My Wonderful World of Animals: A Doodle Art Book

My Wonderful World of Animals: A Doodle Art Book
by Victor Escandell (Author, Illustrator)

Booktalk: This unique doodle book combines coloring, connect-the-dots, and drawing activities with science and math to keep young children entertained for hours. (Be sure to check out the “Animalpedia” facts in the back of the book!)

Snippet:
It’s night time and Bernie the mole is hungry. Which tunnel should he follow to get to his dinner as fast as possible? (maze page)

It’s STEM Friday! (STEM is Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics)

Do you blog about science or math? Share your posts on the STEM Friday group blog.

Copyright © 2014 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
Site Meter

On Kiki’s Reef

On Kiki’s Reef
by Carol L. Malnor (Author) and Trina L. Hunner (Illustrator)

Booktalk: A tiny baby sea turtle scrambles across the sandy beach and into the sea. Floating far out in the ocean, Kiki is becoming a gentle giant. She swims to shallower water where a rainbow of corals puts on a show. Kiki adopts the busy coral reef as her new home and discovers fish of all sizes and lots of surprises! (Each page had prose at the top and poetry at the bottom!)

Snippet: Surf and spray carry Kiki away.

She paddles wildly. The wide open ocean is a big place for a little turtle.

She searches for food and hides from big fish that would swallow her in one bite. Kiki is smart and brave.

Kiki paddles helter-skelter.
Beds of seaweed give her shelter.

This week’s Poetry Friday Round-up will be hosted by My Juicy Little Universe.

Copyright © 2014 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
Site Meter

Monkey with a Tool Belt and the Seaside Shenanigans

Monkey with a Tool Belt and the Seaside Shenanigans
by Chris Monroe (Author, Illustrator)

Booktalk: Clark has an enormous problem. Someone is sabotaging his uncle’s seaside resort! What does he do? He calls Chico Bon Bon, the Monkey with a Tool Belt.

Snippet: Soon they arrived at the beach. The rickshaw driver said good-bye and pedaled off. Chico looked around. The resort looked amazing!

Copyright © 2014 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
Site Meter

The Young World

The Young World
by Chris Weitz (Author)

Booktalk: Welcome to New York, a city ruled by teens.

After a mysterious Sickness wipes out the rest of the population, the young survivors assemble into tightly run tribes. Jefferson, the reluctant leader of the Washington Square tribe, and Donna, the girl he’s secretly in love with, have carved out a precarious existence among the chaos. But when another tribe member discovers a clue that may hold the cure to the Sickness, five teens set out on a life-altering road trip to save humankind.

The tribe exchanges gunfire with enemy gangs, escapes cults and militias, braves the wilds of the subway and Central Park…and discovers truths they could never have imagined.

Snippet:
We did a whole lot of corpse-burning back in the day. Cleansing by fire, Wash called it. Said some dudes called the Zoroastrians used to do it. Yes, I spelled that right. I may not be all SAT-wordy like Wash and Jeff, but no way are they gonna lord it over me, knowing bonus words and shit.

Cleansing by fire! Those were some good times. Douse a bandanna in Chanel No. 5, put on some sassy pink North Face gloves, and heave ho! Make a big pile of bodies and try not to use too much gasoline and try not to lose the lunch you didn’t have enough of.

Not enough hands or time to get rid of all the bodies, though. And they’re still out there, millions of them, slowly turning to mulch, pulsing with maggots. It has been a banner year for carrion eaters.

Copyright © 2014 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
Site Meter

A Cool Summer Tail

A Cool Summer Tail
by Carrie A. Pearson (Author) and Christina Wald (Illustrator)

Booktalk: Do you ever wonder how animals stay cool in the summer? Well they wonder how humans do too!

Snippet:
(Baby fox)
How do humans stay cool in the summer, Mama?
Do they hang out their tongues,
like a spring that’s been sprung,
breathing fast in and out like this?

