Unleashing Readers Launch Week


Unleashing Readers: Helping Students Navigate The World of Books is a new blog developed by Kellee Moye and Ricki Ginsberg.  To celebrate their launch week, they have asked some of their friends to talk about some of our favorite books.  I didn't realize that this would be stressful.  There are so many good books out there and how am I to pick just one for each of these categories.  Here is what I picked today, but know that if you ask me in a couple of weeks my choices might change. :-)

My favorite read aloud...


Yes, I am cheating here, but I love reading all three (Turtle in Paradise by Jennifer L. Holm; Al Capone Does My Shirts by Gennifer Choldenko; and Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis) of these books aloud.  Once we finish them, we hold a 1930's party with the food and drinks mentioned in the books and I also introduce the kids to some of the pop culture of the time.

My favorite close read/analysis book...


I fell in love with The Dreamer when I first read it.  I wanted my students, many who are Hispanic, to really read and understand this book.  I began by reading the picture book, Pablo Neruda: Poet of the People and when we finished with this book we celebrated with a Literacy Café.
 
My favorite lit circle/book club book...


Both The Word Eater by Mary Amato and Frindle by Andrew Clements center around words and responsibility.  The discussions students have with both of these books are fabulous.  Especially, as the question about responsibility comes into play.  Additionally, both books lead to some wonderful lessons about words and their meanings.

My favorite book for the classroom library...


I am cheating here again.  Really, I think anything by Steve Jenkins should be included in an elementary classroom library.  His nonfiction picture books are creative and filled with wonderful images and great facts. 

My favorite book in general....


My first book that I really read independently and loved was The Secret Garden.  As a child, I was very fond of historical fiction especially from the late 1800's and early 1900's. I have read it multiple times even as an adult.  In 2012, Ellen Potter wrote a book inspired by The Secret Garden and in a modern day setting called The Humming Room.  I loved Potter's version too in a totally different way.

July Kindle Fire Giveaway Sign-ups


Sign-ups are now open for our Kindle Fire Giveaway Hop. Book bloggers and Authors can sign up for $10 per Rafflecopter spot. The funds collected will pay for the prizes; there may be more in addition to the Kindle Fire if we exceed the cost of a Kindle Fire HD.

Guidelines:

  • This is for juvenile to YA book blogs and authors (PB: Picture Book, MG: Middle Grade, YA: Young Adult, NA: New Adult). 
  • The cost for each Rafflecopter slot (Follow me on Facebook, Follow me on Twitter, Follow my blog, Add my book to Goodreads, etc.) is $10, payable on Paypal or Amazon (US) gift certificates. We will send more info to all the qualifying sponsors by July 2, 2013.
  • We will be offering raffle items to bloggers as well as blog readers if the funds exceed the cost of a Kindle Fire. (Final prizes TBD)
  • The hop will start sometime in July (TBD when all sponsors have signed up). 
  • The deadline to sign up is June 30, 2013
  • There will be a lot of kid-lit type blogs on this hop, so please no 18+, mature blogs on this hop* although we will allow upper YA and new adult authors to join. 
  • Signing up also means you will be posting about the giveaway on your blog or website. We would also appreciate if you would post the sign-up information. Please link to this page with the image above or the text "July Kindle Fire Giveaway Hop". 
  • Sponsors can also add books or swag to the giveaway as long as they are in keeping with the rest of the rules.
  • If you are not sure if your blog or book qualifies, please sign up anyway and we'll get back to you after we check it out.

Credits:

This is the type of hop that you may have seen on the book blog iamareader.com -- Thanks to Kathy H for the idea. She also holds her own hops so check them out at her site.

This hop will be hosted by 

Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - The Mighty Lalouche

Author: Matthew Olshan
Illustrator: Sophie Blackall
Publisher: Schwartz & Wade (May 14, 2013)
Source: Purchased
Audience: Grades 2 to 5
Keywords: French History, Letter Carriers, Boxing

Description from GoodReads:
In Paris, France, there lived a humble postman named Lalouche. He was small, but his hands were nimble, his legs were fast, and his arms were strong. When his job was replaced by an electric car, he turned to boxing to support himself and his pet finch, Genevieve. But--"You? A boxer?" the fighters asked. "I could sneeze and knock you down!" Still, Lalouche refused to give up. And perhaps small Lalouche was just nimble . . . just fast . . . and just strong enough to beat his fierce competitors. This is a marvelous story, full of humor and heart, and illustrated by Sophie Blackall, winner of a New York Times Best Illustrated Award

My thoughts on the book:   
This book may be pushing the extremes of the true description of nonfiction picture book.  It is more a book of historical fiction. Though a postman named Lalouche did not really exist, French boxing did exist in the early nineteenth century.  Electric cars were being created and experimented with in the late 1800's and early 1900's.  It is this context of Paris, Frances in the late nineteenth century that author Matthew Olshan uses to create his story of a humble but very special postman.  

