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  • Building a Book for Habitat for Humanity

    Since 1976, Habitat for Humanity has built more than 300,000 houses in over 3,000 communities in 90-plus countries. David Rubel chronicles the history and accomplishments of this organization in If I Had a Hammer: Building Homes and Hope with Habitat for Humanity, an October title from Candlewick. The book features a foreword by former president Jimmy Carter, who first picked up a hammer to participate in a Habitat project a quarter-century ago.

  • Children's Book Reviews: 9/28/2009

    This week's reviews include new picture books from Peter Yarrow, Satoshi Kitamura, Patricia Polacco and Lois Lowry, as well as fiction from Sharon Creech, Nancy Farmer, Cinda Williams Chima, Julia Donaldson and Siobhan Dowd.

  • Web Exclusive Children's Book Reviews: 9/24/2009

    This selection of web-exclusive children's book reviews includes new books from Rachel Isadora, Peter Yarrow and Amber Kizer, as well as debut work from Jan Bozarth, Carolyn Q. Ebbitt and Donny Bailey Seagraves.

  • Finalists Named for Astrid Lindgren Prize

    Nearly 170 authors and organizations were named last Thursday as finalists for the annual Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, the world's most lucrative prize in children’s books. Finalists from the United States are: Ashley Bryan, Kevin Henkes, Russell Hoban, Maira Kalman, Lois Lowry, Greg Mortenson, Walter Dean Myers, Anne Pellowski, Allen Say, Uri Shulevitz, Peter Sís, and the Room to Read organization. Nominated British authors include...

  • Debut Author Draws from Her Own Childhood

    Penelope, a big-hearted doll character, mends a tear in her grandfather’s khakis in Poppy’s Pants, out this month from Blue Apple Books. Penelope's story recalls that of her creator, first-time author/illustrator Melissa Conroy, who began sewing at an early age and displayed her prowess with a needle by repairing torn pants belonging to her father, novelist Pat Conroy. Melissa went on to develop the WoOberry line of dolls. Conroy's path to becoming a children's author began...

  • In Brief: September 24

    This week, the Barber brothers appear on 'The Today Show," the Kennedy Center celebrates multicultural kids' books, and two book festivals feature children's authors as guests.

  • Obituaries: Milton Meltzer and Bernie Fuchs

    Historian Milton Meltzer, author of more than 110 books for young people, and a five-time finalist for the National Book Award, died on September 19 after a battle with cancer. Illustrator Bernie Fuchs, who worked for many years as an editorial illustrator before turning his talents to children's books, died of cancer on September 17...

  • Books Go 3-D Starting with Ology Series in U.K.

    Up until this spring, augmented reality - a software program developed in France by Total Immersion to create a hologram-like 3-D experience - has mostly been used in print for marketing brochures for cars. Then in March Topps added augmented reality to enhance its baseball cards. So it was only a matter of time before the program, which ties a brand with a Web site, migrated to books...

  • Q & A with Richard Peck

    Q: When you wrote the short story 'Shotgun Cheatham’s Last Night Above Ground' years ago, did you have any inkling that it would grow into three entire novels?

    A: No, I didn’t. I was asked by Harry Mazer to contribute something to a collection of stories about guns and I thought, "He’s going to get too many guy stories, so I’m going to think up a female character." That’s how Grandma Dowdel was born.

  • Galley Talk: ‘The Maze Runner'

    Shannon O’Connor of the Doylestown Bookshop in Doylestown, Pa., talks about a favorite fall galley.
    In James Dashner’s The Maze Runner (Delacorte, Oct.), Thomas wakes up in a strange place, surrounded by strange boys—and the only thing he can remember is his name. Where has he been taken? To the center of a giant maze that is guarded by Grievers, creatures born of your darkest nightmares.

