Picture Books At The Library 59

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I catalog hundreds of new picture books each year, and I read as many of them as I can. Unfortunately, I can’t review them all, but I can share them. Below are a few recent titles. (Summaries have been taken directly from the books whenever possible.)

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Lucy and her dog, Mr. Barker, find themselves lost in a fairy tale where they meet new friends and find surprises around every turn.

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As crickets sing in the breeze, hunting owls watch over the bay, and sea otters doze on the tide, two children on different continents go to bed.

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Every day after school, Hannah sees her classmate’s dog, Sugar. Hannah is afraid of dogs. But one day, Sugar goes missing and it’s Hannah who finds him.

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Mr. and Mrs. Barleycorn find something unusual growing on their land. And when Mr. Barleycorn decides to bring it inside, he brings the outside along with it.

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This story follows the everyday life of two dancers, one a professional ballerina, the other a very young student, both of whom love ballet.

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Two mouse friends have two distinctly different uses for leftovers: one builds, the other eats.

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Three noisy foxes are always banging and clanging and singing and stomping until one day they decide that it might be nice to move somewhere very quiet for a change. 

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Presents animals acting out the verbs made from their names, including hogs hogging, slugs slugging, and others.

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A young boy and girl, with very different ideas about what they want to play, face off during a playdate.

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Simple, playful haiku offer clues about the animal hiding on he next page.

My View Book Review: Lolli and Pop Find Kindness by Carolyn Snelling

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Title: Lolli and Pop Find Kindness

Author: Carolyn Snelling

Illustrator: Izzy Bean

Publisher/Year: Carpenter’s Son Publishing/2016

Series: The Fruit of the Spirit


If you’ve read my book The Peddler’s Bed, then you know it’s all about kindness. Kindness, often along with friendship, is a theme that shows up in most of my stories. It might take center stage or it might be more subtle, but it’s in there somewhere.

A terrific example of a story that puts kindness front and center is Lolli and Pop Find Kindness by author Carolyn Snelling and illustrator Izzy Bean. Lolli and Pop Find Kindness is the first of nine titles in the Fruit of the Spirit series. “The Fruit of the Holy Spirit is a biblical term that sums up nine attributes of a Christian life according to Paul in his Letter to the Galatians.” (Wikipedia) The other attributes are love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control, all qualities that children should learn more about.

In Lolli and Pop Find Kindness, we meet a little girl named Lolli who is thrilled to meet a new puppy, whom she aptly names Pop. It’s not long before she worries that she will have to give Pop up because her father may be allergic. She prays that she can keep him anyway, despite her father’s suffering. It’s only through helping an old man, by returning to him a treasured lost key, that Lolli learns what it means to be kind.

Early readers will find this to be a sweet, engaging story with bright, fun illustrations that are reminiscent of animation, and I could easily see this book series as an animated one on television. What will Lolli and Pop and their friends learn next? We’ll have to wait for the next book to find out!

Picture Books At The Library 58

PB at the library 2

I catalog hundreds of new picture books each year, and I read as many of them as I can. Unfortunately, I can’t review them all, but I can share them. Below are a few recent titles. (Summaries have been taken directly from the books whenever possible.)

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A mother and son use their imagination to have fun on a rainy day.

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After the zoo closes, monkey slips out of his cage to explore the zoo, introducing the reader to the other animals and the idea of opposites.

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The little bears pick up their instruments and play a noisy song. But will their lively music wake Big Brown Bear?

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Feeling yaaaawny, oh so snorey-snoozy? Time to cuddle up close and snuggle in deep.

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Told using just one word, a hungry dog tries everything he can think of to get a TREAT.

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When Maisy and her friends have a special day for races and competitions, it’s not about winning or losing–the fun is in playing the games.

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This is a rhyming story that encourages children to get outside and play.

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A bare bear dons purple hair and leaves a trail of destruction behind him as he goes about his day.

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Dylan is the very best and cleverest super-villain in the whole wide world, until he meets Addison Van Malice.

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When it comes to new babies, friends, or other special people in your life, it’s very important to let them know just how adorable they are.

