Saturday, April 05, 2014

Children's Books IN THE MEDIA

PW

From Entertainment Weekly:
DreamWorks has picked up film rights to Rainbow Rowell's Eleanor & Park. Click here

From the Guardian:
Remembering writer John Rowe Townsend, who died March 24 at age 91. Click here

From Reddit:
In Laurie Halse Anderson's Ask Me Anything, she answers a question about the "John Greenification" of YA. Click here

From School Library Journal:
Co-editors Gillian McCain and Legs McNeil on Dear Nobody: The Real Life Diary of Mary Rose, an "authentic version of Go Ask Alice." Click here

From Brain Pickings:
A look inside Winston & George, newly published a half-century after its creation. Click here

From Bookish:
Six celebrities "we want to see write children's books." Click here

From the Guardian:
Canongate in the U.K. will publish a series of children's books by comedian Russell Brand. Click here

From Den of Geek:
Learning to adapt: the cinematic explosion of YA books. Click here

From the Hollywood Reporter:
Haylie Duff's blog-turned-teen-cookbook, The Real Girl's Kitchen, is becoming a TV show. Click here

From the Paris Review:
Revisiting the "extremely bizarre collection" The Little Bookroom by Eleanor Farjeon, winner of the first Hans Christian Andersen Award. Click here

From Philadelphia magazine:
The Daring Book for Girls co-author Andi Buchanan on the gendered children's book debate. Click here

From Parade:
10 "life-changing" quotes from children’s books. Click here
SHELFTALKER
ShelfTalker
Josie Leavitt
To Host or Not to Host?
Should independent bookstores hold events for authors published by Amazon? more »

Elizabeth Bluemle
Are We Rushing Kids Out of Picture Books?
Children are being steered away from picture books at younger and younger ages. Why? more »

Elizabeth Bluemle
Vermont’s Youngest Librarians (Ages 11 and 6)
An unlikely duo decides to open a neighborhood library.... more »

Josie Leavitt
Should We Lose the Bags?
Is it time to jettison the paper shopping bag at the bookstore? more »

FEATURED REVIEWS
A Pet for Fly Guy
Tedd Arnold. Scholastic/Orchard, US$16.99 (32p) ISBN 978-0-545-31615-6

Buzz and Fly Guy's enormous bug eyes loom all the larger in Arnold's picture book spinoff. Harkening back to the pet-adoption theme of Hi! Fly Guy, the first title in the author's bestselling early chapter book series, this story brings Buzz and his pet to the park, where they see kids playing with unorthodox pets. more

The Lion and the Bird
Marianne Dubuc, trans. from the French by Claudia Z. Bedrick. Enchanted Lion (Consortium, dist.), US$17.95 (64p) ISBN 978-1-59270-151-3

Dubuc (Animal Masquerade) tells the story of an intimate friendship with few words, light lines, and gentle colors. Gardening in his yard one autumn day, Lion finds a bird with a broken wing. The other birds are flying south, but this bird can't. "You're welcome to stay with me," Lion offers. more

The Prince of Venice Beach
Blake Nelson. Little, Brown, U$18 (240p) ISBN 978-0-316-23048-3

Nelson (Recovery Road) combines a hardboiled first-person narrative and a languid Southern California setting to establish a seductive surf noir atmosphere in the story of Robert "Cali" Callahan, a 17-year-old runaway who's testing out a potential career as a private investigator on the streets of Venice Beach. more

Complicit
Stephanie Kuehn. St. Martin's Griffin, $18.99 (224p) ISBN 978-1-250-04459-4

Jamie and Cate were adopted by the wealthy Henry family after their single mother was murdered – or maybe it was an accidental death. Younger sibling Jamie isn't sure anymore. Jamie has worked hard to overcome his anxiety-ridden youth, and he's doing well until Cate is released from jail after serving time for burning down a barn, killing several horses and badly burning another girl. more

TALES FROM THE SLUSH PILE
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