Wednesday, December 5, 2012

EVEN MORE BOOKS ADDED to Our BOOK GIVEAWAY!

"Like" the NCBLA on Facebook,
and You Could Win a Collection of More Than 40 Books for Young People!
Many Books Have Been Signed by the Authors
 
JUST IN TIME
FOR HOLIDAY GIVING! 

We invite you to enter to win an inspiring collection of books for young people of all ages valued at over six hundred dollars—many of which have been signed by the authors! All you have to do is "like" our Facebook page!

To like us on Facebook now, click here!


Included in our giveaway collection are two hardcover copies of Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out AND two hardcover copies of The Exquisite Corpse Adventure. Both copies of The Exquisite Corpse include a bookplate signed by seven of the contributors. And just added: two more autographed books by National Ambassador for Young People's Literature Emeritus KATHERINE PATERSON and two copies of award-winning author NATALIE BABBITT'S Jack Plank Tells Tales.  


 
ALSO JUST ADDED: seven books by award-winning author Patricia MacLachlan, including her Newbery Medal winner Sarah, Plain and Tall!


Our complete giveaway collection includes more than 40 books, some of the finest fiction and nonfiction (picture books, easy readers, novels, and audio books!), by award-winning authors and illustrators:

William Alexander, Natalie Babbitt, Mary Brigid Barrett, Calef Brown, Susan Cooper, Kate DiCamillo, Timothy Basil Ering, Jack Gantos, Nikki Grimes, Steven Kellogg, Patricia MacLachlan, Patricia McKissack, Marilyn Nelson, John Paterson, Katherine Paterson, Lesa Cline-Ransome, James Ransome, Chris Raschka, Tanya Lee Stone, Chris Van Dusen, and MORE!
 

Check out the other books included in our giveaway, pictured throughout this blog post! (Scroll down to see more.) 

How to Enter to Win Books!
All you need to do is visit our Facebook page and "like" us before 11:00 PM EST on Monday, December 10, 2012, and you will be automatically entered in the giveaway. To like our page, simply click the Like button at the top of the page. The winner will be randomly chosen from all our Facebook "likes." We will announce the winner on Wednesday, December 12, 2012.

To like our page now
, click the following link then click the Like button at the top of our Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/TheNCBLA




Being a Facebook friend of the NCBLA ensures you are among the first to receive our activist alerts, news of our latest projects and events, and critical information regarding literacy and literature for young people.

To stay even more connected with the NCBLA, we invite you to sign up for our Friends of the NCBLA email list. To be added to our email list, email us at info@thencbla.org and type "Friends of the NCBLA" in the subject field. Please include your name, mailing address, phone number, preferred email address, and other information you would like us to know (such as your profession and professional or personal interest in young people, literacy, libraries, and literature) in the email.


To read the official contest rules
, click here.




Please SHARE our book giveaway information with all the parents, guardians, grandparents, aunts and uncles, teachers, librarians, and other adults who live and work with young people you know! Thank you!


Sunday, December 2, 2012

Celebrating the Holidays at the White House

The White House Celebrates The Holiday Season with "Joy to All" Theme
 
“This year’s theme is ‘Joy to All.’ It celebrates the many joys of the holiday seasons: the joy of giving and service to others; the joy of sharing our blessings with one another; and, of course, the joy of welcoming our friends and families as guests into our homes over these next several weeks.”

-First Lady Michelle Obama, November 28, 2012
 
First Lady Michelle Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia accept the
Christmas tree outside the White House. Photo (c) WhiteHouse.gov.

The official Christmas tree was delivered to the North Portico of the White House in a horse-drawn carriage and presented to First Lady Michelle Obama, accompanied by daughters Malia and Sasha and their dog Bo, on November 23. The tree, which now stands tall in the center of the Blue Room, honors the courageous service of the troops, veterans, and military families who serve our country with pride. The 18-foot-6- inch Fraser Fir from Jefferson, North Carolina is trimmed with ornaments decorated by military children living on U.S. Military Bases all over the world, and these one-of-a-kind ornaments honor their parents’ commitment to service.

