Saturday, January 31, 2009

Book Review: Living Dead Girl by Elizabeth Scott

Book: Living Dead Girl
Author: Elizabeth Scott
Published: 2008

Once upon a time, she had a mother and a father and she didn’t belong to Ray. Once upon a time, she was allowed to eat as much as she wanted, go to school, and speak to people. Once upon a time, she slept alone.

Once upon a time, she was not Alice.

Now she is.

She’s been Alice for five long years. Too long. She’s getting too tall, too heavy, too old for Ray. Now he wants a replacement. And Alice has to find her.

I read this book all in one go, and afterwards, I literally wandered around the house in a daze, weeping, until I sat down to write this review. This is not an easy book. This is the kind of book nobody should ever have to read because things like this wouldn’t happen. In saying that, I’m guilty of one of the things that Alice mentions over and over again. Ray has always gotten away with it because people look at her and don’t want to see what they see, because they don’t want it to be something that happens right next door.

I’m probably not making a whole lot of sense. I’m still half in that daze. What Elizabeth Scott does in this novel is take you deep inside the skin of a girl who’s been abused in so many different ways--sexually, physically, emotionally--that she’s been broken down into little more than a survival instinct. There’s nothing left but the will to escape. Not to live, to escape. She fully participates, even pursues, Ray’s plan of replacing her because she knows it will set her free, one way or the other. Where we want her to stand up and say, “No, no other little girl will endure what I did!” she doesn’t, because she’s long past the point where she can afford to care about anybody else. Along with every other vestige of humanity, that capability has crumbled to dust under the onslaught of the past five years.

I won’t spoil the end, but I will say that while many may be disappointed or angry at how it turns out, I think it’s the only way things could have happened for Alice. You’ll remember Living Dead Girl for a long, long time.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Friday Glee #1

I come across so many neat little anecdotes and tidbits from the world of kidlit--from news, from other bloggers--that I find myself doing mini-posts that are really nothing more than a link and some sort of comment, often snarky. So this week, I'm experimenting with a collective post.
  • Daphne over at The Longstockings relates what happened when, during a Q&A session at her old high school, a teacher basically asked her when she was going to start writing real books and leave the kidlit behind. It will make you happy in your heart. Thanks to Lisa Chellman's blog for pointing the way.
  • More proof that villains have all the fun: Narnia's White Witch and Peter Pan's Captain Hook were named the scariest bad guys in children's literature in a British survey by Penguin books. They polled adults, so it's weighted toward classic baddies, but He Who Must Not Be Named did make the list.
  • Confession time: I'm not a fan of James Patterson's novels. But I might be a fan of his website, ReadKiddoRead. It includes booklists broken down by age, author interviews, and a community area for parents. Good show, Patterson. Thanks to Cheryl Rainfield for the link.
  • In the I-Laughed-Myself-Into-Hiccups category: I couldn't tell which girl this Twilight doll was supposed to be. Finally, I just clicked through--and found out it was Edward. Pattinson, you might want to have a discussion with those marketing guys. Go see the rest, but make sure you don't have anything in your mouth when you do. Bookshelves of Doom, natch.
  • I'm soooo tempted not to say anything about this, but I will. Readergirlz is giving away 25 sets of Ellen Emerson White's The President's Daughter quartet. Yeah, I said 25. Yowza. Drop on by and enter your bad self. Thanks again to Bookshelves of Doom.
  • David Lubar is being his usual serious and humorless self, and offering an extremely valuable service to 99.99% of children's and YA authors during this awards season. Go see what it is.
  • One of the most neato-keen covers of the year was Ingrid Law's Savvy, with its blazing sunset reflecting off swirling clouds. Turns out Mother Nature was there first. Drop on by the Astronomy Picture of the Day for a surprisingly familiar photo and a scientific-like explanation.
Okay, what do you think? Should I bundle together, like a cable company? Or go back to mini-posts?

