| You Are 77% Tortured Genius |
![]() You are smart. Brilliant in fact. And while it's a blessing, it's also a curse. Your head is filled with everything - grand ideas, insufferable worries, and a good deal of angst. |
Tags: Blogthings, Blog humor
| You Are 77% Tortured Genius |
![]() You are smart. Brilliant in fact. And while it's a blessing, it's also a curse. Your head is filled with everything - grand ideas, insufferable worries, and a good deal of angst. |
Today I determined it was necessary to complete a big chunk of the author information pages for the resource center web site. I finished a total of 14 authors, making my way through the alphabet to the letter "k." Therefore I checked holdings in the catalog, updated and expanded internet resources, researched in the databases and subsequently provided related periodical articles with appropriate APA formatting, cleaned all of the hazardous coding from old html pages, and placed all the new author information on new pages fourteen times. The lucky fourteen authors and illustrators were updated today were Karen Cushman, Roald Dahl, Leo and Diane Dillon, Lois Duncan, Lois Ehlert, Paul Fleischman, Nikki Grimes, Virginia Hamilton, Kevin Henkes, Karen Hesse, S.S. Hinton, Brian Jacques, Ezra Jack Keats, and Steven Kellogg.
Every children's literature blog I read yesterday afternoon (and Amazon) had this image of the cover art for J.K. Rowlings' last Harry Potter book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. In keeping with the better late than never scenario, I'm posting it here this morning along with links to three blogs I read yesterday detailing the unveiling:Over at Buried, an interesting question was raised concerning PW's mention that "For the first time ever, the jacket image is a full wrap-around. On the front of the book"(PW, 3/28/07). She noted that all of the American covers of Harry Potter did indeed have full wrap-around cover art. I checked my copies this morning. She's right. Then, "e" at dulemba observed the likeness between the new HP cover art and our favorite Newbery book, Lucky. Hmmm, I bet that thrills and/or fuels the Newbery conspiracy theorists. Anyway, here is yesterday's news release from Scholastic.
It matter's not to me, I have had my copy (and a copy for my dad) on order from the library book jobber since before Christmas. July 21st is still four months away.
Update: Children's Bookshelf, Publisher's Weekly
Harry Potter Corner, by Sharon Maughn at the Children's Bookshelf, has several points of interest for HP fans including this ...
"A look at the full spread, including back cover, reveals Harry's skeletal nemesis, He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named, blood-red eyes peering from his cloak, reaching out toward the young wizard. Let the speculation begin: A battle to the death? The end of Hogwarts? The end of the world? The theories are sure to run rampant as readers analyze the jacket for clues about Rowling's final installment of the series, set to run 784 pages with a record-setting first printing of 12 million copies. 113 days and counting…." (Maugh, PW, 3/29/07).
Tags: Harry Potter, Harry Potter cover art, Scholastic, Children's literature
You can link to the blogger's web site from either of these posts. I will not link directly from here because this is a personal matter to the blogger in question. I am personally horrified by what has been reported and feel it's important to spread the word, but I will not become another track back on her blog directing traffic here.
Update:
In response to the events mentioned above, the AASL (American Association of School Librarianss) blog has posted concerning the initiation of a a Stop Cyberbullying Day on March 30, 2007.
"Bullying and social cruelty is hateful behavior, no matter what the format or the age of the instigators. As educators, it is imperative that we do whatever we can to make sure that it does not happen to anyone, child OR adult. " (Alice Yucht, AASL blog)
Tags: Cyber bullying, Blogs & bullying
Perhaps best known for his comic strip Non Sequitur, Extraordinary Adventures of Ordinary Basil is Wiley Miller's first children's book.
Sorry for the book teaser, but I took the easy way out and posted the cover (very cool, isn't it?) and links for this entry before I left for lunch today. Tired of the issues accompanying uploading blog photos from home I decided a place holder was appropriate. There is a lot of interest in this title as my humble little blog had a half dozen hits+ on statscounter with bloggers looking for the book. So, without further ado, today at lunch I finished reading Twisted, by Laurie Halse Anderson.Just a quick sampling of a few feeds (I really should work with my bloglines account here), but looking at them it is obvious some lend themselves more to original work than others. So while I agree with the previously mentioned blog author that it may be annoying to read blogs that only link to others and provide no genuine content, in some cases those links are exactly what I want. Even when blogs are done for professional development, their content is a personal choice. It's nice to have the choice.
