the stories of your lives.

· If you have young children and grandparents are visiting for the holidays, don’t worry about the noise level. Grandparents, especially if they live alone, rarely hear the hustle and bustle of family life, and, for the most part, cherish the sounds of simple family living.

· Instead of, or in addition to exchanging gifts with each other, ask each family member to write a short story or anecdote about their favorite family holiday memory to exchange with a gift partner.

· Host a special family breakfast or brunch. It’s a treat to see extended family in the morning. People sometimes display entirely different, and fascinating, aspects of their personalities than at evening gatherings and conversations may reflect those changes.

· We all have piles of family photographs which we rarely look at. This year create a special family photo exhibit. Ask your guests to bring an amusing family photo to post on a special bulletin board, or tape the pictures to a foam core board that you have decorated. Display the board in an area where everyone can see and admire it, and make time during the day to share the stories surrounding the photographs.

· Before sitting down for your holiday dinner, set an old family photo next to each place setting. Ask each family member to tell the story about the photograph sometime during dinner.

· Have a CD player and a familiar movie or Broadway musical CD’s, like the “Sound of Music” at the ready when you find that gazillions of small cousins are getting under foot while their elders are organizing the holiday meal. Pick out a reliable boss among the kids and send them off to the rec room, basement, attic, or family room with the CD player. Ask them to produce a “musical” for family’s entertainment after dinner. The kids can be kept busy casting the parts and rehearsing, either lip sinking the tunes or singing themselves. Shyer cousins can make programs and act as ushers, seating family members when it is time for the post-dinner entertainment.

· If your kids are in high school or college, get out the old home movies and videos, especially if they are bringing dates or fiancés home for the holidays. It is a parent’s duty to embarrass the offspring in front of their dates during the holidays. And their friends, especially the dates, will love it! Old films and videos will surely trigger everyone’s memories.

· Set an old card table up in your living room and put an old fashioned 575 piece puzzle out in the table. Make sure a part of the puzzle is already started when your guests arrive. Set a comfortable chair or two around the table. The puzzle will draw family members together in surprising ways.

· Have some board games ready that can be played by teams. Board games not only provide entertainment, but they can help generations connect. Board games are ice breakers. And, interacting while playing a game will act as a catalyst for conversation.

· Your local library has many carol and song books. Photocopy a few songs and lyrics from those books and staple the pages together to make your own family song books. Later, you can add to the books and use them over and over again. If one of your family members plays an instrument, ask them if they will perform at your family get together so you can all sing-along. Get a very brave and gregarious cousin with a not-so–perfect voice to lead the singing. With the words in front of them, few people will be able to resist joining in.

· In the evening, get out the afghans and pillows and encourage everyone to gather ‘round the fireplace. If you don’t have a fireplace, light candles and turn out the lights. Give the kids hot chocolate, and the grownups, wine or coffee. Ask someone with a good strong voice to read a favorite holiday story aloud. Or, ask each person, from the oldest to the youngest, to tell everyone about the very first holiday celebration they can remember. Ask them about what they saw and smelled that day, what they ate, what they did, who they visited, what they sang, where they went, and what the weather was like. Ask them about a person they remember with love on that day, and when they are through with their story; tell them how much they are loved by you.

From the NCBLA family to yours, have a joyous and peaceful Holiday Season!

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Our White House in USA TODAY!


USA Today on Our White House,Looking In,Looking Out "If books were measured like elections, this would win in a landslide."

The NCBLA publication Our White House Looking In, Looking Out has been named one of the best books of 2008 by The Horn Book Magazine, Publisher's Weekly, School Library Journal,and Amazon! Look for it in your local library or bookstore! All royalties from Our White House support the education and advocacy projects of the National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance!


To read more about the USA Today booklist go to:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/reviews/2008-12-10-roundup-kids-politics_N.htm

To read about all the riveting "Best Books" chosen this year by The Horn Book Magazine go to:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/books/fanfare/fanfare09.asp

And while you are there make sure you check out the parent and teacher sections of The Horn Book site for great ideas and suggestions to help kids become avid life long readers!

For PARENT resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/parents/default.asp

For EDUCATOR resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/educators/default.asp

Discover all the great books chosen as "Best Books of 2008"
For the School Library Journal's list:
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6617203.html

For the Publisher's Weekly list:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6610357.html

For the Editors' Choice List at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/ref=amb_link_7803252_5?ie=UTF8&plgroup=1&docId=1000297221&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=left-1&pf_rd_r=1J8MQ2QEPJBM01N60YAV&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=457473601&pf_rd_i=1239030011

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

More Holiday Reading Suggestions

Steven Kellogg recommends a story by Truman Capote...read on:
A Christmas Memory by Truman Capote is a poetic short story about the deep bond between a young boy and his elderly and eccentric spinster cousin who live with their emotionally remote extended family in a country house in the rural South. The two of them observe Christmas in a manner that celebrates their tender friendship. The generous spirit that blossoms between them as the holiday approaches galvanizes them into a shared project that reaches beyond the narrow horizons that confine them. Their story moves every member of our family every year when we read it aloud, and we recommend the joy of reading it aloud to everyone!
Author and illustrator of Pinkerton, Behave!, Johnny Appleseed, and over a hundred more, Stephen Kellogg is Vice President of the NCBLA. For more information, click here or visit his website!

