Young Readers

Picture Book of the Day

I Go Potty!

by Scholastic Inc. (Corporate Author) and Emily Bolam (Illustrator)

Booktalk: A board book to help with that important task…

Snippet:

When I go potty,

Bear goes too.

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Chapter Book of the Day

Bad Kitty vs Uncle Murray

by Nick Bruel (Author, Illustrator)

162 pages

Booktalk: Bad Kitty’s owners have left her and Puppy alone for a week with good ‘ol Uncle Murray as pet sitter. How will he survive? Can he even make it out alive? A chapter book comic

Snippet:

UNCLE MURRAY: Okey doke! Goodbye! Good luck!

THE DOOR CLOSES

SFX (sound effects): MEOW WOOF ARF HISS CRASH KABLAM BARK FFT FFT BOOM HISS MEOW

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TAIR

I’m speaking at the Baylor TAIR Elementary Conference tomorrow!

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Literary Link

If you blog about science or math books tomorrow, come share your link!

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Site Meter My NEW book, The Zombie Project (The Boxcar Children Mysteries #128)

Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Great Books

Picture Book of the Day

Looking for the Easy Life
by Walter Dean Myers (Author) and Lee Harper (Illustrator)

Booktalk: Life’s pretty good for the monkeys on Monkey Island, but one of the monkeys wants more. He doesn’t want to do any work at all…

Snippet: “Good is okay,” said Oswego Pete. “But if I become Chief Monkey, I will lead us to the Easy Life, where a monkey don’t have to work hard for nothing. All we have to do is lay back and relax!”
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5 Great Pumpkin Books

Marley and the Runaway Pumpkin
by John Grogan (Author) and Richard Cowdrey (Illustrator)
Marley’s family wants their giant pumpkin to win a prize at the fair, but Marley sends the pumpkin on a wild ride! Level 2 easy reader

Mystery Vine: A Pumpkin Surprise
by Cathryn Falwell (Author, Illustrator)
This pumpkin growing story ends with recipes and projects to try at home. Picture book

Pick a Perfect Pumpkin: Learning about Pumpkin Harvests
by Robin Koontz (Author) and Nadine Takvorian (Illustrator)
Take a trip to a pumpkin farm. Picture book

The Pumpkin Mystery
by Carol Wallace (Author) and Steve Bjorkman (Illustrator)
Scruffy and Mocha, the cat and dog, help the children grow pumpkins for Halloween. Easy reader

Whooo’s That?: A Lift-the-Flap Pumpkin Fun Book
by Kay Winters (Author) and Jeannie Winston (Illustrator)
See whoo’s hiding behind the pumpkin in this rhyming book of Halloween fun. Lift-the-flap book
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Chapter Book of the Day

The Cheshire Cheese Cat: A Dickens of a Tale
by Carmen Agra Deedy (Author), Randall Wright (Author), and Barry Moser (Illustrator)
256 pages

Booktalk: Skilley, an alley cat with an embarrassing secret, longs to escape his street-cat life. Tired of dodging fishwives’ brooms and carriage wheels, he hopes to trade London’s damp alleyways for the warmth of ye olde Cheshire Cheese Inn. He strikes a bargain with Pip, an erudite mouse: Skilley will protect the mice who live at the inn, and in turn, the mice will provide Skilley with the thing he desires most.

But when Skilley and Pip are drawn into a crisis of monumental proportions involving a tyrannical cook, an unethical barmaid, and a malevolent tomcat, their new friendship is pushed to its limits. The escalating crisis threatens the peace not only of the Cheshire Cheese Inn but also the British Monarchy!

Unbeknownst to Skilley and Pip, however, they have a secret ally: a famous author who scribbles away many an afternoon in ye olde Cheshire Cheese Inn…

Snippet: Something a bit different today, a blog tour interview with Margaret Quinlin, the editor of this book. (She is also the President and Publisher of Peachtree Publishers.)

