Great News on the Diversity Front – Plus Twibbons

Elizabeth Bluemle -- February 9th, 2012

I’ve been champing at the bit to revisit the topic of including the nation’s many children of diverse races, creeds, and colors in the literature we provide for them. The significance of creating books that are both “windows and mirrors” for young readers, as Mitali Perkins and others have so eloquently put it, cannot be overstated.

If you have followed ShelfTalker for a while, you’ll know by now that this topic is really important to me. (For a post about mainstream children’s books needing a lot more main characters of color, take a look at Where’s Ramona Quimby, Black and Pretty? For a post linking to the online World Full of Color library—listing 500+ books featuring kids of color where race is not the driving issue of the story—click here. For a post about increasing diversity in the publishing field, check out The Elephant in the Room, a post extra-dear to my heart because of the amazing art created for it by several incredible illustrators. And for a post with some wonderful thoughts about these issues from author Mitali Perkins, publisher Karen Lotz of Candlewick Press, and editor Stacy Whitman of Tu Books, click here.)

For any folks who shut down at the mention of the words “multicultural” and “diversity” (and I wish that didn’t happen, but it sometimes does), I add the pragmatic argument that broadening the scope of what we offer readers not only affects minds and hearts and intellects, but will eventually prove to be vital for publishers, financially speaking, as the population of the U.S. — i.e., future readers — continues to diversify.

So, on to the good news!

The Children’s Book Council’s new CBC Diversity Committee.

Last year, a group of children’s book editors desirous of actively talking about and tackling these issues started gathering for lunch discussions. Over time, this grew into a full-blown initiative spearheaded by the wonderful people at the Children’s Book Council. Last week, I was overjoyed to have a chance to attend the kickoff celebration for the CBC Diversity Committee, which describes itself as “dedicated to increasing the diversity of voices and experiences contributing to children’s literature. We endeavor to encourage diversity of race, gender, geographical origin, sexual orientation, and class among both the creators of and the topics addressed by children’s literature. We strive for a more diverse range of employees working within the industry, of authors and illustrators creating inspiring content, and of characters depicted in children’s literature.”

To this end, the CBC has kicked off a blog/website that will serve as a clearinghouse for information and resources, and that suggests specific steps we can take to make a real difference.

The party was wonderful. Somehow, I never made it to the snacks, but they looked lovely. It was just too much fun to say hi to everyone and hear how they’d become involved in this project. Robin Adelson, Executive Director of the CBC, had invited the committee members to speak, and it was inspiring and touching (and often funny, and sometimes angering on their behalf) to hear these passionate, articulate book people speak of the experiences in their own lives that led them to love literature, and children’s books, and to crave seeing themselves and others in those books. The CBC website has started to post these stories in its blog; so far, you can read fascinating posts on “How I Got Into Publishing” by Little, Brown editor Alvina Ling and Roaring Brook editor Nancy Mercado, along with the first in what will be a series of posts on “Books That Changed My Life,” the first being Nancy Mercado’s discussion of Nicholasa Mohr’s wonderful Felita. Coming up will be posts by Stacey Barney, Editor, Putnam Books for Young Readers; Antonio Gonzales, Associate Marketing Manager, Author Visits, Scholastic; Connie Hsu, Editor, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers; Cheryl Klein, Senior Editor, Author A. Levine Books/Scholastic; Daniel Nayeri, Editor, Clarion Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; Caroline Sun, Senior Publicity Manager, Integrated Marketing, HarperCollins Children’s Books; Namrata Tripathi, Executive Editor, Atheneum/Simon & Schuster; and Stacy Whitman, Editorial Director, Tu Books/Lee & Low Books.

There was more diversity in the room during the kick-off party than one normally sees in a room full of publishing folks, and that was heartening to see. We still have a long way to go, however, and I am SO grateful to the CBC and all the wonderful publishing committee members for taking this enormous step toward opening up conversations about what works (and what hasn’t yet worked, and how to fix that) when it comes to publishing and marketing books for young people featuring main characters of various races and ethnicities, and recruiting a truly diverse field of publishing and creative professionals.

Want to get involved? Start here and here and then add a Twibbon. The CBC Twibbon is a little CBC Diversity Committee icon that will display as a decoration on your Twitter icon (size and placement are adjustable). A single Tweet will go out to spread awareness, saying you’re supporting the Diversity Committee—although this can be disabled if you don’t want that for some reason—and then you can keep the decoration on your Twitter icon as long as you’d like. There is also a Facebook option, though I haven’t quite figured that one out yet. But you can certainly Like the CBC’s Facebook page and find great photos from the kickoff party there, too.