 
What would it be like if the French postal system did decide to use sporty electric cars to deliver the mail?  In The Mighty Lalouche, Olshan speculates how exactly the use of an electric car would provide an opportunity for the small, nimble and quick postman to become famous.


Lalouche did not know about boxing or what was expected of him.  Ignoring those who laughed at him, Lalouche uses his special speed and strength to become a success. 


Despite Lalouche's success in the ring, he missed his former occupation.  I love these lines from the book -

"And yet stationery stores could make him sad, and envelopes, and above all, stamps."

"In his heart, Lalouche was still a postman."

And when his boss called him to say that the electric car was not working out. Lalouche was ready to return. "And just like that, Lalouche traded in his famous gloves and booties for a humble postman's uniform."

Matthew Olshan has provided young readers with an enchanting story and pieces of history that may be less familiar.  Illustrator/artist, Sophie Blackall brings the story to life with her incredible artwork.  I have always been amazed at any author who uses paper cutting as a means of creating illustrations.  Her paper cuttings bring an extra layer and texture to The Mighty Lalouche.  Read about Sophie Blackall's process to create the artwork for The Mighty Lalouche, click here.

This is one of my favorite picture books of 2013 and just a wonderful story.  I encourage you to pick up a copy of this book from your local library or independent children's bookstore if you haven't seen it.

Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews:

Clementine and the Spring Trip Blog Tour & Giveaway with Guest Post by Sara Pennypacker



Today, I am excited to welcome Sara Pennypacker to Kid Lit Frenzy.  I love her Clementine series and often recommend them to students.  

Hi Alyson, and thanks for inviting me to stop in and guest post. You may end up sorry you did, but it’s too late now. I’ve been on a blog tour for my newest Clementine book, CLEMENTINE AND THE SPRING TRIP, for a week now, and many of the blogs have been interviews with lots of good questions. This has made me want to turn the tables, so I’ve decided to interview you...

First of all, Alyson, do you know you live near Marla Frazee?!?! (I figured this out because you often seem to stop in at Vroman’s Bookstore in Pasadena, which is where Marla lives.) If you already know this, do you stalk her? Because I sure would. She’s a genius and I am so lucky she illustrates my Clementine books and will be illustrating my next series (starring Waylon, a boy in Clementine’s class.) I would spy on her to try to figure out how she gets so much emotion and humor into her drawings.

Look at this one here, where Clementine is telling her father how much she misses her cat:

Illustration © Marla Frazee

Or this one here, where she’s being a bit dramatic about how she likes her eggs:

Illustration © Marla Frazee

Also, I would try to find out what Marla does to make her hair look so awesome.

Because I’m such a big fan, if I lived near Marla I would be tempted to bust into her house on Sunday mornings and make her heart-shaped pancakes, just to thank her for making such wonderful art, but that’s the kind of thing that’s well-intentioned in theory but a little creepy in actuality, so it’s good I live 3000 miles away.

Ahem. I have signed books at Vroman’s twice now...were you there? If not, will you come the next time?

To entice you, here’s my favorite Vroman’s story: While I was taking a little break from signing, a woman came up to ask Marla if there was any vomiting in the Clementine books. I’m not kidding! Marla was, of course, a little taken aback by the question, and replied, “Well, I didn’t illustrate any.” Unfortunately, the woman left before I came back to the table, so I didn’t get to educate her. Yes, there is vomiting, because it’s kind of a big deal to elementary school kids! In fact, in the first book, Clementine very responsibly doesn’t spin her little brother in the wok a second time because it makes him throw up. And in THE TALENTED CLEMENTINE, there’s an accident onstage at the talent show that our hero quickly closes the curtain on. Mostly I wish I’d been there to ask the woman, “What kind of a crazy question is that? Weren’t you ever a kid???” Now don’t you wish you’d been there, too, Alyson?

A favor: May I please steal the word Frenzy?

Of course you don’t own it, but the truth is I hadn’t realized what a fabulous word it is until coming to your blog, so I’d owe you. I love that it has a Z in it, and that it sounds like “Friend-sy” but most of all that it conjures up such an energetic, crazed image. In return, I will give you a writing tip to pass on: It’s always funny to connect two words that are usually opposites. For instance, Clementine might notice that her mother is “frenzying very calmly” or that Margaret was “in a frenzy to calm herself down.”

Would you like me to talk a little about the CLEMENTINE series, and about the newest book? You would?