Learn More About American
Holiday Traditions and White House History
The December holidays provide a fabulous opportunity to help young people learn about their own history and heritage, as well as the history, heritage, and traditions of others. Following are some resources you can share with young people to engage their natural curiosity and introduce them to holiday traditions at the White House:
 
Watch a video of the delivery of this year's Christmas tree, download the White House holiday tour book, print an official White House holiday book mark, and fill out Honor Cards for our nation's service men and women on the WhiteHouse.Gov holiday page.

Discover how the Christmas tree became a White House tradition and how farmers across America compete to grow the “Grand Champion” selected to adorn the White House each year in "Grand Champions of the White House" by guest writer Renee Critcher Lyons on OurWhiteHouse.org. Read on for an excerpt:

A tree has not always graced the White House at Christmastime. In fact, Franklin Pierce (1856), our 14th president, became the first to embrace the 500-year old tradition of bringing a tree into the home to celebrate the hope of Christmas morn. And, the practice did not become a yearly event until the 1880’s. Only one president since has frowned upon the use of an official White House Christmas tree, Teddy Roosevelt. Our 26th president (1901-1909), at a time before Christmas tree farms were prevalent, believed the harvesting of Christmas trees might deplete our national forests, and thus banned the practice from the White House.
 
Read about the history of the National Christmas Tree, which graces the Ellipse between the White House and the Washington Monument, in "Our National Christmas Tree" by Cheli Mennella on OurWhiteHouse.org. Here is an excerpt:

The magnificent blue spruce towers above the Ellipse, the ground between the White House and the Washington Monument. Throughout the year it is a silent reminder of yuletide pleasures and joy. Then in December the tree takes on new significance. Dressed in strands of colorful lights and trimmed with ornaments, the tree, our National Christmas Tree, becomes a beacon of beauty and brilliance.

Read Newbery-medal winning author Susan Cooper's contrasting memories of the White House--one at a time of sorrow and another at a time of Christmas splendor--in "Memory of the White House" on OurWhiteHouse.org.
 
Discover More About the White House and American History in Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out
For even more information and stories about White House holiday traditions, the presidents and first ladies, and American history, check out a copy of Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out from your local library and share the extensive fiction and nonfiction pieces and plethora of original art illustrations with the young people in your life. To learn more about White House holidays, you might choose to read how the American hostage crisis in 1979 affected the lighting of the national Christmas tree during President Carter’s term in office in “From Christmas in Plains: Memories” by Jimmy Carter.

Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out is sold in hardcover and paperback at bookstores everywhere. LEARN MORE about this anthology at OurWhiteHouse.org.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Start Your Holiday Shopping Now with Book Suggestions

The 2012 Gift Book Guide from Reading Rockets Makes Holiday Shopping Easy

Reading Rockets' 2012 Books as Gifts Guide makes it easy to find great books that will make kids want to turn off the TV! Created by children's literature expert Maria Salvadore, the list is a delightful collection of  nonfiction and fiction titles for kids ages 0-9 and includes recommendations for kids to read on their own and books for kids to read with a caring adult. This guide is easy to print, so you can take it with you  to the bookstore.  

Click here to check it out!

Monday, November 26, 2012

Don't Miss the Chance to Enter Our Book Giveaway!

"Like" the NCBLA on Facebook,
and You Could Win
an Outstanding Collection of Books
for Young People!
Many Books Have Been Signed by the Authors
 
We invite you to enter to win an outstanding collection of books for young people of all ages valued at over five hundred dollars—many of which have been signed by the authors! All you have to do is "like" our Facebook page!

 To like us on Facebook now, click here!

Including some of the finest fiction and nonfiction, picture books and novels, our giveaway collection features a diverse assortment of hardcover, paperback, and audio books by award-winning authors and illustrators:

William Alexander, Natalie Babbitt, Mary Brigid Barrett, Calef Brown, Susan Cooper, Kate DiCamillo, Timothy Basil Ering, Jack Gantos, Nikki Grimes, Steven Kellogg, Patricia MacLachlan, Patricia McKissack, Marilyn Nelson, John Paterson, Katherine Paterson, Lesa Cline-Ransome, James Ransome, Chris Raschka, Tanya Lee Stone, Chris Van Dusen, and MORE!