Tags: Blog posts, Blog content, Blog choice
Continuing through my back log pile of journals this morning I found the March 2007 (vol. 16, no. 4) issue of Book Links. Another ALA publication, Book Links is unique in that it connects books and curriculum, as well as provides web elements for classroom use and "hands-on-learning" elements for librarians and classroom teachers. Two articles caught my interest and both detail appreciating picture books for not only their artistic value, but also for their literary content. Tags: Book Links, ALA publications, Juvenile literature, Classroom & library resources, Picture book art
After posting about Oddly Normal, Volume 1, I went down to pick up Monday's mail and found a new Booklist journal in my mailbox. The March 15th Booklist, volume 103 number 14, includes a Spotlight on Graphic Novels. Sign up for a trial version of Booklist Online and browse this issue at your leisure. I have not had time to read the issue, but a quick overview reveals it is loaded with great graphic novel information:
Last week was spring break, or at least that is what the academic schedule advertised. I traveled to Pittsburgh for family issues and was positively thrilled - insert sarcasm here - with the five inches of snow that fell throughout the day on Friday and Saturday. Anyway, a week away from the computer is always enlightening. Here are a few hypothetical musings and, well, gripes:
I have fifteen minutes of lunch hour remaining, enough time to load today's book image to this post and make a few introductory comments on Oddly Normal by Otis Frampton. My brain is still somewhat on spring break (pithy spring break post coming) and I thought taking a graphic novel to lunch would be an easier read. Not because graphic novels do not take time and/or effort to read, but because I wanted something different.
Lunch at my desk today includes popcorn, diet pop, a short blogging break. After a morning of redesigning image buttons and replacing them on many, many, many individual web pages, if I see another page in Dreamweaver I am going to scream. Either that or my eyes are going to jump out of my head and run from the resource center. It is my own fault (don't you hate when that happens?) and I have been dealing with the consequences all morning. 
I've mentioned here before that I am not a slave to cover art for juvenile and young adult fiction. Picture books? That is another issue completely since they are, by virtue of their nature, about the illustrations. I can not say an attractive cover does not catch my attention when rifling through a new cart of books, but when I am making a decision to buy the book it is from reading the review and determining it's subsequent fit into our juvenile collection.
Working in an academic setting, there are very few little ones in the resource center. Sure, we get the occassional returning student who needs to bring their children. But more often than not the only children in here are the adult ones. This afternoon the sweetest little boy has accompanied his mother to do work and he is amusing himself by playing with a toy car, what I suspect might be a hot wheel, on any surface he can reach. He is a very systematic young man; the table he chose to use is round and he moved back each of the four chairs from the table so he is able to chart his course without interference.| You Are a Chocolate Cake |
![]() Fun, comforting, and friendly. You are a true classic, and while you're not super cutting edge, you're high quality. People love your company - and have even been known to get addicted to you. |

"What did the cowboy say to the rocket scientist?"
"You sure are a fart smeller!"
It is my last Saturday and Sunday reference shift for this term and I am using my "lunch time" for blogging. With complete and utter joy can announce as of today, the first weekend in March, I have completed both my rotating evening (2) and weekend (also 2) reference duty obligations. Unlike my reference librarian counterparts, terms end is busiest for me due to the education course we facilitate in the resource center. For this reason I often opt to be scheduled early. Today was a regular early term Saturday with only a few international students and a very dedicated high school student doing research. If not for various phone inquiries, hours inquiries and book renewals, it would have seem to have been for naught. Luckily, there were many other tasks to hold my attention."As for the cause of the poor picture book performance in recent years, many observers point to the same culprit: the swell in these titles, both new and backlist, from Harry Potter to C.S. Lewis and beyond, has taken its toll on the more mature picture book category as younger readers turn to fiction, and away from picture books. Simon Boughton, publisher of Roaring Brook Press, breaks it down this way: "Because the younger kids are now reading up, the seven- and eight-year-old end of the picture book market has become the younger end of the kids' fiction market. Pre-reading kids are where picture books serve the most purpose." This is a marked change from the previous generation, where kids might read picture books into first or second grade. " (Marell, Publishers Weekly, 2/26/07)
The article goes on to discuss how Harry Potter changed some of the marketing trends and the oft cited criticisms of how costly picture books may be. Interestingly enough, the discussion also detailed how picture books rely on libraries and librarian's purchasing them to keep the business growing. Case in point, consider the additional profit made by the publishing houses of such award winning books as the Newbery and Caldecott selections. I'm not sure picture books were ever really gone, but the article is interesting. Almost as interesting, to me anyway, as how I found the article.
If you have ever doubted the "linking" nature of the blogosphere, it's a small world after all, reading this post is an example of the phenomenon; kind of like the Kevin Bacon game (if I may be so bold) without all six degrees. How so?