Margaret Quinlan
Margaret Quinlan (photo by Mark Blevis)

Q. When did you start editing?

A. I have been editing since I started in publishing over 35 years ago. I started in scholarly and medical publishing and was trained as a technical copy editor at Elsevier Publishing Company. My college degree was in general studies with heavy emphasis in mathematics and art. I had originally planned to continue my studies in architecture, but got sidetracked by publishing.

I discovered that publishing, especially book development, is a lot like designing a building—conceptually these fields are strongly related for me, and so I found it easy to transition to the idea of building books instead of buildings.

I also come from a family that highly values books and language. In fact, when my mother went into labor with me, her first-born, she and my father were in the process of moving and my father had filled the back seat of his car with stacks of books. He wedged my mother into the front seat and sped to the hospital with books flying around her head. I seem to have been embedded with books my entire life. But growing up I differed a bit from my siblings in that I steered toward math and art, while they mostly chose literature. I liked the certainty of mathematics, and still do.

So, my background in editing was heavily in medical and educational reference and text books before I came to Peachtree. My tendency to focus on logic and structure served me well in editorial development of these books. I was also always thinking of the reader. How will the reader interpret this?

Conceptually a reader enters a book much as she would a house, and brings certain expectations and assumptions with her. I encouraged authors to consider an ideal reader and the knowledge and background and interests she brings to the experience of the book. And also the self interest! Readers like to think a book is written just for them.

I still believe in this philosophy of book development. Published books are intended to reach or resonate with a public, and thinking about the reader is an important part of the process of development.


Carmen Agra Deedy

But I don’t advise this focus on the reader in the development of literary fiction beyond a beginning understanding of the likely age range of the reader. I think this is much more a purely creative effort of the author until the arc of the story is fully developed and a good draft of the work exists. Then it makes sense to me to go through the work to think about the ideal reader and how he might experience the work. This was the case with The Cheshire Cheese Cat development. Carmen and Randall were having so much fun writing and researching the book. They had a good strong arc developed for the story and were piecing together scenes that advanced the storyline and further developed the characters. Here I felt it would be counterproductive to impose limits on their creativity (as far as the ideal reader was concerned). Instead I focused my feedback on the scene and character development.

Q. Describe your editing process.

A. My art background drew me to picture books when I came to Peachtree. I had been introduced to children’s literature in my development of educational textbooks. At Peachtree, we had an opportunity to publish some children’s books in the late 80s and we did so, fortunately at a time when children’s publishing was going through a renaissance and great growth spurt.

The picture book is an art form that I truly love. It is not just the art, although I consider that to be so extremely important. It is the text as well. And it is also how the text appears on the page in relation to the art. It must merge into the art and coexist with it. This is the big challenge of the picture book in my mind: getting the text just right—the right amount of words, and their placement on the page, and always striving for exceptional art and artistic interpretation.

Developing picture books is an iterative process. You begin with the author’s story or central idea and it must be strong and communicated well. And you cannot really trim the text too much at the outset, I believe, because you want to communicate to the artist the fullness of the story as the author created it.

I also believe one needs to think about storyboarding. We generally do this in-house before we send a picture book to an artist because in doing this we learn more about the text and its natural scenes and possible relationship to the illustrations. When the sketches are returned, we combine them with the text as a first comprehensive look at the final formulation. Often here we see places where we need to focus more on text or reinterpret illustrations.

Then again when the final art arrives and is placed with the text in the layouts, the text is studied carefully and often is further trimmed in those places where art is producing meaning. Once the words and art seem just the right balance, then we study how the words fit with the art visually. Developing a very good picture book is an involved and time consuming process, and one that brings rich creative rewards for all involved.