Many of our giveaway titles are pictured throughout this blog post! (Scroll down to see more.) More to be announced soon!


How to Enter to Win Books!

All you need to do is visit our Facebook page and "like" us before 11:00 PM EST on Monday, December 10, 2012, and you will be automatically entered in the giveaway. To like our page, simply click the Like button at the top of the page. The winner will be randomly chosen from all our Facebook "likes." We will announce the winner on Wednesday, December 12, 2012.

To like our page now, click the following link then click the Like button at the top of our Facebook page:

https://www.facebook.com/TheNCBLA

Being a Facebook friend of the NCBLA ensures you are among the first to receive our activist alerts, news of our latest projects and events, and critical information regarding literacy and literature for young people.

To stay even more connected with the NCBLA, we invite you to sign up for our Friends of the NCBLA email list. To be added to our email list, email us at info@thencbla.org and type "Friends of the NCBLA" in the subject field. Please include your name, mailing address, phone number, preferred email address, and other information you would like us to know (such as your profession and professional or personal interest in young people, literacy, libraries, and literature) in the email.

To read the official contest rules, click here.



Please SHARE our book giveaway information with all the parents, guardians, grandparents, aunts and uncles, teachers, librarians, and other adults who live and work with young people you know! Thank you!

AND EVEN MORE BOOKS to be announced soon!  Keep checking our Facebook page and this blog for book giveaway updates!

In Case You Missed It!

New York Times Opinion Piece
Explores the Common Core Standards' Requirement to Increase
the Reading of Nonfiction

The Common Core State Standards are educational goals and expectations for students in grades K-12 that define specific knowledge and skills in English language arts and math necessary for students to be successful in college and careers. The standards are designed to ensure all students—no matter where they live—receive a high quality education. The standards for English Language Arts and Literacy provide an integrated model of literacy designed to prepare students to be college and career ready in reading, writing, speaking, and listening. 
Illustration by Miki Maciaszek (c) The New York Times

The Common Core English Language standards require a higher concentration of nonfiction reading than has previously been taught; the goal is for 70 percent of the high school senior's curriculum to be nonfiction works. Many educational professionals find the decreased emphasis on fiction to be controversial.


In the New York Times opinion piece titled "What Should Children Read?," Sara Mosle presents an  argument in favor of more nonfiction reading across the curriculum. Here is an excerpt:


In my experience, students need more exposure to nonfiction, less to help with reading skills, but as a model for their own essays and expository writing...

I love fiction and poetry as much as the next former English major and often despair over the quality of what passes for “informational texts,” few of which amount to narrative much less literary narrative.

What schools really need isn’t more nonfiction but better nonfiction, especially that which provides good models for student writing. Most students could use greater familiarity with what newspaper, magazine and book editors call “narrative nonfiction”: writing that tells a factual story, sometimes even a personal one, but also makes an argument and conveys information in vivid, effective ways.

To read the entire article, click here.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Just in Time for Holiday Gift Giving! Enter Our Book Giveaway!

"Like" the NCBLA on Facebook, and You Could Win an Outstanding Collection of Books for Young People Valued at Over $500!

What could be better than opening a brand new book, its pristine pages never opened or perused by anyone else? How about a big box filled with an assortment of new books to share with young people, all written and illustrated by some of America's most gifted storytellers and artists and delivered to you free?!

Because the NCBLA believes in the magic and power of books, we want to spread the joy of reading this holiday season. We invite you to enter to win an outstanding collection of books for young people of all ages valued at over five hundred dollars—many of which have been signed by the authors! All you have to do is "like" us on Facebook

To like us on Facebook now, click here!

Including some of the finest fiction and nonfiction, picture books and novels, our giveaway collection features a diverse assortment of hardcover, paperback, and audio books by award-winning authors and illustrators:

2012 Newbery Medal Winner
William Alexander, Natalie Babbitt, Mary Brigid Barrett, Calef Brown, Susan Cooper, Kate DiCamillo, Timothy Basil Ering, Jack Gantos, Nikki Grimes, Steven Kellogg, Patricia MacLachlan, Patricia McKissack, Marilyn Nelson, Katherine Paterson, Lesa Cline-Ransome, James Ransome, Chris Raschka, Tanya Lee Stone
Chris Van Dusen
,
and MORE 


Images of just a few of our giveaway book titles are included here. Check this blog and our Facebook page often to discover the other titles included in our giveaway.

