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16 November 2012 | Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and Chief Executive of the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Agency, Roger Sutton, tour Oxford Terrace in Christchurch, New Zealand. Oxford Terrace was damaged in the 2010 earthquake. The Royal couple are in New Zealand on the last leg of a Diamond Jubilee that takes in Papua New Guinea, Australia and New Zealand. (c) Ross Setford - Pool/Getty Images
Huck is no Simon Legree. He does love Jim, but cannot escape his own racism entirely. That's the point. The world would be a lot simpler if we had bad guys and good guys, but what we do have is a whole lot of mixed-up, uneasy people positively bustling with ignorance. And that's Huck--us--the good guys.
Roger Sutton (via Wild Things! by Betsy Bird, Julie Danielson, and Peter D. Sieruta
Rather than fussing over themes or words or depictions we find problematic in books, I wish we spent more time helping kids become strong–in many senses–readers who know the the truth doesn’t begin or end in a single book.
Roger Sutton
Don’t even think about publishing until you’ve actually started writing, and don’t even think about writing until you’ve done a whole lot of reading. And not of websites or how-to guides; that’s just dilly-dallying. Read children’s books. Lots of children’s books. Although my grumpiness is resurfacing to tell you that if you haven’t already read lots of children’s books, for love, I’m probably not going to be interested in what you think you have to contribute. Harshing your buzz? Deal with it and dig out your library card.
Roger Sutton
If you want to convince children of the power of books, don’t tell them stories are good. Tell them a good story.
Roger Sutton
One thing you risk when mentioning ethnicity in reviewing an otherwise “universal” book is that white readers will say “oh, not a book for me.” Unfortunately, the Magazine does not come packaged with a Slap Machine™. Second, in a discussion of books in which “the characters just happen to be African American” an African American colleague said to me “nobody in this country ‘just happens’ to be black.” We need to continue talking about both those things.
Roger Sutton, editor of The Horn Book, on Reviewing Race
If a gardening enthusiast or a paranormal fan self-publishes a guide to lilacs or a vampire novel respectively he is likely to be imagining a reader like himself. But people writing “for children” tend to have set themselves up as Lady Bountifuls, handing down stories from above like plates of healthy vegetables. They perceive virtue in what they are doing–and virtue is no place from which to begin a book.
Roger Sutton