Also: I continue to invite publishers to send me lists of their recent titles featuring main characters of color where race is not the driving issue of the story so that I can keep the World Full of Color database up to date. I’ve gotten behind for this season, and am looking forward to adding many, many new titles in the next couple of weeks. (Email titles to me at ebluemle at publishersweekly dot com)

The Highlights Foundation’s workshop: Creating an Authentic Cultural Voice

Writers interested in addressing some of these issues in their work will be interested to hear that the Highlights Foundation is offering a Founders Workshop on writing across cultures, called “Creating an Authentic Cultural Voice” April 26-29, led by Mitali Perkins and Donna Jo Napoli, with special guests Alvina Ling and Kathryn Erskine. Some of the questions they’ll be addressing include:

  • Who has the right to write multiculturally?
  • How do we bring humility to our research?
  • What audience are we writing for?
  • Does the term “multicultural literature” match the needs of today’s book market?
  • How is authentic cultural voice achieved?

I loved this quote by Mitali from the Highlights press release: “When to cross a border of race, culture, or power in creating fiction? If a particular community is processing a shared experience of suffering through the healing power of story, maybe it’s time for our ‘outsider’ version to wait. When we have more power in society than our protagonist, it’s always good to ask whether to speak on his or her behalf. If we still feel compelled by the story, we must lean heavily on research, imagination, and empathy. Always, love deeply within that community and listen well. Someone once said that to cross a border of power to tell a story, a writer better live there first, shut up, and hold a bunch of babies.” Amen!

Readers, what ideas do you have for increasing awareness and getting great multicultural books into the hands of kids everywhere?

Bring a Friend to the Bookstore

Josie Leavitt -- February 7th, 2012

We asked our staff to brainstorm ways to bring new customers to the bookstore this winter. While I was busy thinking of ways to reach out to the masses in our county who have never set foot in our store, Kelly came up with a fairly ingenious idea.

Bring a Friend to the Bookstore is so simple, it’s shocking. Rather than casting a wide and expensive net to any and all potential customers, Kelly’s idea is to ask good customers to bring someone to the store who’s never been here. We are taking folks who already love us and have been loyal supporters, folks who get us and understand our value in the community, and asking them to share us with a  friend who might not know about us. We can get no better advertising than that kind of love and enthusiasm. All the staff is being asked to think of six friends or customers they really like, and send them a postcard with a little handwritten note. I’m very excited by this idea.

But wait, it gets better. To sweeten the deal, we’ve partnered with the coffee shop across the street to give everyone a cup of coffee on us. So, we’ve created a date with a friend for the purpose of introducing them to the store. I think it’s brilliant. Kevin, the coffee shop owner, is even underwriting the cost of the coffees because he’s happy for the new business. Kevin printed up the gift certificates and even swapped out his logo for ours and added a sentence: A Gift From the Flying Pig Bookstore. How lovely is that? The gift certificates will be good for a month so we can really track how this promotion is going to work.

I just think it’s a great excuse to spend some time with a friend. I mean really, what’s better than books and coffee?

As Promised: Awards by Publisher

Elizabeth Bluemle -- February 6th, 2012

It appeals to me as a bookseller to break down the awards by publisher, not only to take a look at what works and imprints have been recognized for their achievements, but — practically speaking — as an easy way to make some direct publisher re-orders. Here’s hoping it helps some other booksellers, librarians, and teachers, too.

To see a list of which publishers won how many awards apiece, and which authors and artists won multiple awards, see last week’s round-up post here.

And now… the awards by publisher! And once again, congratulations to all!

ABRAMS Abrams Books for Young Readers

Pura Belpré Illustrator Award WinnerDiego Rivera: His World and Ours, illustrated by Duncan Tonatiuh, written by Duncan Tonatiuh.

ARTSCROLL/MESORAH

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Older ReadersThe Mishkan: Its Structure and Its Sacred Vessels by Rabbi Avrohom Biderman.

BRILLIANCE AUDIO

Odyssey HonorGhetto Cowboy, written by G. Neri and narrated by JD Jackson.

BOYDS MILLS PRESS

Calkins Creek

Sibert Honor BookBlack & White: The Confrontation between Reverend Fred L. Shuttlesworth and Eugene ‘Bull’ Connor, written by Larry Dane Brimner.

Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Older ReadersHammerin’ Hank Greenberg: Baseball Pioneer by Shelley Sommer.

CANDLEWICK PRESS

Geisel Honor BookI Want My Hat Back, written and illustrated by Jon Klassen.

Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Younger ReadersNaamah and the Ark at Night by Susan Campbell Bartoletti with illustrations by Holly Meade.

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Older ReadersTerezin: Voices from the Holocaust by Ruth Thomson.

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for TeensRequiem: Poems of the Terezin Ghetto by Paul Janeczko.

The Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner for Younger ReadersChanukah Lights by Michael J. Rosen with artwork by Robert Sabuda.

CHARLESBRIDGE

Belpré Illustrator HonorThe Cazuela That the Farm Maiden Stirred, illustrated by Rafael López, written by Samantha R. Vamos.

The Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner for Older ReadersMusic Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein by Susan Goldman Rubin.

Yalsa Award FinalistMusic Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein, written by Susan Goldman Rubin.

CINCO PUNTOS PRESS

Belpré Author Honor BookMaximilian and the Mystery of the Guardian Angel: A Bilingual Lucha Libre Thriller, written by Xavier Garza.

Sydney Taylor Honor Book for Teen ReadersThe Blood Lie by Shirley Reva Vernick.

DISNEY-HYPERION

Hyperion Books

Caldecott HonorBlackout, illustrated and written by John Rocco.

Geisel Honor BookI Broke My Trunk, written and illustrated by Mo Willems.

EERDMAN’S

Eerdman’s Books for Young Readers

Mildred L. Batchelder AwardSoldier Bear, originally published in Dutch in 2008 as Soldaat Wojtek, written by Bibi Dumon Tak, illustrated by Philip Hopman, translated by Laura Watkinson.

GALE

Sleeping Bear Press

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Younger ReadersLipman Pike: America’s First Home Run King by Richard Michelson with illustrations by Zachary Pullen.

HACHETTE

Little, Brown & Co.

Alex AwardIn Zanesville, by Jo Ann Beard.

Caldecott HonorMe … Jane, illustrated and written by Patrick McDonnell.

Printz HonorWhy We Broke Up, written by Daniel Handler, art by Maira Kalman.

HARPERCOLLINS

Amistad

King Author Honor—Eloise Greenfield, author of The Great Migration: Journey to the North, illustrated by Jan Spivey Gilchrist.

Balzer + Bray

King Author Book Winner—Kadir Nelson, author and illustrator of Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans.

King Illustrator Book Honor—Kadir Nelson, illustrator and author of Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans.

Ecco

Alex AwardThe Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt: A Novel in Pictures, by Caroline Preston.

Greenwillow

Morris FinalistGirl of Fire and Thorns, written by Rae Carson.

HarperCollins Children’s Books

National Book Award Winner for Young People’s Literature—Thanhha Lai, Inside Out & Back Again.

Newbery HonorInside Out & Back Again, written by Thanhha Lai.

HarperTeen

Stonewall Honor BookPink, written by Lili Wilkinson.

The Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner for Teen ReadersThe Berlin Boxing Club by Robert Sharenow.

HOLIDAY HOUSE

Geisel Honor BookSee Me Run, written and illustrated by Paul Meisel.

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Older ReadersIrena Sendler and the Children of the Warsaw Ghetto by Susan Goldman Rubin with illustrations by Bill Fransworth.

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN HARCOURT

Clarion

National Book Award YPL Finalist—Gary D. Schmidt, Okay for Now.

Theodor Seuss Geisel AwardTales for Very Picky Eaters, written and illustrated by Josh Schneider.

Yalsa Award FinalistSugar Changed the World: A Story of Magic, Spice, Slavery, Freedom and Science, written by Marc Aronson and Marina Budhos.

Houghton Mifflin Books for Children

Sibert AwardBalloons over Broadway:  The True Story of the Puppeteer of Macy’s Parade, written by Melissa Sweet.

Sibert HonorThe Elephant Scientist, written by Caitlin O’Connell and Donna M. Jackson, photographs byCaitlin O’Connell and Timothy Rodwell.

HOUSE OF ANANSI

Groundwood

Stonewall Honor BookMoney Boy, written by Paul Yee.

JEWISH LIGHTS

Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Younger ReadersAround the World in One Shabbat written and illustrated by Durga Yael Bernhard.

LEE & LOW

Children’s Book Press

Belpré Illustrator Honor BookMarisol McDonald Doesn’t Match /Marisol McDonald no combina, illustrated by Sara Palacios, written by Monica Brown.

Lee & Low

Morris FinalistUnder the Mesquite, written by Guadalupe Garcia McCall.

Pura Belpré Author AwardUnder the Mesquite, written by Guadalupe Garcia McCall.

Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Older ReadersIrena’s Jars of Secrets by Marcia Vaughan with illustrations by Ron Mazellan.

LERNER

Graphic Universe

Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Older ReadersLily Renee, Escape Artist: from Holocaust Survivor to Comic Book Pioneer by Trina Robbins with illustrations by Anne Timmons and Mo Oh.

Kar-Ben

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Younger Readers

  • Joseph and the Sabbath Fish by Eric A. Kimmel with illustrations by Martina Peluso;
  • Marcel Marceau: Master of Mime by Gloria Spielman with illustrations by Manon Gauthtier;
  • Picnic at Camp Shalom by Jacqueline Jules with illustrations by Debbie Melmon;
  • Sadie’s Sukkah Breakfast by Jamie Korngold with illustrations by Julie Fortenberry;
  • The Littlest Mountain by Barb Rosenstock with illustrations by Melanie Hall;
  • The Shabbat Princess by Amy Meltzer with illustrations by Martha Aviles.

