To Our Readers
Because of the Bologna Book Fair, there will be one issue of Children's Bookshelf next week, on Wednesday, live from Bologna. We'll have lots of news, photo highlights, and notes from all over in our special issue.
Exit Interview
In 1975, Betty Takeuchi opened San Marino Toy and Book Shoppe in San Marino, Calif., helping guide generations of children’s booksellers and readers during a historic period of growth for the industry. We caught up with Takeuchi as she heads into retirement. more
Book News
Ian Falconer, creator of the internationally bestselling book series about Olivia the pig, is swapping porcine characters for canines in his first picture book outside of the Olivia universe: Two Dogs will be published by Harper’s Michael di Capua Books in April 2020. “After Olivia, dachshunds seemed natural because our family has always had dachshunds,” Falconer said. more Middle Grade Series Due out this April, The Chupacabras of the Río Grande is Newbery Honor-winning author Adam Gidwitz's third collaboration in the Unicorn Rescue Society series for middle graders. We spoke with Gidwitz and co-author David Bowles about the inspiration for their fantasy novel, which takes place on the U.S.-Mexican border. more
In the News
Little Tiger Group Penguin Random House is acquiring Little Tiger Group, a publisher of children's books based in London. more The 10th Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo, better known as C2E2, attracted tens of thousands of fans, and a major lineup of publishers and comics stars, including a number of children's authors. more
Reading Roundups
This month, middle grade and YA novel sequels offer fantasy realms, super (and not so super) heroes, middle grade adventures, reformed bullies, and theater kids. more
In the Winners'
Circle
Winners Announced The Women’s National Book Association has announced the winners of its 2019 Pannell Awards, which are presented annually to two bookstores that enhance their communities by fostering a love of reading. more
Licensing News
Last December, Scholastic published Baby Shark: Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo, a paperback book based on the wildly popular public-domain song and YouTube video. The book has shipped 300,000 copies as of mid-March, and a second title, Bedtime for Baby Shark, is planned for July 2019. Read on for news about Random House's new Minecraft fiction series; Carlton Books' new Disney license for augmented-reality formats; Studio Fun’s Lost Kitties tie-ins; Sterling’s Wetmore Forest books; Bob Books' license for VersaTiles; and more. more
Q & A
Author-illustrator Raúl the Third's 2014 debut, Lowriders in Space, featured Latinx characters and lowrider cars. Two more Lowrider volumes followed; the second won the Pura Belpré Award. Raúl's new picture book, Vamos! Let’s Go to the Market, explores the Mercado de Cuauhtémoc—Ciudad Juárez’s market across the river from El Paso, Tex. Raúl spoke with us about his story. Q: Do you feel like an artist with more ideas than you’ll ever get down on paper? A: It took me a while to begin to create artwork that was about myself and who I was. I had been trained to shy away from that. It was almost as if I had opened up this well full of material. Suddenly, I went from having a difficult time creating artwork to having a difficult time catching up with all these ideas. I became proud of my grandparents who opened up the market in Juárez. more
Out Next Week
Week of April 1, 2019 Among the books hitting shelves next week are a picture book about the creatures who live on the forest floor, a time-traveling middle grade adventure, and a YA novel about two friends who travel to India. more
Rights Report
To see all of this week's deals, click here.
IN THE MEDIA
SHELFTALKER
Cynthia Compton Spring Has Sprung, the Grass Is Riz
Spring is the best season of all in a children’s bookstore.
more »
Kenny Brechner The Compelling Conundrum of Middle School Events
Middle school events are often the most dynamic and the least
financially successful. What to do?
more »
Elizabeth Bluemle Board Books vs. Common Sense
When choosing which books to turn into board books, publishers
seem to be forgetting how young toddlers really are.
more »
Meghan Dietsche Goel Making Mistakes and Falling in Love
A trio of LGBTQ graphic novels take readers into the messy ups
and downs of teen romance.
