Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Great Books for Holiday Gift Giving

            
The Magician's ElephantSnowThe Snow Queen

Warning: The word magic (or some form of it) will occur several times in this blog!
 

Christmas, for the young and for the young-at-heart, is magical. I still wake up on Christmas morning certain I can smell the scent of the turkey my mother always cooked early comingling with the scent of the orange waiting for me in the toe of my stocking, and feel the excitement of my six-year-old self building in the cool still air around me. Christmas brings with it the promise that anything can happen and that our deepest desires can be fulfilled.

I love Christmas books, but I also love books that are not about the season but that evoke its magic, promise, and mystery. And it seems there are others out there like me. Once in a while, as a book seller, I would get the question: "Can you suggest a beautiful book for Christmas that isn't about Christmas but that captures its spirit?"

Right up my alley!

Kate DiCamillo, author of The Tale of Desperaux, The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, and many other awesome books, has a magical pen. Everything she writes fosters wide-eyed belief in miracles and in the ability for even the smallest and most ordinary of us to achieve them. I especially love The Magician's Elephant. Imagine an elephant crashing through a ceiling during a magic show and landing on someone's lap, and no two creatures being more surprised by it than the magician and the elephant, not to mention, of course, the person whose lap the elephant falls on. Then imagine that the elephant is the key to solving the mystery of a young boy's missing sister, and that the boy's belief in the elephant gives him the courage to begin a quest to find her. The recipe is perfect for a poignant tale of hope, magic, and salvation, and is a match for boys and girls from the ages of nine to twelve who love fairy tales, magic, and, of course, elephants.

Speaking of the fairy tale, there is no other genre that captures the spirit of Christmas the way it does. Any fairy tale will do really, but a favourite of mine is The Snow Queen, by Hans Christian Anderson, and it is a perfect match for the season. My mother, who made all my Christmas memories for me when I was a child, presented me with the complete version when I was twelve and performing in the ballet. It tells the tale of Kai, a young boy who falls in love with his neighbour, Gerda, but becomes stricken by the broken shards of a troll's evil mirror and is doomed to see everything in the world, including his beloved Gerda and the rooftop garden in which they play, as ugly. When Kai is kidnapped by the Snow Queen, Gerda sets out to rescue and redeem him. One of the most exquisite versions is the abridged picture book illustrated by Susan Jeffers, and it's perfect for children from the ages of five to seven.

And what about snow? What other element better embodies our Christmas hopes and desires than snow, or at least the promise of it. In the aptly titled picture book, Snow, by Uri Shulevitz, the magic of the simple substance is depicted through the joy of a young boy and his dog. The story unfolds in a dreary looking European town where our heroes notice one simple speck of white falling from the sky. Believing that there will be more, even though the adults in the story deny it's existence, they go out to play in it. When the town and the bookstore that is its centrepiece become transformed into  a beautiful winter wonderland, the adults continue to ignore it and go about their mundane lives as if it weren't there. Only the boy and his dog revel in its beauty until the nursery rhyme characters on the bookstore's front come alive and join them in their frolicking. With a minimum of words and extraordinary illustrations, this gem is perfect for children from the ages of two to five.

I have recommended all of the above to parents, grandparents, aunts, and uncles with great success, many of them returning to tell me how much the children in their lives enjoyed them. I hope they will do the same for someone you love.

Merry Christmas and happy holidays to you all.

 
 
 
 
 









     


 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 

Friday, 19 October 2012

Great Book For a Scary Halloween Party
Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark
No matter the time of year, if you work as a children's librarian or as a bookseller in the Kids department of a bookstore you are guaranteed to hear this question at least once a week: "Where do you keep the scary books?" However, during the weeks leading up to Halloween and in the hot summer months when families sit around midnight campfires, the requests always increase.

Being a lover of "things that go bump in the night" myself, I relished the opportunity to share some of my goosebump raising favorites with kids brave enough to open those cobweb covered tomes and discover the horrors that lurk within.

For me, the best stories to tell at a Halloween party or while sitting around a campfire have their roots in folklore and urban legend and are only a page or two long. Any longer than that and the kids will get restless. Interest needs to be piqued early and the momentum needs to build quickly until it ends with a big finish.

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark by Alvin Schwarz is guaranteed to make your next halloween party for kids over eight a success. Gather everyone in a circle, turn out the lights, shine the flashlight on yourself and begin. You'll have them screaming in no time. Many of the families I recommended this book to came back for more, and, happily, this is just the first in a trilogy that includes More Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, and Scary Stories 3.

