Monday, March 19, 2012

Reviewers Speak Out on "The Exquisite Corpse Adventure"

The Exquisite Corpse Adventure
A Progressive Story Game Played by
20 Celebrated Authors and Illustrators
Amazon Reviewers Give It Five Stars
Have YOU Read The Exquisite Corpse Adventure?!
The Exquisite Corpse Adventure is a progressive story game just like the one many families play on road trips, at camp, at parties, at home when there is a power outage. It is a game where one person begins a story, stops at a cliffhanging moment, and the next person picks it up, continuing on until everyone in the group has the opportunity to contribute. And just like in those game, in The Exquisite Corpse, characters spontaneously erupt out of our authors' imaginations; plot lines tumble forth, some realized, some lost; and we are often poised at the edge of a cliff with no logical solution in sight!
Originally published on Read.gov as the foundation of a national reading and writing initiative created by The National Children’s Book and Literacy Alliance and the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress, The Exquisite Corpse Adventure is available from Candlewick Press in paperback and hardcover. It is also available on audio.
The Exquisite Corpse Adventure authors and illustrators are: M.T. Anderson, Natalie Babbitt, Calef Brown, Susan Cooper, Kate DiCamillo, Timothy Basil Ering, Jack Gantos, Nikki Grimes, Shannon Hale, Lemony Snicket, Steven Kellogg, Gregory Maguire, Megan McDonald, Patricia and Fredrick McKissack, Linda Sue Park, Katherine Paterson, James Ransome, Jon Scieszka, and Chris Van Dusen.

What Are the Reviewers Saying?
H. Sapp from Alexandria, Virginia writes on Amazon, "My kids LOVED this book.  Bought it for my 10 year old daughter, who is not an avid reader. She could not put it down. Once she finished it, I gave it to my 8 year old son. He loves it. He will bring it to us and try to read us passages from it, but it's difficult for him because he can't stop laughing! I recommend this book to anyone."

Nicola Manning from Ontario, Canada writes on Amazon, "An exciting, non-stop action, funny story with a sci-fi adventure theme and some fantasy thrown in for good measure. A really fun ride!"

Sarah Rachel Egelman of KidsReads of New York writes on Amazon, "
The unexpected details, interplay of voices, and joyous momentum makes this story a fun read. ...The absolute best part of THE EXQUISITE CORPSE ADVENTURE may be that it will encourage readers to experiment with storytelling, both written and drawn, and to find pleasure not in the perfection of a completed and cohesive story but in the exquisite thrill of creative collaboration itself."

Publishers Weekly says, "
As gleefully entertaining as it is preposterously ludicrous...Go with the flow and enjoy the ride."

And 8-year old Ty of Cambridge, Massachusetts says, "This book was awesome because each chapter had a different style of writing - like that game where one person starts a story and the next person continues it. I liked all of the chapters because the whole story continues a basic idea, yet it's kind of random. It's fun to figure out where the authors are leading you. On a scale of one to 10, I give The Exquisite Corpse an 11.

Extensive Online Education Support Materials Available!

Discover a treasure trove of online educational support materials for
The Exquisite Corpse Adventure on the NCBLA’s Exquisite Corpse Adventure Education Resource Center. Overflowing with supplemental articles, classroom activities, reading lists, art activities, discussion questions, and more, the Education Resource Center is designed for moms and dads, teachers and librarians, grandparents and guardians—all adults who live and work with young people and have a vested interest in helping kids read more, write better, and create stories and art that expand all of our universes.

Ask for The Exquisite Corpse Adventure
at a Library or Bookstore Near You!

Friday, March 16, 2012

Presidential Trivia of the Week

Presidential Trivia Questions to Share
with the Young People in Your Life!

Illustration Copyright (c) 2008 Kevin Hawkes
Are YOU playing presidential trivia?! In honor of this year's presidential campaign, the NCBLA is posting three presidential trivia questions each week. Check out this week's questions and have fun sharing the questions and answers with the kids in your life!

