Sunday, January 21, 2007
Something Fun While You Wait...
While you wait for the book awards to be announced tomorrow, you might pass the time by checking out this amusing post about the Golden Globe Awards at Suburban Turmoil called THE GOLDEN GLOBES: A RECAP.
Saturday, January 20, 2007
CYBILS ARTICLE
I wrote an article for CHOICE LITERACY, sharing some of my thoughts on the CYBILS picture book short list and the CYBILS experience. It is here if you 'd like to read it.
Runaway (Thrownaway?) Mock Newbery Winner
MotherReader is famous for her loathing of "that bunny book." Now she's put that abhorrence to good work in Tulane Readers Theater. She has taken the idea of Mock Newbery Awards to a new level. In fact, we may have to name the new award the "Raspberry Awards: Pbbbbbbbbtt!"
I used to kinda like the story of Ed's heart warming up over the course of +/- 20 years of hardship. It's sort of the slow-motion version of the Grinch's heart growing two sizes. But now...well, when you look at it that way...
I used to kinda like the story of Ed's heart warming up over the course of +/- 20 years of hardship. It's sort of the slow-motion version of the Grinch's heart growing two sizes. But now...well, when you look at it that way...
Newbery Hope #1--A TRUE AND FAITHFUL NARRATIVE
Well, the more I see what everyone else is picking for the Newbery, the more my top pick seems a bit selfish, and definitely very "yesterday." I admit, I haven't kept up with my Newbery reading in the last month or so, first because of my immersion in graphic novels for the Cybils nominations, and now because I am trapped in Kars, Turkey in a nonstop snowstorm and social, political, and religious upheaval (SNOW by Orhan Pamuk, for book club).
Why do I love A TRUE AND FAITHFUL NARRATIVE?
•strong female character who is a reader and writer, and who does not compromise her talents and her hopes for her future even when it means giving up her dream of owning a bookstore
•detailed sense of time and place in history that doesn't overwhelm the storyline
•reader gets to watch over Meg's shoulder as she struggles with her writing
•timeless message about overcoming cultural prejudices by learning about other cultures
Why do I love A TRUE AND FAITHFUL NARRATIVE?
•strong female character who is a reader and writer, and who does not compromise her talents and her hopes for her future even when it means giving up her dream of owning a bookstore
•detailed sense of time and place in history that doesn't overwhelm the storyline
•reader gets to watch over Meg's shoulder as she struggles with her writing
•timeless message about overcoming cultural prejudices by learning about other cultures
Friday, January 19, 2007
POETRY FRIDAY!
Poetry Friday! Poetry Books That Are Fun to Read Aloud
Early in my career, I taught at a school that had doughnuts and coffee for teachers each Friday in the teachers' lounge. It was a great way to start our Fridays--chatting with colleagues in a relaxed setting. I learned how important these traditions are when setting the stage for positive interactions. I thought that something like this would be great to do with children. Didn't they deserve a relaxing, talk-filled Friday morning too?
When I realized that my students were reading very little poetry, I thought the combination of poetry reading and doughnuts might help them to see the fun in poetry. For the past few years, Poetry Friday has been a tradition in our classroom. Parents sign up to bring in a morning snack (usually donuts and juice boxes) once or twice during the school year. They are able to send them in with their child, drop them off on their way to work, or come in to enjoy poetry and donuts with us.
(This is the beginning of an article that was just posted on Choice Literacy’s website. You can get to the rest of the article and the list of poetry books that are fun to read aloud here.)
Thursday, January 18, 2007
More Newbery Thoughts
Fuse #8 is collecting first choice predictions for the Newbery. I read through them and feel good about almost every one mentioned. There are so many books that I feel are worthy this year. I definitely have my favorites but I am trying to read some of the books that I seem to have missed--books that are popping up on a few lists. I just finished Rules by Cynthia Lord. Loved it!!! I also started A Drowned Maiden's Hair and am really loving it too. I am hoping to fit in a few more hours of reading before the big announcement on Monday. As I read the mock lists and blogger predictions, I wish I could get through all of them sooner!
