Pasadena Loves YA book festival will take place at the Pasadena Public Library (285 East Walnut Street, Pasadena, CA) on Sat, Sept 17, 2016 from 12-4 pm.
Read MoreNonfiction Picture Book Challenge: Cover Reveal - Martina & Chrissie
Recently, Anna from Candlewick Press reached out to see if I was interested in doing a special cover reveal. Of course, I couldn't pass up revealing the cover for a new picture book biography celebrating tennis greats Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert.
Before I reveal the cover, here are a few words from Phil Bildner about his upcoming book, Martina & Chrissie: The Greatest Rivalry in Sports.
When we think of the greatest rivalries in the history of sports, we often think of boxers Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, facing one another in three epic showdowns for the heavyweight championship of the world in the 1970s. We think of basketball immortals Magic Johnson of the Los Angeles Lakers and Larry Bird of the Boston Celtics, facing one another three times in the NBA Finals in the 1980s.
In tennis, we think of legends like John McEnroe and Bjorn Borg, who went head-to-head fourteen times and Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer, who squared off thirty-four times.
Yet none of those rivalries come anywhere close to the rivalry of Martina Navratilova and Chrissie Evert. They faced one another an astounding eighty times, fourteen times in grand slam finals.
But what made their rivalry so much greater than all the others went way beyond the grass courts of Wimbledon and the red clay of Roland Garros. What made their rivalry transcendent was the humanity of the combatants.
Earlier this month at the Olympics in Rio De Janeiro, we witnessed a rare moment of sportsmanship we're not quite used to seeing these days. During a qualifying heat of the women's 5,000 meters race, Abbey D'Agostino of the United States clipped Nikki Hamblin of New Zealand. Both runners fell to the track, and in an instant, lifelong Olympic dreams were dashed. But then the amazing happened. For the remainder of the race, Abbey and Nikki looked out for one another and made sure they both crossed the finish line.
That snapshot moment took place on the track, but it captured the essence of the Martina Navratilova and Chrissie Evert rivalry. Martina and Chrissie were fierce competitors, playing under the brightest lights and on the biggest stages. But they were also the best of friends, and in the world of sports where we often carelessly serve and volley phrases like "going to war" and "doing battle" and "fighting for your life," Martina and Chrissie never lost sight of their humanity and heart and the role of sportsmanship in competition.
That's what made their rivalry the greatest in the history of sports.
Now for the reveal.....
Isn't this a great cover? Absolutely beautiful! I can't wait to get in and see the illustrations in the finished copy and to read the story of Martina & Chrissie. Mark your calendar for March 2017 and pick up a copy of the book at your local indie bookstore.
About the book:
Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert come from completely different places and play tennis in completely different ways. Chrissie is the all-American girl: practiced, poised, with perfect technique. Martina hails from Czechoslovakia, a Communist country, and her game is ruled by emotion. Everything about them is different, except one thing: they both want to be the best. But as their intense rivalry grows, something else begins to swing into place, and a friendship forms that will outlast all their tennis victories. Phil Bildner and Brett Helquist tell the engaging true story of these two masters of the court as they win title after title — and, most importantly, the hearts of the fans.
About the author: Phil Bildner has written many historical picture books, including Marvelous Cornelius and The Unforgettable Season. His next book—the fascinating dual biography of tennis greats Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert, Martina & Chrissie—publishes on March 14, 2017. He lives with his husband in Newburgh, New York.
Don't forget to link up your reviews....
Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge: Mountain Chef
This month authors Janet Fox, Barbara Rosenstock, and Liz Garton Scanlon are shining a light on our National Parks with a series of blog posts - Page Through the Parks. I am joining them in celebrating the 100th Anniversary of National Park Service. Check out my earlier post here.
My post this week celebrates a frequent participant in the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge and author, Annette Bay Pimentel's new book.
Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries, Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook Up the National Park Service
by Annette Bay Pimentel, Illustrated by Rich Lo
Charlesbridge Publishing (August 2, 2016)
Nonfiction * Biography * Cultural Heritage
Audience: Ages 6 to 9
Indiebound | Worldcat
Description from GoodReads: The true story of a Chinese American mountain man who fed thirty people for ten days in the wilderness--and helped inspire the creation of the National Park Service.
Tie Sing was born in the mountains. The mountains were in his blood. But because he was of Chinese descent at a time in America when to be Chinese meant working in restaurants or laundries, Tie Sing’s prospects were limited. But he had bigger plans. He began cooking for mapmakers and soon built a reputation as the best trail cook in California.
When millionaire Stephen Mather began his quest to create a national park service in 1915, he invited a group of influential men—writers, tycoons, members of Congress, and even a movie star—to go camping in the Sierras. Tie Sing was hired to cook.
Tie Sing planned diligently. He understood the importance of this trip. But when disaster struck—twice!—and Tie Sing’s supplies were lost, it was his creative spirit and quick mind that saved the day. His sumptuous menus had to be struck and Tie Sing had to start over in order to feed the thirty people in the group for ten whole days. His skills were tested and Tie Sing rose to the challenge.