Thursday, January 29, 2009

More Narnia Movie News

Well, dahlings, the last we heard, Disney had pulled out of the Narnia franchise for lack of the green stuff, and it was as simple as that. But Tasha Saecker of Kids Lit alerted me to a highly interesting article about the factors that led to the decision, including a pretty nasty-sounding squabble with the owner of Walden media, one Phil Anschutz, who also seems to own at least some of every other industry on the stock exchange.

Sigh. Just when you thought this biz was all about good books and nice people.

The article notes that there will be a "Voyage of the Dawn Treader" movie, just not distributed by Disney. Keep your ears out for more news.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Sara Zarr Thinks She Might Have Issues

Eh, who doesn't.

Sara Zarr shares her (possible) issues in an essay over at Powells.com about the themes that regularly show up in her work. She's not alone, either--many authors revisit the same themes and archetypes over and over again.
Some put it this way: each writer is dealt one hand of cards, and throughout our careers we're playing that one hand in different ways.
Of course, writing the same themes over and over again is not the same thing as replicating the same book over and over again. Although that's been done too.

Authors can (and have) taken radical departures from their established norms. For instance, while I knew what Elizabeth Scott's Living Dead Girl was about, I wasn't expecting the experience I got. (Review coming as soon as I can form a coherent thought.) Partly this was because I'd read Bloom and Perfect You and was expecting something closer to that.

But then again, Living Dead Girl did have some very basic similarities to Scott's other work. Not in style, not in subject, but right down in the basic DNA of the story. It was about a girl whose life is a mess and keeps getting messier. Finally, it become so bad she has to decide what the right thing is for herself and for the people that her actions affect.

Overly simplistic? Probably. Maybe boiled down a little too far. But maybe not. There's only so many stories in the world. The details are just around the edges.

Don't be too concerned, Sara. I'd read your sci-fi novel.

Thanks to Bookshelves of Doom for the link.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Awards Reactions

Since it's had about a day to sink in, here's what I think of the choices of YA and children's lit winners this year.

If I had to apply an adjective to this year's crop of winners, I would call it unsurprising. I'm happy for the winners, I can see why they won. Of the books on the list that I read, not one made me roll my eyes and go, "Come on!" At the same time, there was nothing that made my mouth drop open.

Newbery: The Graveyard Book's been chattered about on blogs and listservs since before the street date, and reportedly snags a lot of kids upon first reading. (That first page--woo!) I do have to wonder whether all the brouhaha about kid-friendly award winners influenced this choice. Don't jump on me--I think it's a well-written book and that it did deserve the award. But this was a good year for books, and to me The Graveyard Book didn't stand out that much from the other high-quality books out there. Of course, I don't have a particular one to offer in its place.

Printz: Haven't read Jellicoe Road yet, although this is another that I heard a lot of chatter about. I'm excited by the honors, especially for Terry Pratchett and E. Lockhart. Octavian Nothing II and Tender Morsels are the kind of books people give awards to.

Morris: I really like the idea of this freshman award, bringing attention to hot new authors in an exploding genre. If half what I've heard about A Curse as Dark as Gold is true, it's well deserved. I wish Graceling had taken it, but that's because I loved that book like whoa and damn and sit down dear, you're scaring the children.

Coretta Scott King: I'm delighted that We Are the Ship did a twofer: the award for writing and an honor for illustration. This isn't all that uncommon in more specialized awards (see the Pura Belpre, for instance), but it was well-deserved. Another blog (sorry, I don't remember which one) pointed out that it probably wouldn't get a Caldecott nod because the text and pictures aren't as interwoven as in the absolute best picture books. True, but taken separately, they're high quality.

Pura Belpre: As a Hispanic woman, I'm ashamed to admit that I haven't read any of the winners or honorees. Best I can tell you is that I've had Just in Case on my reading list for a year now, waiting for the library to order it.

Drop by Kid Tested, Librarian Approved for my take on the picture book and early reader winners.

