School Library Journal – Bojunga Wins Lindgren Award
Brazilian author, Lygia Bojunga, has won the 2004 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award.
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Great and Terrible Beauty
A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray (0-385-73028-4)
This was exactly the sort of book I enjoyed as a teen with its mix of Victorian boarding school and magic. Gemma’s mother kills herself in India and Gemma is sent to Spence in England, a finishing school for young ladies. When Gemma’s mother died, she had a vision that showed her how it happened and she saw a terrible dark shadow in the room with her mother. Gemma continues to have visions and a man has followed her to Spence telling her to stop having the visions. Can Gemma get control of her visions?
The cover of the book will help sell it to teen girls, though it doesn’t allude to the magic within. Bray has created a very vivid Gothic world filled with woods, lakes, and Gypsies. She populated it with a group of girls who all have distinct, fully-rendered personalities. And best of all, she added magic and mystery, creating a wonderful heady cocktail that is impossible to put down.
Anholts
Catherine and Laurence Anholt
Official site for this writer and artist team that has created seventy books for all ages of kids.
New Zoom Site
ZOOM
PBS launched a new version of the Zoom website for the debut of the newest season of the long-running but still-popular kids’ show. Zoom is a show that does book reviews, jokes, science and math projects, and much more. It even has the line in its theme song, “If you like what you see, turn off your TV, and do it!” Definitely a show for kids that librarians can appreciate.
Edgar Award Winners
HoustonChronicle.com – `Resurrection Men’ wins Edgar for best novel of ’03
Took awhile searching to find the Edgar Allen Poe Award winners in the young adult and juvenile categories. Seems like everyone is interested in only the adult book winners. But here are the juvenile winners!
· Best young adult: Acceleration by Graham McNamee (Wendy Lamb Books/Random House Children’s Books).
· Best juvenile: Bernie Magruder and the Bats in the Belfry by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor (Simon & Schuster/Atheneum).
Jane Addams Awards
The Jane Addams Awards were announced on April 28th. The awards are given to books published in the previous year in the U.S. that “effectively address themes or topics that promote peace, social justice, world community, and/or equality of the sexes and all races.”
The winner in the picture book category is Harvesting Hope: The Story of Cesar Chavez, written by Kathleen Krull.
The winnter in the category for older children is Out of Bounds: Seven Stories of Conflict and Hope by Beverley Naidoo.
Carnegie Shortlist Announced
BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Arts | Mark Haddon up for Carnegie medal
This article also lists the other nominees on the shortlist for the Carnegie. They are:
Fire Eaters by David Almond
Gathering Light by Jennifer Donnelly
Garbage King by Elizabeth Laird
Private Peaceful by Michael Morpurgo
Sisterland by Linda Newbury
Off to WAPL
I’m heading off to the WAPL (Wisconsin Association of Public Libraries) Conference for the next couple of days, so don’t expect any posts until this weekend.
Inside Grandad
Inside Grandad by Peter Dickinson (0-385-74641-5)
Peter Dickinson has been one of the authors I always read since he wrote Eva. With this book, he writes in a completely different way, but infuses it all with the magic always present in his writing.
Inside Grandad follows Gavin who has always been taken care of by his grandfather while his mother and gran work. Grandad builds model boats, takes Gavin fishing, and both of them enjoy their near-silent time together. Then Grandad has a stroke and everything changes. Gavin feels an enormous pressure to help Grandad, feeling that he is the only one who can reach him.
This one is certainly appropriate for classroom use, especially with its depth that will generate discussion and its short length. The cover matches the story beautifully, but it may take some pushing to get it into the hands of kids.