On the last night, he fed not just the campers' bodies, but also their minds, reminding them to remember and protect the mountains.
2016 marks the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service, created by Congress on August 25, 1916.
Today, you can hike to Sing Peak, named for Tie Sing, in Yosemite National Park.
Quick thoughts on this book:
I love when a children's biography introduces me to a new person and a fascinating piece of history.
In celebration of the 100th anniversary of National Park Service, I am featuring Mountain Chef by Annette Bay Pimentel. Can you imagine lugging everything you need to cook basically gourmet meals (without modern amenities) in the mountains and do so on the backs of mules? A few years ago, I went camping with friends. We camped not far from the beach. We took care to weigh down coolers and to make sure food was secure and yet, by early morning raccoons had lifted one of the cooler lids enough to reach in and pull things out. However, in our case, we could drive a car into town to pick up anything that we needed. Tie Sing and his small crew didn't have those options so when things were lost, they were gone. It was a tough trip.
Pimentel provides readers with insight into the one small element of Tie Sing's life and how his dedication, creativity, and perseverance as a cook may have influenced Stephen Mather's guests on a very special camping trip.
Another aspect of this story that I appreciated was the focus on an individual of Chinese decent who during his lifetime had to face extreme prejudices but still managed to make his own mark.
Check out these two posts from Annette here and Rich here. Pick up a copy of Mountain Chef at your favorite indie bookstore or check it out at your local library.
Join the giveaway for teachers and librarians sponsored by Janet, Barb, and Liz. For more information about the giveaway, check out Janet's post here.
Don't forget to link up your nonfiction posts below:
Blog Tour & Giveaway: The Full Moon of the Were-Hyena
Thank you Bruce Hale for stopping by Kid Lit Frenzy and sharing about your favorite author visits.
Author visits, to borrow a phrase, are like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’ll get. But over and over again, as I’ve visited schools and libraries from New York to New Delhi, I’ve been surprised, charmed, and touched by the warm welcomes I’ve received.
Here, in no particular order, are some of my favorite author visit experiences:
1. Riding the float
One warm August, the Huxley Public Library invited me to present at that Iowa town’s Prairie Fest. And as a capper, they invited me to ride the library’s float in the Prairie Fest parade.
What a hoot! As the parade wound through town, I sat surrounded by kids with buckets of candy, waving to passersby and tossing sweets. The older boys competed to see who could throw Tootsie Pops hard enough to embed them in bystanders’ foreheads.
2. Red carpet memories
As I approached the cafeteria door of a Long Beach, California, school, two students unfurled a 20-foot-long roll of red construction paper, their version of a red carpet. Kids lined up on either side of it, and as I strolled down the “carpet,” each student told me something they particularly liked about my books.
3. I’m with the band
A Lamont, California, school librarian noticed on my bio that I sing jazz. She mentioned that the middle school jazz band would be playing for the family literacy night, and wondered if I’d like to sing with them? The student band swung hard as we did Route 66 and Well, Alright together, entertaining a crowd of pizza-eating parents and kids.
4. Which cookie rules?
Author visits aren’t usually fattening. But that changed when Crane School in Santa Barbara invited me to be a celebrity judge of their County Fair Day baking contest. As a major cookie hound, I never thought I could ever eat my fill of chocolate chip cookies. I was wrong. After sampling 22 different chocolate chip cookies from 22 different bakers, my student co-judge and I were desperate for something savory.
5. Gettin’ sharky with it
I love it when schools engage kids in projects relating to my books. The students express their creativity, and they end up getting much more out of the experience that way.
Many schools have drawing contests, but a Fort Thomas, Kentucky, school went even further. Not only did students create a Lego version of Clark the Shark and his world, but they turned the library door into a gigantic, open shark mouth. So they only way the students and I could enter the venue was by going down the gullet of a shark!
6. Meeting the bear
On a summer reading tour of Alaska libraries, I discovered that memorable experiences can occur even after the day’s presentation has concluded.
After speaking at Seward Library, I visited a glacier valley for a short hike before leaving town. The views were stunning, and on my way back down the trail, I spotted two bear cubs playing in a tree. Fascinated, I stopped to watch—and then spotted the 400-lb. mama bear at the base of the tree. For several long minutes, she stared at me, and I stared at her. And then, slowly-slowly, I went on my way and she went back to minding her cubs.
7. Hitting the Taj
For my first major international school trip, I began with the Cadillac of author visits. The American Embassy School of New Delhi invited Bruce Coville and me for five days’ worth of presentations to their kids. After treating us like visiting royalty and feeding us at fine restaurants every night, the school sent us on a side trip to the Taj Mahal. I suspect this will be the only time one of my visits involves a trip to a UNESCO World Heritage site, but over time, I’ve learned that with author visits, you never can tell.