I don’t have a lot of time for editing these days. I must look broadly at all the aspects of our company, from editorial/production to sales/marketing/publicity and finance. Being a good editor requires being able to go down deep into a work and maintain a focus on it so it comes alive in your mind. I have found that time hard to come by. But I am fortunate that I have wonderful colleagues on the editorial side who collaborate with me on projects. And we are very collaborative at Peachtree. We are our own first, tough readers for each other’s projects. We expect our editorial colleagues to tell us if something is bothering them about a manuscript. We may not agree, but the perspective is valuable. It is also very easy to get sucked into a project, to get so close that you lose perspective. We look to our colleagues at Peachtree to help us maintain perspective all the way through to the very last proof.

My editing style changes with the personality of the author. In general , I believe that it is better to encourage the author to find the right answers to problems in the work.  Rather than giving solutions, I ask questions about plot or characters, sequencing of scenes. Or I listen as the author tells me what she imagines and why.

I think one of the most challenging areas of development in a literary work is the arc—getting it just right. The ending is also often difficult for authors. These challenges apply to picture books as well as longer fiction. Years ago someone told me not to leave my footprints in a manuscript (as editor). I think about that advice quite a lot. The antidote to this is to think about the reader. And in the end, I always come back to the reader and how she might react to a work.

Q. Tell us about your most recent project.

A.  My most recent project was The Cheshire Cheese Cat: A Dickens of a Tale. Carmen Deedy had told me about the story idea for this book years ago, after she returned from a trip to London with her girls. She was so excited by her visit to Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese, a literary pub. I knew she wanted to move to longer fiction and she has some wonderful ideas for future books. But we were also knee deep in picture books at the time, in particular Martina the Beautiful Cockroach and 14 Cows for America, and she had not moved  too far along with this project until she happened to have a wonderful conversation with Randall Wright about her ideas when she was visiting Salt Lake City for a writers conference. Randall was a huge Dickens fans and had published several books of longer fiction, and loved her story. They decided to try to work on it together. And it worked beautifully for them.

Ye Olde Cheshire Cheesepub

The manuscript evolved in very exciting ways. One of my favorite developments was the introduction of a raven named Maldwyn from the Tower of London. This was such a terrific character that at certain stages he threatened to overwhelm the others! Another aspect of the work that posed potential problems at certain points in development was the inclusion of Dickens as a character. We talked a lot about his role, and I am very pleased with where things ended up. Dickens is now nicely woven into the plot and narrative, and then also stands apart in his journal entries. The journal entries relate the story in the inn to Dickens’s own literary work and his attempts to finish A Tale of Two Cities, and the entries also reveal some things happening in the inn that are important to the story line and character development and are better told by Dickens from his vantage point.

Throughout the book’s development, Carmen and Randall kept going back over the manuscript, refining the story, plot, characters, and language. They had great fun with the language and it got fairly sophisticated. Once the manuscript was in a strong draft, close to final in terms of the story, scenes, and characters, we turned our attention to the level of the language and after a good deal of discussion went back into the work with a focus on language level for middle grade readers ages ten and up. We did not want to eliminate great words. But we made sure the words were understandable in context. And we looked at every chapter to be sure there were not too many difficult words in any one section. We all knew it was really important that the story momentum be strong. And I believe that it is.


Randall Wright

At this point, my colleague Vicky Holifield took the lead with line editing and later copy editing. She is a superb editor and made many wonderful recommendations that strengthened the work. We collaborated closely in the line editing stage, because I had been the one working with the authors prior to line editing and I knew the reason for many of their decisions.  This allowed her to transition to working directly with the authors herself.

I think I read this manuscript about 300 times over its development. It is truly one of the most challenging and enjoyable projects that I ever undertook. That has a lot to do with Carmen and Randall, who are great and creative authors. Carmen and I have worked together on her books for twenty years and we know each other very well, and respect each other ‘s instincts. That closeness between editor and author is a great gift when developing a book.

I feel very privileged to have worked on this book, with Carmen and Randall, and later with Barry Moser on the typography and book design and the illustrations. My talented colleague, our art director Loraine Joyner, stepped in and collaborated on the final layout and typesetting as well as placement of the illustrations and creative styling of type, at which she is very adept. Loraine and I and Vicky Holifield have worked together for several decades and it is always a very satisfying experience to collaborate with them.


