At Night

At Night by Jonathan Bean.

This small and charming picture book offers a look at a long night when a small girl cannot fall asleep.  Her entire family sleeps around her, but she can’t sleep until she follows a breeze from her window, up the stairs up to the roof of her urban building.  Up on the roof, under her blanket and in a chair, she happily falls asleep.  Her mother joins her there, looking out at the night with a cup of coffee.

This book is simply lovely.  The illustrations are an integral part of the storytelling here.  When the child can’t sleep, the illustrations are boxed in by black lines with only a few images opening to the complete page.  Once she reaches the roof, the pages open to broad expanses so that the reader feels the sense of relief and space and even breezes along with her. 

The illustrations in the book have the feel of a Sendak to me in their color and style.  There is that feeling of home but a sense that anything could happen deep in the art.  The text is short, clear and crisp until she reaches the roof where the words and ideas expand along with the vista. 

This is a wonderful book that should be read to every child heading for bed.  It is a gem that I hope stays with families and libraries a long, long time.  Lovely.

Lissy's Friends

Lissy’s Friends by Grace Lin.

I am a great fan of Lin’s.  She manages to do short, friendly picture books with a uniquely Asian perspective and universal appeal.

In this book, Lissy has moved to a new school.  No one is friendly with her at all.  She begins to build her own friends out of origami so she will never be alone again.  Her mother continues to push her to play with the other children, and Lissy heads out to the playground with all of her origami friends.  But when she pushes them on the merry-go-round, they fly away in the breeze.  Lissy is heart-broken until she finds that her paper friends have led her to some real ones.

The book is filled with Lin’s characteristic illustrations where the sky is filled with swirls, and patterns cover the world.  It creates a vivid and inviting setting for her characters.  The language is accessible for children and they will recognize the struggle to make new friends and be thrilled with the use of origami as a bridge to friendship. 

Recommended for classes doing origami or as a read aloud when new students join a class.  But families should not save it until then.  It is a very nice book to share with children who are preschoolers through Kindergarten. 

Quills Finalists

The finalists for the Quills have been announced.  Each category will have a single winner decided by a board of 6,000 booksellers and librarians.  The category winners will be announced in mid-September.  Then the public will get the chance to vote for the overall winner of all categories.

Of course the categories of interest to me are the ones for children and teens.  Here are the lists of nominees:

Children’s Picture Books

The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon by Mini Grey

Fancy Nancy and the Posh Puppy by Jane O’Connor

Flotsam by David Wiesner (My top pick!)

Orange Pear Apple Bear
by Emily Gravett (My second to the top pick)

Owen & Mzee: The Language of Friendship by Isabella Hatkoff

Children’s Chapter/Middle Grade

Clementine by Sara Pennypacker (YES!)

Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney (one of my son’s favorites of the year)

The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick (one of my favorites of the year, and my top pick)

Pick Me Up by Jeremy Leslie

The Titan’s Curse by Rick Riordan

Young Adult/Teen

American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang (YES!)

The Green Glass Sea by Ellen Klages

Incantation by Alice Hoffman (one of my favorites of last year)

Life as We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Sold by Patricia McCormick (my top pick)

It’s a very nice selection of great books.  What are your favorites?

The Twilight Saga

Stephanie Meyer’s Twilight series has a new look for its website.  Check out Meyer on ABC’s Good Morning America too.

VOYA Nonfiction Honors

VOYA has put some of its August 2007 issue’s content online.  One that you must take a look at is their Nonfiction Honor List for 2006.  Nonfiction is one of the areas that I feel very uncomfortable reviewing unless it is poetry or something that I am familiar with.  So often nonfiction is about things that I am just discovering, that I feel I can’t really check for how accurate it is.  Hence my love of lists like this.

VOYA only does middle school and up, so remember many of these may be edgy and very teen oriented. 

Note:  This is a pdf file, so patience may be required while it loads.

And the Train Goes…



And the Train Goes…
  by William Bee.

This picture book is filled with the noises of a train station, from the ticking of the station clock to the call of the station master to the whistle of the train.  The entire text works together with a subtle rhythm of life and action combined with a style both vintage and quirky.  Turning the pages takes readers down the length of the train, seeing soldiers on parade, school children, businessmen, and chefs.  Each group of people matches the style of the train car they are on, creating a vibrant tableau of color and faces. 

Add this to the large collection of books on trains, but realize that this is a real winner of a read aloud.  It would be my first choice for train read aloud due to its large and bright art and the evocative text. 

Framed

Framed by Frank Cottrell Boyce

Dylan is the only boy in the Welsh village where his family owns the garage.  There is no chance to play football anymore now that his last male classmate has left.  The only claim to fame the village has is that it has the lowest crime rate in Britain, and that is attributed to the fact that it also has the highest rainfall.  But things are about to change in the quiet village, because of the secret at the top of the mountain.  Who would have thought that a single secret could change people entirely, create color where there was none, inspire new endeavors, and rock the comfortable but dull world that Dylan lives in?

This book is pure magic, just as Cottrell Boyce’s first book, Millions was.  The entire book has a warmth, a coziness, but also has plenty of mystery and magic.  The language of the book welcomes readers in, shares a laugh, and moves gently onward.  The characterizations of everyone is deep and meaningful, down to even the people of the village who play very secondary roles.  Everyone has an aspect of their personality that is surprising but rings very true. 

I loved the inclusion of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles as the cusp of the story. But best of all was the message that art really does change lives, in ways that those who love it most may not understand.  The inspiration characters took from art is what makes this book sing.  Gloriously.

I listened to the book on CD, and the narrator, Jason Hughes, is extraordinary.  I would never have been able to read the book with a Welsh accent in my head, and it was a treat to listen to it.  Some narrators simply read the book, but Hughes has added a bit of himself into it and brought the entire story to life.  Lovely.

Highly recommended for children ages 10-13, this book will welcome them to a world they have never been before but will recognize immediately.

My Anniversary!

Happy Blogversary to me! 

KidsLit is officially 4 years old this week.  And how the time has flown. 

I was one of the first children’s lit focused blogs online when I started, and am so thrilled to be part of the larger children’s literature blogging community that is now online.  It’s been amazing to watch, applaud, and be a small part of it.

Thank you all for reading, commenting and supporting me.  It has been a lot of fun to share books with all of you over the years.

Here’s to many more years of book blogging to come!

Adventures of Cow, Too

Adventures of Cow, Too by Lori Korchek, photographs by Marshall Taylor.

If you read and enjoyed Adventures of Cow, you will certainly enjoy this one. 

Cow is the clueless protagonist of the story where he is sent to the grocery store.  On the way and at the store, he misnames all sorts of things.  Calling a school bus, a train, and limes apples.  Each page has just one sentence on it, and preschoolers will enjoy the pure silliness of the stories as well as the quick pace.  There is no waiting around for the jokes in this little book, they happen on almost every page. 

Looking for a book that will keep restless little bodies seated?  Well, this is it.  I would recommend having it on hand to be the final book in a story time.  Even better, it is short enough that you could make it a closing tradition for a class story time.  Children will appreciate the humor more each reading.