FEATURED
REVIEWS
Yamile Saied Méndez, illus. by Jaime Kim. HarperCollins, $17.99 (40p) ISBN 978-0-06-283993-0 A girl with brown skin and dark curly pigtails encounters variations on the title question over and over. “Is your mom from here?” asks her ballet teacher. “Is your dad from there?” asks a friend’s mother. From her Abuelo, the girl learns she comes from the Pampas region of Argentina. Although the book begins as a gentle riposte to narrow cultural and ethnic categorizations, its conclusion reaches out to all readers, evoking both heritage and the human family. more Kim Chaffee, illus. by Ellen Rooney. Page Street Kids, $17.99 (40p) ISBN 978-1-62414-654-1 Kathrine Switzer turned heads when she ran—doing laps around her yard at a time when girls weren’t supposed to sweat, competing with the boys’ track team in college, and, in 1967, as the first woman to officially complete the Boston Marathon. Chaffee’s effective telling of Switzer’s iconic story emphasizes persistence, ambition, and discipline. more John David Anderson. Walden Pond, $16.99 (368p) ISBN 978-0-06-264389-6 Rion has always felt that his family is strange, but even he is shocked when news of his grandfather’s death is delivered via a clown with a singing telegram. Rion’s father has never forgiven Papa Kwirk for his absent parenting and is content to bury him without resolution, but that proves impossible when they discover that the casket is empty except for one tantalizing clue: “To find me, start digging in our favorite spot.” more David Macaulay. Roaring Brook, $24.99 (128p) ISBN 978-1-59643-477-6 Macaulay continues to amaze with his architect-trained eye for detail and ability to make the complex understandable. His latest demystifies steam power and its use in ships through the mid-20th century. Bookending the steamship chronicle is the story of the author’s boyhood immigration from Great Britain to the U.S. in 1957 aboard the fastest transatlantic passenger steamship at the time, the SS United States. more Arvin Ahmadi. Viking, $17.99 (416p) ISBN 978-0-425-28990-7 In this near-future thriller, when 17-year-old coder Opal Tal’s father went missing seven years earlier, she attempted to track him down by reaching out to his business partner, Howie Mendelsohn. But Opal’s requests were ignored. Now a senior at Palo Alto Academy of Science and Technology, she is given an opportunity to meet Howie by entering the Make-a-Splash competition on WAVE, a virtual reality social media site that Howie created. more
TALES FROM THE
SLUSH PILE
|
March 28, 2019
ICYMI
Sneak Previews
Take a look ahead at some of the big titles for children and teens due out this fall, from picture books to YA novels, in our exclusive roundup.
Follow Us
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Bookshelf
Archives
Looking for a previous issue of Children's Bookshelf? Click here for
our archives page!