For a great list of scary books to suit the season go to:

http://www.monsterlibrarian.com/horrorfictionlistkd.htm


Tuesday, 28 August 2012

Great Book for a Middle Grader Willing to be Swept Away

No Passengers Beyond This PointMy most vivid memory of recommending this book is to a smart, informed fifth-grade teacher who was looking for something completely different for her class: something her students could sink their teeth into, something that would make them think, something that would take them somewhere they had never been before...

She had come in with another title in mind, directed to it by a glowing review. I knew the book she wanted, but when I heard her criteria, No Passengers BeyondThis Point, by the astounding Gennifer Choldenko, was the book I recommended and the book she left with.

Life is difficult, and sometimes, even though we do everything in our power to keep that fact from our children, it comes crashing down on them anyway. That's what siblings Finn, India, and Mouse discover when their house is lost to foreclosure and their mother hustles them onto a plane bound for Denver to live with their uncle until the end of the school year, when she, a teacher, can join them. After experiencing a little turbulence, the plane lands in Falling Bird and the children disembark into an alternate reality. Neither the children nor the reader knows until the last chapter that the plane has crashed and that what they are experiencing is a shared hallucination that demands they each make a choice either to go their separate ways or choose each other as they struggle to remain alive. To illustrate each point of view, the siblings alternate narrating the chapters describing, in turn, the temptations this new world is holding out to them.

Choldenko artfully entices her reader to keep turning the pages to see what choices the children will make even though it isn't clear until the end what is actually going on. Narrated by a fourth character who discovers the very-much-alive children, who have in the end chosen to come back to their family, the final chapter successfully makes the situation clear and realistically concludes the story.

Treating the reader and her characters with great respect, Choldenko presents the world of adult problems and the parallel world of children caught between two realities in an honest and thought-provoking manner. Into this she weaves a fantasty that would prove tempting to any of us, but guides us, as readers, back to reality firm in the belief that this would be our choice, too.

http://www.choldenko.com/











Friday, 27 July 2012

Great Series Choice For Fantasy Lovers in the Middle Grades:
Fablehaven (Fablehaven, #1)

Harry Potter is a difficult series to beat. It's also a hard series to follow. But for the many children delighted with it, life must continue once the tales have ended, and so must reading. Often faced with the question: "I loved Harry Potter, but I don't know what to read now?" from middle graders themselves, I was happy to be able to recommend a number of good series that would satisfy their thirst for thrilling entertainment. My favorite of them all, and the one I recommended regularly, was Fablehaven, by Brandon Mull.
If the middle graders you're trying to find books for are like me and believe in magical beings, they may wonder where all the fairies, gnomes, and satyrs have gone. The answer lies between the pages of this well-written, fanciful, and suspenseful book--the first in the five-book series. Imagine a world where all the mythical creatures they ever read about in legends, fairy tales, and mythology still existed and lived together in a sanctuary that prevented their extinction. And imagine that they stumbled upon that sanctuary and got to see and live amongst them. When they open the pages of Fablehaven they will.

Once inside, like the book's protagonists, Kendra and Seth, they will become involved in solving a mystery whose final clue is "drink the milk", which will open their eyes to the magic that surrounds them. Then they will learn about the rules, which govern Fablehaven and all who inhabit it, and, which must never be broken. But, of course they are, and when that happens life for the reader, as well as the characters, becomes a ride full of hairpin curves that never slows down until its jaw-dropping conclusion.

The series is great for girls because it features a bright female protaganist with all the self-doubts of a normal adolescent who discovers she has more courage than she ever knew. And it's great for boys, because, Seth, Kendra's brother, is a typical eleven-year-old  whose curiosity gets the better of him landing him in the middle of a thrilling adventure. Above all, though, Fablehaven, like Harry Potter, re-opens the world of magic to kids who may have thought they were getting too old for it, but find that they are able to fall in love with fairies, goblins, and elves all over again.

http://brandonmull.com/site/archives/32




























View the full version of this book online

















View the full version of this book online

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Great Choice For a Book Shower For a Newborn


Elmer 
In an age where so much is available to celebrate the birth of a baby, it is wonderful for
those of us who love books to learn that people often throw "book showers" for new parents so that they can get a good start on their child's library. As a book seller, this was another request I loved getting. Customers shopping for this kind of shower were usually looking for a book baby would grow into and love forever, so it had to be timeless, have a good story, and be beautifully illustrated. In a word, it had to be a classic. Often, however, I was asked to stay away from the well-known classics like Ferdinand the Bull and Peter Rabbit as the parents may already have those books or because other guests may bring them.
My response was often to show them Elmer, a picture book about a patchwork elephant, by David McKee. Though Elmer has been around since 1989, it isn't as well known as one might think. It is, however, by those who do know it, beloved.
Elmer is who he is because he has a great sense of humor and because his hide is made of patchwork. Take one of these things away, and he is no longer Elmer. The other elephants in his herd love him because he is so good at telling jokes and making them laugh. Believing the others laugh at him because he is different, Elmer leaves the herd to disguise his patchwork body by covering it in grey berries. He thinks this will make him fit in. Upon his return, however, the elephants no longer recognize him and  become melancholy because he isn't there to cheer them up with one of his jokes. Elmer pulls off his greatest joke at the end of the story and learns that there is nothing wrong with being different.
Told with humor and illustrated with pictures as bold and beautiful as Elmer's personality, this gentle fable is a perfect addition to any beginning library.