Great! In case you don’t know them, the Clementine books are about a third grade girl who possibly has just the slightest, teensy issue with attention. I base her on my own son (who lives in LA now, so is another neighbor of yours!) who got his own attention issues from his mother, I’m afraid. While the books are funny, I’m very serious about two things when I write them.

First, kids like this, while presenting some challenges, are often extremely empathetic, gifted artists, and creative problem solvers – three things the world could use more of.

Second, all the adults in Clementine’s world are functional, supportive, caring and present. The smart author avoids adult characters like this, because there’s more reader sympathy for the main character who’s an orphan, or neglected or mistreated. Also because it’s harder to drum up dramatic tension in a story when everyone around is helpful to the main character. But I really felt there was a need for contemporary fiction about healthy family dynamics, and that it could be compelling if told truthfully with a lot of humor. Bringing these perfectly ordinary, yet beautifully extraordinary, people to life on the Clementine pages has been the biggest joy of my writing career.

While the Clementine books are funny first, they also explore real issues kids her age often encounter: sibling rivalry, missing pets, worries about one’s place in the family, etc. In the newest book, the sixth in what will be a series of seven, CLEMENTINE AND THE SPRING TRIP, I decided to push Clementine’s sense of fairness a little. On a field trip, she encounters a chicken and can no longer avoid an unpleasant injustice – people eat animals! – and must work out her response. As with all the books, I loved writing this one – Clementine and her friends and family are so much fun to hang out with!

I will be in your area next summer, Alyson. Will you have a literacy café with me, where you and I eat cake and get frenzied about books?

You will? Excellent – I can tell you and I would have a lot to talk about, and we may have to order seconds on the cake, to keep us fortified. BTW, I like to bake cakes, not just eat them – here’s a picture of me with a chocolate zucchini cake, mascarpone frosting:


I will send you my California dates when I have them...

Oh Sara, yes, I have met the wonderful Marla Frazee several times at Vromans, and she also visited my school.  Also, I would be more than happy to attend one of your book events at Vroman's or another store in Southern California.  And, I would be honored to host a Literacy Café for you to celebrate you and Celementine.  Thank you for this delightful post. - Alyson

Bio
Sara Pennypacker (www.sarapennypacker.com) was a painter before becoming a writer, and has two absolutely fabulous children who are now grown. She has written several books, including the Clementine series, all illustrated by Marla Frazee, The Amazing World of Stuart, Sparrow Girl, and Summer of the Gypsy Moths. She grew up in Massachusetts and splits her time between Cape Cod and Florida.

For additional stops on her blog tour check out the dates below:

Mon, June 17: GreenBeanTeenQueen - http://www.greenbeanteenqueen.com/
Tues, June 18: Once Upon a Story - http://www.novalibrarymom.com/
Wed, June 19: Mother Daughter Book Club - http://motherdaughterbookclub.com/
Thurs, June 20: Media Darlings - http://www.mdarlings.com/
Fri, June 21: Sharpread - http://sharpread.wordpress.com/
Mon, June 24: Children's Book Review - http://www.thechildrensbookreview.com/
Tues, June 25: Kid Lit Frenzy - http://www.kidlitfrenzy.com/
Wed, June 26: There's a Book - http://www.theresabook.com/
Thurs, June 27: As They Grow Up - http://www.astheygrowup.com/
Fri, June 28 Bookingmama http://www.bookingmama.net/


Thank you to Disney Hyperion and Blue Slip Media for arranging the blog tour and for giving away a copy of Clementine and the Spring Trip for a giveaway (US/Canada).  Please fill out the rafflecopter below to enter to win a copy.   a Rafflecopter giveaway

It's Monday! What are you reading? From Picture Books to YA - 6/24/13





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.


Since I can't talk about what I read last week (that's the nature of award reading), I will share with you what I am planning on taking with me on my trip (Los Angeles to Chicago/ALA to Connecticut and back to Los Angeles).

What I am planning on reading with my ears:


Zebra Forest by Adina Rishe Gewirtz (Brilliance Audio, April 9, 2013)


Far, Far Away by Tom McNeal (Listening Library, June 11, 2013)


The Wig in the Window by Kristen Kittscher (HarperCollins, June 18, 2013)

What I am planning on reading in the traditional sense:


Sidekicked by John David Anderson (Walden Pond Press, June 25, 2013)


The Real Boy by Anne Ersu; Illustrated by Erin McGuire (Walden Pond Press, September 24, 2013)


Mila 2.0 by Debra Driza (Katherine Tegen Books, March 12, 2013)


Belle Epoque by Elizabeth Ross (Delacorte Books for Young Readers, June 11, 2013)


Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein (Disney-Hyperion, September 10, 2013)

Of course, I am also shipping to Connecticut a box of books to read that I can't talk about until sometime in the future (as in 2014).

So what are you reading that you can talk about? :-)