Cybil Winners Announced Today

Make sure you check out the winners of the Cybils today, 2:00 pm central time.  I am very thrilled to have been a judge on the YA committee.  We picked a great book as the winner and did it with a real shared spirit of love of books and appreciation for teen readers.  It was so much fun to participate! 

If you didn’t sign up to be on a nominating committee or judging committee this year, make sure you join us next year.  And if you don’t blog, this is a great reason to get started.  🙂

Readergirlz

A gorgeous website is at the heart of a new online book community, readergirlz.  Starting on March 1st, they will be featuring one book a month with at least one strong female character.  Hurrah! 

The divas behind this are four authors of teen books, Dia Calhoun, Janet Lee Carey, Lorie Ann Grover, and Justina Chen Headley.  Visit their MySpace page and leave comments. 

This is a great idea by a great group of strong females.  My only request is an RSS feed for new content. 

Being

I love it when a publisher goes all out and really builds a site around a book.  This is especially effective for teen readers.  The new thriller by Kevin Brooks has gotten this treatment with a debate, large excerpts from the book, news, and promises of more content as the March release date gets closer. 

Whose Chick Are You?

Whose Chick Are You? by Nancy Tafuri.

I am a fan of Tafuri who manages to create picture books for the smallest children without being saccharine or condescending.  This book is about a gray chick that doesn’t seem to belong to anyone.  But the chick’s parents know and come immediately to find him once he calls. 

The text is large and simple, filled with animal noises that toddlers and preschoolers will love to help make.  The illustrations are large, bright, and child-friendly. 

Perfect for a read aloud for spring, ducks, birds, and many more.  Share this with a group of toddlers or with a beginning preschool class.  Tafuri scores another “croo” with this one.

Adventures of Max and Pinky: Best Buds

The Adventures of Max and Pinky:  Best Buds by Maxwell Eaton III.

Looking for a book that is pure silly fun?  Well, this is it.  Max is best friends with Pinky the pig.  They both love marshmallows but not sharing them.  They love doing things together, but sometimes do things separately.  And on Saturdays they have an adventure together.  When Max can’t find Pinky on Saturday, he searches for him everywhere until a polar bear reminds him where Pinky is sure to be. 

This is a silly, silly book.  There are running gags about marshmallows, great asides from animals in the background, and wonderfully funny scenarios like Pinky being abducted by evil bunny rabbits. 

This is a lap book because of the silliness and the asides, as well as the fact that children will want to hear it again and again.  The text is very brief but the humor makes it most appropriate for kindergarteners and older who will appreciate it most.

The Invention of Hugo Cabret



The Invention of Hugo Cabret
by Brian Selznick.

Let me add my voice to the large chorus of appreciative sounds from readers all over.  This book is something special.  Hugo is a boy who lives in the walls of a train station in Paris.  He keeps the intricate clocks of the station running ever since his father died and his uncle disappeared.  He can’t cash his uncle’s paychecks, so he is forced to steal from throughout the train station.  Hugo’s world revolves around an automaton that his father discovered in a museum attic.  Hugo discovered the automaton half-destroyed after a fire at the museum that killed his father.  Hugo devotes all of his extra time restoring the automaton to see what message it holds.  As he transverses the station, he encounters a grumpy elderly toy seller who creates intricate toys and a girl his age who loves books and wants to know Hugo’s secrets. 

This book is an amazing combination of art and story, where the art sets a tone and tells a large part of the story.  The art is black-and-white and done with such skill that it is very lifelike and beautiful.  The art is as much a part of the story as the words themselves.  It is impossible to think about this book without the illustrations which are done so vividly that my memory has changed them into full color almost photographic images.

The book is large at over 500 pages, but reads very quickly and is made accessible by the amount of white space as well as the illustrations which are primarily done on double-page spreads.  The language of the writing is fresh and makes the reading quick and fun.  Readers will be caught up in the mystery of the automaton and his creator. 

The entire book, story and images, are a complete work of art.  I look forward to more books by this author with high hopes that he will continue to illustrate them this richly.  Recommended for readers who enjoy graphic novels, boys who may not usually warm to full novels, and children who still want some pictures in their books.  But also warmly recommended to all readers of all ages who want a glimpse of art combined with some magic all its own.

Surrender

Surrender by Sonya Hartnett.

If you are looking for a dark, deep, disturbing read for teens, look no further.  Hartnett’s latest is a psychological study of a dying boy.  Gabriel is slowly dying and remembers his strange childhood growing up in a small town but being shunned by the majority of the community because of his strange parents.  He lives under their cruelty and does not find freedom until he meets Finnegan, who volunteers to be the bad boy while Gabriel strives to be perfectly good.  Finnegan is a wild boy, who has no family and lives on his own in the forest.  He begins to exact revenge on people who are mean to Gabriel and over the course of several years burns down buildings, sets fire to cars, and eliminates the welcome sign to the town.  He is never caught even though the police and Gabriel’s father, the town attorney, devote years to it.  The relationship between the two boys is always a struggle, and never a real friendship though they are like two sides of a coin.

Psychological thrillers are always hard to review, because they rely on the surprises and twists to be thrillers.  I don’t want to reveal too much about the plot and lose some of the tortured thrill of the novel.  The book reveals its secrets slowly and revels in the twists and turns of the plot.  It is a book that drags the reader into a web and leaves them there, fighting to figure out what is really happening.  I can’t think of another book that does this so very well.

I do need to mention that the writing is exquisite.  Hartnett uses words to hide, reveal, puzzle and shock.  She is a master.  Her art moves this book to another level.  It is a horror of a novel, but written with beauty and art.  A true conundrum that really functions well. 

Recommend this to good readers who enjoy horror or thrillers.  The cover is wonderful and will lead the right readers straight to the book. 

Babies in the Bayou



Babies in the Bayou
by Jim Arnosky.

This book is filled with evocative illustrations of bayou animals.  The illustrations are deep colored, naturally accurate, and reveal the hidden life of the bayou.  They are combined with text that is simple but also has hidden depths.  Together the words and pictures form a perfect match that will be welcoming to small children.

I appreciated the fact that the book comes full circle, demonstrating the cycle of nature in a subtle way without being heavy handed.  I also enjoyed the various perspectives of the illustrations which often reveal the relationship between two species without words. 

The book is simply lovely.  Don’t save it for a swamp unit, instead share this one whenever you do a story time on alligators, ducks, or turtles.  It is too lovely not to share.

Duck Duck Goose

Duck Duck Goose by Tad Hills.

Oh what joy!  A new Duck & Goose book!  I was very partial to the first in the series, and consider this a wonderful sequel.  Duck and Goose are still friends, but when a new duckling, Thistle, is added to the mix the threesome just doesn’t work.  Goose tries to play along with Thistle’s competitive games, but eventually heads off alone to look for butterflies.  It isn’t much later that Duck also gives up playing with Thistle and looks for Goose.  In the end, the two of them discover that they enjoy quiet times together after Thistle wins one last game.

The illustrations are as nice as the first, switching between white backgrounds and lush greenery.  The wording is equally child-friendly and made to read aloud. 

Perfect for a preschool storytime on ducks or friendship, I would also use this for a filler in any story time at all.  It is a winner!