Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - Upcoming Releases - February & March


Thank you everyone for all of the great posts each week for the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge 2014.  At the beginning of each month, I like to try to do a post to spread the word about recent releases or upcoming nonfiction/informational titles.  It is not comprehensive, but I do try to include a variety of titles that might be of interest to readers.  Some of them I have read and some I have yet to read.  Often I include reviews in later posts.  Here are some titles that I missed last month, and some additional titles that will be arriving in March.

February 2014 - For additional February releases click here:


Mumbet's Declaration of Independence by Gretchen Woelfe; Illustrated by Alix Delinois (Carolrhoda, February 1, 2014)


Sugar Hill: Harlem's Historic Neighborhood by Carole Boston Weatherford; Illustrated by R Gregory Christie (Albert Whitman & Co, February 1, 2014)


A Home for Mr. Emerson by Barbara Kerley; illustrated by Edwin Fotheringham (Scholastic Press, February 25, 2014)

March 2014


Handle with Care: An Unusual Butterfly Journey by Loree Griffin Burns (Millbrook Press, March 1, 2014)


The Streak: How Joe Dimaggio Became America's Hero by Barb Rosenstock; Illustrated by Terry Widener (Calkins Creek Books, March 1, 2014)


Some Bugs by Angela Diterlizzi; Illustrated by Brendan Wenzel (Beach Lane Books, March 4, 2014)


At the Same Moment, Around the World by Clothilde Perrin (Chronicle Books, March 11, 2014)


In New York by Marc Brown (Knopf Books for Young Readers, March 11, 2014)


A Baby Elephant in the Wild by Caitlin O'Connell (HMH Books for Young Readers, March 18, 2014)


Have You Heard the Nesting Bird? by Rita Gray; Illustrated by Kenard Pak (HMH Books for Young Readers, March 18, 2014)


Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews:

It's Monday! What are you reading? From Picture Books to YA - 2/3/14


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

Recently, I did a lot of picture book reading but I decided to only post my favorites from the pile.  There are a couple that I will post on Wednesday for Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday.   

Here is what jumped out of the pile...


Benjamin Bear in Bright Ideas (Toon Books Level 2) by Philippe Coudray (Toon Books, March 26, 2013) - This was a fun read. I love Toon Books and how they have created a graphic novel format for beginning readers.



Eat Like a Bear by April Pulley Sayre; Illustrated by Steve Jenkins (Henry Holt and Co., October 22, 2013) - I finally found this one.  Jenkins illustrations are wonderful.  Children learn about the seasonal needs of bears.



Come Back, Ben (I like to Read #174) by Ann Hassett, John Hassett (Holiday House, July 1, 2013) - This fun picture book/early reader show Ben going on an adventure while hanging from a balloon.  Loved the ending.


Run, Dog! by Cécile Boyer (Chronicle Books, March 11, 2014) - Add this to your TBR pile for March.  I love this very creative and artistic, nearly wordless story about a dog and a ball.



We're Going to the Farmer's Market by Stefan Page (Chronicle Books, March 4, 2014) - This Board Book comes out in March and takes young readers on a visit to a farmer's market.


I Didn't Do My Homework Because... by Benjamin Chaud; Illustrated by Davide Cali (Chronicle Books, March 4, 2014) - A very funny book on excuses for not doing homework coming in March from Chronicle.

So, what are you reading?

Celebrate This Week - A Day Late - 2/2/14


Maybe at some point, I will actually be able to get a Saturday Celebrate Post up on a Saturday.  However, this one is going up a day late.   Celebrate This Week is hosted by Ruth Ayres and is a great community of writers.  Why don't you join in and link up with #celebratelu
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This past week I had a lot to celebrate.  I kicked off my week with the 2014 ALA Youth Media Awards held in Philadelphia, PA on Monday, January 27, 2014.


After early morning pictures, committees enter the room where the announcements will be made.  I discovered that the Schneider Family Book Award Jury's seats were right between the Newbery Committee and the Caldecott Committee. 