(Mama fox)
No panting! No puffing!
No huh, huh, huh huffing!
They sweat through their skin when it’s hot.

Two years ago, I hosted this author on the blog tour for her first children’s book. Today Carrie A. Pearson is back for the sequel as she answers just 3 questions….

Q. When did you start writing?
A. I started writing very early in life and continued because I realized my words provoked a response. Some of it was good—like when I wrote an affectionate note to my grandma and received a warm hug—and some was not so good—like when I wrote a fictionalized biography that conveyed my teen angst (rather than the truth) and hurt people I loved. My teaching degree in early childhood education further reinforced the impact of words on people, especially little people. I love choosing just the right words to tell the story I want to share. To me, the power of words will never grow old!

Carrie headshot

Author Carrie A. Pearson

Q. Describe your writing process.
A. Since June 2013 when I took on the volunteer role of co-Regional Advisor for SCBWI-MI, my writing days often begin with email correspondence about various projects and activities for our region or the larger organization. At first, I worried my writing time would be eaten up, but the opposite is true; my brain is more engaged for creative writing after it has been called into service to solve problems or work out details. I am careful to chart out how my time will be spent early in the week and check my progress daily to stay on track. I write at my computer in my office that has a lovely view to the outside world. This view reminds me that as much as I’d like to be writing 24/7, my product will be more interesting if writing time is interspersed with doggy adventures, running, hiking, mountain biking, family and friends.

Sierra in rocking chair 001

Sierra in rocking chair

While I dabble in pure fiction, I’m most at home at the intersection of fiction and nonfiction. Science is the underpinning of a lot of my work so accurate research is crucial. I use the internet to begin my research, but find that personal interviews with experts often lead in directions I might not have dreamed. So, after I’ve pulled together intelligent questions, I pick up the phone—or visit locations whenever possible. In fact, when this interview posts, I will have just returned from Redwood National Park to interview and tour with a well-known park ranger for an exciting new project funded by a grant from SCBWI.

Q. Tell us about your latest book.

A. A Cool Summer Tail (Arbordale Publishing, March 2014) is a nonfiction picture book for readers ages 4-8 that explores how woodland animals adapt to summer heat. While the content is true to life, the story is told in a fictional style with lyricism, rhyming, alliteration, and imagery. The book is unique because it is told from animals’ perspectives, and because it compares and contrasts how animals and humans adapt. A Cool Summer Tail is a companion to my earlier book called A Warm Winter Tail which won a Gelett Burgess Award in the Nature for All Ages category. Christina Wald, the illustrator for both books, created visuals that are authentic but still child-friendly and ask to be explored over and over. We hope each book individually and both books together will provide insights into the amazing world of animal adaptation.

WarmWinter cover art high res with Burgess Award

A Gelett Burgess Award Winner in the Nature for All Ages category.

Readers who visit each stop on the blog tour and comment are eligible to be chosen for a free copy of A Cool Summer Tail and a plush animal featured in the book. One winner will be chosen randomly. Here are the tour stops and hosts:

August 11: You are here!
August 14: Brittney Breakey: Author Turf
August 15: Deborah Diesen: Jumping the Candlestick
August 18: Jennifer Chamblis Bertman

Nonfiction Monday

It’s Nonfiction Monday!

Copyright © 2014 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
Site Meter

Shaping Up Summer (Math in Nature)

Shaping Up Summer (Math in Nature)
by Lizann Flatt (Author) and Ashley Barron (Illustrator)

Booktalk: Nature comes to life to help children grasp the concepts of geometry, symmetry, and spatial sense. It’s mathematical problem solving combined with poetry!

Snippet:
But the Sun is so far
from where we all are
that we see it as a circle.
(Did you know it’s a star?)

Two in One!

This week’s Poetry Friday Round-up is hosted by A Year of Reading.

It’s STEM Friday! (STEM is Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics)

Do you blog about science or math? Join us! Share your posts on the STEM Friday group blog.

Copyright © 2014 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.
Site Meter