Sunday, June 01, 2008

Picture Book of the Month: Kate, the Cat and the Moon

May 2008

Katecat

Kate, the Cat and the Moon
By David Almond
Illustrated by Stepehn Lambert
Publisher: Hodder Children's Books, 32 pages

Kate wakes one moonlit night and is invited, by a white-furred, blue-eyed cat, to join him on an adventure in dreamland. The best part of this escapade is that Kate experiences it as a pretty grey-striped cat! Even the moon morphs into a beautiful feline and joins Kate and her new friend on their journey, through the dream-filled skies. This book is very like Lane Smith's "The Big Pets" in its magical, dreamy feel, and the glowing illustrations that look like they've been dipped in milk!

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Picture Book of the Month: The Way Back Home

Wayback April 2008

The Way Back Home Author

By Oliver Jeffers

Publisher: HarperCollins Children's Books, 32 pages

OLIVER Jeffers' books tend to feature little boys with big dreams, big hearts and big appetites. Here, we have another boy who, finding an aeroplane in his cupboard, flies off in it. The sky's not the limit for this young adventurer: he flies past clouds, stars and planets and, finally, lands on the moon when he runs out of petrol. Luckily, he's befriended by an alien who's suffered the same fate. Hopefully, the pair can figure out how to get out of the predicament they're in. And if they don't, at least they'll have company on the moon.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Picture Book of the Month: Zen Ties

Zenties March 2008
ZEN TIES
Written & Illustrated by Jon Muth
Publisher: Scholastic, 40 pages
ISBN: 978-0439634250
Addy and Michael meet Stillwater, a wise and gentle giant panda who tells them stories based on zen parables. In Zen Ties, Stillwater's nephew comes to visit. The young panda is called Hi and speaks in verse: zen-influenced haiku ("Hi, Koo!" say the children, pun intended on Muth's part). Stillwater introduces the siblings and Hi to an old woman who seems surly but is simply lonely. Miss Whitaker helps Michael learn to spell and he wins a red ribbon at a spelling bee. The friends all celebrate by wearing red ties - zentai is Japanese for "whole" or "togetherness" and Zen Ties celebrates the joy of friendship and being part of a circle of friends.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

All Creatures Great and Small

Tots2402b There was a Potter who never wielded a wand but who was, nonetheless, very good at creating magic.

Continue reading "All Creatures Great and Small" »

Sunday, February 03, 2008

Picture Book of the Month: Come On, Rain!

Rain_2 January 2008

COME ON, RAIN!
By Karen Hesse
Illustrated by Jon Muth
Publisher: Scholastic Press, ,40 pages
(ISBN:978-0590331258)

You can imagine this story being performed at a spoken-word gig. Karen Hesse's words dance like sunspots on your skin, trickle like cold water down the back on your neck, ripple across your consciousness - rumbling like thunder, sizzling like an egg frying in a pan full of butter. When the rain comes, you feel like you could stick out your tongue and catch a few raindrops. Jon Muth's watercolours shimmer with heat and then dissolve in silvery wet streaks as the heavens open and the rain finally comes ...

Continue reading "Picture Book of the Month: Come On, Rain!" »

Sunday, January 27, 2008

The Mysteries of Fate

MOST of the time, coincidences are simply an accidental concurrence of events linked in one way or another. 

But what of coincidences that bring people together? In E.M. Forster’s A Room with a View, George Emerson says that it’s fate that causes people to be “flung together” and “drawn apart”.

Continue reading "The Mysteries of Fate" »

Sunday, January 20, 2008

And the award goes to ...

I wonder if Malaysia will ever have its own awards for children's literature. Will the standards of writing and the number of children's books published ever call for the sort of recognition given by prizes like the Newberry and Caldecott, and the Carnegie and Greenaway, or should the awards come first, acting as encouragement to writers and illustrators of children's books?

In Singapore the National Book Council held a picture book writing/illustrating contest a couple of years ago. If I remember correctly, out of the submissions, six picture books were published. I didn't consider them particularly interesting or inspiring, well-written or -drawn. And, speaking to several writers and artists who had submitted work, I think the NBC still has very old-fashioned ideas of what makes a good children's book.

A friend and I are toying with the idea of applying for a grant with which to start a similar contest. Stay tuned to see if anything comes of it. As I keep saying, so much to do, so little time ... 

Continue reading "And the award goes to ..." »

Sunday, January 06, 2008

Hot Men of Children's Literature

Oliverjeffers In Tots to Teens today, I linked Fuse #8's final entry for her Hot Men of Children's Lit series. I'm starting my own list on this blog and choose Oliver Jeffers as my first Hot Man :-D!

Jeffers is an artist, designer and illustrator. He has written and illustrated four picture books: How to Catch a Star (2004), Lost and Found (2005), The Incredible Book Eating Boy (2006) and The Way Back Home (2007).

Jeffers is also a founder-member of the art collective OAR, along with Rory Jeffers, Mac Premo and Duke Riley. OAR's exhibitions so far include 9 Days in Belfast, book and the award winning BUILDING.

Jeffers was the official World Book Day illustrator for 2007.

He is from Northern Ireland and has a degree in visual communication from the University of Ulster. He lives in Belfast.

Continue reading "Hot Men of Children's Literature" »

Friday, January 04, 2008

Celebration of Life

Bowerbird1101 The winner of the Costa children's book award is Ann Kelley for The Bower Bird.

The book is about love, life and death seen through the eyes of a 12-year-old girl with congenital disease. It's the sequel to Kelley's The Burying Beetle.

The winners in the other categories are:

First novel
Catherine Flynn for What Was Lost.

Novel
AL Kennedy for Day.

Biography
Simon Sebag Montefiore for Young Stalin

Poetry
Jean Sprackland for Tilt

Sunday, December 16, 2007

True Story

I think Sherman Alexie's The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian would make a great Christmas present. The bloke I've asked to review the book isn't as impressed as this old woman though. Look out for his review, due out in StarTwo in the next few weeks.

Continue reading "True Story" »

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Picture/Board Book of the Month

  • November 2008: Antoinette Portis: Not a Box

    November 2008: Antoinette Portis: Not a Box
    A box is a box is a box. Right? Wrong! A box is a racecar, a mountain, a robot, a skyscraper, a hotair balloon, a pirate ship ... basically anything and everything you want it to be. This book is about how imagination can transform an object, and your life! Rabbit and his box are rendered in black ink, while red embellishments show readers just where Rabbit's flights of fancy take him and his "not-a-box". Absolutely brilliant!

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