The list of blogs that interest me continues to grow. As I read different blogs and their comments my curiosity (aka inherent nosiness) often overcomes me and I indulge by click on the linked names attached to comments. If the comment author has a blog, it is displayed and I take time to peruse their blog as well. This summer I found an interesting blog, Buried in the Slushpile, by the Buried Editor in this manner; I think she may have commented on Read Roger and I followed from there.
Yesterday the Buried Editor's post, Nothing is ever final, contained two different cover art samples for a book her company is publishing. Children's book cover art is a weakness of mine, so I was compelled to add my two cents to the conversation. This morning I looked back to see what other readers thought of the topic and spent a few minutes clicking on those aforementioned comment links. One link, e, led me to dulemba.com, the blog of children's writer and illustruator Elizabeth O. Dulemba and her post Do you follow the biz? linked to the Publishers Weekly article Are picture books back?
Tags: Children's literature, Picture books, Publisher's Weekly, Picture book articles
The two added to my overflowing book shelf are:
Tags: Collection development, Juvenile books, Picture books, Juvenile literature
It is hard to believe this series has been in print since 1995. I remember stumbling across the first, Naked in Death, while on a store set up in Charleston, West Virginia. Desperate for a new book to read I was excited to find a new paperback by a favorite author (recent editions of the series have been published in hardback first). It did not take me long to become enthralled with the idea of a series; being able to follow these characters into subsequent books is a rare treat. Something, it seems, that Ms. Robb was aware of her readers wanting:
"One of the things I wanted to do was develop those characters over many books rather than tying it all up in one,” she says. “I wanted to explore these people and peel the layers off book by book. Eve and Roarke have given me the opportunity to explore a marriage, as well. Each book resolved the particular crime or mystery that drives it, but the character development, the growth and the changes, the tone of the relationships go more slowly. I'm enjoying that tremendously." (Nora Roberts, Meet J.D. Robb)
From Mavis and Summerset to Dr. Mira and Commander Whtiney, fans of the series will recognize the well developed cast of characters. But it is Eve's husband Roarke, and the undercurrents of marital discord, that bring a certain richness to this particular installment. An old girlfriend, in itself nothing new, arrives on scene. Roarke is blinded to the nature of his former paramour and the basic foundations of their marriage are tested. Vital and complex characters intersperced with a solid police mystery make Innocent in Death a strong entry to the continuing In Death series not to be missed.
Throughtout the series I found myself liking some books more than others; and while I very much enjoy the growing relationships between returning cast of characters it has seemed to me Eve and Roarke's marital issues often are portrayed as Eve's "fault." Marriage is a partnership and these characters, who are a complicated, enjoyable, mess, needed to be more rounded in that regard. Having Roarke be the one with blinders and Summerset becoming an unlikey source of comfort to Eve, went a long way to enriching the story. The policy mystery element of each story has been solid, but I faithfully follow the characters.
Tags: Nora Roberts, J.D. Robb, Innocent in Death, Fiction, Recreational reading
Dark Hours, by Gudrun Pausewang, begins with a brief historical foreword from author Pausewang discussing the end World War I, it’s resulting effect on Germany, and the rise of Adolph Hitler preceding World War II. The story is an open letter to Stephanie, on the occasion of her sixteenth birthday, from her grandmother Gisel. An artfully poignant and life-changing reminiscence of Gisel’s sixteenth birthday, her family's fateful escape to Dresden, follows. Simple, meaningful prose describes the hardships the family faces. Gisel’s father is losing faith in the war and Hitler, a danger unto itself. Afraid for her father and ordered to evacuate their village, Gisel, her pregnant mother, grandmother, and three siblings must travel by train to Dresden. With only the barest of necessities and their valor, they face a dilemma when Gisel’s mother goes into labor and is subsequently sent to a hospital, far away from the family. While waiting for their train, an air-raid siren sounds and everyone is forced to find shelters. In the ensuing confusion, Gisel and her brothers are separated from her grandmother and left to fend for themselves as a bomb hits their shelter effectively burying them alive. The next several days test Gisel’s courage and patience as she is forced to be caretaker and mother to her charges while waiting and hoping for rescue.
This book touches on an important aspect of World War II that is sometimes overlooked in Holocaust literature. Simply put, not all Germans were bad, just as not all Allies were good. It is a small vignette featuring Gisel’s family, an ordinary German family trying to survive during horrific times, questioning the war, and hoping for peace. In closing, Gisel tells Stephanie, “Perhaps my story will show you that even ordinary people like us can be strong when we have to be. That’s what really matters.”