Super-Hero the Trademark

Boing Boing has news of interest to any fans of independent comics and graphic novels.  Marvel Comics and DC comics have jointly filed a trademark for the term “super-hero.”  That way they can go after independent comic creators and publishers simply for using the term.  Sigh.  This is the sort of thing we will see more and more of now that public domain terms are available for trademark.  Very sad.

Author of Stone Fox Dies

John R. Gardiner, author of Stone Fox has died at age 61 from pancreatitis. 

I enjoyed this paragraph of the article:

“Few would have predicted Gardiner’s literary success. He didn’t enjoy
books when he was young he never read an entire novel until he was 19
and he ended up in what he called “dumbbell English” at the University
of California, Los Angeles.”

Learning to Fly

Learning to Fly by Sebastian Meschenmoser is a charming picture book about a man who finds a penguin who tells the man that he has been flying, but penguins don’t fly.  The man takes in the penguin and starts to test whether he is aerodynamic enough to fly and different forms of propulsion.  The ending is about the power of believing in yourself.  The line drawings with their subtle touches of color enhance the story, often the humor is carried by the illustrations alone.  Read this to small groups or with a child in your lap.  The book is small and the illustrations will not project well to an audience. 

This is a lovely book.  Share it with children and show them that they should follow their dreams and believe in themselves. 

Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane

The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo has really divided that children’s literature community into those who adore it and those who strongly dislike it.  When I read and heard that people disliked it, I had to get a copy of my own to read.  I don’t mind sentimentality in books, enjoy doll books in general, and thought I would probably love it.

Me?  I really, really dislike the book.  Yes, the ending touched me.  But I still felt cheated and manipulated by the time I finished.  I didn’t mind that Edward was a doll without a heart, without love, but I disliked the fact that even by the end I didn’t feel like he really GOT it.   He still felt that love was something that was given to him and then he would return it.  And the ending did nothing to change his view at all.

This was one that I looked forward to.  But it is one that you must try for yourself.  Which side of the debate do you fall on?

EH Shepard Article

BBC News reports that EH Shepard, the illustrator of the Winnie the Pooh books, disliked that his illustrations for a children’s book overshadowed the political cartoons he dedicated his life to.  I am not sure I agree with the title of the article, “The man who hated Pooh.”  But I am sure Shepard was frustrated by the huge response to a side project and the fact that he and Milne did not get along.  Yet no one can deny that those line drawings are a large part of the success of “that silly old bear” and that they are as beloved or even more beloved than Milne’s dancing words. 

Golly, I’ve got to dig out my copy of When We Were Very Young and read some poems.  This article has got me wanting to read those books once again. 

Astrid Lindgren Award

Katherine Paterson has won the 2006 Astrid Lingren Memorial Award which is given for lifetime achievement in children’s literature.  How wonderful!  She certainly deserves it for books like Bridge to Terabithia, The Great Gilly Hopkins, Lyddie, and Jacob Have I Loved, and those are only my personal favorites.  Her body of work is simply amazing. 

Andre Norton Award

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America has announced a brand new award for young adult science fiction and fantasy novels!  The award is named the Andre Norton Award and will be given for the first time later this year in conjunction with the Nebula Awards.  Any book published as a young adult science fiction or fantasy book is eligible, including graphic novels. 

Graphic Novels for Younger Children

School Library Journal’s cover story for this month offers information on Graphic Novels for (Really) Young Readers.  This is a great list of graphic novels for the younger set, including some of my favorites like the Owly series and Bone.

Boy Books and Libraries

Ready for this one? The Slate article, The Little Men Who Love Little House – Why boys like girls books. By Emily Bazelon contains in its look at boys’ reading a full attack on librarians and their role in why boys don’t like reading! I kid you not!
“The blame partly lies with librarians. They are mostly women, they tend to love stories, and they also have a thing for books that teach moral lessons.”
“Librarians and teachers often look down on boy humor or nonfiction, and their disdain seeps through to the boys who crave those things.”
I find this entirely offensive. I definitely do not look down on boy-friendly titles. I have Captain Underpants, a nonfiction section filled with dinosaurs, snakes, and biographies, adventure fiction, and a great love of Harris and Me, which I consider one of the funniest books ever written. And I am not the exception when it comes to children’s librarians, I am the rule. There is no disdain here nor is there any need for a moral lesson in a book. Besides, shouldn’t the author of the article have looked as some books published in the last decade? If she had, maybe she would have actually visited a library and discovered that we aren’t all pinch-faced women with rulers all set to smack little boy hands.