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Ontario Library Association announces Forest of Reading award shortlists
The Ontario Library Association has announced its shortlists for its 2012 Forest of Reading program. The winners, as chosen by Ontario school children, will be announced during the Forest of Reading Festival, May 15–16, 2012.
Here are the English-language nominees:
Blue Spruce (Grades K–2)
- A Flock of Shoes, Sarah Tsiang; Qin Leng, illus. (Annick Press)
- Giraffe and Bird, Rebecca Bender (Dancing Cat Books)
- Kiss Me! (I’m a Prince!), Heather McLeod; Brooke Kerrigan, illus. (Fitzhenry & Whiteside)
- The Little Hummingbird, Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas (Greystone Books)
- Making the Moose Out of Life, Nicholas Oldland (Kids Can Press)
- Noni Says No, Heather Hartt-Sussman; Geneviève Côté, illus. (Tundra Books)
- One Hockey Night, David Ward; Brian Deines, illus. (North Winds Press)
- Rosyln Rutabaga and the Biggest Hole on Earth!, Marie-Louise Gay (Groundwood Books)
- Small Saul, Ashley Spires (Kids Can)
- Stanley’s Little Sister, Linda Bailey and Bill Slavin, illus. (Kids Can)
Silver Birch Fiction (Grades 3–6)
- Better Than Weird, Anna Kerz (Orca Book Publishers)
- Crossing to Freedom, Virginia Frances Schwartz (Scholastic Canada)
- Ghost Messages, Jacqueline Guest (Coteau Books)
- Ghosts of the Titanic, Julie Lawson (Scholastic Canada)
- The Glory Wind, Valerie Sherrard (Fitzhenry & Whiteside)
- The McGuillicuddy Book of Personal Records, Colleen Sydor (Red Deer Press)
- Milo: Sticky Notes and Brain Freeze, Alan Silberberg (Simon & Schuster)
- Neil Flambé and the Aztec Abduction, Kevin Sylvester (Simon and Schuster/HarperCollins Canada)
- That Boy Red, Rachna Gilmore (Simon and Schuster/HarperCollins Canada)
- Undergrounders, David Skuy (Scholastic Canada)
Silver Birch Non-fiction (Grades 3–6)
- 50 Poisonous Questions: A Book With Bite, Tanya Lloyd Kyi; Ross Kinnaird, illus. (Annick)
- Africans Thought of It: Amazing Innovations, Bathseba Opini; Richard B. Lee (Annick)
- Animals That Changed the World, Keltie Thomas (Annick)
- Case Closed? Nine Mysteries Unlocked by Modern Science, Susan Hughes; Michael Wandelmaier, illus. (Kids Can)
- Don’t Touch That Toad & Other Strange Things Adults Tell You, Catherine Rondina; Kevin Sylvester, illus. (Kids Can)
- Game Day: Meet the People Who Make It Happen, Kevin Sylvester (Annick)
- Highway of Heroes, Kathy Stinson (Fitzhenry & Whiteside)
- Mathemagic! Number Tricks, Lynda Colgan; Jane Kurisu, illus. (Kids Can)
- Totally Human: Why We Look and Act the Way We Do, Cynthia Pratt Nicolson;Dianne Eastman, illus. (Kids Can)
- Who Wants Pizza? The Kids’ Guide to the History, Science & Culture of Food, Jan Thornhill (Maple Tree Press)
Silver Birch Express (Grades 3–6)
- All Aboard! Elijah McCoy’s Steam Engine, Monica Kulling; Bill Slavin, illus. (Tundra)
- Banjo of Destiny, Cary Fagan; Selçuk Demirel, illus. (Groundwood)
- Canadian Railroad Trilogy, Gordon Lightfoot; Ian Wallace, illus. (Groundwood)
- The Gargoyle Overhead, Philippa Dowding (Napoleon & Company)
- The Last Loon, Rebecca Upjohn (Orca)
- Our Earth: How Kids are Saving the Planet, Janet Wilson (Second Story Press)
- Saving Arm Pit, Natalie Hyde (Fitzhenry & Whiteside)
- The Time Time Stopped, Don Gillmor (Scholastic Canada)
- Uumajut: Learn About Arctic Wildlife! Simon Awa; Anna Ziegler; Stephanie McDonald; Leah Otak, trans.; Romi Caron, illus. (Inhabit Media)
- When Apples Grew Noses and White Horses Flew: Tales of Ti-Jean, Jan Andrews; Dušan Petričić, illus. (Groundwood)
Red Maple (Grades 7-8)
- Dear George Clooney: Please Marry My Mom, Susin Nielsen (Tundra)
- Dust City, Robert Paul Weston (Puffin Canada)
- Fanatics, William Bell (Doubleday Canada)
- Fly Boy, Eric Walters (Puffin canada)
- Half Brother, Kenneth Oppel (HarperCollins Canada)
- Haunting Violet, Alyxandra Harvey (Bloomsbury)
- Home Truths, Jill MacLean (Dancing Cat)
- No Safe Place, Deborah Ellis (Groundwood)
- Thunder Over Kandahar, Sharon E. McKay; Rafal Gerszak, photog. (Annick)
- Torn from Troy, Patrick Bowman (Ronsdale Press)
White Pine Fiction (Grades 9–12)
- Ashes, Ashes, Jo Treggiari (Scholastic Canada)