This Week's Trivia Questions
  1. Which president was asked to aid a soldier who had lost a leg in battle by helping him get a job so he could support his family?
  2. Which president took in a family of mice he discovered in his White House bedroom as pets?
  3. Which first lady (who was often referred to as "Mrs. President" by her contemporaries) implored her husband to "remember the ladies" while he worked on the Declaration of Independence?
A go-to resource for discovering more about America's presidents is the NCBLA's interdisciplinary anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out, and it's coordinating educational website OurWhiteHouse.org! An incomparable collection of essays, personal accounts, historical fiction, poetry, and a stunning array of original art, Our White House offers a multifaceted look at America’s history through the prism of the White House. The companion educational website, OurWhiteHouse.org, provides expanded book content that includes additional articles, resources, activities, and discussion questions related to book topics as well exclusive resources and articles regarding the presidency, presidential campaigns, and presidential elections.
 
Answers and Information for Learning MORE!
  1. Andrew Jackson. During his presidency, a citizen asked Jackson to assist a soldier who had lost his leg in battle by providing a job for him as a postmaster so that he could support his family. The gentleman insisted on informing Jackson that the soldier had voted against him. Jackson replied, “If he lost a leg fighting for his country, that is vote enough for me.” Learn more about Andrew Jackson in the Presidential Fact Files on OurWhiteHouse.org.
  2. Andrew Johnson. Heather Lang writes in "Lions and Tigers and Bears, Oh My! Wild Animals at the White House," "When Johnson discovered a family of mice in his bedroom, he didn’t set traps like some people would. Instead he took care of them, leaving them a basket of flour by the fireplace every night. He told his Secretary William Moore, 'The little fellows give me their confidence and I give them their basket and pour upon the hearth some water that they might quench their thirst.'” Read the entire article and learn about other presidential pets on OurWhiteHouse.org.
  3. Abigail Adams. Although Abigail was not formally educated, she was naturally curious and intelligent. She was an avid reader and took a sincere interest in politics. Abigail often gave her husband advice as he worked on the Declaration of Independence. She wrote in a letter to him in 1776, “Remember the ladies and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors! Do not put unlimited power into the hands of husbands.” Learn more about Abigail and the other first ladies in the NCBLA's First Lady Fact Files on OurWhiteHouse.org.
Our White House is available
in both hardcover and paperback from Candlewick Press.
Ask for it at a library or bookstore near you!

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Coming Soon to a Bookstore and Library Near You!

Queen of the Track:
Alice Coachman
Olympic High-Jump Champion
Written by Heather Lang and
Illustrated by Floyd Cooper
Available in April from Boyds Mills Press

"It's my wish that every young person read this inspiring book. Alice Coachman is truly a hero, and her accomplishments remind us all to never give up when the odds are against us."
- Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Olympic gold medalist

The NCBLA congratulates our volunteer writer Heather Lang on the upcoming publication of her book Queen of the Track: Alice Coachman Olympic High-Jump Champion, available for preorder now and on shelves in bookstores and libraries in April!

Queen of the Track tells the inspiring story of Alice Coachman, an athlete who never took her eyes off the prize. When Alice Coachman was a girl, most white people wouldn't shake her hand. Yet when the King of England placed an Olympic medal around her neck, he extended his hand to Alice in congratulations. Standing on a podium in London's Wembley Stadium, Alice was a long way from the fields of Georgia where she ran barefoot as a child. With a record-breaking leap, she had become the first African-American woman to win an Olympic gold medal.

A portion of the author's royalties will be donated to the Alice Coachman Foundation, which helps deserving and proven amateur athletes reach their full potential. 

Author Heather Lang remembers winning a blue ribbon in the high jump in sixth grade, clearing the bar at 3½ feet and landing on a cushy blue mat. A former attorney, she now loves to write about people who fought for their dreams, usually without the benefits of a cushy mat. She lives in Lexington, Massachusetts. Visit her at heatherlangbooks.com. And be sure to check out her articles "Presidents Are People Too!" and "Lions and Tigers and Bears, Oh My! Wild Animals at the White House" on the NCBLA's educational website OurWhiteHouse.org.

Illustrator Floyd Cooper had a short-lived track-and-field career as a junior-high school student in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He can still hear the voice of his coach yelling, “Go! Push! Push!” as he trained in the southern heat. Today he is the acclaimed illustrator of more than seventy-five books for children. He is the recipient of the 2009 Coretta Scott King Award for Illustration as well as three Coretta Scott King Honors, ten ALA Notables, and an NAACP Image Award, among others. He lives in Easton, Pennsylvania. Learn more about Floyd Cooper and his books on his website.

Ask for Queen of the Track at a bookstore or library near you!

Monday, March 12, 2012

In Case You Missed It!