Photo Credit: Jose Carpizo
Edgar-nominated author Bruce Hale is passionate about inspiring reluctant readers to read. He has written or illustrated more than 35 seriously funny books for children, including the popular School for S.P.I.E.S. and Chet Gecko Mysteries series; as well as picture books such as Clark the Shark, Snoring Beauty, and Big Bad Baby. His creeptastic new series, The Monstertown Mysteries, debuted last month with THE CURSE OF THE WERE-HYENA. An actor and a Fulbright Scholar in Storytelling, Bruce is in demand as a speaker, having presented at conferences, universities, and schools around the world. Bruce's book The Malted Falcon was an Edgar Award Finalist and Murder, My Tweet won the Little D Award for Humor Writing. He lives in Santa Barbara, California with his wife and dog. You can find him online at www.brucehale.com.
Connect with him on Twitter | Facebook
Free Discussion Guide and Activities can be found here.
The Full Moon of the Were-Hyena Howling Good Giveaway!
Ten winners will receive a copy of Bruce Hale’s The Curse of the Were-Hyena. Four Grand Prize winners will receive The Curse of the Were-Hyena plus an advance reading copy of the second book in the series, Mutant Mantis Lunch Ladies! And as a bonus, Grand Prize winners will also get a signed photo of Bruce Hale disguised as a were-wolf! Click here to enter.
YA Friday Book Review: Glass Sword
Glass Sword
Victoria Aveyard
Audience: Young Adult
HarperTeen (February 9, 2016)
IndieBound | WorldCat
"Mare Barrow’s blood is red—the color of common folk—but her Silver ability, the power to control lightning, has turned her into a weapon that the royal court tries to control.
The crown calls her an impossibility, a fake, but as she makes her escape from Maven, the prince—the friend—who betrayed her, Mare uncovers something startling: she is not the only one of her kind.
Pursued by Maven, now a vindictive king, Mare sets out to find and recruit other Red-and-Silver fighters to join in the struggle against her oppressors.
But Mare finds herself on a deadly path, at risk of becoming exactly the kind of monster she is trying to defeat.
Will she shatter under the weight of the lives that are the cost of rebellion? Or have treachery and betrayal hardened her forever?
The electrifying next installment in the Red Queen series escalates the struggle between the growing rebel army and the blood-segregated world they’ve always known—and pits Mare against the darkness that has grown in her soul."
Carolyn's thoughts on the book:
*Spoilers for Red Queen ahead*
Red Queen was easily one of my favorite debut novels of 2015, and though I eagerly awaited Glass Sword, the second book of the series, I was concerned that the sequel would be unable to do its predecessor justice (as is the curse of the middle book of many YA series). My fears were assuaged by Glass Sword’s complex world building, intricate plotting, dynamic character growth, and lyric prose - all of the things that made me love Red Queen.
While most of the world-building in Red Queen was first introducing the reader to the general setting of the Stilts (and the differences between Reds and Silvers), and then Mare’s exploration of the vastly different world of Silvers and royalty, Glass Sword opens Mare’s (and the reader’s) eyes to the underground world of the Scarlet Guard. For those of you who’ve read Steel Scars, the novella detailing Farley’s involvement with the Scarlet Guard leading up to her meeting Mare for the first time, some details may not be new, but there are a plethora of new discoveries within the Scarlet Guard. What Mare thought was a small, hastily put together team of rebels is in fact a sprawling underground movement, with a network spanning farther than the borders of Norta. Indeed, Glass Sword introduces us to more countries than simply Norta and the Lakelands, further expanding Mare’s world - and possibilities for what’s to come.
In Red Queen, Mare’s emotions were plagued by her conflicting loyalties and guilt over her involvement with the Scarlet Guard, but her heart is far more bitterly turmoiled in Glass Sword. While Mare may rejoice in her long-lost brother Shade’s return, her feelings are complicated after Maven’s brutal betrayal. Mare is haunted by her former fiancé - alternating between a sickening thirst for revenge, and missing the person he pretended to be; her conflicting feelings toward Maven are mirrored by Cal, who lost his brother as well as his father through Maven’s deceit. Mare and Cal share their trauma and change as a result, but character development isn’t exclusive to them. Farley and Kilorn have grown and changed as well - and, of course, so has Maven, though it’s not so much growth as a slimy regression, shedding his former skin to show his true colors.
But Mare’s turmoil is quelled, at least temporarily, by her mission ahead: to find the other Reds that possess Silver powers and recruit them to the Scarlet Guard before Maven can kill them off. Worse yet, her mission is unsanctioned, her only allies a close few. But soon, as their figures swell, so does their confidence, though it belies the ever-increasing danger. A long-distance game of cat-and-mouse ensues, until Mare is too emotionally embroiled to see Maven’s careful plotting, and their carefully-wrought plans hang in the balance.
Glass Sword is carefully and smartly written, paced quickly enough to hold the reader’s attention and appropriately communicate the dangerous, high-stakes atmosphere, but thoughtful enough to not neglect the character development or other important details as the electrifying plot progresses. The story unfolds with Victoria Aveyard’s same graceful prose, straightforward but poetic, and is a deeply satisfying read. It does end on an infuriating cliff hanger, though, reinforcing the reader’s hunger for the next installment in the the series, King’s Cage (although I doubt readers need that specific motivation, as the Red Queen series has been highly successful thus far). I will be impatiently waiting until then.
Carolyn is a teen blogger who shares her favorite YA reads and favorite book related finds with readers on Fridays.