View the full version of this book online


My response to this request was often Elmer by David McKee.

Thursday, 21 June 2012

Great Picture Book Series for a  Three-to-Six-Year-Old "Girly Girl"
Fancy Nancy
One of the most frequent requests I got as a bookseller went something like this "I'm looking for a picture book for a five-year-old girl who loves princess books and is something of a "girly girl'." The term "girly girl" would often be accompanied by a facial expression that made me think the customer smelled something bad (not me I hope), and the statement would usually be followed by "I'm so tired of princess books" or "I hate that she likes princess books."

Two series matching the "girly girl" and "not-a-princess-book" criteria that always sprang to mind were Pinkalicious by Victoria Kann and Fancy Nancy by Jane O'Connor. The series I always recommended first was Fancy Nancy, not only because Nancy is an awsomely fierce "girly girl," but because each and every one of her books brings language, other cultures (specifically French), and the fun of learning alive for young readers, while wrapping it up in a package as fancy as Nancy herself. So little girls reading Fancy Nancy can embrace their inner "girly girl" and parents can feel good about the fact that their daughters will be learning about the joys of language and other cultures as well as receiving positive life lessons.

And the Fancy Nancy catalogue now extends beyond the five picture books currently available, Fancy Nancy and the Mermaid Ballet being the most recent, to beginning readers and chapter books so that lovers of Fancy Nancy and her expoits (and there are many; parents included) can grow up with her and not discard her friendship once they have put picture books down for good. As Nancy herself would say "Ooh la la"!

I would also like to mention a new series self-published by my friend Brenda Bradley about a little girl named Maya who makes discoveries about the world around her. I haven't had the privilege of reading it yet, but knowing Brenda's sensibilities and her love of teaching, I feel confident that it would be perfect for any little girl interested in the world around her. You will find the link after the Fancy Nancy links.

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/426625.Fancy_Nancy
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/12264509-fancy-nancy-and-the-mermaid-ballet
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13119928-fancy-nancy
http://www.lulu.com/shop/search.ep?type=&keyWords=Brenda+Bradley&sitesearch=lulu.com&q=&x=23&y=10

Saturday, 9 June 2012

Great Father's Day Picture Book for a Toddler to Give to Dad

With Father's Day only a week away everyone is scrambling to find the perfect gift for dad. Even the youngest of children want to get in on the festivities and choose something he'll love. And what better way to do that than to treat him to something he can share with his child.

There are many suitable picture books that celebrate dad including these favorites of mine: Daddy Kisses, by Anne Gutman; What Dads Can't Do, by Douglas Wood; The Very Best Daddy of All, by Marion Bauer; and Daddy Hugs, by Karen Katz. My personal favorite, however, is I Love My Daddy, by Sebastian Braun and the book I suggested most when asked to recommend a Father's Day gift from a toddler.

The simple story joins a father and son bear on a day of noisy play together that turns into one of quiet compassion as the sun goes down revealing the many sides of the loving relationship they share. Its beautiful illustrations bathe the characters in a golden light that also swaddles the reader in its warmth making the book ideal for a quiet nighttime read.

We used to feature I Love My Daddy during our Father's Day storytime and the children were so mezmerized by its large size, simple, understandable message; and vibrant illustrations that you really could have heard a pin drop; a remarkable feat considering the fact that our weekly storytimes drew huge crowds. If this book can charm a roomful of young children in a bookstore, just think of what it will do for daddy as he cuddles up to read to the child he loves.

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/993176.I_Love_My_Daddy

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/276553.Daddy_Kisses

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1044325.The_Very_Best_Daddy_Of_All

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/267463.Daddy_Hugs

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/970694.What_Dads_Can_t_Do

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Great Choice for a Child Transitioning to Longer Chapter Books

I love parents. They want only the best for their children. One of my favorite requests as a bookseller went something like this: " My seven-year-old loves series like Mercy Watson by Kate DiCamillo but needs to be challenged a little more. Can you recommend a good book that still has pictures in it but with longer chapters that my child might like?" "Yes" I would reply happily, "I can."

