Friday, February 21, 2014

Harriet the Spy turns 50 and other Children's Book News from PW


Harriet the Spy Celebrates 50 Years of Sleuthing 

An iconic children's book heroine first came on the scene in 1964, when Harper & Row published Louise Fitzhugh's Harriet the Spy. On February 25, Delacorte, which acquired the rights to Fitzhugh's Harriet books in 2000, will issue a 50th anniversary edition. Extras include a new map of Harriet’s Manhattan neighborhood and “spy route”; a letter that Fitzhugh’s editor, Ursula Nordstrom, wrote to her when the book was published; and tributes by 14 children’s book professionals. more




IN THE MEDIA

From the New York Times:
The Common Core curriculum now has critics on the left. Click here

From the Independent:
The leader of France's main center-right opposition party has taken aim at the nudity in a children's book whose title translates to "all in the buff." Click here 


From the L.A. Times:
The finalists for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for YA literature have been announced. Click here

From the Daily Express:
A nine-year-old girl in Cheshire, England, read 364 books in seven months. Click here

From WRAL TechWire:
Self publisher Lulu is expanding the Lulu Jr. children's line with a kit that allows kids to create their own books. Click here

From the Guardian:
The Borribles, once infamous children's books, are being reissued for 21st-century readers. Click here

From NPR:
Dr. Seuss's private hat collection is "quite a sight." Click here

From BuzzFeed:
Fifteen YA books that need to be made into movies. Click here

Also from BuzzFeed:
On loving – and losing – your favorite picture books from childhood. Click here
From Ypulse:
In the wake of Toy Fair, a look at the top toy trends for 2014. Click here

From the Boston Globe:
"Riding the wave of popularity" for children's books, Candlewick Press is on a roll with its Newbery win for Flora & Ulysses. Click here

From the Telegraph:
Philip Pullman's latest literary endeavor: the Twitter tale of Jeffrey the housefly. Click here

From BuzzFeed:
A Pixar artist drew scenes from R-rated films and turned them into a children's book. Click here

From the Wrap:
See George Clooney enthusiastically recording his voice performance for the 2009 animated film Fantastic Mr. Fox. Click here

Also from the Guardian:
A letter reveals that Alice in Wonderland creator Charles Dodgson, aka Lewis Carroll, loathed fame. Click here

From Boing Boing:
Three picture books depicted as color wheels. Click here

From the Huffington Post:
Twelve YA fantasy book finales you need to read this year. Click here

From Book Riot:
Twenty signs that you might be reading too many YA books. Click here



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