- Beat the Band, Don Calame (Candlewick Press)
- Blood Red Road, Moira Young (Doubleday)
- Chance to Dance for You, Gail Sidonie Sobat (Great Plains Publications)
- Death Benefits, Sarah N. Harvey (Orca)
- The Fifth Rule, Don Aker (HarperCollins Canada)
- The Gathering, Kelley Armstrong (Doubleday Canada)
- Motorcycles & Sweetgrass, Drew Hayden Taylor (Vintage Canada)
- Something Wicked, Lesley Anne Cowan (Puffin Canada)
- The Way It Is, Donalda Reid (Second Story)
White Pine Non-fiction (Grades 9–12)
- The Book of Awesome, Neil Pasricha (Penguin)
- Call Me Russell, Russell Peters (Doubleday Canada)
- Wars: An Illustrated History, Jonathan Webb; J.L. Granatstein, illus. (Scholastic)
- Hockey Now! Mike Leonetti (Firefly Books)
- I.D.: Stuff that Happens to Define Us, Kate Scowen; Peter Mitchell, illus. (Annick)
- Kick the Fossil Fuel Habit: 10 Clean Technologies to Save Our World, Tom Rand; Dave Clark, eds. (Eco Ten Publishing)
- Nice Recovery, Susan Juby (Viking)
- Stick to Your Vision: How to Get Past the Hurdles and Haters to Get Where You Want to Be, Wes “Maestro” Williams (McClelland & Stewart)
- Two Generals, Scott Chantler (M&S)
- Will to Live: Dispatches from the Edge of Survival, Les Stroud (Collins Canada)
Golden Oak (adult)
- Canadian Railroad Trilogy, Gordon Lightfoot (Groundwood)
- Fatty Legs: A True Story, Christy Jordan-Fendon and Margaret Pokiak-Fenton; Liz Amini-Holmes, illus. (Annick)
- Highway of Heroes, Kathy Stinson (Fitzhenry & Whiteside)
- No Safe Place, Deborah Ellis (Groundwood)
- Our Earth: How Kids Are Saving the Planet, Janet Wilson (Second Story)
- Out of Darkness: The Jeff Healey Story, Cindy Watson (Dundurn Press)
- Second Wife, Brenda Chapman (Raven Books/Orca)
- Viola Desmond Won’t Be Budged, Jody Nyasha Warner; Richard Rudnicki, illus. (Groundwood)
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Erin Bow’s Plain Kate wins TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award
Erin Bow has won this year’s TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award for her historical fantasy YA novel Plain Kate, published by Scholastic Canada.
Bow received her $25,000 prize at a gala event in Toronto last night. The Canadian Children’s Book Centre also announced winners of the following awards:
Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award ($20,000)
I Know Here by Laurel Croza; Matt James, illus., Groundwood Books
Norma Fleck Award for Canadian Children’s Non-fiction ($10,000)
Case Closed? Nine Mysteries Unlocked by Modern Science by Susan Hughes; Michael Wandelmaier, illus., Kids Can Press
Geoffrey Bilson Award for Historical Fiction for Young People ($5,000)
The Glory Wind by Valerie Sherrard, Fitzhenry & Whiteside
John Spray Mystery Award ($5,000)
A Spy in the House by Y.S. Lee, Candlewick Press/Random House of Canada
The CCBC also introduced the Monica Hughes Award, which will honour excellence in the children’s science fiction and fantasy genre. The inaugural $5,000 cash prize will be awarded annually, starting October 2012. To be eligible, the book must be an original work in English, aimed at readers ages eight to 16.
Toronto mayor Rob Ford knows lots of B words
Although Margaret Atwood didn’t attend Thursday night’s marathon Toronto city council executive meeting to address the city’s budget deliberations, she was there in spirit and in swag (scroll down the Torontoist’s impressive live blog to see an Atwood button and references to photocopied face masks of the author). Although Atwood has become a symbol for library-devoted Torontonians thanks to councillor Doug Ford’s stated inability to recognize the country’s most recognizable author – even the Guardian mentioned it – several other authors waited patiently for their turn to speak to city council.
NOW magazine reports that Thom Vernon, author of The Drifts (Coach House Press) told the room, “We are not for sale … The KPMG report is a work plan to transfer public wealth to the private sector.”
Children’s author Vikki VanSickle expressed her concerns about the budget at around 4:30 a.m. After being asked the title of her book, Words That Start with B (Scholastic Canada), mayor Rob Ford is heard on video muttering, “I can think of another B word for her.”