Newbery Medal Winner "A Wrinkle in Time" Turns 50 This Year

NPR celebrates the fantasy and science fiction classic A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle in its recently published article "The Unlikely Best-Seller: 'A Wrinkle in Time.'" 

Addressing the fact that most publishers turned down L'Engle's novel due to its complexity, L'Engle's granddaughter Charlotte Jones Voiklis, says, "Even if a young reader doesn't know all of the words, or know who all of the quotations are from, or if they can't grasp exactly what a tesseract is ... it sort of gives room for the reader and shows possibility and a place where you want to go and understand. [L'Engle] didn't think condescending to children was the right thing to do."

To read the article or listen to the podcast, click here.

To read The New York Times essay "'A Wrinkle in Time' and Its Sci-Fi Heroine" by Pamela Paul, click here.

Friday, March 9, 2012

Presidential Trivia of the Week

Learn and Have Fun Sharing Presidential Trivia with the Young People in Your Life
 
Are YOU playing presidential
trivia?!
In honor of this year's presidential campaign, the NCBLA is posting three presidential trivia questions each week. Check out this week's questions and have fun sharing the questions and answers with the kids in your life!
 
This Week's Trivia Questions
  1. Which president met with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to improve relations and negotiate a treaty to eliminate a substantial number of nuclear missiles?
  2. Who was the first First Lady to sit in Cabinet meetings?
  3. Which president was honored for his pioneering work in the discovery and study of fossils by having a species of mastodon named for him?
Interested in helping young people discover even more about American history, presidents, and civic life? Check out a copy of Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out at your local library or bookstore. An incomparable collection of essays, personal accounts, historical fiction, poetry, and a stunning array of original art, Our White House offers a multifaceted look at America’s history through the prism of the White House. 
 
And for additional articles, resources, activities, and discussion questions, check out the NCBLA's coordinating educational website OurWhiteHouse.org!
 
Answers and Information for Learning MORE!
  1. Ronald Reagan. During his second term, Reagan met with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Not only did Reagan manage to improve relations, he also negotiated a treaty to eliminate almost 2,700 intermediate-range nuclear missiles. Reducing the number of nuclear weapons was a first for any president and a significant achievement. Learn more about Reagan and his presidential legacy in the Presidential Fact Files on OurWhiteHouse.org.
  2. Rosalynn Carter. Carter paved new roads for first ladies by not only campaigning extensively for and advising her husband, but also actively working to develop policy. She was the first first lady to sit in Cabinet meetings and also the first to represent the government in an official capacity while traveling abroad. Learn more about Rosalynn Carter and the other first ladies in the First Lady Fact Files on OurWhiteHouse.org.
  3. Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson was so fascinated by fossils that he studied bones dug up by William Clark on the floor of the East Room in the White House. In the article titled "Jefferson's Monstrous Bones" in Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out, author Barbara Kerley writes, "In 1822, four years after his death, scientists honored Jefferson for the pioneering work he'd done on Great Claw: they officially name the species Magalonyx jeffersonii." Be sure to check out a copy of Our White House at your local library or bookstore so you can read the entire article!

Activist Alert! Take Action for Libraries!

Ask Your Senators to Support Funding for Childhood Literacy and
the Library Services and Technology Act

It's officially appropriations season in Washington, D.C. and literacy and library funding needs your support! Please call your two U.S. Senators and ask them to sign two separate “Dear Colleague” letters that support funding for literacy and libraries. 

The first letter supports funding for the Innovative Approaches to Literacy Grant in FY13. This grant is crucial because at least half of it would go to low-income school libraries to help update their books and materials.  If your senator is a Democrat, ask him or her to contact the office of Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) to sign the childhood literacy letter. If your senator is a Republican, ask him or her to contact the office of Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) to sign the childhood literacy letter.

The second letter supports funding for the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) in FY13. LSTA is the primary source of funding for libraries in the federal budget. If your senator is a Democrat, ask him or her to contact the office of Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) to sign on to the LSTA letter. If your senator is a Republican, ask him or her to contact the office of Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) to sign on to the LSTA letter.

For more information, please visit the American Library Association's Legislative Action Center. You will also be able to find your Senators' phone numbers simply by typing in your zip code.

The deadline for signing these two letters is March 26, so please call before then.  Make sure Congress knows how important libraries are to your community!

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

In Case You Missed It!

Articles Discuss Trends in
Electronic Publishing

Anyone interested in the burgeoning trend of e-publishing should check out recent articles in The Horn Book Magazine and The New York Times.