2012 Caldecott Award Winner
  Our book giveaway is the perfect 
  solution to your holiday shopping
  woes! With the spirit of holiday
  giving in mind, the winner will
  receive enough books for personal
  gift giving AND philanthropic gift
  giving, enabling you to donate freely
  to the local classrooms, libraries,
  hospitals, or worthy youth
  organizations of your choice. 




How to Enter to Win Books!

Hardcover and signed by the author!
The book giveaway starts today, Monday, November 19, 2012. All you need to do is visit our Facebook page and "like" us before 11:00 PM EST on Monday, December 10, 2012, and you will be automatically entered in the giveaway.
(Our page is titled The National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance.) To like our page, simply click the Like button at the top of our Facebook page. The winner will be randomly chosen from all our Facebook "likes." We will announce the winner on Wednesday, December 12, 2012. 


Hardcover and signed by the author!
Companion audiobook also included!
Please share our book giveaway information with all the parents, guardians, grandparents, aunts and uncles, teachers, librarians, and other adults who live and work with young people you know!

Being a Facebook friend of the NCBLA ensures you are among the first to receive our activist alerts, news of our latest projects and events, and critical information regarding literacy and literature for young people.

To stay even more connected with the NCBLA, we invite you to sign up for our Friends of the NCBLA email list. 

TWO hardcover copies included in giveaway!
To be added to our email list, email us at info@thencbla.org and type "Friends of the NCBLA" in the subject field. Please include your name, mailing address, phone number, preferred email address, and other information you would like us to know (such as your profession and professional or personal interest in young people, literacy, libraries, and literature) in the email.

For the latest updates on the Book Giveaway, be sure to check our Facebook page and this blog often.

To read the official contest rules, click here.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Books for Post-Election Learning and Discussion

The Election Is Over!
Check Out Our Book Recommendations to Keep Kids Engaged in Presidential History

The election may be over, but presidential and congressional politics will continue to remain a hot topic on the national agenda. There are hundreds of fabulous books--both fiction and nonfiction!--to help you engage kids in stories of White House residents past and present.

An excellent, authoritative list to find the right book for your kids or class is "Presidents, the President's House, and More: A Select List of Books (and a Few Web Sources) for Children and Young Adults" compiled by librarian Maria Salvadore and available on OurWhiteHouse.org

This extensive list includes annotations and publication information for each book, as well as recommended age levels to help guide your choices. Books are grouped into several categories.

Categories include:

  • The White House and Its Residents
  • The Early Years of the White House and the Presidency
  • Civil War and Post Civil War Presidents and Eras
  • Books About Voting Rights
  • Books that Are Just for Fun!
You are certain to find a great book for even the most reluctant reader in these lists!    

And, we also suggest you check out our award-winning anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out, which features poems, essays, stories, illustrations, and photographs by over 100 of America's most gifted writers and artists.  Our White House is available in both hardcover and paperback. 

To complete the Presidential Timeline created by artist Bob Kolar in Our White House, click here.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

"from SCREEN to BOOK" Event Held at Cambridge Public Library

Illustrators Offer Thoughts and Perspectives on Storytelling in Traditional and New Media

Illustration Copyright (c) 2012 Helen Oxenbury
In celebration of their twentieth anniversary, Candlewick Press hosted an engaging and informative picture book panel discussion for the public yesterday at the Cambridge Public Library titled "from SCREEN to BOOK."  Participating in the panel discussion were illustrators and book makers Tony Fucile, Scott Nash, Peter H. Reynolds, Holly McGhee, and Ann Stott. Shelf Awareness Children's Editor Jenny Brown moderated the discussion.

Regarding the topic of how newer media have influenced the illustrators in the art of storytelling, Scott Nash emphasized the importance of the narrative itself, noting that he prefers to ask the question, "What is the best and proper medium to tell the story?" Peter Reynolds noted his belief that the most powerful technology is the picture book itself, stressing, "There is nothing more interactive than a picture book."