  • Bologna Reinstates Fourth Day

    The Bologna Children's Book Fair has yielded to protests and reinstated the fourth day of the event. The 2010 fair will now take place from Tuesday to Friday, March 23-26. A group of U.K. publishers petitioned Bologna after they had learned that the 2010 fair had been scheduled to take place over three days rather than the usual four. Gloria Bailey, manager of international book fairs at the Publishers Association, met Bologna Fair director Roberta Chinni...

  • Children's Book Reviews: 9/21/2009

    This week's children's book reviews include new picture books from Ursula K. Le Guin, Jeff Smith and NBA-er Chris Paul; fiction from Jutta Richter, Laini Taylor, Gordan Korman and Joanne Dahme; and a collection of Thanksgiving books (none of them turkeys).

  • QR Codes Tie Print, Online Marketing

    As publishers continue to hunt for ways to use new technology to draw the attention of teens to books, HarperCollins has been extremely pleased with the response it has received to the use of QR (quick response) codes, which it used for recent releases L.A. Candy and The Amanda Project. To access the codes, teens (or anyone else) take a picture of the code with a smartphone, which then links the user...

  • Children’s Publishing in the Digital Age

    In a forum this past Tuesday on “The Current State of E: Publishing in the Digital Age,” a group of panelists discussed some of the thorniest issues that the industry is currently facing: where digital publishing stands and where it is headed. Speakers included Len Feldman of Follett Digital Resources, Andrew Weinstein of Ingram Digital, Erica Lazarro of OverDrive and Josh Koppel of ScrollMotion; digital publishing reporter Craig Morgan Teicher served as moderator.

  • Kids' and YA Authors at the Brooklyn Book Festival

    More than 200 authors and illustrators participated in the Brooklyn Book Festival this past Sunday, many of whom were creators of books for children. The one-day festival drew 30,000 attendees, according to the Village Voice; more than 150 booksellers, publishers and other organizations were on hand as well. See our photos from the event.

  • Harry Potter Heads to Orlando

    From tasting Bertie Bott’s Every Flavour Beans to visiting Ollivander’s wand shop, Potterphiles will soon be able to live out fantasies of life in Hogwarts. Universal World Resort has revealed some advance details about The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, a Potter-themed addition to Universal’s Islands of Adventure in Orlando, Fla. Scheduled to open in spring 2010, the 20-acre attraction will feature shops, food and entertainment drawn from J.K. Rowling’s books as well as...

  • Happy Birthday, Tomie!

    Tomie dePaola celebrated his 75th birthday this past Tuesday, and Penguin Young Readers Group threw a birthday party in honor of the beloved author and illustrator last week at New York City’s Valbella Restaurant. Numerous friends, writers and publishing folk turned out to wish dePaola well; see our photo-essay from the party, after the jump.

  • Amulet Series Delivers Good News to Nerds

    Five geeky fifth-graders-turned-spies transform issues they’re coping with—among them asthma, hyperactivity and allergies—into superpowers, in a new middle-grade adventure series by Michael Buckley, author of the Sisters Grimm series. Out this month from Amulet with a 100,000-copy first printing is the inaugural book, NERDS: National Espionage, Rescue, and Defense Society, Book One. In this novel, the popular captain of a peewee football team gets kicked off the squad...

  • A Pooh Party: Eeyore, Piglet and Pooh Return

    “Promise me you’ll never forget me because if I thought you would I’d never leave.” --Christopher Robin


    But will those who have never forgotten A.A. Milne’s Winnie-the-Pooh and The House on Pooh Corner be pleased with the first authorized sequel in 80 years? Dutton will find out on October 5, when it releases 300,000 copies of Return to the Hundred Acre Wood.

  • Q & A with Julia Donaldson

    Q: In 'Stick Man,' you introduce a humble stick that is taken far from home and almost becomes kindling. How did you invent this unusual hero? A: It was two things coming together. In my book 'The Gruffalo’s Child,' the child drags a stick doll everywhere, and that must have sparked it. And I fully remember my own children, 20-odd years ago, loving sticks. When we would go out for a walk, they would find a stick, and it wouldn’t always become a weapon. A stick could be anything to anyone.

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