Monday, January 26, 2009

ALA Youth Media Awards!

Whee! The most exciting day of the year if you happen to be a gigantic kidlit dork like me . . . and I had to work through the webcast. Blah.

Anyway, chickies, here they are! As always, the (H) signifies an honor.

The Big Three

The John Newbery Medal (for the best children's novel of the year)
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
(H) The Underneath by Kathi Appelt
(H) The Surrender Tree: Poems of Cuba's Struggle for Freedom by Margarita Engle
(H) Savvy by Ingrid Law
(H) After Tupac and D Foster by Jacqueline Woodson

The Randolph Caldecott Medal (for the best picture book of the year)
The House in the Night illustrated by Beth Krommes and written by Susan Marie Swanson
(H) A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever by Marla Frazee
(H) How I Learned Geography by Uri Shulevitz
(H) A River of Words: The Story of William Carlos Williams illustrated by Melissa Sweet and written by Jen Bryant

The Michael L. Printz Award (for the best YA novel of the year)
Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta
(H) The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation, Volume II: The Kingdom on the Waves by M.T. Anderson
(H) Nation by Terry Pratchett
(H) Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, The by E. Lockhart
(H) Tender Morsels by Margo Lanagan

The Rest of Them, Which Are Very Nice Too

The Alex Awards (for ten adult books with teen appeal)
City of Thieves by David Benioff
The Dragons of Babel by Michael Swanwick
Finding Nouf by Zoë Ferraris
The Good Thief by Hannah Tinti
Just After Sunset: Stories by Stephen King
Mudboundby Hillary Jordan
Over and Under by Todd Tucker
Sharp Teeth by Toby Barlow
Three Girls and Their Brother: A Novel by Theresa Rebeck

The Andrew Carnegie Medal (for excellence in children's video)
Paul R. Gagne and Melissa Reilly, Weston Woods Studios, producers of "March On!: The Day My Brother Martin Changed The World" (links to book)

The Coretta Scott King Book Awards (for the best book about the African-American experience)
Author
We Are the Ship: The Story of Negro League Baseball by Kadir Nelson
(H) The Blacker the Berry written by Joyce Carol Thomas, illustrated by Floyd Cooper
(H) Keeping the Night Watch by Hope Anita Smith, illustrated by E.B. Lewis
(H) Becoming Billie Holiday by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Floyd Cooper
Illustrator
The Blacker the Berry illustrated by Floyd Cooper, written by Joyce Carol Thomas
(H) We Are the Ship: The Story of Negro League Baseball written and illustrated by Kadir Nelson
(H) Before John Was a Jazz Giant: A Song of John Coltrane by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Sean Qualls
(H) The Moon Over Star by Dianna Hutts Aston, illustrated by Jerry Pinkney

The Laura Ingalls Wilder Award (for the children's author or illustrator who's made a lasting contribution to the field)
Ashley Bryan

The Margaret A. Edwards Award (for the YA author who's made a lasting contribution to the field)
Laurie Halse Anderson

The May Hill Arbuthnot Lecture Award (for an individual in the field of children's literature, who will then present a paper at ALA's Annual Conference)
Kathleen T. Horning, director of the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)

The Mildred L. Batchelder Award (for the best translated children's novel; presented to the publisher)
Arthur A. Levine Books for Guardian Of The Spirit (Moribito) by Nahoko Uehashi, translated from the Japanese by Cathy Hirano
(H) Eerdmans Books for Young Readers for Garmann's Summer written and illustrated by Stian Hole, translated from the Norwegian by Don Bartlett
(H) Amulet Books for Tiger Moon written by Antonia Michaelis, translated from the German by Anthea Bell