My View Book Review: Goodnight Unicorn by Pearl E. Horne

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Title: Goodnight Unicorn: A Magical Parody

Author: Pearl E. Horne (a.k.a. Karla Oceanak)

Illustrator: Kendra Spanjer

Publisher/Year: Bailiwick Press/2016

First Line: In the great green wood, there were sweet hawthorns, and breezes warm, and a blessing of unicorns with spiraling horns.  

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Did you know that a herd of unicorns is called a blessing? And that a unicorn’s spiraling horn is called an alicorn? Did you know that only people who are pure of heart can see unicorns? These are just a few of the magical facts young unicorn lovers will discover in the back of Goodnight Unicorn: A Magical Parody.

As the name suggests, Goodnight Unicorn is a parody of the beloved classic Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown and Clement Hurd. Two years ago, I did a short blog post about parodies (Parodies:The Power of Picture Books). I mentioned how your book has staying power if someone writes a parody of it. I also mentioned that a great many parodies of children’s books are not written for children at all. Thankfully, Goodnight Unicorn is a delightfully sweet parody, perfect for kids (and unicorn enthusiasts of all ages).

I enjoyed this book thoroughly, from the beautiful lyrical language to the bright, whimsical illustrations, depicting a myriad of mythical (and adorable) creatures, including fairies, trolls, gnomes, and more. Author Horne and illustrator Spanjer both did a top-notch job of staying true to the look and feel of Brown and Hurd’s classic bedtime book (super important for a parody), while at the same time, creating something fun and fresh. If you like Goodnight Moon, you will like this book. If you like unicorns, you will like this book. If you like fantasy, you will like this book. Highly recommended!

Calling All SCBWI Members

Are you a member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI)? If so, have you voted yet for your favorite children’s book? Round One voting ends tomorrow for the SCBWI Crystal Kite Member Choice Awards, so if you haven’t voted yet, now’s the time. It’s easy!

Head on over to www.scbwi.org, log in to your account, scroll down to the bottom of the left-hand sidebar, and click on “Vote in the Crystal Kite Awards”. All the fabulous books from your SCBWI regional division will display, and then you can vote for your favorite.

The Crystal Kite Award is an annual peer-given award that recognizes children’s books from 15 SCBWI regional divisions around the world:

US Divisions
· California, Hawaii
· West (Washington, Northern Idaho, Oregon, Alaska, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota)
· Southwest (Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Southern Idaho, Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico)
· Midwest (Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio)
· New England (Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire. Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island)
· New York
· Texas, Oklahoma
· Atlantic (Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, Washington DC, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland)
· Mid-South (Kansas, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi, Louisiana)
· Southeast (Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama)
 
International Divisions
· UK, Ireland
· Middle East, India, Asia
· Canada
· Australia, New Zealand
· Other International

Want more information before you vote? Click Here!

Zoo Ball Blog Tour

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Please welcome award-winning Australian children’s book author Aleesah Darlison to Frog on a Blog! Aleesah offers a unique perspective on how to perfect picture book stories. She’s also here to share her latest picture book Zoo Ball, which, as you’ll soon discover, was illustrated by some very special people. Read on! 

Tiny Grains of Sand – Perfecting Picture Book Stories

By Aleesah Darlison

Many people dream of publishing a picture book. This particular format, and genre, is my favorite of all the books I write.

But it’s not easy to write those few hundred words, which to some seems such a meagre amount!

Making a picture book is not simply a matter of writing those words, after all, it’s a matter of perfecting them and making them sing.

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I’m currently working on a picture book, toing and froing with my publisher, as we finalize layout and design and word choice to the nth degree.

Last night, as we were discussing what words to keep or perhaps delete from the manuscript, my publisher wrote in an email to me:

We probably are picking at tiny grains of sand here…but I am enjoying crafting this book to the best we can make it.

This struck me as a profoundly prophetic and true statement about picture books. This comparison is, in essence, the entire crux of what making picture books is about.

To write a picture book, a good picture book, you have to think of each word as a tiny grain of sand that requires intricate crafting, with correct usage and placement, which, when combined with all the other tiny grains of sand within the story, will create an overall beautiful result. Something memorable, inspiring, emotive and … lasting.