Candlewick Art Director Ann Stott explained that from an editorial point of view, the usage of computer-generated art for picture book illustrations has made it easier to request changes and for the illustrator to make those changes. Stott also noted that digital technologies have improved so much that it is almost impossible to tell now if the art was created using a traditional or digital method. 

Ending the discussion, Peter Reynolds addressed aspiring  writers and illustrators by encouraging them to investigate the new avenues to publishing now available, noting that some stories just need to be told! For guidance, he recommended the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI.org).  And Holly McGhee emphasized that November is National Novel Writing Writing Month (NANOWRIMO.org).

To learn more about how and why Candlewick Press is celebrating picture books, check out their website ReadingStartsHere.com, a year-long video celebration!

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Literary Field Trip

Beyond the Book:
Take Kids to Beatrix Potter Exhibit
at the Morgan Library in New York

From The Tale of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter
"Beatrix Potter: The Picture Letters," a new exhibition at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York, explores twenty of Beatrix Potter's letters to children, including the earliest surviving picture letter, the famous Peter Rabbit letter, and others containing the original ideas for the adventures of Squirrel Nutkin, Jeremy Fisher, and Pig Robinson.

Also on display are early commercial designs, nature studies, and fanciful animal drawings showing the development of Potter's artistic skills and the first stirrings of her story-telling sensibilities. Other objects in the exhibition speak to Potter’s fiercely independent business methods and her resolute attempts to sustain high standards in her published work. She had her first books privately printed at her expense, she stoutly defended her rights to her artistic creations, and she personally oversaw the design of toys and games based on her bestselling books, a model for merchandising ventures even now.

Young visitors and their caregivers are invited to enjoy books by Beatrix Potter in a reading area on the Morgan’s lower level. This exhibition continues through January 27. For more information, click here

 
More Literary Field Trip Ideas!
For a list of museums and galleries that offer exhibits of children’s book art, refer to the NCBLA article "A Literacy Field Trip." And for more tips about connecting books to places, read the Reading Rockets article "Day Trips for Book Lovers."

Monday, November 5, 2012

Picture Book Symposium THIS SATURDAY

Candlewick Press to Hold
"from SCREEN to BOOK"
November 10, from 1:00 to 3:00 PM
at Cambridge Public Library

Candlewick Press invites picture book lovers to celebrate its 20th anniversary at its first picture book symposium, featuring an incredible panel of illustrators and bookmakers exploring art and story in both print and multimedia. 
 
 
Special guests include:

TONY FUCILE
author-illustrator of Let’s Do Nothing!

SCOTT NASH
author-illustrator of Tuff Fluff and
The High-Skies Adventures of Blue Jay the Pirate

PETER H. REYNOLDS
author-illustrator of The Dot, Ish and Sky Color

and
HOLLY MCGHEE
founder of Pippin Properties and author of Mitchell’s License


Shelf Awareness Children's Editor, Jenny Brown,
will moderate the discussion.

This very special event will take place Saturday, November 20 from 1:00 to 3:00 PM in the main lecture hall at the Cambridge Public Library, 449 Broadway, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Books will be available for purchase and autographing from Porter Square Books.

For more information, please visit cambridgema.gov.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Campaign 2012: Last Minute Lesson Plans

Take Some Time to Discuss the Presidential Campaigns with the Young People in Your Life

In these final days of the presidential campaigns, take some time to READ and DISCUSS such topics as the president's responsibilities, the process of voting and voting rights, and how to make sense of the nonstop campaign rhetoric.

Get all the information, discussion questions, and activities
for use at home or at school you'll need  in our Race to the Ballot: The Our White House Presidential Campaign and Election Kit for Kids!


And have fun with our activity ideas, such as inviting kids to write their own stump speeches,  make their own campaign tokens, analyze the rhetoric of a particular campaign ad, and play a presidential trivia game! Click here for these activities and MORE!

And be sure to check out our American history anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out, a perfect partner in engaging our kids in this historic election cycle with essays, poetry, paintings, photographs, and more! Our White House is available in both hardcover and paperback from Candlewick Press.