Included in the March/April issue of The Horn Book Magazine, which is themed "Books Remixed: Reading in the Digital Age," publisher Stephen Roxburgh writes in his article titled "The e-Future," "There has never been a more exciting or vibrant time in publishing."

Other illuminating articles included in the special issue of The Horn Book Magazine include "From Touchstones to Touch Screens: The Evolution of a Book Lover" by librarian and writer Ann Dixon and "What Makes a Good Picture Book App?" by Horn Book marketing and editorial assistant Katie Bircher. 

And you can read about Kindle Singles, works of long-form journalism that seek out that sweet spot between magazine articles and hardcover books, in "Miniature E-Books Let Journalists Stretch Legs" by Dwight Garner in The New York Times.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Activist Alert!

Ask Your Representative to Support Funding for Childhood Literacy and
the Library Services and Technology Act

Appropriations season is now underway in Washington, D. C. It’s crucial that you call your U.S. Representative today and ask him or her to sign two separate “Dear Colleague” letters that support funding for libraries.

One letter, found here, supports funding for the Innovative Approaches to Literacy Grant in FY13. This grant is crucial because at least half of it would go to low-income school libraries to help update their books and materials. 

The other letter, found here, supports funding for the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) in FY13. LSTA is the primary source of funding for libraries in the federal budget.

For more information, please visit the American Library Association's Legislative Action Center.  You will also be able to find your representative’s phone number simply by typing in your zip code.

Please call your representative by March 14 to ensure that they sign on to these important letters. Make sure Congress knows how important libraries are to your community!

Monday, March 5, 2012

Reading Rockets Launches New Writing Challenge for K-12 Students

2012 Writing Challenge Prompts Inspired by Work of Edgar Rice Burroughs

The John Carter novel A Princess of Mars Is Available
to Read Online at Read.Gov

It has been 100 years since Edgar Rice Burroughs first introduced readers to his jungle hero Tarzan, as well as to John Carter, a hero whose Martian adventure hits the big screen this month in the new Disney film of the same name. 

Give K-12 readers the chance to learn more about Edgar Rice Burroughs and have a writing adventure of their own with the thought-provoking prompts in the Writer's Quest Writing Challange from Reading RocketsThe leveled prompts for the Writer's Quest contest are inspired by Burroughs — his distinctive styles, themes, and influences. The prompts ask young writers to stretch their imaginations by designing their own bookplate or by writing a travel brochure for Mars, a scifaiku, or the history of their hometowns.

The contest begins March 9 and ends May 4, 2012. Prizes include a collection of books, "John Carter" titles, T-shirts, and movie posters.

To read Burroughs' first John Carter novel, A Princess of Mars, in a scanned book format on the Library of Congress' website Read.Gov, click here

Friday, March 2, 2012

Presidential Trivia of the Week

Learn and Have Fun Sharing Presidential Trivia with the Young People in Your Life
 
In honor of this year's
presidential campaign, the NCBLA is posting three presidential trivia questions each week. We encourage you to share the questions
before starting the daily homework, while driving to soccer practice, or while cleaning up after dinner. Enjoy!
 
This Week's Trivia Questions
  1. Which president was the first to live in the White House? 
  2. Which president was the first to use electricity in the White House?
  3. Which first lady worked with the Library of Congress to create the National Book Festival, an annual event first held on the Mall in Washington, D.C. in 2001 designed to celebrate the joy of reading?
Interested in helping young people discover even more about American history, presidents, and civic life?  Check out a copy of Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out at your local library or bookstore.   An incomparable collection of essays, personal accounts, historical fiction, poetry, and a stunning array of original art, Our White House offers a multifaceted look at America’s history through the prism of the White House.   
 
And for additional articles, resources, activities, and discussion questions, check out the NCBLA's coordinating educational website OurWhiteHouse.org!
 
