It's Monday! What are you reading? From Picture Books to YA - 4/8/13

It's Monday! What are you reading? is hosted by Sheila of Book Journey. Jen & Kellee from Teach Mentor Texts have adapted this to focus on Picture Books to Young Adult Books.

I read through a stack of picture books this week.  I am still looking for some exceptional picture books.  Lately, there have been some fun ones, but not many that I want to take home with me.  I have listed a few that are definitely worth checking out.

I, also, enjoyed reading Donalyn Miller's Nerdy Book Club post from 4/7/13.  I realize that I have been feeling guilty about reading books or other material that are not children's books.  Lately, I have been exploring a variety of reading material such as that stack of magazines that I have been meaning to tackle.  There are also three boxes of Leveled Literacy Intervention Materials that I have been working my way through.  My sister has been looking for some romance books and somehow I have been on a search for books to recommend to her which has taken me into a whole realm of books that I don't normally read.  I have finally started an adult paranormal/urban fantasy series (J.R. Ward's Black Dagger Brotherhood Series) that some of my friends were reading. I am just having fun reading something totally different and completely escapism.  Am I reading? Most certainly.  I probably read over 1000 pages this week. However, if you only see picture books and a few early chapter books below, then you'll understand why.

Here is what stood out from the stack this week...


The Pet Project: Cute and Cuddly Vicious Verses by Lisa Wheeler; Illustrated by Zachariah O'Hora (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, April 2, 2103) - This is a fun one for National Poetry Month.  I never quite expected the ending, but it was entertaining.


The Boy and the Airplane by Mark Pett (Simon & Schuster, April 2, 2013) - This wordless picture book was strange in a good way.  If you find it, definitely take a look at it.


The Three Triceratops Tuff by Stephen Shaskan (Beach Lane Books, April 2, 2013) - This play on The Three Billy Goats Gruff will entertain young readers. 


Nugget and Fang: Friends Forever - Or Snack Time? by Tammi Sauer; Illustrated by Michael Slack (Harcourt Children's, April 2, 2013) - This concept has been done before but I enjoyed how Sauer pulls this one off. 


Mouse Guard: The Black Axe by David Petersen (Archaia Entertainment, April 9, 2013) - If you haven't read any of the previous Mouse Guard graphic novels by David Petersen, you must especially if you have read any of the Redwall books by Brian Jacques.  The illustrations in this series are fabulous. 


Starring Jules (As Herself) by Beth Levine Ain; Illustrated by Anne Keenan Higgins (Scholastic, March 1, 2013) - An entertaining and humorous read for 2nd to 4th graders, particularly girls.

So, what are you reading?

Author Event - Pseudonymous Bosch & The Story Pirates


On April 2, 2013, Pseudonymous Bosch's newest book - WRITE THIS BOOK - was released.  To celebrate, Vroman's Bookstore in Pasadena organized the event which was hosted at McKinley School.  This was definitely not your typical author event.  The Story Pirates performed an improvisational skit around the book.  For more information about the Story Pirates, check out their website.


The whole performance was done as an improv skit with suggestions from children who were in attendance.  I have seen various other improvisational performances before but I truly give kudos to the Story Pirates.  Incorporating the ideas of the young audience into the skit was not easy, but the performers were amazing.


Isn't this "plot map" fabulous?!  I want one. Part of the skit incorporated a lesson in various elements of storytelling.  The car moved around as those elements were mentioned.



Here is a short clip of the Story Pirates as they perform WRITE THIS BOOK...



Here one of the performers is encouraging the audience to provide suggestions for the next part of the skit.


As characters were added to the skit (thanks to the suggestions from the audience), clothing changes were made.


And made again...


And, well, again...


Here the Story Pirates turn their skit about WRITE THIS BOOK into a musical...



At one point in the improv, the topic of genre came up.  Below is a picture of a "genre wheel".  I so want one of these.  Brilliant way of creating one.


A student from McKinley came up and had a chance to "spin the wheel".  The genre selected was then incorporated into the skit.