The Odyssey Award (for the best children's audiobook of the year)
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian written and narrated by Sherman Alexie
(H) Curse of the Blue Tattoo written by L.A. Meyer, narrated by Katherine Kellgren
(H) Elijah of Buxton written by Christopher Paul Curtis, narrated by Mirron Willis
(H) I'm Dirty written by Kate and Jim McMullan, narrated by Steve Buscemi
(H) Martina the Beautiful Cockroach written and narrated by Carmen Agra Deedy
(H) Nation written by Terry Pratchett, narrated by Stephen Briggs

The Pura Belpre Award (for the best children's book about the Latino/a experience)
Authors
The Surrender Tree: Poems of Cuba's Struggle for Freedom by Margarita Engle
(H) Just In Case: A Trickster Tale and Spanish Alphabet Book by Yuyi Morales
(H) Reaching Outby Francisco Jiménez
(H) The Storyteller's Candle/La velita de los cuentosby Lucia Gonzalez, illustrated by Lulu Delacre
Illustrators
Just In Case: A Trickster Tale and Spanish Alphabet Book by Yuyi Morales
(H) Papa and Me illustrated by Rudy Gutierrez, written by Arthur Dorros
(H) The Storyteller's Candle/La velita de los cuentos
illustrated by Lulu Delacre, written by Lucia Gonzalez
(H) What Can You Do With a Rebozo? illustrated by Amy Cordova, written by Carmen Tafolla

The Robert F. Sibert Medal (for the best children's nonfiction book of the year)
We Are the Ship: The Story of Negro League Baseball written and illustrated by Kadir Nelson
(H) Bodies from the Ice: Melting Glaciers and the Recovery of the Pastwritten by James M. Deem
(H) What To Do About Alice?: How Alice Roosevelt Broke the Rules, Charmed the World, and Drove Her Father Teddy Crazy! written by Barbara Kerley, illusrated by Edwin Fotheringham

The Schneider Family Book Award
(for the best book about the disability experience)
Picture Book: Piano Starts Here: The Young Art Tatum by Robert Andrew Parker
Middle Grade: Waiting for Normal by Leslie Connor
Young Adult: Jerk, California by Jonathan Friesen

The Theodore Seuss Geisel Award (for the best early reader book)
Are You Ready to Play Outside? (An Elephant and Piggie Book) written and illustrated by Mo Willems
(H) Chicken Said, "Cluck!" written by Judyann Ackerman Grant
(H) One Boy written and illustrated by Laura Vaccaro Seeger
(H) Stinky (Toon Books) written and illustrated by Eleanor Davis
(H) Wolfsnail: A Backyard Predator written by Sarah C. Campbell, photographs by Sarah C. Campbell and Richard P. Campbell

The William C. Morris Award (for the best YA novel by a first-time author)
A Curse Dark as Goldby Elizabeth C. Bunce

Surprises? Delight? Rage? Express it all in the comments.

Cross-posted to Kid-Tested, Librarian Approved.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

A Post That Doesn't Mention the Word "Newbery" Anywhere

I swear.

Publisher's Weekly recently went to booksellers for their annual "Cuffies." Some categories are pretty standard.
Favorite Novel of the Year
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins (“absolutely riveting”)
Honorable mentions: Impossible by Nancy Werlin (“well-written, intriguing”); Paper Towns by John Green; Nation by Terry Pratchett (“funny but deep”)
And others are . . . less so.
Book You Wish Everyone Would Shut Up About
Twilight
Hee.

Check out the full list here.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

This Merits a Squee

Breaking(ish) news! The official title for the Hunger Games sequel is . . . *drumroll* . . . Chasing Fire! More importantly, we've also got an official release date, which is September 8th. Drop into the Publisher's Weekly article for more.

Squee!

Thanks to Presenting Lenore for the heads-up.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Finally, a Use For All Those Donated Dictionaries

The bane of any public library's life is those well-meaning donations. "Here, I found these encyclopedias from 1965 in the attic. Just brush off those spiderwebs before you add them to the collection!"