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Give Books This Holiday Season!

Michael Dirda, Washington Post Book Critic Offers
"Ten Commandments of Book Giving"


"Last week, I began to think seriously about presents. 'Tis the season, after all. When little, I used to lie on the faded blue davenport in my family's living room and daydream about what I'd like to unwrap on Christmas morning. A gleaming silver six-gun in a tooled black leather holster. A gigantic Erector Set, with battery-operated motors. The plastic model kit for a three-masted frigate or a double-fuselaged P-38 Lightning. Cool stuff, in other words. I could never quite fathom why Santa even bothered with socks and underwear and heavy winter clothes, usually in wool.

Of course, now that I'm -- sigh -- older, I still think a lot about presents. These days, though, I speculate on what to give rather than receive. Happily, I know from years of experience that books really do make the best holiday gifts -- plus, they're easy to wrap. Just follow these 10 holiday commandments: . . . "

Read more at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/04/AR2008120402676.html

Friday, December 5, 2008

Our White House named one of the "Best Books" of 2008 by The Horn Book Magazine!



The NCBLA's Book Created to Promote Literacy and Historical Literacy,Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out is chosen as one of The Horn Book Magazine's 2008 Fanfare Best Books for Young People!




The NCBLA is honored that The Horn Book Magazine, one of our nation's leading children's book reviewing agents, has chosen Our White House;Looking In, Looking Out as one of the best books for young people published this year!

We would also like to congratulate all the other book creators who have been chosen; any of the selected titles would make wonderful holiday gifts for young people! And we send special congratulations to our fellow NCBLA board members M.T. Anderson (The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing , Traitor to the Nation, Volume II: The Kingdom on the Waves)
and David Macaulay (The Way We Work) for their selection to The Horn Book's 2008 Fanfare List! David Macaulay created the wry, witty cover for Our White House as well as the cover for his own book. Is this the first time that an illustrator has created the cover for two books on The Horn Book Fanfare List? It would be interesting to know if it has happened previously, and who was the illustrator, and what were the books? It would also be interesting to know if any one author has ever had more than one book on The Horn Book Fanfare Best Books of the Year list!

The NCBLA is thrilled that Our White House has also been chosen as a "Best Book of the Year" by School Library Journal, Publisher's Weekly, and also by the Editors' at Amazon.com. If parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and friends are looking for suggestions for wonderful books to give to young people this holiday season, these lists are a great place to start!

To read about all the riveting "Best Books" chosen this year by The Horn Book Magazine go to:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/books/fanfare/fanfare09.asp

And while you are there make sure you check out the parent and teacher sections of The Horn Book site for great ideas and suggestions to help kids become avid life long readers!

For PARENT resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/parents/default.asp

For EDUCATOR resources:
http://www.hbook.com/resources/educators/default.asp

Discover all the great books chosen as "Best Books of 2008"
For the School Library Journal's list:
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6617203.html

For the Publisher's Weekly list:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6610357.html

For the Editors' Choice List at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/ref=amb_link_7803252_5?ie=UTF8&plgroup=1&docId=1000297221&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=left-1&pf_rd_r=1J8MQ2QEPJBM01N60YAV&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=457473601&pf_rd_i=1239030011

Great Holiday Reading Choices from the NCBLA Board!

NCBLA Board Members Susan Cooper and Carol Greenwald Share Favorite Holiday Book Memories!

NCBLA president Mary Brigid Barrett here. Recently I posed a question to all the members of our esteemed NCBLA Board—What is one of your favorite holiday reads? For your holiday pleasure, my blogging assistant Colleen and I will be posting their responses!