At the end, the Real Pseudonymous Bosch arrived and set everyone straight. 


Here is Pseudonymous Bosch signing books.


Jax (she helped me write the review of WRITE THIS BOOK) & her friend Ella had a chance to take a picture with Pseudonymous Bosch.  Of course, pictures were taken in Bosch's trademark style. :-)


This was one of the best author events that I have ever attend.  Thank you to Pseudonymous Bosch, the Story Pirates, Little Brown Books for Young Readers, Vromans Bookstore, and McKinley School for creating such a memorable event.

Enter below for a chance to win a signed hard cover of WRITE THIS BOOK by Pseudonymous Bosch.  a Rafflecopter giveaway

Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - April 2013 Releases





As part of the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge, I try to give a heads up on new releases for the month.  Here are some of titles that I found being released in April 2013 (and a few that I missed from February and March). 


February 1, 2013


War Dogs: Churchill and Rufus by Kathryn Selbert

February 26, 2013


Eye on the Wild: Orangutan by Suzi Eszterhas (Frances Lincoln's Children's Books)

March 5, 2013


Miss Moore Thought Otherwise: How Anne Carroll Moore Created Libraries for Children by Jan Pinborough; Illustrated by Debby Atwell (Houghton Mifflin Books)

March 19, 2013


The Beatles Were Fab (And They Were Funny) by Kathleen Krull, Paul Brewer; Illustrated by Stacy Innerst (Harcourt Children's Books)

April 1, 2013


Miracle Mud: Lena Blackburne and the Secret Mud That Changed Baseball by David A. Kelly; Illustrated by Oliver Dominguez (Milbrook Press)


Revolutionary Friends: General George Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette by Selene Castrovilla; Illustrated by Drazen Kozjan (Boyd Mills)


Something to Prove: The Great Satchel Paige vs. the Rookie Joe DiMaggio by Robert Skead; Illustrated by Floyd Cooper (Carolrhoda Books)

April 2, 2013


Gandhi: The March to the Sea by Alice B McGinty; Illustrated by Thomas Gonzalez (Amazon Children's Publishing)

April 9, 2013


Barbed Wire Baseball by Marissa Moss; Illustrated by Yuko Shimizu (Abrams Books)

Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews:

An interview with Amy VanDerwater - Forest Has a Song

Today debut author, Amy VanDerwater  has stopped by to chat and share her thoughts about her new book Forest Has a Song and a little bit about her writing life.  She has also shared some great ideas for celebrating National Poetry Month.  Thanks Amy for stopping by.


Amy, your book is beautifully illustrated and the poetry is very lovely. In Forest Has a Song, all of the poetry is focused on nature. Do you have other topics you like to write about? 

Thank you very much; I adore Robbin Gourley’s illustrations too! And yes…I often write about the small observations in my life such as hugging warm laundry fresh from the dryer or curling up with a dog. I love to write about play and questions and making things. Many of my poems explore the border of daily life and mystery – that in-between space. Many more are about connection; I am fascinated by how we are all connected to each other and to animals, to history and to plants, to art and to song.

I have recently had fun teaching children about writing cinquains. Is there a type of poetry that you most enjoy writing or teaching? 

I like to write just to see what happens. For me, a poem often grows from a snip of thought or wonder or joy or just good-sounding words. I’m a notebook keeper, and I enjoy discovering what arises from my entries. I do like reading others poems and studying their forms, experimenting with those forms on my own. I always think of it as like trying on dress up clothes and seeing what fits. When I teach, I most want children to understand that we write not to fit a template, but to illuminate what matters to us.

When did you decide you wanted to write poetry? Do you write a lot of poetry as a child?

I did write some poetry as a child. I kept diaries here and there (when I was really little, Mom took dictation for me), and I remember loving the play of words. In sixth grade I wrote a poem about mothers that ended like this:

Mothers always yell at you/ like make your bed or tie your shoe/or pick up that sock you left on the ground/but mothers make the world go round. 

