Arthur and the Minimoys will be released in film version this Christmas. The website offers a trailer you can view online, information on the main characters, a glimpse at the storyline, and looks at the amazing animation that captures the land of the Minimoys. This is certainly worth a look.
Month: June 2006
Baby Shoes
Baby Shoes by Dashka Slater, pictures by Hiroe Nakata.
This is a delightful picture book perfect for toddlers and preschoolers who will completely understand the book’s premise. Baby (a child who could be either a boy or a girl) has just gotten brand-new very white shoes. Then he goes off on adventures with his mom. On those adventures, his shoes slowly become more colorful and less white until they are almost a rainbow of color. Each time another color gets on his shoes, Baby says “Uh-oh!” and Mama says “Oh, no!” This pattern continues as does the chorus of “but those shoes just go, go, go.” The rhythm of the book is perfectly written and the enthusiasm by Baby is contagious. The illustrations are vivid, bright and pure fun as they show how each color gets added to the shoes. The best picture in my eyes is the second to last, where Baby is sitting on a park bench with her now exhausted mother. Baby has muddy knees, a messy face, a big smile and is proudly showing the shoes in all their glory.
Add this one to your storytimes on clothes and color. It is a lot of fun.
Rash
Rash by Pete Hautman.
I am a huge Hautman fan, having really enjoyed his book Invisible. Rash is a book set in a dystopian United States, now called the USSA. In this future, the United States and its citizens have become obsessed with self-protection, meaning that even to walk down the street kids have to wear a helmet, to run a race they have to be fully suited in protective gear and run on a shock absorbent track. The protagonist of the book, Bo, has a father and an older brother in the penal system. People are given jail time for anger and antisocial behavior. Bo has his father’s temper and is on the razor edge for being jailed. When Bo finally gives into his urge to fight with another boy who is hitting on his girlfriend, he is arrested and sent to northern Canada to a McDonald’s pizza factory. It is in jail that Bo discovers his real passion: the illegal game of football.
Rash is about a future that is more than possible. It is about corporations taking over our penal system, a society relying on prisoner work to support itself, an amazingly self-centered society where nothing matters more than self-survival and extending your life as long as possible, even when that destroys the very quality of life. It is a frightening world, but readers get to experience through the eyes of sarcastic Bo which is a real treat. I enjoyed the dystopian society because it really is well fleshed out to the extent that it begins to color how you view today’s society. I also enjoyed the character of Bo, a person who doesn’t fit into the world he has been born in. There is humor throughout the book, lifting it from what could have been a dismal look at the future into something that is fresh, new and inventive.
Share this book with teens who enjoy science fiction, but it should also be enjoyed by teens who enjoy sports books and anyone quirky enough to have felt they don’t fit into society. This is a great read and is definitely another winner by Hautman.
Monster Blood Tattoo: Foundling
Monster Blood Tattoo: Foundling by D M Cornish.
Five star book! Oh, I don’t do stars… Applause! Oh, you can’t hear me… Praise galore, now that I can do.
This book is the answer to all of the issues with plagiarism in teen novels. It is so unique, so new, so fresh that it could only be original. Young Rossamund is foundling who lives in a ramshackle orphanage. He is approaching the age when he will head out into the monster-infested world and get a job. He hopes to follow his caregiver into the navy, traveling on the caustic vinegar seas, but instead he is employed by the Lamplighters, a job that sounds dull to his young ears. On his way to take up his new position, Rossamund gets aboard the wrong boat, run by a horrid captain who deals in the dark arts. Rossamund manages to escape and finds himself in the company of a fancy lady, Europe, who hunts monsters for a living using electricity that comes out of her body. But Rossamund finds himself feeling very sympathetic towards some of the monsters he meets and wondering if Europe is maybe the evil one.
This is a vividly rendered world filled with complex characters who change, grow and mystify. It is a entirely new world, created with a loving hand. This is a real gem of a book. Recommend this to teens who enjoy fantasy and also those who enjoy horror. It is a great read, one that could also get reluctant readers to go along for the ride. This is a must-read and must-own.
Squidoo Lens for School Librarians
Squidoo is an interesting Web 2.0 resource. Gayle Keresey, a participant in the ALA Library 2.0 Bootcamp, has created a Reading List for School Librarians and Youth Librarians on Squidoo. She has included recommended blogs, articles on School Library 2.0, youth librarian blogs, author blogs, and books about Web 2.0. This is a very useful resource list!
Where's Waldo Returns
Where’s Waldo: The Great Picture Hunt is a website for the latest Where’s Waldo book that will be ever so popular at your library. Ours was immediately snatched up and carried away to be closely examined.
Top Ten for Teens
YALSA has announced the nominations for the 2006 Teens’ Top Ten Books that will be voted on by teens during Teen Read Week, October 15 – 21. It is nice to get the list to teens in your community so that they can read the books over the summer.
Here are the nominees:
Wolf: the Journey Home by Asta Bowen
Rebel Angels by Libba Bray
Megan Meade’s Guide to the McGowan Boys by Kate Brian
Powder Monkey: Adventure of a Young Sailor by Paul Dowswell
I, Coriander by Sally Gardner
Captain Hook: the Adventures of a Notorious Youth by J.V. Hart
2006 Boston Globe- Horn Book Awards
Today the winners of the Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards were announced. Here are the winners, all names that are very familiar:
Fiction and Poetry: The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo
Picture Book: Leaf Man by Lois Ehlert
Nonfiction: If You Decide to Go to the Moon by Faith McNulty
As an aside, I am very happy with Leaf Man and Moon winning, but I am still baffled by the appeal of Edward Tulane. Ah well, I must be missing something.
Two honor books were also selected in each category:
Fiction and Poetry:
Yellow Elephant: A Bright Bestiary by Julie Larios.
Yellow Star by Jennifer Roy.
Picture Book:
Mama: A True Story in Which a Baby Hippo Loses His Mama… by Jeanette Winter
Sky Boys: How They Built the Empire State Building by Deborah Hopkinson.
Nonfiction:
A Mother’s Journey by Sandra Markle.
Wildfire by Taylor Morrison.
Specials
Specials by Scott Westerfeld.
This is the final book in the Uglies Trilogy. If you have missed this trilogy or don’t have it in your library for the teens in your community, RUN out and get it. It is a great series that offers a unique society where people of a certain age are surgically turned into Pretties. Tally Youngblood finds herself caught in yet another web of lies and control where she has to think her way past her latest surgery. I really don’t want to give much away, especially if you haven’t had the pleasure of reading the first two books in the series. Let me just say that the final book in the trilogy is filled with as much adventure, amazement, detailed world building, and pure reading fun as the first two. I enjoy Westerfeld’s sly humor and the not-so-subtle parallels with today’s society that ring very true.
This is a great trilogy. The only bad thing about it is that it is now finished. But having read Westerfeld and loved his other books too, we will just have to wait to see what amazing teen novel he puts out next. These are a must-purchase! Recommend them to kids who enjoy science fiction. They will be enjoyed by both boys and girls alike.