LETHE PRESS

Stonewall Honor Booka + e 4ever, drawn and written by Ilike Merey.

MACMILLAN

Bloomsbury USA

Alex AwardSalvage the Bones, by Jesmyn Ward.

Farrar Straus Giroux

Alex Awards

  • Big Girl Small, by Rachel DeWoskin.
  • The Lover’s Dictionary, by David Levithan.

Newbery MedalDead End in Norvelt, written by Jack Gantos.

Henry Holt & Company

Belpré Author Honor BookHurricane Dancers: The First Caribbean Pirate Shipwreck, written by Margarita Engle.

Newbery HonorBreaking Stalin’s Nose, written and illustrated by Eugene Yelchin.

Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Teen ReadersThen by Morris Gleitzman.

Roaring Brook

Flash Point

YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction for Young AdultsThe Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism & Treachery written by Steve Sheinkin.

Yalsa Award FinalistBootleg: Murder, Moonshine, and the Lawless Years of Prohibition, written by Karen Blumenthal.

Neal Porter

King Illustrator Book Winner—Shane W. Evans, illustrator and author of Underground: Finding the Light to Freedom.

Roaring Brook

Caldecott HonorGrandpa Green, illustrated and written by Lane Smith.

MARSHALL CAVENDISH

National Book Award YPL Finalist—Debby Dahl Edwardson, My Name Is Not Easy.

Sydney Taylor Notable Book for Younger ReadersThe Golem’s Latkes by Eric A. Kimmel with illustrations by Aaron Jasinski.

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY

Sibert Honor BookWitches!: The Absolutely True Tale of Disaster in Salem written and illustrated by Rosalyn Schanzerand.

Yalsa Award FinalistWheels of Change: How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom (With a Few Flat Tires Along the Way), written by Sue Macy.

PENGUIN

Dial Books

National Book Award YPL Finalist—Franny Billingsley, Chime.

Printz HonorThe Returning, written by Christine Hinwood.

Philomel

Morris FinalistBetween Shades of Gray, written by Ruta Sepetys.

Viking

Schneider Middle School Award (ages 9-13)close to famous, written by Joan Bauer.

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Older ReadersThe Cats in the Doll Shop by Yona Zeldis McDonough with illustrations by Heather Maione.

RANDOM HOUSE

Crown

Alex Awards

  • Ready Player One, by Ernest Cline;
  • The Talk-Funny Girl, by Roland Merullo.

Delacorte

Batchelder HonorThe Lily Pond, written by Annika Thor, and translated by Linda Schenck.

Morris FinalistPaper Covers Rock, written by Jenny Hubbard.

Doubleday

Alex Awards

  • The Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern;
  • Robopocalypse: A Novel, by Daniel H. Wilson.

Alfred A. Knopf

National Book Award FinalistAlbert Marrin, Flesh & Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy.

Printz HonorJasper Jones, written by Craig Silvey.

Schneider Teen Award (ages 14-18)The Running Dream, written by Wendelin Van Draanen.

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Older Readers

  • Flesh & Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin;
  • When Life Gives You OJ by Erica S. Perl.

Listening Library

Odyssey AwardRotters, written by Daniel Kraus and narrated by Kirby Heyborne.

Odyssey Honors

  • Okay for Now, written by Gary D. Schmidt and narrated by Lincoln Hoppe;
  •  Young Fredle, written by Cynthia Voigt and narrated by Wendy Carter.

Schwartz & Wade

Caldecott MedalA Ball for Daisy, illustrated and written by Chris Raschka.

King Author Honor Book—Patricia C. McKissack, author of Never Forgotten, illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon.

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Younger ReadersI Will Come Back for You: A Family in Hiding during World War II by Marisabina Russo.

Tricycle Press

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for Younger ReadersOne Little Chicken by Elka Weber with illustrations by Elisa Kleven.

SCHOLASTIC

Scholastic Audiobooks

Odyssey HonorThe Scorpio Races, written by Maggie Stiefvater and narrated by Steve West and Fiona Hardingham.

Scholastic Press

Printz HonorThe Scorpio Races, written by Maggie Stiefvater.

Schneider Middle Grade Award (ages 9-13)Wonderstruck: A Novel in Words and Pictures, written by Brian Selznick.

Sibert Honor BookDrawing from Memory, written and illustrated by Allen Say.

SIMON & SCHUSTER

Atheneum Books for Young Readers

Printz WinnerWhere Things Come Back, written by John Corey Whaley.

Morris AwardWhere Things Come Back, written by John Corey Whaley.

Free Press

Alex AwardsThe New Kids: Big Dreams and Brave Journeys at a High School for Immigrant Teens, by Brooke Hauser.

Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers

Stonewall Book AwardPutting Makeup on the Fat Boy, written by Bil Wright.

Simon Pulse

Stonewall Honor Bookwith or without you, written by Brian Farrey.

S&S (primarily) authors who won awards for their bodies of work:

Coretta Scott King–Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement—Ashley Bryan

Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults—Susan Cooper

WALKER & CO.

Sydney Taylor Notable Books for TeensOyMG by Amy Fellner Dominy.

WESTON WOODS STUDIOS

Andrew Carnegie Medal—Paul R. Gagne and Melissa Reilly Ellard, producers of Children Make Terrible Pets. The video is based on the book written by Peter Brown, and is narrated by Emily Eiden, with music by Jack Sundrud and Rusty Young, and animation by Soup2Nuts.

 

Once More, With Feeling

Josie Leavitt -- February 2nd, 2012

The battle against Amazon seems to be never-ending. The New York Times featured a long story over the weekend about Barnes & Noble’s struggle to fight the online behemoth with ebook content. I’m not even going to discuss the absolute irony of the article about B&N feeling the pressure from Amazon, when in fact, B&N is responsible for the closure of many indies in the 1990s.

The death knell for the physical book seems to be getting louder every day as the ebook threatens to subsume the publishing world as we know it. I have had it.

Books with pages and covers and that yummy book smell are not going away. To constantly say that they are is giving Amazon more power than it deserves. Yes, the ereaders are fun, and there might be something nice about having thousands of books in one little device, but real readers, the people who have kept bookstores open for years, are not all going to switch to the new technology. Maybe I’m being a Pollyanna here, but I’ve more customers tell me that they actually don’t like their Nook, Kindle or other ereader. They want real books. And our sales for January bear this out as we ended up 10% over last January.

Are we all fighting for our lives? Hell, yes. But let’s stop whining about it. Whining never made me want to support a cause. Want to make the book stays around forever? Stop letting three-year-olds play with book apps. A book doesn’t make noise at you. A book doesn’t have ten links to press per page that take you away from the story. A book doesn’t sound words out for you. A book lets you use your imagination – some anti-book folks would say, forces kids to use their imagination. I think every kid should be able to read The Cat in the Hat and feel a growing anxiety about when the parents are coming home. There shouldn’t be a hundred ways to pull you out of the story thereby diluting it. Kids have enough distractions thrown at them every day, a book should be a sanctuary. And yes, some books are going to be work, but that’s okay. I struggled with reading until I was eight and I survived quite nicely.

If children now grow up with ebooks that start to feel like video games how can a book with pages, words and pictures compete? These kids will expect books to do more with no effort on their part. I see a lack of imagination every day with kids. A child comes in with a stuffed animal and I ask what the animal’s name is and eight times out of ten the animal either has the name it came with on the price tag, or it doesn’t have a name. These kids need heaps of free time where all they have to do is think and imagine. I cannot comprehend not naming a favorite stuffed animal, or just calling it Dog.

Here’s another way to keep the book alive. Start talking to pre-teens and teens about the importance of the real book and bookstores. These kids have surprising amounts of money at their disposal. These are also the kids who latch on to a cause and fight for it and make it the law of their household. Make their cause your store and real books. Talk to them about shopping locally and supporting your town. They’re smart, they’ll get it.

Books are not sexy compared to ereaders. They don’t do anything but provide words on a page. And that is a wonderful, wonderful thing.

Funny, Sad, and Really Good

Josie Leavitt -- January 31st, 2012

A few weeks ago I promised to talk about some of the books I read during the week that we were closed. I was happy to find these galleys and while they are decidedly different from each other, they share one thing in common: humor. All to often the humor is missing from young adult novels as we spend more and more time in dystopias.

The first book I read was Pete Hautman’s What Boys Really Want.  I was immediately taken in by this book because it’s really funny. Funny from the first chapter when one of our narrators, Adam, gets caught in a no-win discussion with his friend about how skanky she is. By the end he freely admits that he doesn’t really know what skanky means. Adam’s honesty rings true and his best friend, Lita, understands and accepts him for all his foibles.

The book alternates short chapters from Adam’s point of view and Lita’s. Hautman does an admirable job of making each voice unique and equally compelling. Lita has been a secret and very popular advice blogger at her school and has aspirations to write, so she’s angry and sad that Adam suddenly begins working on a book about What Boys Want. Being an enterprising teen, Adam sells the book before it’s written. Feeling pressure to now actually write a book, Adam starts stealing material from the web, including content from Lita’s Ask Ms. Fitz blog. The book sails along until the slightly unbelievable ending which I won’t give away. Suffice to say it was a tad farfetched, but it didn’t spoil my ultimate enjoyment of the book. I laughed out loud so often it didn’t matter.