Answers and Information for Learning MORE!
  1. John Adams was the first president to live in the White House. He moved in when it was still unfinished on November 1, 1800. He wrote to his wife the next day, “I pray Heaven to bestow the best of blessings on this house and on all that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise men ever rule under this roof.” These words are now carved in the mantelpiece in the State Dining Room. Learn more about President Adams and the other presidents in the Presidential Fact Files on OurWhiteHouse.org.
  2. Benjamin Harrison was the first president to use electricity in the White House. However, he and his family were fearful of being shocked, so they refused to touch the light switches and simply left the lights on all the time. Learn more about President Harrison and the other presidents in the Presidential Fact Files on OurWhiteHouse.org.
  3. Laura Bush. As first lady of Texas and a former librarian, Mrs. Bush established the Texas Book Festival and then worked with the Librarian of Congress to create a national festival when she became first lady of the United States. The National Book Festival is now an annual event held in late September that enables Americans to hear and meet with their favorite authors. To learn more about the history of the National Book Festival, you can read "Mrs. Bush Inspires a National Book Festival" by Dr. John Y. Cole in Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out.  This year's Book Festival will be held September 22 and 23. For more information, visit LOC.GOV/bookfest
 Literacy + Historic Literacy = Civic Engagement!

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Engage Your Kids with Seussical Activities

ReadingRockets.org, AdLit.org, and the NEA Offer Loads of Fun for
Reading and Learning with Dr. Seuss

"You're never too old, too wacky, too wild, to pick up a book and read to a child." -Dr. Seuss

The theme is green for a very special Read Across America celebration this year. NEA's Read Across America campaign is showcasing The Lorax book as well as NBC/Universal's movie The Lorax. 

Check out tree-themed art, science, and poetry activities in Reading Rockets' The Lorax Family Literacy Bag, all of which are great fun for sharing at home, in the K-2 classroom, a Scout meeting, or an afterschool program.

AdLit.org offers additional activity ideas and resources to help you bring Dr. Seuss into the secondary classroom and to celebrate Read Across America with older readers.  Also be sure to check out suggestions for making reading meaningful through public service.

And don't forget the  NEA's Read Across America digital toolkit overflowing with resources and materials to make the most of your own reading party, filled with downlable activities, stickers, poetry, reading sheets, and MORE!

Have fun READING America!

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

NCBLA Recomends: A Family Outing!

The National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance Encourages You to Take Your Children to the Many Great Museums Across the Country for Fun and to Broaden Their Worlds!

Every state has amazing museums that offer fascinating exhibits, great activities that will expand your child's universe-- and bring you closer together as a family! Be sure and check with your local library because many offer free family passes that will cover the admission costs to your local museums. 

A sampling of current museum shows across the country: 

The Chicago Museum of Science and Industry
The U-505 Submarine Exhibit: 
On June 4, 1944, a German submarine known as U-505 was prowling off the coast of West Africa on a hunt for American and Allied ships, when depth charges from the USS Chatelain blasted the dreaded U-boat out of hiding. It was the end of a violent run for U-505, which had terrorized the Atlantic Ocean as part of a massive U-boat campaign that almost altered the outcome of World War II.
The Museum of Science and Industry invites you to step inside the real U-505—the only German submarine in the United States, and, now, a national memorial to the 55,000 American sailors who gave their lives on the high seas in WWI and WWII.

The San Fransisco Museum of Modern Art
ArtGameLab
Imagine a selection of crowdsourced games designed by SFMOMA's community, for SFMOMA's community. Last summer the museum put out an open call for inventive but simple and low-cost game ideas. Visitors can view the results in the Koret Visitor Education Center, and pick up instructions for prototype games to be played in the museum's galleries and other public spaces.
You are invited to participate in this experiment. Do you have an idea for a fun and engaging new activity in SFMOMA's galleries? Add your voice to the dialogue by visiting the exhibition's game design station. Watch SFMOMA's social media channels for gaming-related activities at the museum. Come play!

Seattle Museum of Flight
Space: Exploring the New Frontier
Imagine yourself at the beginning of the 20th century with visionaries like rocket pioneer Robert Goddard. Watch the launch of Russia’s Sputnik, the world’s first satellite, and see how it captured the attention of the entire planet. Bring the Space Shuttle in for a safe landing at the Kennedy Space Center. Land the lunar module on the Moon and join Apollo astronauts in an exploration of the moon’s surface. Share the experiences of astronauts from the Pacific Northwest and climb inside a full size replica of the International Space Station’s Destiny Research Laboratory. Discover how Mission Control works to keep astronauts safe, see the only Mars Viking lander left on Earth and so much more!
To learn more about the history of space exploration, check out our series of articles originally published in the Seattle Times in 2007, coinciding with the opening of Space: Exploring the New Frontier:

Houston Children's Museum 
The Invention Convention
Step into a workshop of gadgets and gizmos where kids create, concoct and construct contraptions and use their imagination to become inventors! Dream-up and design in a workshop filled with half-finished contraptions, bins of spare parts, project tables, schematics and various instruments from floor to ceiling. Experiment with LEGO® bricks, propellers, magnets, batteries, switches and buzzers through facilitated, hands-on experiments and mini-workshops.