From Susan Cooper, author of The Dark Is Rising, Green Boy, The Selkie Girl, Matthew’s Dragon, and many more delightful books for young people:

For me it’s John Masefield’s THE BOX OF DELIGHTS, and at first I didn’t even read it as a book, it was a BBC radio serial. The high point of our day when I was a kid – and there weren’t too many high points, this being England during the bombings of World War Two – was a program called The Children’s Hour at 5pm. They dramatized THE BOX OF DELIGHTS, which is a wonderful Christmas fantasy, and it bewitched me. I even remembered the incidental music, and 30 years later put it into my book THE DARK IS RISING as the magical music heard at key moments by its hero Will. (You can hear it too, if you can find it – it’s the Second Intermezzo from Wolf-Ferrari’s opera THE JEWELS OF THE MADONNA. And do read THE BOX OF DELIGHTS! )

Carol Greenwald, the Director of Development for Children’s Programming at WGBH/PBS in Boston and the executive producer of PBS programs Arthur, Postcards from Buster, Curious George, and the new PBS children’s program Martha Speaks--all based on children's books-- shares this suggestions for a great holiday read:

I’m kind of partial to “Little Tree”, the ee cummings poem. There are several nicely illustrated versions of it. I can’t find the one we used to read to our kids but there’s at least one on Amazon right now.

To find out more about Susan Cooper and her books, go to:

http://www.thelostland.com/

To find out more about PBS’s great educational children’s programs that promote reading and books! – got to:

http://pbskids.org/

And check out a blog listing below for holiday reading recommendations from NCBLA Vice- President Katherine Paterson!


School Library Journal Chooses Our White House as one of the Best Children's Books of 2008!


The NCBLA's creative tour de force, Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out has been Chosen by School Library Journal as one of the "Best Books" Published for Young People in 2008!

Librarians are our heroes, so this wonderful distinction given to Our White House means a great deal! We are thrilled and grateful! Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out was created by the NCBLA to ignite young people's interest in the history of our nation and inspire them to read more. We also hope that it can be used by librarians, teachers, and parents to engage young people in critical thinking, urging them to seek information from multiple, reliable sources! And all of the royalties from Our White House will help the NCBLA continue its educational outreach as well as advocacy work fighting for young people's educational opportunities and for America's libraries!

Thank you School Library Journal!

To read about all of the incredible books on School Library Journal's Best Books for 2008, go to:
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6617203.html

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Holiday Reading Suggestions


Katherine Paterson shares her recommendations for Christmas stories.


NCBLA board member Katherine Paterson, author of Bridge to Terabithia, Jacob Have I Loved, and The Great Gilly Hopkins, writes:
Two magical books from my own childhood Christmases which may, or may not still be in print, are: A Tree for Peter, written and illustrated by Kate Seredy and Maud and Miska Petersham's glowing illustration of the Christmas story, The Christ Child. Two more recent books I love are: The Nativity, which is the Gospel accounts illustrated by Julie Vivas (with a really pregnant Mary being hoisted onto the donkey by Joseph and a bare-naked baby Jesus) and N. Scott Momaday's Native American Christmas Story, Circle of Wonder.
To learn more about Katherine Paterson, visit her website!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Find Great Gift Books for Your Kids This Holiday Season!

Holiday Gift Books: How to Find Just the Right Books for the Young People in Your Life!

When you give a book to a child or teen at Hanukah, Christmas, or Kwanza it helps create emotional bonds that link love, family, and tradition to reading. It also sends a message that books and story can be as enjoyable as toys! Especially if you take the time to read that gift book together!

We asked Natacha Pouech, librarian and book buyer, for some pertinent suggestions about choosing and buying books for holiday gift giving. Natacha has many years of experience connecting kids to books. She was the Children’s Services Librarian at the Hinesburg Public Library in Hinesburg, Vermont and was responsible for buying all the children’s, middle grade, and young adult materials servicing children from toddlers through to high school students. Natacha has also worked as the children’s book buyer for a number of independent book stores.

Finding a special book for the child you love can be an overwhelming task given the huge selection available at your neighborhood bookstore. Natacha offers the following advice:

Find out what the child or teen has already read. Ask what authors he or she likes to read. Discover the subjects and topics that interest him or her. Does he or she prefer fiction or nonfiction, fantasy or reality?

Don’t be afraid to ask your neighborhood children’s librarian or children’s bookseller for suggestions or advice.

Read your local newspaper’s book section. Many newspapers and magazines feature books suggestions this time of year.

Be consumer savvy. The books with the biggest marketing budgets are not necessarily the best books for your child or teen. And conversely, a book you’ve never heard of may contain the story that changes your child’s or teen’s life. Natacha says, “We all fall victim at one time or another to ‘judging a book by its cover.’ Just because a book jacket may look promising does not mean the story is going to live up to the cover. However, an interesting looking book jacket is always reason enough for me to open it up! And remember to take into consideration the book’s content—is it pertinent to the age level of the child? I think great care needs to be taken when choosing a book, especially if a young reader is at a higher reading level. Just because a child reads at an older level does not necessarily mean that he or she is ready for ‘mature’ subject matter or content.”

Consider all the possibilities: great literature and fun, entertaining books. Natacha says, “Think of books in terms of chocolate mousse and a Hershey Kiss. There are moments for both!”