CONTACT US
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School and
Library Spotlight
Today’s librarians are typically well versed in social media, and for many, one picture-friendly platform shines brighter than the rest: Instagram. We spoke with a number of school and public librarians about how they are using 'Library-stagrams' for promotion, professional development, and fun. more
In the News
The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art has revealed the recipients of the 14th annual Carle Honors. This year's honors will be presented in New York City on September 26, hosted by author-illustrator Grace Lin and Little, Brown Books for Young Readers v-p and editor-in-chief Alvina Ling. more
Comics News
Takes On Catwoman This spring, DC is releasing the first titles from DC Books for Young Readers, a new publishing unit composed of imprints DC Zoom, for middle grade readers, and DC Ink, for young adults. YA author Lauren Myracle spoke with us about her debut graphic novel, which is part of the launch list, Under the Moon: A Catwoman Tale. more
On the Scene
Marcus Emerson Author Marcus Emerson recently set out on a national book tour to launch his new middle grade adventure Ben Braver and the Incredible Exploding Kid, sequel to last year's The Super Life of Ben Braver. Over the course of the tour, Emerson presented to approximately 2,200 kids. Click through to see our selection of highlights from the events, which included readings, drawing demos, and more. more
Q & A
Lucy Strange's second historical novel for young readers, Our Castle by the Sea, thrusts her protagonist Petra's family into intrigue at the start of World War II. Strange spoke with us about her latest novel's timely message, and weaving history with fantasy as she also did in her debut, The Secret of Nightingale Wood. Q: Why did you decide to blend history and magic in Our Castle by the Sea? A: I think the more real the world is in the story the more effective the magical realism is, because if the world feels very concrete and then you have an element of the supernatural seeping into the story—if it’s done well—then you’ll get goosebumps. And you’ll get this very odd kind of feeling of vertigo where you’re not quite sure what’s real and what's not. The historical elements ground the story in reality. more
Out Next Week
Week of March 25, 2019 Among the books hitting shelves next week are a picture book about a book hoarding pig who can't read, a middle grade novel about a bully who gets a second chance, and a myth-infused science fiction YA novel. more
In Brief
In Brief: March 21, 2019 This week, a debut author brings her story of survival into the light; an actor-turned-author celebrates her debut; Hena Khan attends a Washington Wizards pregame; and author-illustrator Ben Clanton makes new friends. more
Rights Report
To see all of this week's deals, click here.
IN THE MEDIA
SHELFTALKER
Kenny Brechner When Go To Books Go Away
A method is proposed of identifying books that have been retired
before their time.
more »
Cynthia Compton Let the Children Read
A bookseller celebrates the value of “old fashioned” books for
children in a screen-filled age.
more »
Elizabeth Bluemle Not Your Kid’s Picture Book Anymore
There are so many picture books that are most loved by adults,
but how do we help them reach their audience?
more »
Leslie Hawkins Family Is Family
Spellbound hosts a very different kind of family celebration at
the bookstore.
FEATURED
REVIEWS
Lucy Knisley. Chronicle, $17.99 (52p) ISBN 978-1-4521-6156-3 Cartoonist Knisley makes her solo picture book debut with a hearty welcome to the new babies of the world: “Hello, you! You are new. When you’re new... what can you do?” Working in a bold graphic design style, she depicts babies of different ages and backgrounds observing and interacting with their environments. It’s a vivacious celebration of new arrivals and the many wonders to explore. more Michael Sussman, illus. by Júlia Sardà. Atheneum, $17.99 (40p) ISBN 978-1-5344-0512-7 Duckworth has a problem: a scarlet serpent as big as a minivan is coiled in his closet, and his parents, immersed in their new copy of Dealing with Your Difficult Child, are unconcerned. Then the snake swallows Duckworth—neatly, so that he can still hold a conversation. Sardà creates an elegantly chilly atmosphere for Duckworth’s Treehorn Trilogy–esque drawing room comedy. more Remy Lai. Holt, $21.99 (384p) ISBN 978-1-250-31410-9 Lai centers her incisive illustrated debut novel on Jingwen, who moves from his