Fabulous Fiction

Fabulous Fiction opens with “Eye of the Tiger” playing and lots of flashy graphics. The site is for kids who dislike reading, offering suggestions in different genres. Unfortunately, each genre features only two well-known authors, but the message boards are active and filled with additional suggestions. Visitors are also able to write reviews of books.

Label Those Dirty Books

These bookmarks would offer a warning is an article about a Guilderland Public Library trustee who wants teen materials with racy content to be labeled with a bright orange sticker that says “PG rec.” or Parental Guidance recommended.
For my teen section, I can only imagine how many orange stickers I would need and how few of the books would be left unadorned! I think that the library director in the article makes great points about sexual content not being the only concern people may have as well as the lack of complaints she has gotten about the collection.
This is one of those horrible things that can suddenly happen in a public library when an adult feels that kids need to be protected from their own books. I only hope that the library can stay strong in the face of this and that more sensible board members and community residents will step forward and fight.

Going to Prom

Sideways takes on prom — from misfits to mosh pits is a look at three of the recent YA novels that deal with prom: Prom by Laurie Halse Anderson, 24 Girls in 7 Days by Alex Bradley, and Mosh Pit by Kristyn Dunnion.

CCBC Graphic Novel Booklist

The CCBC now offers a Booklist of Graphic Novels for Children’s and Young Adult Library Collections. The bibliography is for building graphic novel collections in both public and school libraries. I appreciate the fact that there is a lengthy list of titles for elementary age kids as well as lists for middle school and high school age.

Artemis Fowl Article

Fairies, farting fire Irish author’s imagination – Yahoo! News is a nice look at how Colfer started his Artemis Fowl series and the fame it has brought him.
“Eoin Colfer planned to write a small picture book about a lost leprechaun, but it became a fast-paced adventure about a child criminal mastermind, a fairy police squad and a farting dwarf.”

Boys and Books

The Christian Science Monitor also has a well-rounded article on Matching boys with books. It includes a list of recommended books for high school boys as well as an in-depth look at why boys enjoy reading less than girls. Very interesting.

Blogging Teens

The Christian Science Monitor has an article on teens and blogging: Teens: It’s a diary. Adults: It’s unsafe.
It contains some interesting perspectives on the dangers of blogging for teens as well as some impressive statistics:
“Of the world’s approximately 38 million “blogs,” or self-published Web pages, 52.8 percent belong to those age 19 or younger, according to survey data from the Perseus Co., a maker of Web-surveying software. By year’s end, the firm expects the total number of blogs on the Web to reach 53.4 million.
Meanwhile, Perseus says the typical blogger continues to be a teenage girl who uses the medium primarily to communicate with five to 10 friends.”

Early Reading

The North Shore News has a great article about a new emphasis on early literacy by Vancouver Public Libraries. It focuses on the role of public librarians going beyond that of doing storytimes and more into teaching parents how to expose thier babies to books and language. Sounds wonderful to me!
Here is my favorite paragraph from the article:
“The interest and enthusiasm expressed both by the librarians I interviewed, and others that I have spoken to while visiting libraries, is a testament to the excellent resource we have in our community libraries. In an age where so much information comes at us electronically, it is remarkable that the connection our new babies and preschool aged children are hungry for – talking, rhyming, reading – is being offered to us by highly skilled professionals who are more than eager to help our children succeed in life.”

Gobble Gobble Slip Slop

gobble.gif
I shared Gobble Gobble Slip Slop: A Tale of a Very Greedy Cat by Meilo So with preschoolers and kindergarteners this week. They adored this picture book based on a folktale from India. The greedy cat eats his friend the parrot, five hundred cakes, and then goes on to eat and eat and eat more and more people and animals. The kids gasped with amazement at each new eating feat, and then the ending had them completely spellbound and moaning.
Best of all, this is one of those folktale versions that actually works as a read-aloud for this age group. Often folktales can be too wordy to share easily, but this one really works. The pictures pay homage to India and the cat with red feathers flying in the air really grabbed them. I used it in a storytime about eating, but it could be used with all sorts of animal themes, folktales, or silly stories to make you groan!