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
A Graphic Blog
No, not sexually explicit or violent. No, not comics. GRAPHS. On index cards. (Hence the name, Indexed.) A blog where every post is a graph, and every graph is a smart and funny comment on modern life.
Thank you, Borderland, for this link.
Thank you, Borderland, for this link.
Book Review: THE ARRIVAL
THE ARRIVAL
by Shaun Tan
Lothian Books,
an imprint of Hachette Livre Australia
South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
2006
Review copy provided by publisher
Every detail of this book is worth lingering over. The cover is designed to look like an antique leather-bound book, and the story's art has a photographic feel as well. All of these details lend this story of the immigrant experience an authority that allows the reader to accept the strangeness of the world depicted in the illustrations not as a literal strange new world, but as an artistic representation of the strangeness that an immigrant encounters no matter where he moves: there are barriers of language, food, and finding work; there is loneliness, isolation, and longing for loved ones. But at every turn, there are those who will help. Those who have their own stories of leaving, abandonment, and exile.
The most amazing thing about this intricate and subtly nuanced graphic novel is that it is silent. No words whatsoever.
In his essay about the book (Click on the cover image and scroll down. Take your time, because the pictures are amazing!), Shaun Tan describes his move from creating picture books to creating this graphic novel. He had never read many comics or graphic novels, so he turned to Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics to Japanese manga and to Raymond Briggs' The Snowman for information and inspiration. When you look at the layout of some of Tan's pages, you can definitely see Brigg's influence. The moments when the reader must "read" the emotions on a face or in a gesture are very reminiscent of manga.
I can't wait to share this book with my 5th graders. I think it will deepen their thinking about immigration. I'll have to share the book with small groups so that they can see the pages and talk...even though the book is silent, I'm sure they won't be! It'll be fascinating to see what 11 year-olds make of it!
RELATED LINKS:
Here's my favorite website for helping kids to understand the waves of immigrants who have come to America, beginning with the Native Americans crossing the land bridge from Asia.
A review from a New Zealand blogger.
by Shaun Tan
Lothian Books,
an imprint of Hachette Livre Australia
South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
2006
Review copy provided by publisher
Every detail of this book is worth lingering over. The cover is designed to look like an antique leather-bound book, and the story's art has a photographic feel as well. All of these details lend this story of the immigrant experience an authority that allows the reader to accept the strangeness of the world depicted in the illustrations not as a literal strange new world, but as an artistic representation of the strangeness that an immigrant encounters no matter where he moves: there are barriers of language, food, and finding work; there is loneliness, isolation, and longing for loved ones. But at every turn, there are those who will help. Those who have their own stories of leaving, abandonment, and exile.
The most amazing thing about this intricate and subtly nuanced graphic novel is that it is silent. No words whatsoever.
In his essay about the book (Click on the cover image and scroll down. Take your time, because the pictures are amazing!), Shaun Tan describes his move from creating picture books to creating this graphic novel. He had never read many comics or graphic novels, so he turned to Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics to Japanese manga and to Raymond Briggs' The Snowman for information and inspiration. When you look at the layout of some of Tan's pages, you can definitely see Brigg's influence. The moments when the reader must "read" the emotions on a face or in a gesture are very reminiscent of manga.
I can't wait to share this book with my 5th graders. I think it will deepen their thinking about immigration. I'll have to share the book with small groups so that they can see the pages and talk...even though the book is silent, I'm sure they won't be! It'll be fascinating to see what 11 year-olds make of it!
RELATED LINKS:
Here's my favorite website for helping kids to understand the waves of immigrants who have come to America, beginning with the Native Americans crossing the land bridge from Asia.
A review from a New Zealand blogger.
Anna Quindlen on Writing
If you haven't seen Anna Quindlen's latest column in Newsweek, it is definitely worth the read. It is called WRITE FOR YOUR LIFE. It reminds us of the power of writing to make sense of our lives and our worlds. (I think it says lots about why blogs are becoming so popular too.) She is one of my very, very favorite writers and I love all of her work, but this one says so much to all of us about writing.
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