Friday, May 02, 2014

Children's Book News

PW
Diversity Social Media Campaign Goes Viral

BookCon's current lineup of white authors – and a cat – continues to roil the blogosphere. Declaring on Tumblr that "now is the time to raise our voices into a roar that can't be ignored," a group of 22 authors, publishers, and bloggers kicked off a three-day social media campaign called "We Need Diverse Books" on May 1, to call attention to the lack of diversity in contemporary children's literature. more


Children/YA Segment Has Strong January
Led by a 65.1% increase in e-book sales, January sales jumped 43.7% in the children/young adult category in 2014 compared to January 2013, according to figures in AAP’s StatShot program. Sales of adult trade titles rose 2.8% in January as e-book sales rose 6.4%. With sales hitting $116 million, e-book sales accounted for 32% of adult trade revenue in January 2014 compared to 31% in January 2013. more
Scholastic Debuts Storia School Edition and
Core Clicks 


Scholastic is launching Storia School Edition and Core Clicks, two institutional e-book subscription services that provide access to a database of fiction and nonfiction e-books designed for pre-K through grade six. more




A public memorial service for author, poet, editor, and publisher Charlotte Zolotow will be held in New York City on Tuesday, May 27, from noon to 1:30 p.m. at Judson Memorial Church. Zolotow, the author of more than 90 titles for children who had an eponymous imprint at Harper & Row, passed away in November 2013 at the age of 98. more


IN THE MEDIA

From Slate:
What happens to boys who fall behind in school? They become men who can't catch up, says new research. Click here

From the Huffington Post:
How libraries are working to bridge the cultural divide. Click here

From Bookselling This Week:
Bookstores are gearing up for the "Give Me Summer! Give Me Books!" promotion. Click here

From the Wall Street Journal:
Next summer Meg Cabot will release spinoffs – one for middle-grade readers and one for adults - of her Princess Diaries books. Click here

From the Huffington Post:
A list of "50 of the best children's books published in the last 25 years." Click here

From the New Yorker:
Adam Gopnik on the lasting power of The Little Prince and why it's really a war story. Click here

From Grafik:
Friends reunited: Stephen Savage and his illustration hero and one-time tutor, Seymour Chwast. Click here

From CNN:
Sharing a love of reading: Anna Quindlen on raising readers. Click here
From the Globe and Mail:
A Canadian study finds that girls have always done better than boys at school, and the paper asks: Why? Click here

From Salon:
Louis C.K. blasts the Common Core: "It feels like a dark time." Click here

From Marketing:
McDonald's U.K. teams up with Kobo to give away free digital books with Happy Meals. Click here

From School Library Journal:
A school librarian unraveled the mystery of an unsigned mural at her school, which turned out to be painted by Robert McCloskey. Click here

From the Star Tribune:
Middle-grade author Margi Preus turns history into award-winning novels. Click here

From the New York Times:
"I've always loved books which are set in a real world with a magical edge": a talk with author Jaclyn Moriarty. Click here

From Brain Pickings:
A look at Carson McCullers's 1964 children's book, Sweet as a Pickle and Clean as a Pig. Click here

From Flavorwire:
Vintage children's book covers from all over the world. Click here


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