Here is John Schumacher with fellow committee member Amy Koester


After the initial welcome and the Alex Awards, the Schneider Family Book Awards were announced.  Yes, I was definitely celebrating this. After months of reading and deliberations, we had made our decisions.


And these were the books that my fellow jury members and I were celebrating....


Though I don't have a lot of great pictures from the exhibit hall, here I am with Schneider Book Award Jury members Caroline Ward and Peg Glisson holding A Splash of Red with all it's beautiful bling.


Over at the Simon and Schuster booth, several other award winning books also looked very shiny with new medals.



When I arrived home from Philadelphia, I was thrilled to find my signed copy of Locomotive, winner of the 2014 Caldecott Medal and a Sibert Honor recipient. 


Mr. Schu made this great image of all of the 2014 Newbery Winners.  I loved these choices.  It was the first time that I had read every one of them prior to the announcements.


I, also, celebrated finding my signed copy of Flora & Ulysses, which won the 2014 Newbery Award.



When I got back to Pasadena, it seemed that my book adventures were not over.  Thank you to Nicole White, Penguin Publishers, I was invited to a dinner with Sally Green, author of Half Bad, which comes out in March.  It was a lovely evening with great food and even better conversations with several booksellers and Ms. Green.


This weekend, I am trying to hold onto the wonder of the past week while returning to my regular routine.

YALSA 2014 Top Ten Best Fiction for Young Adults


Check out YALSA's 2014 Top Ten Best Fiction for Young Adults

In addition to the complete 2014 Best Fiction for Young Adults list, the BFYA committee selected the following titles as a top ten:

Berry, Julie. All the Truth That’s in Me. Penguin/Viking Juvenile, 2013.


Clark, Kristin Elizabeth. Freakboy. Macmillan/Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013. 


Federle, Tim. Better Nate Than Ever. Simon & Schuster/Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2013. 


McNeal, Tom. Far Far Away. Random House/Knopf Books for Young Readers, 2013. 


Rowell, Rainbow. Eleanor & Park. Macmillan/St. Martin’s Griffin, 2013


Sedgwick, Marcus. Midwinterblood. Macmillan/Roaring Brook Press, 2013. 


Sepetys, Ruta. Out of the Easy. Penguin/Philomel, 2013. 


Smith, Andrew. Winger. Illustrated by Sam Bosma. Simon & Schuster/Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2013. 


Sullivan, Tara. Golden Boy. Penguin/Putnam Juvenile, 2013. 


Wein, Elizabeth. Rose Under Fire. Disney-Hyperion, 2013.

Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - Congratulations to the 2014 Sibert Winners


On Monday morning,  the American Library Association announced their 2014 Youth Media Award Winners. Below is the Press Release issued by ALA, and can be found here.  It was wonderful to listen to the awards be announced.  To know individuals who served on the 2014 Sibert Award Committee and to discover that the Schneider Family Book Award Jury honored one of the same books.  If you want to read Horn Books' reviews by Roger Sutton of each of these magnificent books, click here.

For those of you who participate in Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday, how many of the books below were your picks to win? 
 
Philadelphia – Susan L. Roth and Cindy Trumbore and illustrator Susan L. Roth of “Parrots over Puerto Rico,” were named the winners of the 2014 Robert F. Sibert Medal for the most distinguished informational book for children published in 2013. The award was announced today by the Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC), a division of the American Library Association (ALA), during the ALA Midwinter Meeting held Jan. 24 – 28 in Philadelphia.


Parrots over Puerto Rico,” published by LEE & LOW BOOKS Inc., is the story of the rescue and return of the Puerto Rican parrot, a species once so abundant it blotted out the sun.  Through the efforts of a valiant, dedicated and committed team of scientists and island residents the fate of this native bird is now inching out of extinction.        

“The Sibert committee was swept into the lush collages and unique layout of the exciting efforts to rescue the iridescent Puerto Rican Parrot,” said Sibert Medal Committee Chair Cecilia P. McGowan.

Susan L. Roth resides in New York and has written and illustrated numerous children’s books. Cindy Trumbore lives in New Jersey and is a former children’s book editor and has written several children’s books. Roth and Trumbore co-wrote “The Mangrove Tree,” featuring collage illustrations by Roth, which was a 2012 ALA Notable Book and Orbis Pictus Honor Book.