Ask for Our White House at a library of bookstore near you!

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Presidential Campaign 2012

PLAN TO VOTE ON TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6!
And Bring Your Kids to Show Them Democracy in Action!

All American citizens who are at least 18 and not incarcerated can vote, but sadly not all eligible voters do so.
 
Read all about the history of voting rights in America in "Who Gets to Vote?" on OurWhiteHouse.org.

Use the suggested discussion questions to talk with the young people in your life about the value of voting, and most importantly demonstrate your commitment by going to the polls and exercising your right to vote on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6! Talk with your kids about the candidates and ballot questions on your local ballot ahead of time, then bring your kids with you so they can engage in the process!

To help understand the critical role of the Electoral College in the presidential election, check out "Getting the Votes and Getting Elected: The Popular Vote vs. the Electoral College."


And, for even more information about voting in America, check out our resource "Get Out the Vote! Websites"  and the Vote411.org website created by the League of Women Voters, which enables you to find your local polling place and to build your own ballot. 

Monday, October 29, 2012

Halloween Story Time!

Have Fun Sharing Spooky Stories of
Ghost Encounters in the White House
with the Young People in Your Life


OurWhiteHouse.org, the NCBLA's companion educational website for the art and literature anthology Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out, features a treasure trove of exclusive articles, discussion questions, activities, and other resources to help young people connect with American history. Both the Our White House website and book are perfect partners for helping you get kids engaged in next week's presidential election!

This Halloween week be sure to check out our web exclusive "Knock, Knock! Whoooo's There? Spooky Stories from Children of the White House" by NCBLA volunteer writer Renee' Critcher Lyons.  

Parents, teachers, and librarians---did you know that many White House residents throughout the years have claimed that it is HAUNTED? Do you know WHOSE ghosts stalk the bedrooms, fireplaces, and gates? You can read all about the stories of ghostly encounters experienced by presidential children Margaret Truman, Jenna and Barbara Bush, Susan Ford, and Lynda Johnson Robb, in our exclusive article "Knock, Knock! Whoooo's There? Spooky Stories from Children of the White House." We encourage you to share this article--and the accompanying discussion questions and activities--with all the young people in your life.

Here is an excerpt:

Other ghostly noises linger along the gates and upon the doors of the White House’s North Portico. Legend says the banging is the ghost of Anna Surrat rattling the doors and gates, pleading for her mother’s life. (Anna is the daughter of Mary Surrat, hanged in 1865 after her conviction as a conspirator in the murder of Abraham Lincoln. Mary became the only woman ever executed by the U.S. government). Anna’s weeping swells throughout the White House’s entrance hall, even with the doors shut! And on July 7th each year, the anniversary of her mother’s execution, Anna’s ghost paces back and forth on the front steps, supposedly awaiting the arrival of President Johnson.
 
Renee' Critcher Lyons is an assistant professor in the School Library Media Program at East Tennessee State University in Johnson City, teaching children’s and young adult literature. Prior to her appointment at ETSU, she served as a school/instructional librarian for eight years at the elementary and middle school level and nine years at the high school/community college level. Renee’s book, The Revival of Banned Dances: A Worldwide Study (McFarland), was published in September 2012. She is a graduate of the Vermont College of Fine Arts’ MFA Program in Writing for Children and Young Adults and the Appalachian State University Masters in Library Science Program.

Our White House is an outstanding collection of essays, personal accounts, historical fiction, and poetry that melds with an equally stunning array of original art to offer a look at America’s history through the prism of the White House. Starting with a 1792 call for designers and continuing through the present day, these highly engaging writings and illustrations, expressing varied viewpoints and interwoven with key historical events, are a vital resource for family and classroom sharing -- and a stirring reminder that the story of the White House is the story of every American.

To learn more about Our White House, click here.

Looking for Even MORE Spooky Stories?
Check out the "Boo to You!" list on ReadingRockets.org
for scary and not-so-spooky tales filled with pumpkins, ghosts, and monsters galore, and peruse the "Monsters Bookshelf" on the New York Times website.

For more great fall reading suggestions, check out the NCBLA's "Great Books for Boys" list and "Discovering Fantasy Beyond Harry Potter."