2006 Charlotte Zolotow Award

The CCBC (Cooperative Children’s Book Center) has announced the 2006 Charlotte Zolotow Award that is given each year to the most outstanding writing in a picture book published in the USA in the previous year.

This year’s winner is My Best Friend by Mary Ann Rodman. 

The Honor Books are:

Patricia McKissack and Onawumi Jean Moss for Precious and the Boo Hag.
Jon J. Muth for Zen Shorts.

Highly Commended Books are:

Leslie Patricelli for Binky.
Sandy Turner for Cool Cat, Hot Dog.
Norton Juster for The Hello, Goodbye Window.
Mo WIllems for Leonardo the Terrible Monster.
Stephen Michael King for Mutt Dog!
Elivia Savadier for No Haircut Today!
Bob Graham for Oscar’s Half Birthday.
Mara Berman for Snip, Snap!  What’s That?
William Bee for Whatever.

Top Shelf Fiction for Middle School Readers

VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates) has a great list of the Top Shelf Fiction for Middle School Readers from 2005.  The list is in pdf format, so make sure you have Adobe loaded. 

A lot of my favorite teen novels of the year are included, like Revenge of the Witch by Joseph Delaney, Invisible by Pete Hautman, and Uglies by Scott Westerfeld.  Many of the others are on my lengthy to-be-read list and others will be added there.  Enjoy!

2005 Golden Kite Awards

The Golden Kite Awards have been announced.  They are given by the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI) for the most outstanding fiction, nonfiction, picturebook text and picturebook illustrations.  This year’s winners are:

FICTION: 

Award:  Mary E. Pearson for A Room on Lorelei Street
Honor:  Deborah Wiles for Each Little Bird That Sings

NONFICTION:

Award:  Russell Freedman for Children of the Great Depression
Honor:  Suzanne Jurmain for The Forbidden Schoolhouse

PICTURE BOOK TEXT:

Award:  Pat Mora for Dona Flor
Honor:  Becky Birtha for Grandmama’s Pride

PICTURE BOOK ILLUSTRATION:

Award:  Melissa Sweet for Baby Bear’s Chairs
Honor:  Barbara McClintock for Cinderella

Three Wishes Under Fire

The Ontario Library Association named Three Wishes by Deborah Ellis as a nominee for the Silver Birch Awards, an award where children in the province vote for their favorites from the 20 Canadian books nominated.  But the Canadian Jewish Congress does not agree about the merit of the book, saying that it reflects anti-Semitic views and is inappropriate for the 9 to 11 year old target age. 

TeacherLibrarian Wiki

teacherlibrarianwiki is a brand-new wiki for teacher librarians. You can discuss the profession, share online resources, and share your own professional wisdom. This is a great way to get started using wikis, come join the conversation!

Duck and Goose

Duck and Goose by Tad Hills. 

This is one of my favorite picture books in a long, long time.  It has been added to the rather short of list of “I will use this in story times for the next decade” books.  It is the story of a small duck and a small goose who discover a strange polka-dot egg sitting in the grass.  The two of them argue together about whose egg it is.  Duck saw it first, but Goose touched it first.  They eventually agree to sit on it together to keep it warm.  It isn’t until a little blue bird comes along and tells them it is a ball that the Duck and Goose are let in on the joke.  Children on the other hand will have figured it out from the beginning.

The art of the book is perfect for children.  Humorous, silly, and clever.  And it  matches the text, because the words are also silly and clever and just right for children. 

If you are looking for a great Easter basket stuffer, this book would be it, though it isn’t an Easter book.  Use it in any spring storytime, but it is good enough to bring out in the fall too when the geese are flying south overhead.  I know it is one that I will turn to time and time again for story time.  I just have to come up with more themes to suit it.  🙂

Chicken and Cat


Chicken and Cat by Sara Varon.

This nearly wordless book about a cat who lives in the country and comes to visit his friend Chicken in the city, shows how country folk may react to the city.  At first, Cat only sees the garbage, the concrete, and the empty lots.  Chicken shows him much more like a huge park, but Cat still thinks that there aren’t enough flowers and colors in the city.  The final solution is that the two friends create a garden out of the empty lot across the street from Chicken’s house. 

I really liked this story.  The wordlessness makes it accessible to preschool children all on their own.  As a librarian in a rural community, it is also a really nice book to help introduce children to a city and to share before they travel to a large city for the first time.  This is a great addition to collections in both city and rural libraries.