Cupcake
parties, school quizzes, whānau
storytelling times, a Parihaka peace celebration and a live Tuatara visiting a
library are all part of this year’s New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards
festival.
Libraries,
bookstores, schools and communities around the country are gearing up for a
week of colour and fun as the festival celebrates the fantastic books named as
finalists in the New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards.
The colourful
festival promotes the importance of books and reading, and provides inspiration
for New Zealand’s future writers and illustrators.
Find out what
events are happening in your area: www.nzpostbookawards.co.nz
The festival’s national coordinator, Mary McCallum
says the festival will see authors and illustrators popping up all over the
country. “Our festival coordinators have taken the stories at the heart
of the books and made them come alive for children and families. It’s very
exciting.”
To cap off the amazing array of initiatives, two
roadshows will ferry bunches of librarians and piles of books to schools and
preschools around Canterbury and Marlborough reaching over 3,000 children.
The festival
runs from 17 June until the announcement of the winners at an awards ceremony
in Christchurch on Monday 24 June.
Some festival
highlights:
- In libraries around Auckland
there will be a series of magical cupcake tea parties to celebrate the
picture book finalist, A Great Cake by Tina Matthews, and the
central library will host a giant Book Trail and Storytime at the Cinema.
- Lower Hutt library will have a very special guest – a
live Tuatara – visiting the library to introduce young readers to the book
Kiwi: the real story by Annemarie Florian and Heather Hunt.
- The West Coast will
host varied events including a Mister Whistler pyjama party, a
glow-in-the-dark experience with the book Kiwi: the real story, and
‘pin the tail on the donkey’ with author Kyle Mewburn’s Melu.
- Whangarei library will run a popular ‘Storytime’
character hunt.
- In Taranaki, there
will be a celebration of the peace of Parihaka, speeches by local school
children and performances by Kura Kaupapa; and Hawera Community
Centre will host a Secondary Schools Literacy Challenge based on
the awards finalists.
- In Wellington the
popular Java Dance Company will perform a dance depicting the story of
Margaret Mahy’s Mister Whistler, which will be performed for three
schools as well as a public performance at the Wellington Central Library.
This sounds fabulous -- so inventive. What a great way to showcase these books and authors. Bravo behind the scenes workers!
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