John Green’s long awaited, The Fault in Our Stars was another realistic young adult fiction I read. This book’s humor is definitely of the dark variety as the book focuses on kids with cancer. Hazel is a depressed 16-year-old with terminal stage IV thyroid cancer. She is forced to go to a cancer support for kids with cancer. Everything she says is funny, biting and a little tragic. As a reader, when I know books are about terminal kids, I try to put up a wall so I’m not crushed if they die. I couldn’t do this with this book.

I was right there with Hazel the whole book. She meets another cancer survivor at the group, Augustus, who sweeps her off her feet. Augustus had a leg amputated because of bone cancer that’s now in remission. Hazel and Gus share books (I love this idea), introducing each to their favorites. Hazel’s book is The Imperial Affliction about cancer and Gus’s book is about a video game. They couldn’t be more different, but their attraction towards each other has them reading and rereading the books. Gus, while at first comes off as a knight in shining armor, is a richly portrayed character who is trying to live life fully.

This book is also devastatingly sad even while it’s being funny. Sometimes, there’s no humor as funny as black humor. It’s also touching and reminds one of the good in the human spirit. I don’t want to give anything away, so all I will say is don’t read the last 40 pages in public and make sure to have to plenty tissues on hand. I read this at home and was down right sobbing on the couch. Elizabeth kept asking if I was okay and the poor dog had no idea what to do. Even through the tears I told Elizabeth she should read it, too. It’s not shocker that a book about kids with cancer might end on a sad note, but it’s totally worth the journey.

The Happiness Continues

Josie Leavitt -- January 30th, 2012

Friday’s post, A Happy Resolution, had me speaking about a mix-up with The Invention of Hugo Cabret. Well, if I was thunderstruck at how well the customers handled the situation, I was completely blown away by my Scholastic rep’s response.

Friday’s blog post had been live for barely two hours when I got an email from Nikki Mutch, who has been my Scholastic rep for more than a decade. Nikki is the epitome of a great rep. She listens, she lets me read F&Gs without giving away the ending to adorable picture books. Like all good reps, Nikki has gotten to know my store: what we like, what will sell, what we should take a chance on, and what we can safely skip.

The email was quite simple. Nikki had a copy of Hugo in her office and she was going to overnight it to the store so I could give it to the customer who had gotten one that had already been written in. I thought this was extraordinarily lovely and I thanked her profusely for being so thoughtful.

Well, the box was delivered on Saturday. I opened it and found… not only a pristine copy of The Invention of Hugo Cabret. There was also a copy of The Hugo Movie Companion. Oh, wait, there’s more. Nikki also enclosed a copy of Wonderstruck. And if this wasn’t enough, everything came in a very snazzy Wonderstruck bag. Honestly, all that was missing was Brian Selznick himself.

I called the customer and explained what I had just gotten in the mail. She kept saying, “Are you sure?” I kept saying that I was. She was giddy with the riches, and I was giddy to be able to fully right a wrong. It’s these gestures that make me love reps. They work so hard in an ever-changing field.  Just as bookstores are facing huge changes in day to day operations to stay competitive, sales reps are facing similar shifts as well, and they have to listen to us — booksellers who call wondering where their order is, why they can’t get this author to come to their store, etc. It’s a rare day that I call a rep when there isn’t a problem.

Perhaps this is the nature of the beast, but Nikki’s gesture reminded to take a minute and thank all the hard-working reps who make my life go so much more smoothly.

A Happy Resolution

Josie Leavitt -- January 27th, 2012

During the holidays someone had called to ask if we had The Invention of Hugo Cabret. We did not have it because it was back-ordered. As we talked on the phone, a customer was in the process of returning a copy of Hugo Cabret.

Happiness ensued. Or so we thought. Until we got a very angry phone call December 27th. A message was left for “the owners,” to call back immediately. It seems the copy of Hugo Cabret had inadvertently been inscribed to Matthew. Sadly, the book was unwrapped and opened on Christmas morning by an eager boy named Aaron. It had never occurred to us to check the returned book before we resold it to see if someone had written in it.

Needless to say, the mom was mad. She didn’t understand how that could happen. We explained that it hasn’t; this has never happened before, never once in 15 years. We promised her a new book as soon as it comes in. She wanted to know what we were going to the woman who returned the book (and got a store credit for it). I punted a little because I hadn’t spoken to that customer yet. I thought she was ending the conversation by saying, “I just needed to talk about it.” And then she proceeded to talk about it, all over again.

I was able to look up who returned the book. I called her and explained the situation. She felt horrible about it and came in yesterday to pay for the book. She was absolutely hilarious. She approached the register with her head hung low and said, “I’ve come to atone for returning that book.” And then she laughed and apologized for returning an inscribed book. Her kids were adorable and there was just something relaxed about the way she paid for the book that was a relief. There was no underlying tension or discomfort with the transaction; she knew she had messed up and was taking humorous responsibility for it.

