Saturday 30 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: CBCA Book of the Year

Bonus: Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year: Picture Book winner

My strange shrinking parents: being: a picture story told in 38 pages
Written & drawn by Zeno Sworder.

Thames and Hudson, 2022.

Sorry for the bad photos - trying to get them while I could. 

Oh my word. This is heart-breaking. 

The metaphor of shrinking yourself to fit is blown apart in this. 

The giving and giving and giving and giving of yourself.






Friday 29 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award

A book by a winner of the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award:

Daytime visions: an alphabet. 
By Isol; adapted in English by Isol and Elisa Amado.

Enchanted Lion, 2016. 

I found the creator's reflection on how to adapt her work into another language fascinating.

How language - and alphabets - frame our thinking. 







Thursday 28 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: IBBY Hans Christian Andersen Award

A book by a winner of the IBBY Hans Christian Andersen Award

The great piratical rumbustification; &, the librarian and the robbers. 
Written by Margaret Mahy; with pictures by Quentin Blake.  

Dent, 1978. 

It will always be Margaret Mahy! 

This time, I've included another HCA winner: Quentin Blake. 

Why this book? Well, it's really the second story: "The Librarian and the Robbers." 

I wish I had Serena Laburnum's sangfroid. 

I do have a t-shirt with a Miss Laburnum quote on it (thanks to my manager.)

AND the memory of spending time with Margaret Mahy. Including at this gathering for her 70th birthday, where we are admiring the bracelet I made for her. 










Wednesday 27 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: USBBY Outstanding International Books list

A book from the USBBY Outstanding International Books list:

This place: 150 years retold.
Foreword by Alicia Elliott; colouring by Scott A. Ford and Donovan Yaciuk.
Stories by:
Kateri Akiwenzie-Damm. Sonny Assu, Brandon Mitchell, Rachel Qitsualik-Tinsley, Sean Qitsualik-Tinsley, David A. Robertson, Niigaanwewidam James Sinclair, Jen Storm, Richard Van Camp, Katherena Vermette, Chelsea Vowel.
Illustrated by: 
Tara Audibert, Kyle Charles, GMB Chomichuk, Natasha Donovan, Scott B. Henderson, Andrew Lodwick, Scott A. Ford, Donovan Yaciuk, Ryan Howe, and Jen Storm.

Highwater Press, 2019.

Merging together various storytelling traditions – oral, written, and visual – this is a powerful anthology, commemorating Canada’s indigenous peoples.

There are stories of the past, the present, and the future.

As one reviewer said, these are post-apocalyptic tales – indigenous cultures worldwide have lived – still live – in post-apocalyptic worlds, thanks to Western colonisation. 






Tuesday 26 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: White Ravens Catalog

A book from the White Ravens Catalog:

We all play = Kimêtawânaw.
By Julie Flett.

Greystone Kids, 2021.

A joyous romp of a book! 

I challenge you not to smile while reading this. 

Children and animals are lovingly detailed, with just enough scenery to provide context. 






Monday 25 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: GLLI Translated YA Book Prize

A book awarded the GLLI Translated YA Book Prize:

Oksi
By Mari Ahokoivu; translated by Silja-Maaria Aronpuro.

Levine Querido, 2021.

I was trying to decide which pages to photograph.

It would have ended up being the whole book.

A graphic novel retelling of a Finnish fairy tale is one that will haunt you. 

The use of negative space, and of colour, is masterfully done. 






Sunday 24 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: IBBY Books for Young People with Disabilities

A book from the IBBY Books for Young People with Disabilities list:

Future girl.
By Asphyxia.

Allen & Unwin, 2020.

Dystopian future.

Searching for community.

Searching for acceptance.

Being true to yourself. 

A disability doesn't define you.

A disability isn't all you are. 








Saturday 23 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: Batchelder Award

A translated book awarded the Batchelder Award

Do fish sleep? 
Written by Jens Raschke; illustrated by Jens Rassmus; translated from German by Belinda Cooper. 

Enchanted Lion, 2019. 

*Sigh* another book featuring death and grief. 

It is such a universal, that there is no surprise it features in translated works. 

Simple and poignant. 








Friday 22 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: Bonus Middle Grade Book

Bonus: A Middle Grade Book: 

Glitter boy
By Ian Eagleton.

Scholastic, 2023. 

I will admit to haunting our library catalogue in the hopes that this would eventually arrive! I was getting very close to making a purchasing suggestion.

Yet again, death features in one of my choices. 
Those books don't usually come with a whole heap of Mariah Carey love! 

The under-the-radar, low-level bullying of James is something that hits close to home.

Again, those middle years can be complete hell. They were the worst years of my bullying - and by those who were, ostensibly, my friends. 

Through it all, James keeps his glitter on. I quashed mine down. 




Thursday 21 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: A Comic / Graphic Novel

A Comic / Graphic Novel: 

Helen and the Go-go Ninjas. 
By Ant Sang and Michael Bennett. 

Penguin, 2018. 

I'm not really a graphic novel sort of girl. I mean, I do read them. I went through the obligatory Asterix phase at 11 to 13. 
But this one sticks in my memory. 
It's been a few years since I first read it - and I re-read it.
I find more every time.
And, these last couple of years, it is even more poignant - and pointed - to read. 







Wednesday 20 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: Children's Poetry Book

Children's Poetry Book: 

Roar squeak purr: a New Zealand treasury of animal poems.
Edited by Paula Green; illustrated by Jenny Cooper.

Penguin Random House, 2022.

Paula Green is a doyen of Aotearoa poetry, especially of that written for children. And, of that written by children. 

There is so much to love about this book.

The production values. 

The range of poets.

The range of poems.

The illustrations.

But, what I really, really, really love - is the inclusion of the children's poems. 

The children are Poets, and they are treated with the respect and care as the adult, professional, poets. 

The children's poems are included on merit - and they more than stand up to that. 







Tuesday 19 September 2023

World Kid Lit Month 2023: A Non-fiction Book

A Non-fiction Book: 

One wish: Fatima al-Fihri and the world's oldest university. 
Written by M. O. Yuksel; illustrated by Mariam Quraishi.

Harper, 2022. 

How inspirational is this! 

If you've never heard of Fatima al-Fihri (like me, before this book) - then it's time you had. 

Fatima founded the University of al-Qarawiyyin in 857-859, as a Mosque and - subsequently, educational centre - and it is still going. 

Picture book biographies are a wonderful way to meet new and amazing people. Even if you're a grown-up.