We smile in a pained fashion and take them. Then when the self-satisfied patron leaves, secure in his position as a Supporter of the Ahts and owner of a tax credit, we discreetly cart them to the dumpster.*

Well, no more! Fuse #8 pointed me at this freakin' cool site with various sculptures and things made out of books. Including bookshelves. My favorite is to the right.

*This is not to say we do not leap on new, shiny, barely-read books like wild dogs after a shard of meat. We just get so many more physics textbooks from 1973.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

PW Interviews First-Timers

First time authors, that is. Three of them, anyway, and two of them are among my favorite books of the year: Kristin Cashore on the wicked awesome Graceling and Donna Freitas on the sweet and hilarious The Possibilities of Sainthood. Go see!

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

More Newbery Stuff

And I swear to y'all that this is the last post that will mention "Newbery" until the announcement of the awards next Monday. School Library Journal has a nice little roundup of the diversity brouhaha, including quotable quotes from the study's author, from Anita "Has the Newbery Lost Its Way" Silvey, and others.

Okay, that's it, I mean it. After all this, I think 2009 is going to be the year that the Caldecott gets hammered on.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Susan Patron Defends the Newbery Medal

Susan Patron has taken up arms, or pen, to defend the Newbery against the recent fooforaw. To the charge that Newbery books have become inaccessible to the average reader, she argues:
Does it follow that books dealing with tough social issues turn kids off? Doesn't whether a book is complicated or inaccessible depend on the age and experience of the reader?
Now the cynical among you may say, "Well, duh she said that. She was the 2007 winner, and that book, The Higher Power of Lucky, is often pointed to as one of the inaccessible ones." (Boy, you're articulate.) But she's also speaking from broader experience than that. Patron was a children's librarian for L.A. Public Library (City, not County--very important distinction if you live in L.A.) for thirty-five years. She knows whereof she speaks.

What do you think of the points Patron raises?

Monday, January 19, 2009

What Do You Think?

When I heard the news about the proposed Winnie the Pooh sequel, Return to the Hundred Acre Wood, I shared it with my co-worker, who let out a heartfelt groan of disgust.

Of course it's about money, but does it follow that the sequel will be awful? Now I have to be honest. I've never read the two originals *ducking rotten tomatoes* but I have heard that it has a very definite and somewhat solemn ending. Does anybody out there (who has read it) think the same thing as my co-worker? Is this a stupid idea?

The nice thing is that no matter how many bad sequels are made (DISNEY I AM LOOKING AT YOU) nothing can ruin a truly high quality original.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Class of 2K9 is in Session!

For the past two years, new authors--that is, authors putting out their first YA or children's novel--have banded together online to get the word out via a common blog, and it's worked a treat, I must say.

This year's crop, the class of 2009, is up and running at Class of 2K9. Go have a look-see!

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Book Review: House of Many Ways by Diana Wynne Jones

Book: House of Many Ways
Author: Diana Wynne Jones
Published: 2008

To her own amazement, Charmain Baker has been shuttled off to take care of Great-Uncle William’s house while he’s away. At last, a chance to do exactly as she pleases, which is mostly to read on her own without the intrusions of her parents. (Not that I blame her.) But when she arrives, she discovers all sorts of mischief afoot besides the disaster area inside the house--rebelling kobolds, a singularly helpless apprentice wizard, a house that regularly changes its insides, and a mystery at the palace. She may just have found something that’s more interesting than her books . . .

I love Diana Wynne Jones because she writes people with flaws. She has characters that are selfish, vain, downright silly, stupid, and any host of other undesirable traits that would prompt immediate intervention in many other books, but Diana Wynne Jones simply points everybody’s flaws at everybody else and says “Off you go then,” to hilarious results. It’s only the truly wicked who come to sticky ends, and everyone else feels quite real.

The best example is Charmain herself when she encounters a house that hasn’t been looked after in quite some time. Instead of an industrious little girl who rolls up her sleeves and tackles the mess, you get Charmain, who ignores it in favor of more interesting things. On the one hand, we’re used to tidying-up happening when a mess is encountered. On the other, how many of you know a twelve-year-old who would do that without an adult around to prod them along (quite forcefully?) The house is only put in order when the incovenience of the mess far outweighs the drudgery of cleaning (which sounds awfully familiar, now that I think about it).