My Father's Dragon, by Ruth Stiles Gannet, is the perfect book for a child transitioning to longer chapter books. In the bookstore I worked in, it was included in the section that catered to seven-to-twelve year olds, but it could certainly be read by an advanced six year old, and, like all good children's books, be read to younger children by their parents. Its simple and charming black-and-white drawings fulfill the need for illustrations, and, at the same time, give it a more grown-up feel.

The story line is perfect for all children with a keen sense of imagination, a lust for adventure, and the belief that there is order in the world. It centers around Elmer Elevator and a baby dragon he hears about that has been captured and is being held prisoner on Wild Island. Elmer, being a conciencious child, believes that this is wrong and devises a  creative and successful plan to rescue the dragon.

My Father's Dragon is the first in Ms. Gannett's three-book series. The parents who accepted my recommendation often returned for Elmer and the Dragon and The Dragons of Blueland, the other two books in the series respectively. All three have also been published as one volume in a fifty-year anniversary edition called Three Tales of My Father's Dragon. Whichever way you choose to introduce your children to these delightful tales--separately or in a single volume--they are sure to spark their imagination and gently nudge them into the wonderful world of  young-reader fiction.

http://www.deseretnews.com/top/469/2/My-Father7s-Dragon-by-Ruth-Gannett-Stiles-illustrated-by-Ruth-Chrisman-Gannett-The-50-best-books.html




Friday, 18 May 2012

Great Choice for a Well-Read Ten-to-Twelve-Year-Old Girl

 Great Choice for a Well-Read Ten-to-Twelve-Year-Old Girl

Often, as a bookseller, I would get a question that went something like this "My eleven-year-old daughter loves to read . She likes books about girls having adventures like the Narnia books and Nancy Drew. We're looking for something a little different for her as well as something that will challenge her."

In response, the first title that often popped into my head was Rebecca Stead's When You Reach Me, a fast-paced mystery with  a complicated twelve-year-old heroine named Miranda at its heart. Miranda also loves to read and her favorite book is none other than A Wrinkle in Time, Madeline L'Engle's classic science fiction children's book about time travel and self-discovery. Miranda references it often and it is a credit to Ms. Stead's writing that she presents the time-travel principles L'Engle employs in her work in an understandable and entertaining manner. It isn't until the reader is well into the story that she discovers that this mystery is also a tale about time travel.

But that's not all it's about. Miranda has a lot going on in her life, not least of which is being ignored by her best friend, Sal, for reasons she can't comprehend. When the key to her mother's apartment goes missing and mysterious letters begin arriving from someone who seems to know the future, Miranda is plunged into a race against time to try and prevent a terrible tragedy . How will Miranda unravel the tangled web that has become her life and restore things to normal? And if she does, will her world ever be the same? Like Meg Murry in A Wrinkle in Time, Miranda will discover that life is complicated, but that by working through her problems, it can be enriched by the answers she finds even though it may be altered.

For girls who love adventure, mystery, the challenge of learning about something new, and reading about complex girls like themselves who are also trying to figure out their place in the universe, When You Reach Me is a great choice with a bonus. Not only will they discover a wonderful new classic, they will also discover a tried-and-true one that they can begin as soon as their journey with Miranda has come to an end.

http://www.rebeccasteadbooks.com/whenyoureachme.html








Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Great Choice for a Fun-Loving Ten-Year-Old Boy

What book do you get for a ten-year-old boy who loves humour, doesn't like reading, and especially doesn't like the books his parents want him to read...and has outgrown Captain Underpants, his all-time favorite series that his parents didn't approve of?

Faced with this dilemma one day, as well as the ten-year-old boy in question, and his frustrated parents, I suggested the Andy Griffiths "Butt" books. The word "butt" disheartened the parents but delighted their son. As I handed him the first book in the series "The Day my Butt Went Psycho", which he began devouring on the spot, I told his parents not to worry and assured them that though the series definitely employed potty humour it was also imaginative, well-written, and hilarious. Of course, seeing the disconcerted look on his parents faces made their son want to try it even more. However, the proof was in the reading for him, and he became stuck on the series the way toilet paper gets stuck to a butt (sorry; it's catching).

Andy Griffiths is an Australian author who gets kids. His books have won numerous awards and he is a New York Times best-selling author. His "Butt" series follows the ongoing saga of Zack Freeman and his rogue butt, which, from time to time disengages itself from his body and takes off to get involved in all kinds of buttalicious shenanigans.

So if you're looking for a book for a child who doesn't want to read anything he thinks you might approve of, but which is funny and right up his alley, pick up one of Andy Griffith's "Butt' books or any book in his other series and know your child is in good hands. And, when he isn't looking, take a moment yourself to crack open the cover--just  don't let him catch you--and you might find that you're snickering, too, in spite of yourself.