Debbie Harry Sings in French

Debbie Harry Sings in French by Meagan Brothers.

Johnny lives an edgy life filled with Goth outfits, lots of drinking, and plenty of music.  When he discovers Debbie Harry, he finds someone who inspires him with her toughness and beauty.  Someone he would love to be like.  Johnny isn’t gay, but he’s not sure what he is exactly.  As Johnny copes with other issues in his life, including an overdose, he finds himself grappling with labels, love and sobriety.

Brothers has created a book that embodies the quest of teens who are different than those around them.  Johnny’s search for himself is told not only in his sexuality but through his struggles with addiction and his troubles with his mother.  The book has a deft coolness and an addictive readability.  It will be devoured by teens who are outsiders in any way.

The characterizations are wonderfully done as well.  Johnny is a believable teen grappling with many issues as is his girlfriend Maria.  The adults in the story are also multidimensional and honestly portrayed.  It is refreshing to find an adult character who can handle sexuality issues with such grace as Johnny’s Uncle Sam. 

Highly recommended for any outsider.  This book takes on issues that I haven’t seen handled in teen fiction before.  It is groundbreaking yes, but written so naturally and easily that it doesn’t read that way.  Just as it should be.

Free Horton Hears a Who for Teachers

Kidthing is offering a free online version of Horton Hears a Who by Dr. Seuss where the book is read aloud online.  The book is free through March 31st for classroom use. 

L.A. Times Book Prize nominees announced

And the nominees for Young Adult Fiction are:

Sherman Alexie for “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian”

Geraldine McCaughrean for “The White Darkness”

Walter Dean Myers for “What They Found: Love on 145th Street”

Kenneth Oppel for“Darkwing”

Philip Reeve for “A Darkling Plain”

 

My favorites are the first two listed, but I haven’t read any of the others.  The first two are my among my favorite YA books of 2007.  Alexie’s novel is my #1 choice of the year.  It will be interesting to see what takes the prize.

Creative Play

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I think that any of us who are interested in books for children are also interested in children having childhoods rich in imagination.  NPR has an interesting piece on creative play for children and its importance in forming “executive function” such as self-regulation, cognitive flexibility and working memory.

The advice is common sense: children should be encouraged to play games where they dream, wish, pretend and invite.  Free play should be an integral part of their lives.  My youngest son has a way of pretending that he has done since he was tiny.  He whooshes around running, talking to himself and making loud explosive noises every so often.  He won’t tell any of us what he is doing, and we have learned to just enjoy his orbiting.  I wouldn’t rob him of that time where he is obviously in another world all his own for anything.  In fact, when teachers tell us that our sons are both daydreamers, I take it as a great compliment.  Means that I did something right.

How about you?  Any daydreaming children?  Any who have such rich imaginations that they don’t need anyone else around to have fun?  Tell us!

Reviews BY Teens for Teens

In the last few days, the Adbooks list has been discussing online resources where teens review books.  Because it can often be frustrating to try to figure out what teens in general enjoy without becoming stereotypical, I love these sites!  Here are my three favorites that were mentioned on the email list:

LYRE: Center for Literature for Young Readers from Youngstown State University offers the LYRE review which is filled with book reviews by high school students.  The Review is posted quarterly and features a mix of brand new titles and older ones.

NotRequiredReading.com also does reviews by high schoolers.  Their interface is more graphical and will probably appeal more to teens themselves.  They have different sections such as What’s Hot and Pageturners to draw you in.  The What’s Hot section does feature hot books in YA lit.

Teen Book Review is my final pick.  It is a book review blog written by 16-year-old Jocelyn.  She also has an active MySpace, a great blogroll, and does incredible interviews with authors.  Amazing!

Looky Here! Lookybook

Oo la la!  I adore the beta Lookybook site!  The site offers all sorts of children’s books that you can page through online!  And these are not books you have never heard of, they are top-of-the-line and recent children’s books.  The paging works seamlessly and smoothly with an intuitive interface, plus you can embed the Lookybooks onto your blog or website, even without registering for the site.

Registration gets you your own bookshelf, the ability to comment on books, and other bells and whistles. 

You can browse the books by highest rated and most looked at.  Here is an embedded book so you can see how it works:

 

http://www.lookybook.com/embed/1309-embed.swf

What do you think?

2007 Middle School Top Shelf Fiction from VOYA

VOYA does it again with a great array of fiction for middle-grade readers.  Some of my favorites from the year made the list, others are still patiently sitting in my to-be-read pile, and others are new to me.  What more could you want from a list?! 

Here are some of my favorites from the list:

Atherton by Patrick Carman.

Dragon Slippers by Jessica Day George.

Skulduggery Pleasant by Derek Landy.

A Drowned Maiden’s Hair by Laura Amy Schlitz.

 

See any of your favorites on the list? 

Writing for Children Not Child's Play

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A Milwaukee Journal article offers hope that finally people are realizing that there is an art to creating books for children!  Amazing!

Here are some of my favorite quotes, but it is worth reading it in full:

“Most people have a warm and fuzzy and kind of inaccurate idea of what children’s literature is,” says John Warren Stewig, director of the Center for Children’s Literature at Carthage College.

….

In fact, the best writers for children are masters of illusion. They labor for years over their manuscripts, cutting out unnecessary words, boiling down descriptions to the finest, clearest images and immersing themselves in the worlds of childhood to make their stories authentic.

My only quibble with the article is their final section where they say that Hugo Cabret is “stronger on the graphics than the prose, which is rather plain.”  Guess it goes to make their point that all children’s books are being held to standards by readers.

Picture Books, Seriously

The Associated Press has a wonderful article on the new trend of taking the art of children’s books seriously.  Children’s book illustrations are now being shown in museums, studied in art courses, and of course being purchased as investments.  I especially like the second page of the article where they tie children’s book illustrations to cultural and artistic movements of their times.