Fans of Howl’s Moving Castle will relish the chance to meet up with Sophie and Howl again. One character’s supposedly adorable lisp did wear on my nerves a tad, but then I realized it was meant to be annoying, and also quite true to the character. Pick this book for a grand old time in Diana Wynne Jones' world.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Gives the Term Electronic Book a Whole New Meaning

100 Scope Notes posted a review of a book called Skeleton Creek a few days back. Now the book itself sounds pretty neat, but what really caught my attention was how the author used a mixture of old-fashioned text on paper and new-fangled Internet video to tell his story.

Interesting. I remember a book maybe last year or 2007 that worked together with a website, and the 39 Clues series is famously utilizing all sorts of things, online and offline, to hook kids in. What do you guys think? Will we be seeing this a lot more often, or will it remain a gadget and a hook?

And my question is, what happens if/when the website or the videos go down? How will that affect the reading of the book?

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Vote, vote, vote!

Tasha over at Kids Lit pointed this one out:
In association with the Children’s Book Council (CBC), Teenreads.com is giving you a very special opportunity to let your voices be heard by telling us your five favorite books of 2008. The five titles that receive the most “votes” will serve as the finalists for the CBC’s 2009 Teen Choice Book Award. Later we will tell you where you can go vote for them once the five finalists have been announced. The winner will be announced in May 2009.
Coooooooooooooooooool. Follow the link for more info.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Just When You Thought It Was Safe to Talk About the Newberys

Oy vey. That poor Newbery medal is going to need to be hammered back into shape after this year of bashing.

Have a gander at this article about a recent study that claims the Newbery is all about white boys. (I found it in the Detroit Free Press, Liz B. in the Bloomberg News. It seems to be one of those articles that gets picked up and run verbatim by every newspaper with a slow news day.)

There are problems with the article and the study alike, which Liz B. at A Chair, a Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy examines in more detail.

The primary one, however, is that the Newbery is for literary quality, hands down. That's what it's about, folks. There are other awards to celebrate diversity or popularity or what-have-you, but every committee member, past or present, that I've ever heard from has come back to the same core: it's about the book.

Would it be nice to have a list of award-winners that perfectly reflects our society's gender/social/racial/ethnic makeup? Yes. Is it gonna happen? Probably not.

Friday, January 09, 2009

Reading Like a Girl

Some columnist in the New York Times wishes she could read like a girl.

I hope in this case, "girl" is referring to the condition of being young--girl vs. woman--rather than the condition of being female--girl vs. boy. Because I know boys who read like this.

Heck with that, I know grown folks who read like this. Like me! Okay, maybe I am pickier than some kids sometimes (*cough*Eragon*cough*) but I think the author is setting up a false dichotomy here, one that annoys me. She points to one daughter's reaction to an old favorite of hers as proof of the girl's growing "adult" skepticism.
“I couldn’t stop reading it,” she said, before adding, with regret, “but I knew from the beginning how it would turn out.”
Yes? And? Like we didn't know at five years old how Sleeping Beauty would turn out? Or Harry Potter at twelve? Just because a kid recognizes the essential drive of a narrative--good guys/gals win, get the gal/guy, live happily ever after--doesn't mean they've somehow lost the ability to suspend disbelief. Geez Louise.

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Hey, I'm a Knight's Fangirl!

Anybody got a hanky? I have to wave it out a castle window.

Silliness aside (is it ever on this blog?), Terry Pratchett got made a knight on New Year's Day. Check out the article, which includes an interview in which Sir Terry is asked the question whether the knighthood is due to his work in raising money for Alzheimer's (which he is in the early stages of). He basically answers, "Well, I have written a couple of good books that people kinda liked, so . . . y'know . . . maybe it's for that? Rather than having a disease?"

