Secrets in the Fire

SECRETS IN THE FIRE by Henning Mankell (1-55037-801-5)
This amazing book based on a true story has a breathtaking heroine named Sofia who lives war-torn Mozambique. Her village is attacked, her father killed, and she flees with her mother, sister and younger brother. After travelling on foot for an amazing distance, they reach a new village where people driven from other destroyed villages have come together. This new village is surrounded by landmines, and people are told to keep to the paths. Sofia is playing a game and steps off the path and onto a mine. The rest of the story tells how she survives against all odds.
The cover of the book grows more and more evocative as you read the book. The deep oranges, purples and browns grow richer and Sofia’s eyes more and more wise.
This gem of a book will have to be brought to kids’ attention. Give it to children who like true stories, adventures, and tragedy. Those girls looking for books that are sad and have lots of emotional tugs will really enjoy this one.

No Name Calling

no name calling week :: 2004
I found out about No Name Calling Week a little late to do anything at the library, but it would be a great chance to display some of those books for elementary kids that feature bullies and name calling. Our local school seems to be doing a lot of activities around this this year, so I will have to plan a display at the library next year, or a bibliography that the teachers can hand out.

Imagine!

Guardian Unlimited Books: Georgia Byng: books to feed the imagination
Ten books that inspire imagination from Georgia Byng, author of the Molly Moon books.
Via Metafilter.

First Annual Gryphon Award

Center for Children’s Books: 2004 Gryphon Award
Douglas Florian has been announced as the winner of the first Gryphon Award for Children’s Literature for BOW WOW MEOW MEOW, a poetry book. The Gryphon Award focuses on transitional reading.

Hyperlexia, A Rare Reading Disorder

Studying Hyperlexia May Unlock How Brains Read (washingtonpost.com)
Fascinating article on hyperlexia, a disorder where children begin reading spontaneously at a very young age. This is different from being a gifted or early reader, since other delays are associated with hyperlexia.
“Understanding hyperlexia may also help explain how normal brains accomplish the feat of reading. Unlike seeing and hearing, skills acquired through evolution, reading is usually not acquired naturally. Humans have been reading for only a few thousand years, and the pressure for everyone to become good readers has become intense in only the past couple of centuries.
Reading involves a complex series of brain activities: Visual centers must first perceive variable, tiny features of printed symbols on a page, then those changes must be mentally converted into strings of sound, and finally the patterns of sound must be interpreted by language centers in the brain to register their meaning.”

Graphic Novels Article

Sun-Sentinel: Palm Beach County news
“Will Heckman, the school’s media specialist, thinks the school’s growing graphic novel collection is keeping kids out of trouble and hooking them on reading, albeit in a nontraditional format. In its first year, almost half the 600-book collection is usually checked out of the library. Acquired with about $5,000 from the Palm Beach County School District, the books account for 1 percent of the library’s collection but 50 percent of the books students check out.”
Via LISNews.

The Value of School Libraries

The Miami Herald — FCAT scores up at schools with good libraries, study shows
“In her Making the Grade report, Education Professor Donna Baumbach found FCAT scores were 20 percent higher in 2000-01 at high schools with at least one full-time professional librarian and one full-time assistant. Among elementary schools, the same level of staffing meant a 9 percent improvement.
And yet, the amount of state money provided to libraries is ”pitiful,” Baumbach said. Since 2000, the state account earmarked for library materials has remained at $15 million, despite an overall growth in student population. This year, Gov. Jeb Bush’s proposed budget would keep it at $15 million, while the state Department of Education is asking for $18 million.”
Via LISNews.

Teen Ink

Teen Ink: A Magazine and Book Series Written by Teens for Teens
VOYA recommended this site in their February issue. Teen Ink is a monthly magazine where all the writing is done by teens. Teens can submit articles, art, photos, reviews, and poems to the magazine.

The First Part Last

THE FIRST PART LAST by Angela Johnson (0-689-84922-2)
With all of the awards this book has won, including the Coretta Scott King and the Printz, it is not surprising to hear that I loved it!
This is the story of Bobby, who decides to keep his baby daughter Feather rather than giving her up for adoption. It is written with poetry and strength. Images here will stay with you long after you finish. Bravery is captured here, as is shame and heartbreak and hope. It is simply a lovely book.
The cover is one of the best I have seen and will help the book circulate well. Teens of both sexes will enjoy it immensely. And even better than enjoying it, they will come away with insight that they did not have.
Wonderful! My only regret is that I cannot read it for the first time all over again.