Massachusetts' 
Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art 
Testing the Ice: A True Story About Jackie Robinson
December 3, 2011 - May 6, 2012
Testing the Ice by Sharon Robinson, an educational consultant for Major League Baseball and vice chairman of the Jackie Robinson Foundation, and illustrated by the award-winning Kadir Nelson is a story about her father, baseball legend Jackie Robinson. The original art for the book as well as numerous preliminary sketches will be on view in the museum’s Central Gallery from December 13, 2011 until May 6, 2012. It will complement the art, also by Nelson, for We Are the Ship, a history of the Negro Leagues, which will be in the East Gallery from February 7 until June 10, 2012.

The Tampa Museum of Art
Romare Bearden: Southern Recollections
January 28 - May 6, 2012
The Tampa Museum of Art is pleased to present Romare Bearden: Southern Recollections, an exhibition of approximately 80 works of art that span the career of this internationally renowned artist. Bearden (1911-1988) is widely regarded as one of the most important African-American artists who worked in the United States during the 20th century. He has been the focus of many solo exhibitions, including presentations at the National Gallery of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art. In 1987 he was awarded the National Medal of the Arts by President Ronald Reagan.


St. Louis  Museum of Transportation 
http://transportmuseumassociation.org/

Roads, Rivers, & Railroads - Transportaion of the Civil War
ROADS, RIVERS, & RAILS
Transportation of the Civil War

Opening March 6, 2012

THE WHISTLE STOP - Presidential Travel by Train
The Whistle Stop - Presidential Travel by Train 

Opens March 6, 2012
Runs through Inauguration Day - 2013

 




Monday, February 20, 2012

The National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance OUR WHITE HOUSE: The Best Book for President's Day!

Happy Birthday George!

Today we celebrate George Washington's birthday and what better way to celebrate it than by reading and sharing the NCBLA's book, Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out with your kids! The exquisite illustration of George Washington to your left, was done by Bagram Ibatoulline, and is just one of the many incredible illustrations of American Presidents and their families that appears in our book. 

This week, many kids across the country have a school break. In the midst of recreational  activities, you might want to consider taking a family field trip to one of the many presidetial historical sites throughout our country-- February is the month we celebrate our presidents, after all! To find out what presidetial historical site is nearest you, go to the NCBLA's Our White House website, and visit our presidential field trip page and click on the any state at: http://www.ourwhitehouse.org/fieldguidestate.html

Pack a lunch, take the kids, and have your own American history day! For tips on how to make the day a success go to:  http://www.ourwhitehouse.org/fieldguidefam.html.










Thursday, February 16, 2012

In Case You Missed It!

Boston Globe Article Profiles This Year's Newbery Medal Winner Jack Gantos!

Author Jack Gantos in the Reading Room at
the Library of Congress in September 2011.
Photo by Richard Groth.
Journalist James Sullivan writes in "A Newbery winner at last, "Already the recipient of many honors for his books, which are favorites among educators and librarians for their ability to lure those coveted 'reluctant' readers, last month Gantos was awarded the Newbery Medal, the highest honor in children’s literature, for his latest book, Dead End in Norvelt. Several factors contributed to his Newbery selection, Gantos figures. Part of it could be his longevity; now 60, he’s been writing books since the late 1970s. Part of it could be the fact that he had already amassed quite a bit of 'swag,' as he calls it. Joey Pigza Swallowed the Key (1998), the first book in that series, was a finalist for a National Book Award. In 2001, Gantos was a Newbery finalist for Joey Pigza Loses Control. The author also won several awards, including the Printz and Sibert honors, for Hole in My Life (2001), perhaps his most unusual book, in which he wrote frankly about a bad decision that landed him in prison in his early 20s. Mostly, though, Gantos believes Dead End in Norvelt, an oddball murder mystery involving a boy and a stack of obituaries about the town founders, is deserving of the award. 'I don’t feel like I just barely lipped it in over the rim,' he says with an impish grin."

To read the entire article, click here.  

To learn even more about Jack Gantos and all his fabulous books, visit his website

Did you know Jack Gantos is a contributor to The Exquisite Corpse Adventure

To learn more about this fun and engaging progressive story game, click here.