The Richmond Times-Dispatch has a nice article about cookbooks for kids: Cookbooks feature kid-friendly recipes. They look at the new Williams-Sonoma series for children, as well as the Dr. Seuss cookbook, Green Eggs and Ham Cookbook. My favorite is the final book on the list: Mom’s Big Book of Cookies, because what kids doesn’t love cookies and doesn’t love to help make them. Even better, the author Lauren Chattman has some very clever tricks up her sleeve like using melted butter rather than softened butter in her recipes. I love this! I don’t know how many times I have tried to soften butter in the microwave to use in baking and end up with a golden puddle of melted butter anyway. Chattman’s recipes will at least save me the angst in between.
Month: December 2006
How Many Fruits Baskets?
AnimeNewsNetwork as an article about TOKYOPOP’s Fruits Basket series reaching two million books in print! Amazing! Fruits Basket was one of the first manga that I ever read and one of the first I purchased for the library.
I love the quote from the author:
When TIME Magazine asked Ms. Takaya her feelings on having the
top-selling manga in the U.S., she responded, “That definitely flatters
and pleases me. Thank you very much. As for a reason, I can’t clearly
distinguish one, but if people read Fruits Basket and think ‘I like
this,’ then that alone is enough to bring me joy.”
This series certainly brings a lot of people around the world joy too.
Nestle Book Awards
The Nestlé Children’s Book Prize Award from the UK has been announced! And the winners are:
Ages 9-11
The Diamond of Drury Lane by Julia Golding.
Silver: The Tide Knot by Helen Dunmore
Bronze: The Pig Who Saved the World by Paul Shipton (out in paperback in the U.S.)
Ages 6-8
Mouse Noses on Toast by Daren King.
Silver: Hugo Pepper by Paul Stewart & Chris Riddell (coming in Feb. 2007 in the U.S.)
Bronze: The Adventures of The Dish and The Spoon by Mini Grey (available in U.S.)
Ages 5 & Under
That Rabbit Belongs to Emily Brown by Cressida Cowell (available in the U.S.)
Silver: The Emperor of Absurdia by Chris Riddell (available in the U.S.)
Bronze: Wibbly Pig’s Silly Big Bear by Mick Inkpen (available in the U.S.)
NPR Recommended Books

NPR has their own list of recommended titles for gifts. Or in my case, for hoarding all to myself and reading! Covering picture books to teen novels, they have some of my favorite titles and more that I haven’t read yet. Hurrah!
Mo Willems

Way cool! Mo Willems has a blog filled with doodles, letters from children, and art galore. I particularly like the Kung-Fu pigeons and the suggestion for a new Pigeon title.
Thanks to A Fuse #8 Production for the link.
The Monster in the Backpack
The Monster in the Backpack by Lisa Moser, illustrated by Noah Z. Jones.
Annie just got a beautiful new backpack with pink and blue flowers. But an unexpected surprise came along, a little orange monster. The monster eats Annie’s lunch, except for the carrots, puts gum in one of her boots, and rips up her homework. Annie is very annoyed, but by the end of the day, she realizes that what she has in her backpack is actually very special and something that she could never get rid of.
With this unique premise for a beginning chapter book, the book is a lot of fun. The monster is incredibly cute and nonthreatening. Readers will giggle at his antics that drive Annie crazy. The book leaves everyone wishing for a monster in their backpack too.
Recommended as a beginning reader with a great sense of fun. Beginning readers in first and second grade are sure to enjoy it.
Pixie stix kids pix
pixie stix kids pix is a great blog from Kristen McLean, author of children’s books and Executive Director of The Association of Booksellers for Children. Her site is filled with book reviews that are rated on a 10 point scale. It is great to get the perspective from the bookselling industry.
What Happened to Cass McBride?
What Happened to Cass McBride? by Gail Giles.
Where do I start to tell you how wonderful this novel is? Perhaps with the skill of the writing that manages to create a breakneck speed buts stays firmly in control of the plot points and horror. Perhaps with the fantastic characterizations that slowly reveal what is lacking in these teenage lives. Perhaps with the simple fact that it is Gail Giles and we know to expect great quality fiction from her. Or perhaps with the way that this book with enter your psyche and stay with you whether you are reading it right then or not.
It is the story of Cass McBride, a perfect daughter to an imperfect father, who strives to do her best in all things but can’t help being a little bit catty. When a loser asks her out, she nicely says no, but then writes a horrible note about him to her friend. The boy reads the note and later that day commits suicide. The boy’s older brother blames Cass for his death and kidnaps her, trapping her in a crate buried beneath the ground. And there is where all of the characters reveal more and more of themselves until the tension finally breaks.
The book is riveting with a pace that matches the frenzy of the older brother but controlled and forceful like Cass herself. It moves from a book about the search for Cass to a character study of two teens who couldn’t be more different and more the same. The writing is accessible and clear, helping the pace of the book stay zippy and the tension build to almost unbearable levels.
Recommend this to every teen out there. It is a creepy, fast-paced thriller of a novel. It will be one of those books that is devoured and then shared with friends. Read it, enjoy it and then pass it on.
On the Night You Were Born
On the Night You Were Born by Nancy Tillman.
I am not a fan of most books that tell children about the day/night they were born and how special it was. They tend to be overly sweet and to not capture the real amazing magic of birth. So it wasn’t until I saw this book on several lists from independent booksellers as a top pick that I decided to take a look at it.
It turns out that all of those independent booksellers are right. This is a magical book with appeal to parents and children alike. Filled with evocative paintings that create a mood of quiet amazement, the text tells children not of the fact that they were born, but about how unique and special they are.
I shared this one in bed with my five-year-old son. At the beginning of the book, it says ” There had never been anyone like you… ever in the world.” He turned to me with a look of such wonder on his face and whispered, “Never?” It was a moment of pure connection with the wonder of himself, a moment that every child should have.
Take this one home to your little one or recommend it to families who adore reading bedtime stories. It is one to be shared quietly and lovingly in parent-child pairs. It would also make a fabulous gift for new babies or young children of any age.