Pete Hautman

Pete Hautman, author of Godless and Invisible, has a new book coming out in May, entitled Rash.  He also has an Amazon author blog that is worth checking out. 

School Library Journal

Imagine my surprise as I was happily paging through my new volume of School Library Journal and found my KidsLit blog featured as part of the “Blograrian” Book Reviews column! The kind words said about my blog literally made me do a happy dance around my office. What a wonderful way to perk up a Wednesday lunch hour. I am still grinning ear to ear and probably will be all day long.
So welcome to any of you who visiting because of the SLJ article. Hope you find lots of love of children’s literature and the children themselves.

School Librarian Blog

School Librarian in Action is a very active blog from a school librarian in Manila, Philippines.  She wirtes essays from her own perspective as a Filipino librarian, but many of them translate well to school librarianship world wide. 

YALit

Thank you to Tangognat for posting about a very cool new service! 

YALit.com has a list of upcoming teen book releases.  And best of all, there is an RSS feed to subscribe to!  Right now the release dates frun from February through June.  Lots of new books to look forward to.

Tana Hoban Dies

Tana Hoban has died at age 88.  Her obituary is in the New York Times.  She has written, designed and illustrated over 100 books for children, and she did it with photographs that were vivid even when black and white.  Her books are marvelous for sharing with very young children, because they get kids talking and involved in books.  Consider them especially for children who don’t want to sit through stories, because they are concept books of the finest quality. 

Super Fly Guy

Super Fly Guy by Tedd Arnold.

This is the sequel to the Geisel Honor Book, Hi Fly Guy.  It contains the trademark Tedd Arnold humor and style.  In this book, Fly Guy goes to school with Buzz and discovers the lunch room.  He makes friends with the lunch lady by saying her name, Roz.  But the principal is not happy and when he discovers Fly Guy, he fires Roz for allowing the lunchroom to have flies.  They hire Miss Muzzle who can’t cook at all, burning everything into piles of brown glop.  But Buzz and Fly Guy come to the rescue and find a way to get rid of Miss Muzzle and get Roz back. 

I think I enjoyed this sequel more than the first book.  It has a great rhythm to the writing, the story is funny, and the book just carries the reader along.  This kind of momentum in an early reader is wonderful to see, because early readers need books that will grab them and make them want to see what will happen next.  The humor is also crucial because then the reader gets the joke and understands that the book is there for their enjoyment.  And perhaps best of all, this is a very boy-friendly book with gross humor that will not bother the adults. 

This is a necessary purchase.  If you are a librarian, get a copy for your library.  If you are a parent, find this at your library.  And make sure you read the first book too!

Super Fly Guy is being released in March.

Do Not Open This Book!

Do Not Open This Book! by Michaela Muntean, illustrated by Pascal Lemaitre.

As a child, I always adored The Monster at the End of This Book with Grover frantically trying to stop the reader from turning the pages.  Do Not Open This Book has the same feel as a little pig tries to stop the reader from reading the book because it isn’t finished.  He can’t figure out what kind of story to write, scary or bedtime.  He does try hanging word after word, but then the reader turns the page and scrambles them around.  Some of the jokes are straight out of the Grover book with the pig taking a Very Heavy Rock and putting it in the way of page turning. 

That said, this book does cause laughs of its own.  It contains a nasty letter to get the reader to leave where for every blank, you put in your own name.  This caused a lot of laughter with my two sons, and we had to read it over several times using each person’s name in the blanks. 

And on top of it, the book is really about the power of words, the writing process, and humor.  It is a great book to read one-on-one with an emerging reader.  They will be able to see how words go together to form sentences, gain clues to words from the way they are written, and have fun doing it. 

Sir Thursday

Sir Thursday by Garth Nix is the fourth book in the Keys to the Kingdom series.   Arthur is intent on heading out of the House and returning to the secondary realms to check on his family before he tries to find the next part of the Will and win the next Key.  But that is not to be.  Instead he is unable to return to his home because someone else is already there, pretending to be him.  Luckily, his friend Leaf can return and do battle with the strange creation that is impersonating him.  While he is trapped in the House, Arthur is drafted into the Glorious Army of the Architect under the command of Sir Thursday.  Arthur has to survive not only basic training, but a suicide run led by Sir Thursday himself. 

If all of this sounds a little confusing, that is part of the charm of this series.  The books are set in the House where the Universe is run.  Arthur is a reluctant hero who has been chosen as the Rightful Heir.  Because his own world and his family are threatened, he is forced to continue to battle through the Morrow Days one by one, putting the Will back together and gathering the Keys.  To my great joy, Arthur is accompanied now by two great girls who face battles themselves: Leaf and Suzy Blue.  The child characters are vividly rendered and they are surrounded by complex characters in the House.  The entire series should be read from the first, Mister Monday on through.  No skipping around, or you will miss some of the fun!

This book is recommended primarily for those who have read the first three.  But it could serve as a way for new people to get hooked on the series, wondering what they have missed.  It is not for reluctant readers or squeamish ones.  This is a dark series filled with humor and action.
Released March 2006.

Can You See What I See?



Can You See What I See: Seymour Makes New Friends
by Walter Wick. 

Walter Wick does it again with another charming Seymour book.  This illustrator of the continually popular I Spy series has created a series of his own that is for smaller children.  The illustrations are similar but more open with the same clear but cluttered photos.  Seymour is a little man made of wooden beads who along with the readers searches for items amid the pictures.   There is a slight storyline, but the most important part is finding the items and the fun of the search. 

This is not a book for storytimes, but one to curl up with a child and enjoy together.   Enjoy this one and search out the other Seymour books too.