I was reminded again at the many ways customers surprise and delight me. Her little boy came right up the counter and just said,”I’m so tall because I’m almost four.” Well, okay then. It was a great way to end the day.

What Fresh Hell Is This?

Josie Leavitt -- January 26th, 2012

Elizabeth and I were having lunch yesterday and we were talking about the latest Amazon assault of having Houghton Mifflin Harcourt be the publisher and distributor for their New Harvest line of adult books. I think Elizabeth summed it up best when she said, “What fresh Hell is this?”

It’s funny how quickly a happy mood that is largely because I’m focused at work and working on my budgets and trying to make this year more profitable than last year, came crashing down when I read the news about Amazon’s latest deal. I feel attacked by Amazon every time I turn around. If it’s not the ridiculous discounts, the Kindle ereader that drives folks away from bookstores, it’s the constant feeling that Jeff Bezos won’t rest until all the Amazon competitors are out of business. Now it’s the co-opting of one my favorite publishers. This move by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt underscores that the publishing playing field is shifting away from indies. Amazon is turning into the Walmart of the book world who dictates prices with threats of Buy Now buttons being removed, the insidious price checker app, etc.

Of course it might make sense for HMH to team up with Amazon, who knows how many more books they’ll sell through this deal. They have a bottom line they need to attend to. I’m sure Amazon sells more books a year than all the indies combined. I wonder if there will be a time that publisher backlists will only be available to Amazon customers or the lucky few bookstores that can afford an Espresso Book Machine. The book world is changing very fast and all the indies are doing their best to keep up with the changes, but when a favorite publisher gets into bed with Amazon, it’s hard not to take it personally.

I am tired. I’m tired of publishers I’ve supported wholeheartedly for the entire time I’ve been open, now forcing me to choose between buying some of their books and supporting the very company that seeks to put me out of business, or buy not buying the books at all and potentially losing those sales to the company that seeks to put me out of business. On dreary winter days this dilemma almost feels overwhelming. I love HMH books, but this new deal really makes me view the whole company differently. I know they’re just looking out for themselves, but it sure doesn’t feel good right now.

So, rather than lament and stew endlessly, I will have a drink as Ms. Parker would recommend and I will keep doing what I know how to do best: sell books and recommend unique  books and offer the kind of personal service that Amazon will never be able to. I will be proud to be an indie, and will fight for my bookstore with my purchasing dollars and continue to create a space that makes all readers feel welcome as I continue to point out the differences between Amazon and the Flying Pig.

I just hope that’s enough.

The Awards by Publisher

Elizabeth Bluemle -- January 24th, 2012

The awards are out! Seventy-one American Library Association Youth Media awards and twenty-eight Sydney Taylor Book awards by the Association of Jewish Libraries were announced within the past week. Combined with last fall’s National Book Awards for Young People’s Literature, that makes a grand total of 104 awards and honors for children’s books, audiobooks, visual media, and adult books with crossover teen appeal.

We’re celebrating the wonderful winners, and doing that happy/sad dance you do while appreciating those and shedding a few tears for some of our favorites that didn’t get a nod. With a field as rich in talent as ours, the books that don’t get awards can truly take your breath away. Last year, author Kate Messner wrote a poem for children’s book writers and illustrators, a comforting read if you didn’t win (and a lagniappe if you did).

Since the full award lists are readily available online (ALA Youth Media Awards here and AJL Sydney Taylor Book Awards here and the National Book Awards for YPL here, I like to present the results for my colleagues in the bookselling and publishing worlds a little differently.

Last year, I looked at the Newbery, Caldecott, and Printz awards by gender — and I suspect folks will be discussing that topic some more, given this year’s numbers (nine men, three women for those three awards, which includes a clean male sweep for the Caldecotts), and also at the 2011 awards by publisher. I’m repeating the latter breakdown for this year’s awards, because I like to take a look at these things and think it will interest you folks, too.

There are still children’s book awards yet to be announced this year, including the Boston-Globe Horn Book Awards and the Jane Addams Children’s Book Award, among others. We’ll keep you posted on those, as well.

Before we get to the publisher breakdown, here’s a shout out to a few children’s book creators whose work received multiple awards:

