School Library Journal – ‘Pinkerton’ to Stay on Shelves
In Illinois, the Evanston Public Library Board has decided to retain Steven Kellogg’s Pinkerton, Behave!. A parent had ask it to be removed because there was a scene she felt was too scary for children.
Teen Site Pulled by Governor
eSchool News online
The Governor of South Dakota has shut down the teen section of the State Library’s website, because it had links to material that he believes is inappropriate for teens. The link in question is to Planned Parenthood, because the governor opposes abortion.
“”As a parent, I would be very disturbed to have my children connecting to any of these web sites that are found through the state web site at this time,” the governor said July 12 as links on the library’s Teen Center page began disappearing.”
Kate Greenaway Medal
The Kate Greenaway Medal
Shirley Hughes has been awarded the 2003 Kate Greenaway Medal for her book, Ella’s Big Chance. The Greenaway Medal from the UK is awarded for outstanding illustrations in children’s books.
Ned Vizzini
New York Press has a short Q&A with Ned Vizzini, author of the new teen novel, Be More Chill.
You can also visit Ned’s website which is mentioned in the Q&A.
Cornelia Funke
The Observer | Review | Push one off the cliff
A charming piece on author Cornelia Funke, who is releasing Dragon Rider in August here in the U.S.
My favorite quote from the interview comes at the end: “Funke is a champion of reading aloud. She describes words as being like ‘butterflies pressed between the pages – the voice releases them’.”
Via h20boro lib blog.
Science Games
BBC NEWS | Technology | Science Museum launches games
The London Science Museum is offering five games focusing on different types of science in the hopes of getting children interested in science. The games are for both PC and Mac and more titles are planned for later this year.
Narnia Movie News
NarniaWeb
NarniaWeb offers movie news plus a rumor mill. Today you can head there to see photos of the four lead actors who will play Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy.
Childhood in Children's Books
The Australian: Children’s fiction spins tale of wise patriarchs
Natasha Giardina has done a thesis on eight children’s novels published between 1900 and 1997. It includes well -known books like The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and examines how adults perceive childhood and how that perception has changed over the years.
“Despite those changes, some relationships between adult and child in fantasy fiction had changed little, even in modern stories such as Harry Potter, she said. “In particular, the figure of the white patriarch — the Merlin, Gandalf, Dumbledore figure — and the associated ideology that children should always trust the guidance of white patriarchs — has changed very little.”
Of the authors she looked at, Roald Dahl used children’s culture – games, rhymes, rituals and anti-adult mentality – “most overtly”, a factor she attributed to his success.
Phillip Pullman’s Northern Lights bucked the trend. She said it destroyed the idea that parents knew best or were always benevolent. It empowered children and showed they could cope on their own.”
Donnelly Wins Carnegie
Telegraph | News | American beats British writers to child book prize
Jennifer Donnelly has won the Carnegie Medal for children’s literature, beating out two very popular British books for the prize.