unspecified home country to Australia with his mother and younger brother Yanghao after his father’s death. The boy mourns the loss of his father and feels like an alien among his fifth-grade classmates. Summoning memories of baking with Papa, Jingwen imagines the cakes they’d anticipated selling at Pie in the Sky, the bakery they planned to open upon moving. more Aida Salazar. Scholastic/Levine, $17.99 (240p) ISBN 978-1-338-28337-2 Writing in clear, lyrical first-person verse, debut author Salazar gives voice to 11-year-old dance enthusiast, Oakland-based Celi Rivera, as she grapples with her changing body and a first crush, as well as familial and cultural expectations about growing into womanhood. Celi describes her heritage as “Black-Puerto Rican-Mexican-ness,” and she is particularly dreading the start of her period, because her mother insists that she celebrate with a “moon ceremony,” an ancestral Mexica tradition. more Kate Allen. Dutton, $17.99 (384p) ISBN 978-0-7352-3160-3 In Rockport, Mass., budding artist and narrator Lucy, 12, does everything with her best friend Fred, a keen scientist, including writing an extra credit field guide to local wildlife. When family friend and fisherman Sookie accidentally catches a great white shark, TV stations broadcast old footage of Lucy’s marine biologist mother, a shark expert who died suddenly when Lucy was seven, dredging up old feelings for the girl. more Mason Deaver. Push, $17.99 (336p) ISBN 978-1-338-30612-5 In an emotionally complex story about finding acceptance and redefining family, 18-year-old Ben is rejected by their parents when they come out as nonbinary. They’re taken in by their older sister, Hannah, who was also driven out by their conservative and judgmental parents 10 years earlier. A powerful illustration of the ways that compassion and love can overcome intolerance. more
TALES FROM THE
SLUSH PILE
|
March 21, 2019
People
Random House Children's Books has several promotions. Maria
Modugno has been promoted executive editorial director at Random House
Books for Young Readers, from editorial director. Erin Clarke has been
promoted to editorial director at Knopf Books for Young Readers, from senior
executive editor. Katherine Harrison has been promoted to senior
editor at Knopf Books for Young Readers, from editor. Kelly Delaney
has been promoted to editor at Knopf Books for Young Readers, from associate
editor. Karen Greenberg has been promoted to associate editor at Knopf
Books for Young Readers, from assistant editor. Marisa Dinovis has
been promoted to associate editor at Knopf Books for Young Readers, from
assistant editor. Dana Carey has been promoted to associate editor at
Wendy Lamb Books, from assistant editor.
Ellen Kokontis has joined Cottage Door Press as art director; previously she
was associate art director at Albert Whitman & Company.
Oona Patrick has been promoted to senior production editor at Bloomsbury Children's Books, from production editor.
In the Winners'
Circle
Philip Pullman, author of the His Dark Materials series, is the recipient of this year’s J.M. Barrie Award, given annually by Action for Children’s Arts in recognition of a lifetime’s achievement in delighting children. The award will be presented at a ceremony in London in the fall. For more information, click here. Lee & Low Books’s Tu imprint has announced the winner of its sixth annual New Visions Award for new authors of color. Monica Zepeda has won for her contemporary YA manuscript, Boys of the Beast, and Michelle Jones Coles’s YA historical fiction manuscript Woke has received the New Visions Award Honor. Zepeda will receive a cash prize of $2,000 and a publishing contract with Lee & Low; publication of Boys of the Beast is planned for fall 2020. For the complete list of this year’s finalists, click here. The Boy at the Back of the Class by Onjali Q. Raúf (Delacorte) is the winner of this year’s overall £5,000 Waterstones Children’s Book Prize. Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Blood and Bone (Holt) won the prize in the older fiction category, and The Girls by Lauren Ace and Jenny Løvlie (Rodale) won in the illustrated category. For more information, click here.
ICYMI
Sneak Previews
Take a look ahead at some of the big titles for children and teens due out this fall, from picture books to YA novels, in our exclusive roundup.
Follow Us
Children's Bookshelf is on Instagram! Follow us @pwkidsbookshelf.
Bookshelf
Archives
Looking for a previous issue of Children's Bookshelf? Click here for
our archives page!