Such restraint, good sir. Thanks to Cheryl Rainfield's blog for the link.

Oo, and here's another vid from Fuse #8--clearly the same interview but different clips.

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Ursula K. LeGuin Interview

Have I mentioned how much I love retellings?

Well, I do.

Have I mentioned that I took Latin in college, on purpose, and had to translate the entire second book of The Aeneid from Latin into English, plus read the whole thing (in English)?

Well, I did.

Have I mentioned that Ursula K. LeGuin is retelling the second half of The Aeneid from the point-of-view of Lavinia, otherwise known as That One Girl Aeneas Had to Marry to Get the Throne of Rome But We All Know He Still Loved Dido and Who Cares About That Girl Anyway? (Although most people just refer to her as Lavinia, if they remember her at all.)

Well, no, cuz I just found out. Here, have an interview. Quoteage:
So in writing this I was not trying to set a wrong right or give voice to a woman who was unjustly deprived of her voice, it's just that she was my way into Virgil's world, in a way. As a woman I could think, well, what did Lavinia feel about all this? How did she see it? What was her life like? She was sort of my key to open the door.
Intriguing. I may want to re-read The Aeneid after Lavinia. But if I reach for the Latin-English dictionary, shoot me.

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Well, That One Got By Me

Did you guys know?

Ramona the Movie!

The page says March 19, 2010 is the release date. This could be a lot of fun, if they stick to the source and resist putting superspies in or something.

On second thought, scratch that. I'd kinda love to see Ramona foil superspies.

Saturday, January 03, 2009

File This Under A for Awesome


túrána hott kurdís by hasta la otra méxico! from Till Credner on Vimeo.

Yoinked from Astronomy Picture of the Day.

Friday, January 02, 2009

Nice One

How Disney Killed Off Its Billion Dollar Narnia Franchise

Apparently, Disney is calling it quits on the Narnia movies after "Prince Caspian" didn't perform to expectations. (I'll say; I barely even knew it was in theatres.) But seriously . . . no "Magician's Nephew"? I actually might have gone to see that one.

Thanks to Bookshelves of Doom for the heads-up.

Thursday, January 01, 2009

They're Here! They're Here!

The Cybils shortlists came out today and may I say, Damn. Yes, I think I will. Damn, you guys! What good books! How are the judges going to winnow each of those lists down to one?

Congrats to all the shortlisted authors and illustrators, and big kudos to the nominating panels!

Reading Roundup 2008

I decided to go back through and pick my faves from this year. Not all of these books were published in 2008, but that's when I read 'em.

By the Numbers
Teen: 210
Tween: 136
Children: 205

Standouts
Teen: Boy Toy by Barry Lyga
Tween: Leap of Faith by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley
Children: Moxy Maxwell Does Not Love Stuart Little by Peggy Gifford

Because I Want To Awards
Best Nonfiction: Albino Animals by Kelly Milner Halls
Best Graphic Novel: Rapunzel's Revenge by Shannon Hale and Nathan Hale
Best Series Kickstart: The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Favorite New Author: Kristin Cashore
Favorite Rediscovered Author: Ellen Emerson White
Holy Schnikes, I Read Those Fast!: Tithe, Valiant, and Ironside by Holly Black
Grossest: Dead High Yearbook by Ivan Velez

A good year for reading. Here's to 2009!

Reading Roundup December 2008

This month was rather disrupted by my moving to another state right in the middle, meaning I didn't have quite as much time for reading as usual. But I squeezed it in.

By the Numbers
Teen: 12
Tween: 6
Children: 11

Standouts
Teen: Wish You Were Here by Barbara Shoup
Tween: Mothstorm by Phillip Reeve
Children: At the Firefly Gate by Linda Newbery

Because I Want To Awards
Saddest: September Roses by Jeannette Winter
Punniest: The Case of the Fiendish Flapjack Flap by Nate Evans