I was very happy with that ending rhyme.

What is the question that you most frequently get asked by children who write to you?

I do not yet receive many letters from children…but maybe someday! - I (Alyson) suspect that will change now that your book is out. :-)

What suggestions would you give teachers for celebrating National Poetry Month? 

Just fall in love. Begin each day of April by reading a fantastic poem “just because”. Choose nature poems, funny poems, sad poems…poems that span human experience. Our currently-crazed testing culture is not supportive of reading poetry for poetry’s sake, but we are teaching children with great minds and souls, and these minds and souls need poems. Children are hungry for meaning, and there is meaning in poems. From this meaning-place, our students will want to write, and then revise, edit, and maybe share their own poetry. Don’t worry about making every poem fit an activity or a form; just fall in love with words, let poems wash over and through you.

I share some ideas for sharing and writing poems at my blog, The Poem Farm, and you can find links to many poetry-happenings in the Kidlitosphere this month at Jama Rattigan’s Alphabet Soup -  and at Poets.org

I will also be the Author-in-Residence at ReaderKidZ for the month of April.

One thing I am always curious about is the writing habits and writing space of authors? Some work in their home or a writing space, and others in coffee shops. Some like music playing in the background and others have special snacks or beverages. Tell us a little bit about your writing space and habits.

I am not very organized, so alas, I have not made an organized or lovely writing space. I write anywhere: flopped in the grass, at a local bakery (background music is not good for me), stretched out on our living room floor, at my messy antique roll top desk. I do best when I’m in a rhythm, and this April, I’m getting back into writing rituals by drawing each day in my new sketchbook. I am hoping that poems will grow from these drawings which I will post daily at my blog.

If we were to get a peek at your “To-be-read” pile, what titles would be see in the stack of books?

Right now I am looking at Lewis Turco’s TURCO’S BOOK OF FORMS, a book that I’m not sure how I’ll attack. I’m finishing Ted Kooser’s THE POETRY HOME REPAIR MANUAL, am rereading THE TREE THAT TIME BUILT poems selected by Mary Ann Hoberman, and I am about to read MINDSET: THE NEW PSYCHOLOGY OF SUCCESS by Carol Dweck. I need a novel!

Cake by Luci Levere of Elm Street Bakery E. Aurora NY
Do you have any other future writing projects in the works? Anything you can share? 

READING TIME, a collection of reading poems, will be published by WordSong at some point in the future, and I do have my fingers crossed for a couple of other manuscripts too…but those are still secret.

Thank you very much for hosting me here at KidLitFrenzy, Alyson. It has been a pleasure. 

Some special links and resources from Amy...

The Poem Farm (my poem blog)

Sharing Our Notebooks (my notebooks blog) 

Information about FOREST HAS A SONG - click here

HMH's Spring Poetry Kit - Spring 2013 Poetry Kit on Scribd 

Illustrator of FOREST HAS A SONG - Robbin Gourley's website http://robbingourley.com/


Don't forget to enter to win a copy of A Forest Has a Song from Blueslip Media. a Rafflecopter giveaway

It's Monday! What are you reading? From Picture Books to YA - 4/1/13

It's Monday! What are you reading? is hosted by Sheila of Book Journey. Jen & Kellee from Teach Mentor Texts have adapted this to focus on Picture Books to Young Adult Books.

I read through a stack of books this week.  Some good, some okay, and some that were exceptional.  I also was working on a number of projects while on break and seemed to have started a lot of books but didn't finish them in time for this post (I do plan to finish them). I think I was having a case of "book ADD". 

Here's what stood out from the pile....


Paul Thurlby's Wildlife by Paul Thurlby (Templar, March 2013) - This book just blew me away.  It was a great concept that was well executed.  I learned so much from reading it.


The Book Boat's in by Cynthia Cotten (Holiday House, January 2013) - Interesting piece of book history.


Wilfred by Ryan Higgins (Dial/Penguin, March 2013) - I really liked this unique tale of friendship and consequences.  

So, what are you reading?