As I said before, it isn’t an easy process, but it is a joyous process.

Combined with the crafting of sand grain words, picture books must then have a layer (or several layers) of storytelling added through the illustrations.

One picture book I’ve had a lot of fun working on recently, and which will be released on 15 April 2016, is called Zoo Ball. It’s a very funny, rhyming story about a boy named Ned who takes his big, bouncy ball to the zoo. Almost the moment he arrives, Ned loses the ball and then the chase (and the pandemonium) begins as each animal at the zoo has a go playing with Ned’s ball.

The special thing about Zoo Ball is that it’s illustrated by children, twenty-three Australian school children, to be precise!

The publisher, Wombat Books, established an Illustration Challenge to provide aspiring young illustrators with the opportunity to be published in a professionally produced children’s book and gain an introduction into the world of illustrating. Once I’d written the text for Zoo Ball, it was then up to children to send in a drawing of one of the scenes from the book. 

From the illustrations children submitted, it was clear that they had as much fun drawing the pictures as I did writing the story.

And that’s the other key thing about making a picture book – it’s crucial that an illustrator falls in love with the story text as much as the author who has written it. Otherwise, they miss the subtle nuances of story and overlook possibilities to make the book even better than the words can achieve alone.

I was amazed at how talented these young artists were and what nuances of storytelling – and humor – they’ve added to Zoo Ball. It’s definitely worth the read and a perfect example of picture book making teamwork.

Happy Reading!

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Aleesah Darlison Headshot 2015 LOW RES (2)Aleesah Darlison is an award-winning Australian children’s author who writes picture books, chapter books and novels. Her much-loved stories promote courage, understanding, anti-bullying, self-belief, friendship, teamwork and environmental themes. In 2015, she won the Environment Award for Children’s Literature (Non-Fiction) for her picture book, Our Class Tiger. In 2012, she was shortlisted for the same award for her picture book, Warambi.

Since commencing her writing journey six years ago, Aleesah has written over thirty-five books including Zoo Ball, Stripes in the Forest: The Story of the Last Wild Thylacine, Awesome Animal Stories for Kids, the Netball Gems Series, the Unicorn Riders Series, the Totally Twins Series, Ash Rover: Keeper of the Phoenix, Little Good Wolf, Puggle’s Problem, Little Meerkat, Spidery Iggy, and Mama and Hug.

Travelling throughout Australia and overseas, Aleesah delivers talks and workshops to children and adults at preschools, schools, libraries, bookstores, literary festivals and writers’ centers. She is currently Director of the NSW Writers’ Centre Kids and YA Literary Festival. When Aleesah isn’t creating entertaining and enchanting stories, she’s usually looking after her four very energetic and imaginative children.

Connect With Aleesah

Website: www.aleesahdarlison.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/AleesahDarlisonFanPage

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Aleesah Darlison visits with some young students in Hong Kong

 

Picture Books At The Library 57

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I catalog hundreds of new picture books each year, and I read as many of them as I can. Unfortunately, I can’t review them all, but I can share them. Below are a few recent titles. (Summaries have been taken directly from the books whenever possible.)

No More Ratings

Okay, you’re going to think I’m nutsy, but I really gave this a lot of thought. I’ve decided to do away with my rating system. My rating system, as those of you who have been following my Picture Books At The Library posts know, has been changed a few times over the past year. Recently, I settled on a simple 🙂 = Good, 🙂 🙂 = Great, and 🙂 🙂 🙂 = Excellent. 

But it dawned on me the other day why I’ve not been satisfied with my rating system. What if it was my book in someone else’s list on someone else’s blog? And it didn’t get a smile, not even one! Well, I would be kind of sad. I don’t want to make any hardworking author or illustrator sad. I’m all about spreading the happy. And besides, I can find something to like in just about every picture book I read.

The reason I post these lists is so you can go out and find these books and formulate your own opinions about what you’ve read. Perhaps you’ll discover a few intriguing new titles.

So, no more ratings here on Frog on a Blog. But here’s what I will do; when I come across a picture book that is, in my humble opinion, over-the-top fantastic, I’ll point that out. And if I have time, I’ll even try to explain why I think the book is extra special.

Enough about that, here’s this week’s Picture Books At The Library.

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Teeny’s mama is stuck in a bucket. Her big, strong brothers rush to save the day, but soon they’re in trouble too. Now it’s up to Teeny to be the hero.

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Niko wants Sasha to come play with him in his spaceship, but his sister Posh has other ideas.

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In search of writing ideas, an author takes a walk with his dog around the neighborhood.

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One day, the children find a bird lying on its side with its eyes closed and no heartbeat.

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From the time she wakes at 8 a.m. until the curtain rises at 8 p.m., a prima ballerina’s day is busy, busy, busy with classes, rehearsals and fittings.

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A polar bear grieves over the loss of his companion, based on the real-life Gus and Ida of New York’s Central Park Zoo.

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Swooping and squawking, flapping and fluttering…birds of all shapes and sizes are celebrated in this tale of extraordinary plumage.

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Bo is lonely. So he sets out to find a new friend. And that new friend just happens to be an egg.

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A little boy digs, plays, and explores in his garden.

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Spring is here and new life is stirring. There is so much for Big Bear to teach her cub as they leave their den and step into the forest.

An update of the classic folk song Old MacDonald, featuring farm vehicles like excavator, dump truck, and bulldozer.

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Anna and Crocodile set off on a dangerous adventure to find gold.

 

Picture Books At The Library 56

PB at the library 2

I catalog hundreds of new picture books each year, and I read as many of them as I can. Unfortunately, I can’t review them all, but I can share them. Below are a few recent titles. (Summaries have been taken directly from the books whenever possible.) Rating System: 🙂 Good, 🙂 🙂 Great, 🙂 🙂 🙂 Excellent. Don’t let my ratings keep you from reading a title just because I didn’t give it a smile. You may absolutely love it!

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Gnome cannot wait to help his friends harvest the school garden! But his eagerness and excitement get him into trouble.

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🙂 When little dinos fuss and fight, they find a way to make things right.

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🙂 Little Green is a proud and strong pickup truck who loves helping with chores, but when Farmer Gray buys a big new blue truck, Little Green is left to rust in a pasture.

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🙂 Babies observe and make friends with friendly little animals.

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🙂 A pint-sized pirate trades a button for some teacups, but that’s just the start. Soon he’s swapping   rope for oars, oars for flags, flags for anchors and more.

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Told she cannot have a puppy because it would just be another mouth to feed, Lula Mae decides to turn one of the chickens into a very special dog.

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🙂 Leaving her best friend is difficult for a young hedgehog whose family is moving, but everyone assures her that things will be alright.

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🙂 When Old Turtle dies and is taken back by the sea, his friends remember that he was a wonderful teacher and friend who made his world a better place.

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A granddaughter recounts the reasons why her grandmother is hard to love–and why she loves her anyway.

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🙂 🙂 The crayons are all set to put on their production of Frankencrayon, when disaster strikes, a scribble is found on the set.

Darlene, Cally, and Jen, You’ve Won!

Peddler Jump_Peddlers BedThe peddler’s jumping for joy because three winners have been chosen to receive copies of my picture book The Peddler’s Bed, illustrated by Bong Redila and published by Ripple Grove Press.

If you subscribed to follow my blog between January 1 and March 31 of this year, you were automatically entered into the drawing.*

January’s winner: Darlene F. (Living In His Presence Daily)

February’s winner: Cally F. (Some Special People)

March’s winner: Jen (Jen’s Lexical Creations/The Wordsmith Mom)

And guess what, you each get two copies of The Peddler’s Bed, one to keep and one to share!

Winners, get in touch with me through my Contact page. I need your address (U.S. addresses only), and I need to know how you’d like each book signed.

Please contact me within the next three weeks or I may choose an alternate winner.

I look forward to sharing my book with you! 🙂

*This contest was held on my SCBWI Launch Party Page. Winners were chosen at random.

 

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