CONTACT US
Have a comment or
suggestion? We'd love to hear from you. Click here to drop us a note. |
||||||||
Bologna Preview
Bologna 2019 Two new exhibition halls and additional programming bring excitement to the upcoming Bologna Children’s Book Fair, which runs from April 1–4 in Bologna, Italy. more In Bologna We spoke with a dozen literary agents and scouts attending this year’s Bologna Fair about trends they’ve been noticing in children’s and YA books, and what they’re expecting to see. more
Obituary
Author Marjorie Weinman Sharmat, creator of more than 130 books for children and young adults, and known for her beloved series about boy detective Nate the Great, died on March 12 at the age of 90. Beverly Horowitz, senior v-p and publisher at Delacorte Press, said, "Generations of kids learned to read and to think because of Marjorie and Nate." more
Book News
We spoke with author Andrea Warren about her research for Enemy Child, a timely nonfiction account of former congressman Norm Mineta, who was taken as a boy by military police with his Japanese-American family from their home in California to an internment camp in Wyoming, where they lived for the duration of World War II. "He went through this and did something with his life, to ensure that something like this doesn’t happen again," Warren said. more Beginning this spring, Random House Children’s Books will publish Spanish-language editions of classic picture books by the late Dr. Seuss. more
Digital News
Fresh from announcing impressive company growth and an infusion of $30 million in new funding, Redwood, Calif.-based kids’ digital reading platform Epic has kicked off a line of exclusive, original content. The Epic Originals collection of books and videos went live today with the release of three titles. more
On the Scene
This year's Tucson Festival of Books took place at the University of Arizona on March 2–3. The event drew approximately 140,000 attendees and featured a lineup of 70 children's authors and storytellers, among other authors. Click through for our selection of photo highlights from the celebration. more
Q & A
Andrew Smith is the author of a number of YA novels, including the Printz Honor-winning Grasshopper Jungle. Smith’s first middle grade novel, The Size of the Truth, is a spin-off focused on Sam Abernathy, a character who first appeared in the teen novel Stand-Off. We spoke with Smith about writing for a middle grade audience, and the connections between his novels. Q: What made you decide to branch out to younger readers? A: I was on tour back in 2015 and my publicist had set up some visits to middle schools. At first, I said, “Why are you sending me to middle schools? I don’t really write for that audience.” She said, “Oh no. They have been asking for you for a long time.” The first middle school I got sent to on that tour was in Boise, Idaho. The kids there were devouring my young adult books, and I really keyed on their energy and thought, wow, I really would like to write something specifically for that age group. more
Rights Report
To see all of this week's deals, click here.
IN THE MEDIA
SHELFTALKER
Elizabeth Bluemle Not Your Kid’s Picture Book Anymore
There are so many picture books that are most loved by adults,
but how do we help them reach their audience?
more »
Leslie Hawkins Family Is Family
Spellbound hosts a very different kind of family celebration at
the bookstore.
more »
Cynthia Compton In Response to “The Problem with Problems”
Another bookseller responds to the recent Twitter storm against
YA titles.
more »
Kenny Brechner The Problem with Problems
When does expunging harm from children’s books become harmful?
FEATURED
REVIEWS
Amy Schwartz. Beach Lane, $17.99 (32p) ISBN 978-1-4814-4510-8 Babies and their guardians appear in eventful scenes illustrated with detailed patterns and splashy colors. A child in a highchair is seen “eating peas”; another baby is supine on a pink blanket, “rattling keys”; and a third is “clapping chubby hands.” Schwartz delicately captures the wonder of new experience in her spry, friendly artwork. more K-Fai Steele. HarperCollins/Balzer + Bray, $17.99 (40p) ISBN 978-0-06-274857-7 Pip, the only spotted pig in her class, is “a normal pig who did normal stuff.” But Pip feels unmoored and vulnerable when a new pig at school points to her lunch of greens and dried seaweed and bellows, “Eww!! What are you eating?!” Instead of rushing in to fix things for Pip, her parents take her to the city for the first time, where she sees many different kinds of pigs, none of whom seems to feel that who they are (or what they eat) makes them strange. more Jonathan Fenske. Penguin Workshop, $9.99 (32p) ISBN 