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Carter, Betty – School Library Journal, 2011
This article presents an interview with Paolo Bacigalupi, a rising sci-fi star who has walked away with the Hugo Award, the Nebula Award, and, most recently, the Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature--the Young Adult Library Services Association's top prize for prose. That's pretty impressive for a guy who's published…
Descriptors: Authors, Science Fiction, Adolescent Literature, Books
School Library Journal, 2011
This article presents a list of ALSC's notable children's books for younger readers, middle readers and older readers. It also presents a list of YALSA 2011 best fiction for young adults. Great graphic novels for Teens are included.
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Young Adults, Novels, Books
Hunt, Jonathan – School Library Journal, 2011
This article presents an interview with Terry Pratchett, one of the world's most beloved storytellers. And with sales of more than 65 million books in 37 languages, he's indisputably one of the most successful. The English novelist's many honors include a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth, more than a half dozen honorary doctorates, and the 2008…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Recognition (Achievement), Fantasy, Novels
Carter, Betty – School Library Journal, 2010
This article presents an interview with Libba Bray, author of "Going Bovine," the winner of the Michael L. Printz Award as the year's most distinguished title for teens. Since the publication of "A Great and Terrible Beauty" in 2003, Bray has captured the imaginations and loyalties of a host of teen readers. This initial entry in a trilogy--which…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Recognition (Achievement), Novels, Interviews
Green, John – School Library Journal, 2010
It is a fun parlor game to speculate about what the future of books will look like. The author wonders whether stories will be read on screens and supplemented with gaming, illustration, video, and multimedia riddles. In this essay, the author shares his vision of the future of reading and describes what he learned from writing a story based on…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Innovation, Novels, Library Materials
School Library Journal, 2009
This article presents a list of ALSC's notable children's books, YALSA's best books for young adults, YALSA's great graphic novels for teens, and YALSA's quick picks for reluctant young adult readers.
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Novels, Childrens Literature, Books
Kopple, Jody – School Library Journal, 2011
No one believes that bullying is a problem isolated to teens and tweens. Children tease one another from a very young age; they discover power by rejecting someone or by taking another's toys. Adults are hardly immune. By addressing bullying behavior early on, at every grade level, and in a variety of ways, educators have a better chance of…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Picture Books, Bullying, Young Adults
School Library Journal, 2010
This article presents a list of ALSC and YALSA Book Picks 2010. The list includes (1) ALSC Notable Children's Books; (2) YALSA Booklists; (3) Best Books for Young Adults; (4) Great Graphic Novels for Teens; and (5) the Top 10 Quick Picks.
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Young Adults, Novels, Reading Material Selection
Jones, Trevelyn; Toth, Luann; Charnizon, Marlene; Grabarek, Daryl; Fleishhacker, Joy – School Library Journal, 2010
This article presents the 62 books chosen by "School Library Journal's" editors as the best of the year. While novels include some historical settings and contemporary concerns, it is fantasy that continues to reign supreme. More original, and more creative than ever, it includes selections that are frightening, edgy, wildly funny, electrifying,…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Audiences, Biographies, Novels
Campbell, Heather M. – School Library Journal, 2010
Steam-powered machines, anachronistic technology, clockwork automatons, gas-filled airships, tentacled monsters, fob watches, and top hats--these are all elements of steampunk. Steampunk is both speculative fiction that imagines technology evolved from steam-powered cogs and gears--instead of from electricity and computers--and a movement that…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Fiction, Nonfiction, Books
Handler, Daniel – School Library Journal, 2009
This article presents an interview with National Book Award-winner Judy Blundell. For nearly 20 years, Blundell has toiled in anonymity, turning out more than 100 mysteries, romances, and media tie-ins under various pen names, such as Jude Watson. But in mid-November, the writer-for-hire was suddenly shoved into the spotlight. That's when "What I…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Awards, Authors, Writing (Composition)
Blais, Madeleine – School Library Journal, 2009
In the two years since her husband's death at the age of 35, Grace Lin has spent much of her time, whether by chance or on purpose, living up to her first name--with excellent results. The petite, self-effacing 35-year-old woman of Taiwanese ancestry lives alone in a two-bedroom apartment in a former schoolhouse in Somerville, Massachusetts. The…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Authors, Profiles, Novels
Sutton, Roger – School Library Journal, 2009
Neil Gaiman first gained wide notice as an author of comics, most notably "The Sandman" series (DC Comics), and confirmed his reputation as a major contemporary Anglo-American writer with the novels "Stardust" (1999), "American Gods" (2001), and "Anansi Boys" (2005, all William Morrow). But as Gaiman…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Cartoons, Foreign Countries, Novels
Messner, Kate – School Library Journal, 2009
In May 2007, the faculty book club that the author facilitates read Chris Bohjalian's novel "The Double Bind" (Shaye Areheart: Harmony, 2007). Bohjalian, a local author, agreed to meet them in Burlington for drinks and conversation. When he arrived, the author and her class introduced themselves, passed around some nachos, and began their…
Descriptors: Novels, Authors, Clubs, Book Reviews
Gorman, Michele – School Library Journal, 2008
After years of fighting for shelf space in libraries and classrooms, graphic novels have finally become an acceptable alternative to their prose-packed counterparts--and kids can't seem to get enough of them. For that matter, neither can grown-ups. In 2006, U.S. consumers dropped an estimated $330 million on graphic novels and comics, with…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Picture Books, Cartoons, Librarians
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