This morning, the Twitterverse was filled with support for VanSickle, who tweeted, “Rob Ford thinks I’m a bitch, but I think he’s a bully.” There’s no response yet from the mayor, although joke account Hulkmayor tweeted, “WAIT! HULKMAYOR NO CALL LADY B-WORD! IS MISUNDERSTANDING.”
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Way to Display! C’est Noël, David! at Indigo in Montreal
That’s right: it’s the holiday edition of Way to Display!, with a too-cool-for-yule display for C’est Noël, David! (Scholastic Canada), the French edition of David Shannon’s It’s Christmas, David!, at the Indigo in downtown Montreal. (Photo courtesy of Scholastic Canada)
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Books of the Year 2010: Books for Young People
There’s no formula for choosing the books of the year. Some break ground, some tackle familiar themes with new energy. Some represent the best work from established authors, some introduce us to important new voices. And some are simply in-house favourites we feel deserve a little more attention. Here are the Books for Young People that made the most impact in 2010.
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Daily book biz round-up: Joan Didion’s new book; Bush incriminates himself; and more
Today’s book news:
- Joan Didion finishes her memoir on aging
- Lori Benton becomes vice-president and publisher of Scholastic Trade Publishing
- Amnesty International says Bush’s memoir is incriminating
- Amazon removes The Pedophile’s Guide to Love and Pleasure
- A 14th-century book on King Arthur to sell for $3.23 million (U.S.)
- A book of wishes for Canadian soldiers donated to the Canadian War Museum
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Way to Display! The Hunger Games trilogy at Vancouver Kidsbooks
The upcoming visit from author Suzanne Collins (on Nov. 2) to Vancouver Kidsbooks inspired the store to once again go all-out on its exterior, opting for an eye-catching – yet more than a little menacing – “fear the future” theme very much appropriate to Collins’ mega-selling Hunger Games trilogy. (Photo courtesy of Scholastic Canada)
[Know of a great bookstore display? Made one yourself? Take a photo and drop it in our Flickr pool or send it to nwhitlock at quillandquire.com.]
Daily book biz round-up: new Oprah pick coming; money for Ontario textbooks?; and more
Today’s book news:
- Oprah prepares to announce new book club pick, and it’s not Freedom
- Scholastic Book Club takes new marketing approach
- Dalton McGuinty makes vague reference to helping Ontario schools cover cost of textbooks
- Penguin sues sports writer over undelivered bio
- Century 21 scoops up former Barnes & Noble space before corpse is even cold
- EW uncovers shocking Hollywood prejudice: authors not asked to be on Dancing With the Stars
- Delightful literary oddities available on EBay
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Daily book biz round-up, May 17
Your Monday links round-up:
- Scholastic issues statement of support for Robert Munsch after he admits to struggles with addiction
- Mount Allison profs continue to protest honorary degree for Indigo’s Heather Reisman
- Cursor admits it will be selling those gorgeous worthwhile dead-tree books after all
- U.K. publishers told they must be “in control” of agreements made with Apple
- Kobo’s Michael Tamblyn offers his Bookcamp 2010 summer wine picks
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Robert Munsch’s latest grounded by terrorist threats
After the Christmas Day terrorist threat aboard a Detroit-bound plane, the public has had to deal with longer wait times, intrusive full-body scanners – and now the delay of the latest book from Robert Munsch.
According to the Toronto Star, the Canadian children’s author was planning to release his next book, Temina’s Dolls, at the end of 2010. However, newly heightened airport security and carry-on restrictions seem to have rendered the story inappropriate for the time being. From the Star:
“We were going to do a story on a little girl who smuggles all these dolls onto a plane, but then that thing happened in Detroit,” said Munsch. “Scholastic calls me up in a panic saying, ‘Hold everything, that kid couldn’t smuggle anything onto the plane, she’s lucky to get onto the plane herself.’”
Munsch said he had no problem with the change, and even chuckled about the coincidence of a story of his clashing with a real-life situation. He is now in talks with the publisher on his next project.
The book tells the story of a little girl with 27 dolls, who learns the value of sharing. You can see where the problem lies after reading the book (which you can do, since Munsch posts his unpublished stories online):
“NO!” said Temina, “You may not look in my backpack. My backpack is top secret. Even my mom does not know what is in my backpack.”
“Right,” said the man. “But if I do not look in your backpack, then you do not get on the airplane.”
“Well,” said Temina, “OK.”
So the man unzipped the backpack and all the dolls unscrunched and uncrammed and went flying all over the airport.
“AHHHHHHHHHHH!” yelled the man, “HELP!!!”
All sorts of policemen and soldiers came running and pointed guns at Temina and her dolls.
“IT’S JUST DOLLS,” yelled Temina.
“WE’RE JUST DOLLS,” yelled the dolls.





















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