Barry Moser

This book has been a high point for me in my publishing life. I am perfectly happy with it, and feel it is destined to be a classic. Of course, only time will tell, and readers and reviewers will be the ultimate judges. So far, I am very heartened by the response of children to the book, especially eleven-year-olds. They are the perfect age for it.

Thanks for a wonderful interview, Margaret. I’m pleased to be a part of this tour.

Dear Readers, here are the other stops on this week’s Cheshire Cheese Cat blog tour.

Monday 10/3: A Word’s Worth and From the Mixed Up Files…

Tuesday 10/4: There’s a Book and Through the Looking Glass

Wednesday 10/5: Chapter Book of the Day and Satisfaction for Insatiable Readers

Thursday 10/6: Not Just for Kids

Friday 10/7: Peachtree Publishers

BONUS! Visit the Cheshire Cheese Cat webpage for news and games!

And… I’ll select one name from the blog comments for a BOOK GIVEAWAY! (U.S. residents only.)
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Literary Links

Last 2011 picture book workshop! Intensive Picture Book Workshop Oct 5-Nov 23 starts today! (online)

No Flying No Tights is back!
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Site Meter My NEW book, The Zombie Project (The Boxcar Children Mysteries #128)
Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Unexpected…

Picture Book of the Day

The Little Red Pen

by Susan Stevens Crummel (Author) and Janet Stevens (Author, Illustrator)

Booktalk: An fun comic book style retelling of the Little Red Hen, as a Little Red Pen. She’s not baking a cake, she’s correcting homework… and the deadbeats are the other office supplies in the teacher’s desk.

Snippet: Where are my helpers?

Stapler, Scissors, Pencil

Eraser, Pushpin, Highlighter!

Are you hiding in the drawer?

Get up here now! Let’s get to work.

BONUS! See the video!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlVSwfglD6g]

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Chapter Book of the Day

Till Death Do Us Bark: 43 Old Cemetery Road: Book 3

by Kate Klise (Author) and M. Sarah Klise (Illustrator)

144 pages

Booktalk: When a shaggy dog arrives at Spence Mansion, Seymour is overjoyed. His adoptive parents, Ignatuis B. Grumply and Olive C. Spence, are less enthusiastic — especially when Secret, the dog, begins barking all night long. (A story told in letters.)

Snippet: Dear Olive and Mr. Grumply,

A dog followed me home from the library today. I’ve always wanted a dog, and this one has a lot of personality. He even smiles!

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My Book of the Week

Road Work Ahead by Anastasia Suen

A transportation picture book

  • Copyright: 2011
  • Ages: 3-5
  • Hardcover
  • Publisher: Viking

“Suen’s sparse rhyming verse leads readers through the busy scenes and uses simple vocabulary that suits both the youngest listeners and those just beginning to read.” ~ Kirkus Reviews

“A batch of Grandma’s homemade oatmeal cookies beckons, but for this backseat narrator, the sights and sounds along the road to her house are equally compelling.” ~ Publishers Weekly

Activities:

Play the Road Signs Matching Game.

Take the online Traffic Sign Quiz for Kids.

Watch the construction site video.

Make a Traffic Light Necklace with yarn and stickers.

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Literary Links

How are picture book apps created? Editor Anne Hoppe shows us with @alyankovic’s WHEN I GROW UP (via @thepageturn)

Nominate a book for the Cybils awards!

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Site Meter My NEW book, The Zombie Project (The Boxcar Children Mysteries #128)

Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Sillies

Picture Book of the Day

How Do Dinosaurs Laugh Out Loud?

by Jane Yolen (Author) and Mark Teague (Illustrator)

Booktalk: A lift-the-flap board book to answer the age old question, once and for all, How Do Dinosaurs Laugh Out Loud?