The Sibert Medal Committee selected four Honor Book(s).


A Splash of Red: the Life and Art of Horace Pippin,” written by Jen Bryant, illustrated by Melissa Sweet and published by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc.

Readers will be inspired by the passion and perseverance of artist Horace Pippin in this engaging picture book biography. The tightly woven narrative coupled with mixed media collage, watercolor and gouache illustrations capture the essence of Pippin's life and work.

Jen Bryant lives in Pennsylvania. She has written dozens of fiction, nonfiction and poetry books for children. Melissa Sweet lives in Maine. She is the winner of the 2012 Sibert Medal for “Balloons Over Broadway.” Bryant and Sweet collaborated on "A River of Words: The Story of William Carlos Williams,” for which Sweet won a 2009 Caldecott Honor.


Look Up! Bird-Watching in Your Own Backyard,” written and illustrated by Annette LeBlanc Cate and published by Candlewick Press.

This spirited, accessible introduction to the art and science of birding features immersive, fact-filled cartoon art punctuated with tongue-in-beak bird commentary via word bubbles and humorous asides. Cate's can-do tone empowers children and reminds them that they too can be citizen scientists if they only, "Look Up!"

Annette LeBlanc Cate, a graduate of the Art Institute of Boston, is the author/illustrator of "The Magic Rabbit."  She resides in Massachusetts.


Locomotive,” written and illustrated by Brian Floca and published by Atheneum Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing.

CHUG-CHUG!  HUFF-HUFF! Brian Floca invites us back in time to experience the excitement and danger of a family’s 1869 transcontinental rail journey. Flowing, detailed blank verse text and warm, thoroughly researched illustrations fuel the adventure. ALL ABOARD! for this stunning aural and visual celebration of early rail travel. WHOO-WHOO!

This is author and illustrator Brian Floca’s fourth Sibert Honor Book. Floca lives and works in Brooklyn, N.Y.


The Mad Potter: George E. Ohr, Eccentric Genius,” written by Jan Greenberg and Sandra Jordan and published by Roaring Brook Press, a division of Holtzbrinck Publishing Holdings Limited Partnership.

Greenberg and Jordan provide a fascinating account of the life and work of the eccentric and inventive ceramic artist, George E. Ohr. The text is enhanced by photographs and information about where to see his art today. He was, in his own words, “The Greatest Art Potter on Earth. You prove the contrary.”

Jan Greenberg and Sandra Jordan have been award winning collaborators since the 1990s. Greenberg lives in St. Louis and Jordan lives in New York.

The award was established by ALSC and named to commemorate Mr. Robert F. Sibert, founder of Bound to Stay Bound Books, Inc., of Jacksonville, Ill. Sibert is known for his early work in establishing standards of bookbinding.

Members of the 2014 Sibert Medal Committee are:  Chair Cecilia P. McGowan, King County Library System, Issaquah, Wash.; Barbara A. Genco, BAGenco Consulting, Brooklyn, N.Y.;
Christine A. Jenkins, University of Illinois, Champaign; Dr. Allison G. Kaplan  University of Wisconsin SLIS, Madison; Sally L. Miculek, Austin (Texas) Public Library;
Catharine Potter, Falmouth (Maine) Elementary School; Victor Lynn Schill, Fairbanks Branch,  Houston; Letitia A. Wilson, Dayton (Ohio) Metro Library; and Terrence E. Young, Jr., Metaire, La.

ALSC is the world’s largest organization dedicated to the support and enhancement of library service to children. With a network of more than 4,000 children’s and youth librarians, literature experts, publishers and educational faculty, ALSC is committed to creating a better future for children through libraries. To learn more about ALSC, visit their website at www.ala.org/alsc.
For information on the Robert F. Sibert Medal and other ALA Youth Media Awards, please visit www.ala.org/yma.

Contact:

Macey Morales
ALA Media Relations
Public Information Office (PIO)
312-280-4393
mmorales@ala.org


Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews below and to check out and comment on some of the reviews: