I’m just back from my book tour where I spent a couple of days in (rainy) Philadelphia and a couple of days in (rainy, sleeting, and snowy) Chicago! Then I got back to beautiful weather in NYC where the cherry blossoms, daffodils, and tulips are in bloom. Gotta love springtime!
We’re moving to a new format with these newsletters, and now we’ll have a bookish Etsy recommendation, a couple of notable new releases, plus some Riot Recommendations (which basically means I get to shout out a bunch of books I love). I hope you enjoy this new format as much as I do!
Hello, gorgeous foil cover that sparkles when you turn it this way and that! Christina Soontornvat is one of my favorite authors, and this Thai-inspired book set on the high seas is a perfect middle grade read! Get ready for adventure, drama, and danger!
Gillian has a knack for entering the middle grade mind, and this book is no exception. Elliott is dealing with a lot in life and in middle school: his closest friend has moved away and his dad is newly remarried and there’s a baby on the way. When he’s paired with an unlikely person for a school project, Elliott finds himself a surprising friend and ally in Maribel. This book tugged at all my heartstrings!
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
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I love books centered around home, and there have been some really great books published recently that explore the idea of home and houses. Check these out and let me know what you think!
Tia Fortuna’s New Home: A Jewish Cuban Journey by Ruth Behar, illustrated by Devon Holzwarth
When Tia Fortuna has to move from her little pink casita at the Seaway, Estrella visits one last time and listens to Tia Fortuna’s memories from living there for decades. They say goodbye to the house and head to La Casa de los Viejitos where Tia Fortuna meets new people and sets up her new home where new memories will be born.
The first thing that drew me to this book was the cover. Isn’t it amazing? I love a cover with a cool house on it! In this middle grade story, Asha’s dream house is Donnybrooke, a mansion that sits on the highest hill in Coreville. When her best friend Sam is accepted into a new school and starts spending all his time with Prestyn (who actually lives at Donnybrooke), Asha feels lost. This story is told in the points of view of Asha, Sam, and Donnybrooke itself!
Merra, Locky, Roozle, Finn, and little Jory love their ramble shamble house. They spend their days taking care of the chickens, making mud pies, and tending the garden. But when they come across a picture of a “proper” house in a book, they wonder if their little house is so great after all. They set out to make their house just like the one in the book until they discover that maybe their ramble shamble house is the perfect place for them just as it is.
Rabbi Ruben takes a look around the synagogue and realizes it could use some sprucing up. So he sets out to fix the creaky floorboards, the drafty windows, and the leaking faucet. But when his efforts don’t quite succeed, the congregation pitches in to make the synagogue feel like home.
Poppy’s House by Karla Courtney, illustrated by Madeline Kloepper (July 12)
I just love this picture book about a young girl and her grandfather who lives in Newfoundland. When the young girl visits, she has to take a ferry to his home where they explore the docks and green hills specked with puffins and read at night by the lantern light. I love the Canadian landscape, so I was a huge fan of this picture book!
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
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We just got back from a road trip down to North Carolina. We left New York City where it was lightly snowing, drove through Pennsylvania where a foot of snow covered the ground, then through Virginia where snow was melting, and then to North Carolina where daffodils were blooming. It was quite amazing to see the change in weather as we made our way south, and it made me very excited about SPRING and NATURE! Here are some great books for all of you looking forward to warmer weather.
This gorgeous, wordless picture book follows a marmot who sees part of his home destroyed by wildfires. He (adorably) sets out to replant the forest, taking care of his baby trees and enduring windstorms and winter. This marmot is probably the most adorable creature I’ve seen!
All From A Walnut by Ammi-Joan Paquette, illustrated by Felicita Sala
This intergenerational picture book begins with a grandfather’s story of leaving his home country as a young child with just one small bag and one nut. When he arrived in the new country, he planted it in a pot and watched it grow. When he bought a house, he moved it to the backyard and watched it grow. And from that tree came more walnuts, which his granddaughter collected… I loved this story so much!
This informative non-fiction book for middle grade readers tells the human story of the climate change conversation from the recent past into the present day. It wrestles with the long shadow of our failures, what might be ahead for today’s generation, and crucial questions of how we understand the world we live in—and how we can work together to change the outlook for the better.
I really enjoyed this non-fiction picture book about Frederick Law Olmstead. I am familiar with him because he designed a lot of NYC’s parks, including the park I got married in (Fort Tryon Park!). It was wonderful to learn more about his life and the vast number of projects he undertook all throughout America.
This picture book is set right in my neighborhood! Years ago, Tony Hillery invited a group of students from an underfunded school to transform a vacant lot into a beautiful and abundant farm. By getting their hands dirty, these kids turned an abandoned space into something beautiful and useful while learning about healthy, sustainable eating and collaboration. The author’s portion of proceeds from the sale of this book directly benefits the non-profit organization Harlem Grown.
If you’re planning summer camping trips, I highly recommend 50 States 500 Campgrounds, published by National Geographic. Filled with great information and photos, this is a must have book if you’re researching where to go and where to stay.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
Did you know that I have a new middle grade book coming out on Tuesday? It’s called A Duet for Home and it’s set in a homeless family shelter in the Bronx. It’s told in two voices: one is June, who is just entering the shelter, and the other is Tyrell, who has lived at the shelter for three years. I look forward to hearing what you think about it!
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I am so pleased to have the author of This is a School (Candlewick, 3/29/22) on the newsletter today! John Schu has made a career out of advocating for the people and things he cares about most: kids, books, and the people that connect them. He was named a Library Journal Mover and Shaker for his dynamic interactions with students and his passionate adoption of new technologies as a means of connecting authors, illustrators, books, and readers.
Karina: This is a School is a beautiful love letter to school communities.
Do you remember the moment you wrote the first lines for this book? Where were you and what got you excited about this idea?
John: Hello, Karina! Thank you for inviting me to this space to discuss This Is a School. I must admit it feels strange not to interview you. As you know, I’m a SUPER fan of The Vanderbeekers series.
This Is a School is a companion to This Is a Story (Candlewick, spring ’23). This Is a School is my debut picture book, but I wrote This Is a Story first. The opening stanza in both books follows a similar structure. I used This Is a Story as a mentor text for This Is a School. Thanks to Story, the opening line of School came to me right away: This is a kid. Working on both stories was a truly joyful experience.
Where was I when I wrote the first line of This Is a School? I was at 1901 Vine Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania! Look up the address on Google Maps!
Karina: You are quite famous in the kidlit community! Your infectious laughter and your unending enthusiasm for children’s books makes you a favorite among teachers and librarians… and authors!
John: You’re very kind! Thank you for mentioning my laugh. I visited Kendall Elementary School in Naperville, Illinois, regularly before the pandemic. A few days ago, I stopped by for the first time in over two years. One of the teachers said, “I knew Mr. Schu was in the building. I heard his—your—instantly recognizable laugh traveling up and down the hallways.”
Karina: What is it like to be able to share your debut picture book with the world?
John: I go back and forth from feeling super excited to a little nervous, but mostly excited. I hope This Is a School makes students smile. I hope it shows everyone in a school how important Veronica Miller Jamison and I think they are.
Karina: What was your reaction when you found out that Veronica Miller Jamison was illustrating This is a School?
John: OH MY GOODNESS!!!! I was so, so, so, so happy! I sent Karen Lotz, the brilliant editor of This Is a School, an email message that contained a lot of exclamation marks and excited emojis! Veronica’s illustrations are so warm and inviting. She’s brilliant!
Karina: What other projects are you working on?
John: Two projects were recently announced: Louder Than Hunger, my debut novel-in-verse for older readers (Candlewick, fall ’23) and The Poetry Place Is Our Space illustrated by Holly Hatam (Candlewick, spring ’24).
I’m currently working on a story that keeps showing up in my notebooks and dreams. Recently, I shared my story idea with a third grader at a school in Mesa, Arizona. I asked her if should keep working on it. She said, “Yes, keep writing!” Her feedback was exactly what my heart needed to hear.
Karina: Has there been anything you’ve found surprising about the writing process?
John: Yes! So many things surprise me about my writing process, especially how each story pours out of me in a different way. I keep my ears and heart open and let the story guide me.
Karina: What are some things or activities that spark your creativity?
John: School visits, walking, music, and live musical theatre spark my creativity. They feed my heart and soul.
Karina: Approximately how many Broadway shows do you see a year?
John: Yay! A Broadway question! Thank you! I always look for you when I’m wandering around Midtown.
To answer your question, as many as I possibly can! I’ve seen Waitress on Broadway 24 times.
Karina: Wow! 24 times!I love that musical too, but I’ve only seen it once.
Okay, we really need to know what your cat, Lou Grant, thinks about This is a School.
John: Mr. Grant loves the endpapers. Here he is walking across them.
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I hope everyone is doing well this week and adjusting well to “springing forward”. Every year, adjusting to this time change gets harder for me. But it’s so nice that the weather is trending warmer, and I’m grateful for spring coming! Today, I’m very happy to share some new books for emerging readers with you. These books are actually really difficult to write because they are meant for readers who are just starting to read independently. Check out the books below and let me know what you think!
Goat and Frog are friends; Goat likes to lead, and Frog likes to follow. But Goat starts jumping on it, along it, above it, inside it, beside it, around it, and under it. It’s a lot, and Frog doesn’t know if he can keep up. Can their friendship survive this?
Meet an unlikely group of heroes: Toots the Bean, Chip Ninja, Tammy the Tomato, and Leonard, a wedge of cheddar cheese. But as strange as these heroes might be, they’re the only ones who can save kids all over the world (even the annoying ones). When they get a call that a kid in Ms. Sternbladder’s class missed breakfast and isn’t allowed to have snacks, they know he needs to eat something or he can’t do all the things he needs to do that day! Can the Hunger Heroes save the day?
This sweet friendship book by Caldecott Medalist Matthew Cordell reminds me of books I loved reading with my kids when they were younger: Frog and Toad, The Fire Cat, and Little Bear. In this new story, Cornbread loves planning and Poppy does not. When winter approaches, Cornbread is completely prepared but Poppy is not! What will Poppy do?
Meet Yasmin! by Saadia Faruqi, illustrated by Hatem Aly
Yasmin and her multi-generational Pakistani American family are endlessly entertaining in this early chapter book series. I love Yasmin and her energy and all the ways she creatively solves problems. There are plenty of books in this series, which is great for newly independent readers!
I love LeUyen Pham’s illustrations, and this new book for burgeoning readers is no exception. In this book, a bunch of dinosaurs have an itch: Triceratops, Pterodactyl, Brontosaurus, AND T-Rex! But DINOSAURS DO NOT SCRATCH. Right?
It’s a Sign! by Jarrett Pumphrey and Jerome Pumphrey (Hyperion, May 10, 2022)
One, Two, Kat, and Four are really good at doing lots of things… but one thing they are not good at is naming clubs! Will they be able to find the perfect name before it’s too late?
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As a former gymnast, I have followed Simone’s career for years and have been amazed by her accomplishments and integrity. She has brought so much to the sport and is truly the G.O.A.T.! This wonderful picture book biography tells the story of this incredible woman.
In her own words, the Nobel Peace Prize winner tells a story inspired by her own childhood. As a child in Pakistan, Malala wished for a magic pencil that would grant all the wishes she desired. But as she grew older, Malala saw that there were more important things to wish for. She saw a world that needed fixing. And even if she never found a magic pencil, Malala realized that she could still work hard every day to make her wishes come true.
This book tells that incredible story of Zaha Hadid, a British Iraqi architect whose stunning buildings and fluid lines made her a pioneer in her field. I first found out about her when a new building was going up in New York City. It was the most beautiful building I had ever seen, and I wanted to know more about the architect behind it. Zaha faced discrimination as she pursued architecture, but through it all she persisted and ended up creating some of the most stunning buildings in the world.
I have been so in awe of Greta Thunberg and her devotion to spreading knowledge about climate change. When she was fifteen she learned of global climate change from her teacher, and it impacted her so much that she went on strike, skipping school every Friday to sit outside of the Swedish Parliament building with a sign that read “School Strike for Climate.” At first, Greta was the only one. But gradually, more and more students joined her, until her lone protest had sparked a worldwide student movement for action on climate change.
I have nothing but admiration for Sonia Sotomayor who grew up in New York City and faced many odds on her path to becoming a Supreme Court Justice. In this honest picture book, Justice Sotomayor shares about her childhood and the health issues she encountered. I also love how she continues to write picture books that are focused on empathy and compassion. Check out Just Ask! and Just Help!
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A few years ago, we spent spring break in Arizona visiting my college roommate and her husband. We traveled all over Sedona, the Grand Canyon, Monument Valley, and Phoenix. It was the first time I had spent time traveling through a desert, and I loved the red mountains and beautiful landscape. I thought I would share some gorgeous children’s books about the desert!
Okay, let’s first acknowledge the genius that is Jason Chin. He is the most recent Newbery Medalist for his work in Watercress (written by Andrea Wang). Watercress was one of my absolute favorite picture books published in 2021. In Grand Canyon, Jason writes an incredible picture book with an engaging story, intriguing facts, and incredible illustrations. I mean, check out that gorgeous cover!
I love Raul the Third’s illustrations. I love examining every inch of his drawings of a border town. This book is bilingual in a new way, teaching readers simple words in Spanish as they experience the bustling life of Little Lobo and his dog Bernabe as they deliver supplies to a variety of vendors, selling everything from sweets to sombreros, portraits to piñatas, carved masks to comic books!
I adore Kate Messner’s Over and Under picture book series. (I always think about her first one, Over and Under the Snow, whenever I take a walk in the winter.) This beautiful book examines life in the canyon which takes young readers on a thrilling tour of a desert canyon ecosystem.
Dusti’s love for the desert is apparent in all of her middle grade books, but I especially love this survival story of a girl and her father who escape to the canyon to find some peace after an unspeakable tragedy. But when her father is swept away by a flash flood, Nora faces dehydration, venomous scorpions, and deadly snakes. Can she survive the desert and find her dad?
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Discover Her Art invites young art lovers and artists to learn about painting through the lives and masterpieces of 24 women from the 16th to the 20th century. In each chapter, readers arrive at a masterwork, explore it with an artist’s eye, and learn about the painter’s remarkable life and the inspirations behind her work. Young artists will discover how these 24 amazing women used composition, color, value, shape, and line in paintings that range from highly realistic to fully abstract. Hands-on exercises encourage readers to create their own art! Whether you love to make art or just look at it, you will enjoy discovering the great work of these women artists.
Hi Kid Lit Friends,
I was looking through my bookshelf of new releases today, and I noticed a lot of picture books with love themes. That’s not surprising since it is February, the month of Valentine’s Day, so I thought I would dedicate this newsletter to those books!
This beautiful book is a reflection of the many ways a father’s love is demonstrated through words and actions. The gorgeous watercolor illustrations show the tenderness and strength of fathers all over the world who are guiding, teaching, caring, and loving their kids in so many ways.
This sweet love story unfolds in the most difficult of circumstances: a War Relocation Center in the desert after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in World War II. Tama works in the camp’s tiny library, and it is there where she takes refuge in stories and beautiful pictures. George waits each morning outside the door with an armful of books to return – can anyone read that many books? Or does George spend so much time in the library for an entirely different reason?
This is the book we all want, especially after two years of pandemic life. This stunning picture book is all about welcoming people into our homes and our spaces, and it features the word “welcome” in fourteen different languages. There is a stunning spread that opens up to a feasting table at the end of the book that took my breath away!
Bright Brown Baby: A Treasury by Andrea Davis Pinkney, illustrated by Brian Pinkney
This book is a celebration of Black and brown babies! The award winning author illustrator duo has created another book that is filled with vibrant illustrations and hugs and affirmations. This is a book about JOY!
I am a huge fan of Renata Liwska’s charming and playful illustrations, and this book is filled with so much sweetness. When Lion shows his distaste for love, it’s up to Mouse to show him all the things he does love – especially their friendship! This is one adorable book!
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An action-packed middle grade quest with empathetic heroes, missing treasure, and a great beast lurking beneath–all set against a vibrant, Sri Lankan-inspired landscape. Razi, a local fisherboy, is swept up in a thrilling seafaring adventure when he meets Zheng, a boy who’s just escaped a shipwreck and is full of tales of sea monsters and missing treasure. But now the villains who are after Zheng are also after Razi and his sister, Shifa. This delightful caper from the author of The Girl Who Stole an Elephant will thrill young fans of adventure and fantasy.
Hi Kid Lit Friends,
It’s always so fun to see book Twitter shortly after the American Library Association’s Youth Media Awards is revealed! There is a celebratory mood for all the books recognized, and it just reinforces that well known fact that the children’s book community is the Best Ever! Here are some of the titles I loved this year that were recognized, but check out the full list here!
Caldecott Medal and Newbery Honor: Watercress by Andrea Wang, illustrated by Jason Chin
I talk about Jason Chin A LOT in this newsletter – I just love his illustrations – and this picture book is one that I’ve recommended dozens of times this year. Watercress was awarded the Newbery Honor as well as the Caldecott Medal. This book is set in Ohio, and in the start of the book we see a family driving along a road. The car stops and the family gets out to gather watercress at the side of the road, and the young girl is embarrassed that her family is foraging. But the experience leads to her parents sharing their own stories of gathering watercress in their home country, which helps create new family memories of watercress and feeling grateful for what they have.
Newbery Medal and Pura Belpré Award: The Last Cuentista by Donna Barbara Higuera
This intricately woven book follows a girl named Petra Peña, who wanted nothing more than to be a storyteller, like her abuelita. But when a comet destroys earth, only a few hundred scientists and their children – among them Petra and her family – have been chosen to journey to a new planet. They are the ones who must carry on the human race. Hundreds of years later, Petra wakes to this new planet – and the discovery that she is the only person who remembers Earth. This book will make you think and wonder and rediscover what it means to be human.
Winner of the Coretta Scott King Awards for Author and Illustrator, Caldecott Honor, Sibert Honor: Unspeakable: The Tulsa Race Massacre by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Floyd Cooper
This beautifully illustrated and informative book provides a powerful look at the Tulsa Race Massacre, one of the worst incidents of racial violence in our nation’s history. The book traces the history of African Americans in Tulsa’s Greenwood district and chronicles the devastation that occurred in 1921 when a white mob attacked the Black community.
This vividly illustrated picture book joins the ¡Vamos! world with familiar characters like Little Lobo, his dog Bernabé, and their pals El Toro and La Oink Oink. Little Lobo just got a new truck, and they are using it to carry party supplies over the bridge. But the line is long and there is a lot of traffic. They set up a party to pass the time where people from two countries meet each other and celebrate new friendships.
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Mary Hamilton was proud to be Black, and when the chance came along to join the Civil Rights Movement and become a Freedom Rider, she was eager to fight for what she believed in. Mary was arrested again and again—but she did not back down. In an Alabama court, a white prosecutor called her by her first name, but she refused to answer unless he called her “Miss Hamilton.” The judge charged her with contempt of court, but that wasn’t the end of it. Miss Mary Hamilton fought the contempt charge all the way to the Supreme Court.
Dear Kid Lit Friends,
Like many members of the kid lit community, I was deeply saddened to hear of the death of children’s book legend Ashley Bryan last weekend. I’ve had the pleasure to meet him multiple times, twice at his beautiful home on Islesford, a small island off the coast of Maine. His studio, located in a sunlit corner of his home, has jars brimming with sea glass he has collected from long walks on the beach and jars filled with newspaper that he mashes up into a paste for his gorgeous sculptures and puppets.
When Ashley was eighteen, he was drafted to fight in World War II. As a Black soldier in a segregated army, Ashley spent the next three years witnessing the atrocities of war. He experienced harsh and inhumane treatment at the hands of his officers and was given the cruelest tasks, such as burying the bodies of fallen soldiers. Throughout it all, he drew and made notes in his sketchbook and dreamed of returning home.
When he came back to America in January of 1946, he planned to return to his college studies in art at Cooper Union. Haunted by the images of war, he instead enrolled at Columbia University and studied philosophy. He tucked his war drawings away in a drawer, speaking of that time in his life only to his family and close friends. He traveled the world and later settled down in Islesford, Maine. For decades, Ashley, pulling a wagon filled with his paint supplies, became a familiar fixture on the island. He painted big murals filled with bold flowers and took long walks on the beach where he collected sea glass polished smooth by the waves that would later be used for his stained glass windows. Some of those windows were installed at The Storyteller Pavilion, a project of The Ashley Bryan Center, which is down the road from his home.
He created and illustrated dozens of books over his lifetime, each one beautiful and special.
Ashley’s autobiography is stunning, filled with never-before-seen artwork and handwritten letters and diary entries from his time serving in World War II. It is one of the most powerful and honest and illuminating autobiographies I have ever read, and I encourage you all to pick up a copy and spend time in his story.
This is probably one of my favorite books because it captures the essence of this remarkable man. From his walks on the beach by his home on Little Cranberry Island, Ashley would gather weathered bones and stones shaped like hearts and empty bottles and fishing net. He would bring them back to his home and make the most magnificent puppets out of them, some nearly two feet tall. In the book, he gives them names and stories.
Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life by Ashley Bryan
This luminous book, which won a Newbery Honor and Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor Award, has its roots in original slave auction and plantation estate documents. Ashley Bryan contrasts the monetary value of each person and imagines and interprets each person’s life on the plantation, as well as the life their owner knew nothing about—their dreams and pride in knowing that they were worth far more than an overseer or madam ever would guess.
The last time I saw Ashley was the summer of 2019. He had just been visited by a team from the Kislak Center for Special Collections at the University of Pennsylvania where they spent a week photographing an archive of his work, which includes drawings he made as a child, letters and correspondence to friends, and preliminary and finished material from a number of books. Ashley offered me a seat at his dining room table, pushed over a bin of gumdrops in my direction, and showed me a mosaic that our friend Linda Sue Park had made for him – it is a peacock made of gumdrops.
I will never forget this incredible man. He is truly a national treasure.
Rest in peace, Ashley Bryan. Thank you for your big, beautiful life.
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