Snippet:

Where do dinosaurs shop?

LIFT THE FLAP

At the dino-store!

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Chapter Book of the Day

Nana Takes the Reins

by Kathleen Lane (Author), Sarah Home (Illustrator) and Cabell Harris (Contributor)

142 pages

Booktalk: Nana decides she wants to go to the rodeo to become a bull rider. But a run-in with bad guys Tuff and the Ruffies spins her day in a new direction. Before you can say “yee-haw,” Nana’s grandchildren, Eufala and Bog, join in on the wild adventure.

Snippet: “Bull riding!” exclamed Nana. “What fun! I haven’t ridden a bull in years. Nana felt around on the table for her scissors and accidently picked up a Fudge Freezie wrapper instead.

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September 2011 Carnival Of Children’s Literature

The September 2011 Carnival Of Children’s Literature
is online at Texas Librarian.

Thanks, Elaine! It looks great!

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Literary Links

Lowe’s Toolbox for Education Grants = $2,000-$5,000 per school! (deadline Oct 14)

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Site Meter My NEW book is here!

Read and Write Sports: Readers Theatre and Writing Activities for Grades 3-8

Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Nonfiction Monday

Picture Book of the Day

Mule Train Mail

by Craig Brown (Author, Illustrator)

Booktalk: Anthony the Postman delivers the mail, but he doesn’t drive a mail truck. See how he does it…

Snippet: Anthony the Postman doesn’t wear a uniform. He wears a cowboy hat, chaps and spurs.

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Chapter Book of the Day

Explorers of the New World: Discover the Golden Age of Exploration with 22 Projects (Build It Yourself series)

by Carla Mooney (Author)

128 pages

Booktalk: Delve into the expeditions of Vasco da Gama, Christopher Columbus, Ferdinand Magellan, John Cabot, Hernán Cortés, and more. Using common household items and minimal supervision, kids enjoy 22 hands-on activities to help them learn about these legendary explorers and their voyages during the Age of Exploration and Discovery.

Snippet: Most of the projects in this book can be made with little adult supervision, using materials you already have at home or can easily find at a craft store. So get ready to step back into time and discover the men who were the explorers of the New World and the kings and queens who sent them on their journeys.

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Nonfiction Monday

Nonfiction Monday

This week’s Nonfiction Monday Round-up host is True Tales & A Cherry On Top

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Literary Link

Publishing Innovation Awards for ebooks, enhanced ebooks, and apps: deadline Nov 1. (via @loreenleedy)

Fascinating piece from National Geographic about teen brains. (via @tashrow)

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Site Meter My NEW picture book Road Work Ahead is here!

Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Friday Reads

Picture Book of the Day

Road Work Ahead

by Anastasia Suen (Author) and Jannie Ho (Illustrator)

Booktalk: When a family sets out on a trip to Grandma’s, their journey proves to be more like a visit to a construction site. Sidewalks are being poured, streetlights repaired, roads resurfaced. The noise of jackhammers, whistles, and horns fills the air. Boys and girls alike will love seeing the big machines at work. Anastasia Suen’s simple text and Jannie Ho’s bright, up-beat pictures make this one road trip to remember.

Snippet:
Road work ahead.
Move over. Go slow.
Jackhammers crack.
Look at them go.

Yes, this is my new picture book, a picture book poem that was 25 years in the making (and it’s only 120 words long)! The illustrator and I have been out on tour with the book all week.

September 19-23 Road Work Ahead blog tour

We want to say a BIG THANK YOU to all of the bloggers who hosted us this week! What a GREAT group! Each one focused on a different aspect of the book…Darcy wanted to know about the 25 years of revision, Carrie reminded us that kids like to watch construction, Terry and I talked about growing readers, Mary Ann’s kindergarten classes created art, Melissa explained the benefits of play, and Jone asked her students to review the book.

