Mouth watering Mango bites. Taslima Mam and Sajida mam both crunching their mango share in this prickly heat summer. #sanskritividhyapeeth #darrangdiaries #darrang #ebma #summer (at EBMA Foundation) https://www.instagram.com/p/By1tSXlns_H/?igshid=1so4sku1ihh9v
Jane Yolen’s HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE alters the classic tales in fun, creepy, and imaginative ways
Margo Kelly on her eponymous site praises Jane Yolen’s HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE.
HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE, by Jane Yolen, is a collection of short stories and poems based on familiar fairy tales--but altered in fun, creepy, and imaginative ways. Yolen explains, "A fracture is a break . . . [it] can hurt like a sprain or reveal like a geode being split apart to show the jewels within."
Yolen takes well-known fairy tales and splits them apart, sometimes leaving them still quite familiar and other times shining a light from an unfamiliar angle to reveal new truths and possibilities.
This collection is a perfect choice to read when you have only a few minutes at a time to devote to the book. Read it while you're waiting at the doctor's office, or waiting in line to pick up your kids, or waiting anywhere!
Photo: Jason Stemple
Educational Book and Media Association (EBMA) names Jane Yolen winner Of the 40th Annual Jeremiah Ludington Memorial Award.
In 1975, Jeremiah Ludington, owner of Ludington News Company in Detroit, Michigan, founded the Educational Paperback Association, now known as the Educational Book and Media Association. To honor his dedication and commitment to the educational paperback market, the EPA in 1979 established the Jeremiah Ludington Memorial Award.
The Ludington award is presented annually to an individual who has made a significant contribution to the educational paperback business, and is the EBMA version of a "Lifetime Achievement Award." Recipients receive a framed certificate and EBMA presents a $2,500 check to the charity of their choice. Past winners of the award have included illustrators, authors, educators, and librarians such as John Scieszka, Lois Lowry, Beverly Cleary and Judy Blume
AVALINAH’S BOOKS enjoys Finding Baba Yaga.
I absolutely adored Finding Baba Yaga. It surprised me! Because I have never read a novel in verse before, and let me tell you, I am not a fan of poetry. It’s very hard to make me read poetry!
Despite that, I didn’t find this book to be pretentious or hard to understand. The verse didn’t feel complicated, instead, it made it a quick read that was easy to connect to. It’s about struggling with being understood and too controlled by your family – religious parents and being a woman in society in general. Not having any say in your life, and making a stand about it. As well as actually finding your own self, as well as your new place, your new family. It’s also about disappointment, love and being understood. It was a beautiful story, laced with modernized Russian mythology that was really a delight to read about. Very recommended!
For more info on HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE, visit the Tachyon page.
If I'm hearing Marc Aronson of Rutgers right, EBMA making list of crucial Common Core bks so publishers will have backlist in stock #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
Aronson: Publishers will have to think about prices. Schools have to be able to afford the books. Backlist driven for starters #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
Steve Del Vecchio of @SPLBuzz: "Anything we recommend [for EBMA list] has to be beautifully written. It is clear, it is accurate." #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
Epitomizations of that "beautifully written" definition: Richard Dawkins' The Magic of Reality, Arnold Lobel's Frog and Toad series #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
Aronson: publishers should not push individual titles for Common Core; they must think "in terms of titles that work together" #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
Aronson: as more materials go digital, publishers and wholesalers need to think how to sell chapters #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
So Lexile is the leading reading level brand because of its marketing outreach? I certainly hope it's also because it's fair to kids #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
It has to be said: Most vendors don't care about collections unless the margin suits them. This is a disservice to libraries and CC #EBMA14
— Heather McCormack (@HuisceBeatha)
January 15, 2014
Apologies for the profusion of H-Dude heads, but I thought some of you might want to see my tweets covering the Common Core session at EBMA (for more context, see my previous post). I have to confess I understand why some publishers were annoyed. EMBA will have to define its criteria much better, or it's not going to work.