  • Susan Goldman Rubin took home three awards: the Sydney Taylor Book Award for Older Readers, a YALSA finalist nod for Music Was IT: Young Leonard Bernstein (Charlesbridge) and a Sydney Taylor Notable citation for Irena Sendler and the Children of the Warsaw Ghetto (Holiday House).
  • Thanhha Lai won both the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature and a Newbery Honor for her book, Inside Out & Back Again (Harper).
  • John Corey Whaley’s Where Things Come Back (Atheneum) won the Printz Award and the Morris Award.
  • Kadir Nelson won both the King Author Award and the King Illustrator Honor for Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans (Balzer + Bray)
  • Albert Marrin‘s Flesh So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy (Knopf) was both a National Book Award YPL finalist and a Sydney Taylor Notable Book for Older Readers.
  • Maggie Stiefvater was awarded a Printz Honor and an Odyssey Honor for The Scorpio Races (Scholastic).
  • Eric A. Kimmel won two Sydney Taylor Notable Book for Younger Readers citations, for The Golem’s Latkes, illustrated by Aaron Jasinski (Marshall Cavendish) and Joseph and the Sabbath Fish, illustrated by Martina Peluso (Kar-Ben).
  • Gary D. Schmidt‘s Okay for Now (Clarion) was both a National Book Award YPL finalist and an Odyssey Honor Book.
  • Guadalupe Garcia McCall won the Pura Belpré Award and was a Morris finalist for her book, Under the Mesquite (Lee and Low).

I will post the full breakdown of awards by publisher in the next blog post, but here is the quick-and-dirty publisher summary. (Please note that some of these numbers include multiple awards for a single title.)

Random House – 18 (5 for Knopf, 3 for Schwartz & Wade, 3 for Listening Library, 2 for Crown, 2 for Delacorte, 2 for Doubleday, 1 for Tricycle)

Macmillan Group – 11 (3 for FSG, 3 for Henry Holt, 4 for Roaring Brook, 1 for Bloomsbury)

HarperCollins – 9 (2 for HarperCollins, 2 for Balzer + Bray, 2 for HarperTeen, 1 for Amistad, 1 for Ecco, 1 for Greenwillow)

Lerner – 7 (6 for Kar-Ben, 1 for Graphic Universe)

Simon & Schuster – 7 (or 5 if you don’t count Ashley Bryan and Susan Cooper’s lifetime achievement awards as S&S awards) (4 — or 2 — for Atheneum, 1 for S&S BFYR, 1 for Free Press, 1 for Simon Pulse)

Candlewick Press – 5

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt – 5 (3 for Clarion, 2 for Houghton Mifflin)

Penguin – 5 (2 for Dial, 2 for Viking, 1 for Philomel)

Lee & Low – 4 (3 for Lee & Low, 1 for Children’s Book Press)

Scholastic – 4

Hachette – 3 (all for Little, Brown)

Charlesbridge – 3

Boyds Mills Press -2 (both for Calkins Creek)

Cinco Puntos Press – 2

Disney – 2 (both for Hyperion)

Holiday House – 2

Marshall Cavendish – 2

National Geographic Society – 2

And one apiece for Abrams, Artscroll/Mesorah, Brilliance Audio, Eerdmans, Gale/Sleeping Bear Press, House of Anansi/Groundwood, Jewish Lights, Lethe Press, Walker & Co., and Weston Woods Studios.

Congratulations, everyone!!

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Readers, which of these books have you read and loved? Which ones do you recommend to all of us, your fellow confirmed children’s book devourers?

P.S. From Paul O. Zelinsky comes this wonderful little tidbit of information: “Stephen Colbert will be interviewing Maurice Sendak on his show in two parts, tomorrow and Wednesday evenings.” Wahoo! Thanks for the heads-up, Paul!

 

 

So, You’re Telling Me Not to Buy a Book?

Josie Leavitt -- January 23rd, 2012

Sometimes part of providing good customer service means not selling someone a book. I know it sounds wrong to suggest that folks can have a great experience while being told not to buy a book, but it’s true.

Case in a point: on Friday a mom and her sweet but very quiet 10-year-old daughter, let’s call her Denise, came in looking for a book. Shy kids often struggle with answering the question, “What’s your favorite book?” This question gets asked after “What kind of book are you looking for?” has gotten no response other than a shy smile. She couldn’t articulate her thoughts, so I went back to the cardinal rule when talking to shy readers: ask yes or no questions.

This worked like a charm. I discovered she like adventure and fantasy. Finally, I could make some recommendations. I suggested Tunnels, The Sisters Grimm, The Frog Princess and The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles. I handed her each book slowly and gave a sentence description of each book. Then I told her to curl up on one of our fabric cubes and see if she liked any of the books and I went back to the register. I could hear them talking about each book.

A short while later they came to the register holding the stack of books. Denise looked a little sheepish and I looked at her mom who said, “The ones she likes the best we have at home.” I took that in and then said, “Well, go home and read them because you’ve got the books you think you’ll like.” I forget that kids have bedside reading like adults. And, like adults, that stack can be full of treasures that might have been forgotten.

“Wait, so you’re telling me not to buy a book?” the mom asked. Yup. The mom really couldn’t believe it. She asked why and I told her it’s because she has the right books at home. It’s not always about making a sale, it’s about helping folks find the right book, and if that book happens to be at home, well then, that’s okay with me.

Happily, Denise chose The Sisters Grimm and Tunnels, both firsts in a series. So, if she likes them, then she’ll come back to the store for the sequels. This totally works for me.