We have more activities for the book on our Road Work Ahead Facebook page. (Visit Jannie’s blog to see how she worked on the sketches and created the cover.)

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Chapter Book of the Day

Dirt Bikes (Edge Books: Full Throttle)

by Lori Polydoros (Author)

32 pages

Booktalk: No other motorcycle can take a beating quite like a dirt bike. These lightweight speedsters combine strong suspension systems with high powered engines and superb handling. Find out how today’s riders push their tough bikes to new limits in racing, freestyle, and beyond.

Snippet: Forty dirt bike riders twist their throttle grips. Their bike engines roar. A flagman gives the 30-second warning, When the gate falls, the bikes blast off like rockets.

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Poetry Friday

This week’s Poetry Friday Round-up is hosted by Picture Book of the Day

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STEM Friday

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

This week’s STEM Friday Round-up is hosted by Rasco From RIF
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Site Meter My NEW book is here!

Read and Write Sports: Readers Theatre and Writing Activities for Grades 3-8

Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Young Readers

Picture Book of the Day

Trains!

by Charles Reasoner (Author)

Booktalk: See what the busy truck does all day in this board book.

Snippet:

It’s the start of a big busy day.

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Chapter Book of the Day

The Romeo And Juliet Code

by Phoebe Stone (Author)

304 pages

Booktalk: Felicity’s glamorous parents have a secret. When they leave her with distant relatives in Maine, Felicity hopes they won’t leave her long. Her new Uncle Gideon hides things. Her Aunt Miami is star-crossed. And Derek, a kid her age, refuses to leave his room.

But Felicity needs Derek’s help. Gideon is getting coded letters from Felicity’s parents, and she’s sure they’re in trouble. Can Felicity crack the code, heal the family and save her parents, all while surviving her first crush?

Snippet: I barely heard them. I was watching that letter halfway under the door. And then just as I was about to turn round and go downstairs, the letter moved. Someone pulled it under the door and picked it up.

My heart started racing and thumping and spinning, carrying on inside me like a tiny bird in a new cage. I was scared and nervous and pleased all at once. It was a nice feeling to realize that I had run a test and it had worked. I had proved that Derek existed. He was in there. It made me think that I can be a clever girl, even though I can’t do long division.

BONUS! See the video!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=axBm1muUnhc]

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September 2011 Carnival Of Children’s Literature

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Literary Links

My new book Road Work Ahead is on tour at Imagination Soup today!

Kindle Books Now Available At Local Libraries! (via @galleycat)

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Site Meter My NEW book is here!

Read and Write Sports: Readers Theatre and Writing Activities for Grades 3-8

Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Close to the Sea

Picture Book of the Day

New Year at the Pier: A Rosh Hashanah Story

by April Halprin Wayland (Author) and Stephane Jorisch (Illustrator)

Booktalk: A boy named Izzy celebrates Jewish New Year at the water’s edge…

Snippet: Izzy loves this changing time of year. Some days sunglasses, someday sweaters. Apples, honey, the sound of the shofar, and his favorite part of Rosh Hashanah:

Tashlich!

BONUS! See the video!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1tgkBMiBGM]

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Chapter Book of the Day

Chasing the Nightbird

by Krista Russell (Author)

208 pages

Booktalk: Fourteen-year-old Lucky Valera is a seasoned sailor on the crew of the whaling ship, Nightbird. But when his estranged older brother suddenly kidnaps him off the docks and forces him into servitude at the mill, his life takes a dramatic turn for the worse. The Underground Railroad looks like the answer, but plans go awry. How can Lucky find freedom?

Snippet:

New Bedford, Massachusetts, 1851

If it were true that seagulls possessed the souls of dead sailors, Lucky Valera wondered which of his shipmates was diving at him from the June morning sky.

BONUS! See the video!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzGQnZBGVZ0]

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Road Work Ahead blog tour underway!