978-1-5247-9195-7 Speed-reading takes on new meaning when a rabbit named Book-It Bunny challenges readers to a race in this interactive early-reader-turned-race-course. With long ears, buckteeth, and a tendency toward duplicity, Book-It proves to be a wily competitor. With fast-paced text and illustrations to match, Fenske has created a page-turning race that readers will surely want to run again. more Raina Telgemeier. Graphix, $12.99 (144p) ISBN 978-1-338-35384-6 Bestselling graphic novelist Telgemeier encourages readers to tell their stories and offers “tips, tricks, and inspirational kick-starters for getting your story down on paper.” Integrating sketches and sample art from her bestselling comics (as well as a few childhood photos), she describes her creative process. Blank panels provide space for readers to create their own drawings. An encouraging and compassionate guide for budding comics creators. more Laurie Morrison. Amulet, $16.99 (288p) ISBN 978-1-4197-3366-6 Debut author Morrison, a former teacher, realistically captures the challenges of middle school—complicated family dynamics, volatile friendships, and first love—in this story about a girl struggling to find where she belongs. Though a learning disability makes school difficult despite tutoring and extra study sessions, Annabelle Wilner finds success on her swim team, where she is bumped up to the high school level. more Mady G. and J.R. Zuckerberg. Limerence, $9.99 paper (96p) ISBN 978-1-62010-586-3 This nonfiction graphic novel by #OwnVoices collaborators Mady G. and Zuckerberg packs a lot of useful information into a slim volume. Iggy, a snail, imparts terminology, concepts, and advice to other snails observing a campfire gathering of queer humans. Iggy begins by helpfully answering “What is queer?” and then considers topics such as gender identity and expression, dysphoria, and asexuality. more |
March 19, 2019
People
Cecily Kaiser has been named director of preschool publishing at Penguin Workshop, as of April 1. She will create a developmental program that will encompass board books, novelty books, and 8x8s. Most recently she was children’s publisher at Phaidon Press, and before that launched the Appleseed imprint at Abrams.
Miriam Newman has been promoted to editor at Candlewick Press, from associate
editor.
Emily Mannon has
joined Holiday House as trade marketing coordinator; she was previously
marketing and project coordinator at Trustbridge.
Jamie Real has
been promoted to associate managing editor of children's books at Chronicle,
from assistant managing editor.
Lynn El-Roeiy has joined Little, Brown Books for Young Readers as design
assistant for picture books; previously she was marketing and publicity
assistant at Abrams.
Brian Murray has
joined Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing as marketing assistant.
Of Note
The Highlights Foundation has announced the Diversity Fellowship in Children's Literature, a 24-month professional development and mentorship program for people of color and Indigenous authors or illustrators who are pursuing publication within the children's publishing industry. Mentors include author-illustrator Floyd Cooper, and authors Debbi Michiko Florence, Emma Otheguy, and Paula Chase Hyman, with more to be added. The Foundation is currently accepting applications for the Diversity Fellowship. For more information, click here.
In the Winners'
Circle
The shortlists for the 2019 CILIP Carnegie and Kate Greenaway Medals, the U.K.’s oldest book awards for young readers, have been announced. For the first time, three verse novels have been shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal, all of which are by U.S. authors of color: Elizabeth Acevedo’s The Poet X, Kwame Alexander’s Rebound, and Jason Reynolds’s Long Way Down. Debut author-illustrator Jessica Love has been shortlisted for the Greenaway Medal, along with the Fan Brothers, and illustrator Jon Klassen has been nominated for the second time. To see the complete shortlists, click here.
Bestsellers
#1 Brawl of the Wild (Dog Man #6) by Dav Pilkey. Click here #1 Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss. Click here
Sneak Previews
Take a look ahead at some of the big titles for children and teens due out this fall, from picture books to YA novels, in our exclusive roundup.
Follow Us
Children's Bookshelf is on Instagram! Please follow us @pwkidsbookshelf.
Bookshelf
Archives
Looking for a previous issue of Children's Bookshelf? Click here to
see our archives page!
CONTACT US
Have a comment or
suggestion? We'd love to hear from you. Click here to drop us a note. |
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