September 19-23 Road Work Ahead blog tour

Visit the Road Work Ahead Facebook page for news and activities *

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Literary Link

The Children’s Authors Who Broke the Rules (via New York Times)

Banned Books Week is 9/24 – 10/1 — check the YouTube page for new videos throughout the week! (via @harpercollins)

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Site Meter My NEW book is here!

Read and Write Sports: Readers Theatre and Writing Activities for Grades 3-8

Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Friday Reads

Picture Book of the Day

Cats, Cats!
by Michelle Nelson-Schmidt (Author, Illustrator)

Booktalk: Look at all the cats! What kind are you?

Snippet:
Cats, cats, are everywhere.
Look at all the cats out there!

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Chapter Book of the Day

Geology of the Desert Southwest: Investigate How the Earth Was Formed with 15 Projects (Build It Yourself series)
by Cynthia Light Brown (Author)
128 pages

Booktalk: Learn about geology as you explore the dry and arid deserts of the Southwest with hands-on projects.

Snippet: The Desert Southwest has occupied a unique place in the imagination and culture of America. At first the region seems barren, with little vegetation and water. But its wideopen spaces and unique ecosystems reveal a quiet beauty.

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Poetry Friday

This week’s Poetry Friday Round-up is hosted by The Poem Farm

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STEM Friday

It’s STEM Friday! (STEM is Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics)
This week’s STEM Friday Round-up is hosted by Archimedes Notebook

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Literary Links

Judge Adopts Trial Schedule At Google Status Conference, but Settlement Talks Continue (via @publisherswkly)

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Site Meter My NEW book is here!
Read and Write Sports: Readers Theatre and Writing Activities for Grades 3-8
Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.

Young Readers

Picture Book of the Day

The Busy Life of Ernestine Buckmeister
by Linda Ravin Lodding (Author) and Suzanne Beaky (Illustrator)

Booktalk: Ernestine is in over her head. Monday through Sunday, Ernestine’s week is packed with after-school lessons—tuba, knitting, sculpting, water ballet, yoga, yodeling, and karate. Overwhelmed and exhausted, Ernestine decides to take matters into her own hands…

Snippet:
On Mondays she sculpted with Clay Lumpkin.
On Tuesdays she did water ballet with Miss Goldfisher.
On Wednesdays she knitted with Mrs. Pearl Stitchem.
On Thursdays she took tuba lessons with Mr. Oompah.
On Fridays she yodeled with Little Old Lady Hoo.
On Saturdays she studied karate with Grand Master HiYa!
And on Sundays she practiced yoga with Guru Prakash Pretzel.

BONUS! See the video!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BustjCHbkDw&]

 

**Linda is one of my former students!**

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Chapter Book of the Day

Alice-Miranda at School
by Jacqueline Harvey (Author)
272 pages

Booktalk: Alice-Miranda Highton-Smith-Kennington-Jones can’t wait to start boarding school. When she arrives at Winchesterfield-Downsfordvale Academy for Proper Young Ladies, the adventure begins . . . only not quite as Alice-Miranda expects. The minute she sets foot on the school’s manicured grounds, she senses that something is wrong: Miss Grimm, the headmistress, is nowhere to be seen, the gardens have no flowers, and a mysterious stranger seems to be hiding out on the premises.

Snippet: Alice-Miranda Highton-Smith-Kennington-Jones waved goodbye to her parents at the gate.
“Goodbye, Mummy. Please be brave.” her mother sobbed loudly in return. “Enjoy your golf, Daddy. I’ll see you at the end of term.” Her father sniffed into his handkerchief.

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September 2011 Carnival Of Children’s Literature

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Literary Links

Tired of blog scrapers stealing your online writings? Help Google fight digital pirates (via @galleycat)

Berenstain Bears helping revive an endangered American Indian language in a new TV animated series (via @educationweek)

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Site Meter My NEW book is here!
Read and Write Sports: Readers Theatre and Writing Activities for Grades 3-8
Copyright © 2011 Anastasia Suen All Rights Reserved.