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  • ALA Midwinter Meeting: Let It Snow

    Although attendance was up at this year's ALA Midwinter Meeting, held during the Martin Luther King holiday weekend at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center, over last year's meeting in Denver — 11,095 compared to 10,220 in 2009 — it was still down compared with the last time it was on the East Coast. The 2008 show in Philadelphia drew 13,601 people. Some attributed the fact that attendance wasn't stronger this year to economics, including cuts in libraries' travel budgets...

  • Capstone Partners with SI Kids

    Educational publisher Capstone Publishing, based in Minneapolis, has entered into a partnership with sports magazine publisher Sports Illustrated KIDS, to create a line of 82 high-interest nonfiction and fiction sports books for elementary and middle-school readers, beginning this month and going through spring 2012. The line, to be published under the Stone Arch Books and Capstone Press imprints, will include three series, debuting in January...

  • Recapping the Holidays: Austerity Mixed with Success

    The 2009 holiday season had more than its share of harsh realities, including reduced consumer budgets and cautious or uncertain book buyers. But that didn’t stop independent bookstores from making the best of the holiday season—and in some cases great success—with thanks to Suzanne Collins, handselling, and National Public Radio. Porter Square Books in Cambridge, Mass., devoted more space to children’s this year...

  • Who Will Win the Big Awards? Scanning the Blogs

    Ah, January 2010. New year, new decade—and the last chance to lay odds on which books from 2009 will be slapped with the gold and silver seals that come with the annual awarding of the Newbery and Caldecott Medals, the Printz Award, and all the other prestigious prizes handed out by the ALA's ASLC and YALSA divisions next Monday. A tour of various book- and librarian-centric Web sites, blogs and listservs turns up countless confident souls eager to champion their favorite titles...

  • In Brief: January 14

    This week, Rick Riordan's new series, The Kane Chronicles, gets a cover reveal, and Elizabeth Eulberg now wears two hats: publicist for Stephenie Meyer, and YA author.

  • Lori Benton Joins Capstone

    Lori Benton has been named general manager/publisher of fiction imprints at the children's book publisher Capstone. The move puts Benton in charge of Stone Arch Books and Picture Window Books. Benton was most recently v-p and publisher of Harcourt's children's book division. Capstone's major market is schools and libraries, and Benton will be working to develop more of a trade list for the company...

  • An Animated Conversation

    For the inexperienced, the prospect of taking a picture book and turning it into a children's TV show may seem like a relatively simple one. But a panel presentation this past Saturday — which explored the process of transforming an (often beloved) children's picture book into a fully imagined and successful television series — proved that to be anything but the case. The panel, entitled "From the Page to the Screen... The Television Screen, That Is"...

  • Joy Berry Enterprises Expands, Signs with Perseus Distribution

    Perseus Distribution announced yesterday that it would take over sales and distribution for Joy Berry Enterprises, which publishes books by the educator and child development specialist Joy Berry. Berry, who has been published by a range of houses, including Scholastic and Grolier, and boasts more than 85 million books sold, began releasing books via Joy Berry Enterprises in late 2008.

  • The Baby-sitters Club to Reconvene

    Almost a quarter century ago, middle-grade readers were ushered into the lives of four Connecticut girls whose entrepreneurial spirit led them to start a babysitting business.The stars of Ann M. Martin's The Baby-sitters Club obviously endeared themselves to girls: between 1986 and 2000, Scholastic published 213 novels in the series, which reached an in-print tally of more than 176 million copies. This April, the publisher will release Martin's hardcover prequel to the series...

  • Abrams to Publish 'Wimpy Kid' Movie Diary

    One of the most anticipated films of 2010—at least on the children's side of things—is the adaptation of Diary of a Wimpy Kid, the first book in Jeff Kinney's bestselling series, which arrives in theaters on April 2. To get readers ready, on March 16 Abrams's Amulet Books imprint will publish Kinney's The Wimpy Kid Movie Diary, a behind-the-scenes from the author's perspective, about the moviemaking process.

  • Obituary: Talivaldis Stubis

    Talivaldis Stubis, the prolific graphic designer and artist, died late last year at the age of 83, after a long battle with amyloidosis. Stubis illustrated nearly two dozen books over his long career, including Sir Alva and the Wicked Wizard by Otto Friedrich, Sam's Place by Lillian Moore, and many by the husband-and-wife team Rose Wyler and Gerald Ames...

  • In Brief: January 7

    This week, the winner of a Lunch Lady contest is revealed, and a new American Girl character is unveiled.

  • RH Children's Signs New Sachar Title

    Random House's Delacorte Press Books for Young Readers imprint has acquired a new YA novel by Louis Sachar called The Cardturner. The title, by the Newbery-winning author of Holes, was sold by Ellen Levine at Trident to Delacorte's Beverly Horowitz, and RH is planning a May 11, 2010, publication. The U.S. deal also follows a British acquisition; Sarah Odedina at Bloomsbury Children's Books closed on the U.K. and Commonwealth rights to the book earlier this week

  • Katherine Paterson: Madam Ambassador

    Today Newbery Medalist Katherine Paterson adds the title of National Ambassador for Young People's Literature to her long list of honors. In a ceremony at the Library of Congress this morning, Librarian of Congress James H. Billington will officially name Paterson — who succeeds the first children's ambassador, Jon Scieszka — to the position.

  • Melanie Kroupa to Join Marshall Cavendish

    Around this time last year, Melanie Kroupa, who had had her own imprint at FSG Books for Young Readers since 2000, was let go as part of Macmillan’s reorganization of its children’s division. But news came late yesterday that Kroupa will be joining Marshall Cavendish Children's Books as an editor-at-large on January 1, reporting to publisher Margery Cuyler.

  • CPSIA Stay on Testing Extended Another Year

    On December 17, the Consumer Product Safety Commission voted four to one—with Commissioner Robert Adler voting against—to extend the stay of enforcement on the independent lead testing and certification provisions of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act for one more year. The provisions will go into effect on February 10, 2011.

  • Autographed Shirt Benefits First Book

    Securing a spot on the New York Times bestseller list is a big deal, so it's no wonder that Amy Krouse Rosenthal wanted to mark the occasion when her collaboration with Tom Lichtenheld, Duck! Rabbit!, landed on the list. She decided to circulate a white T-shirt to all the other authors on that week's list, asking each to sign it and pass it along. Every author agreed to participate and the autographed shirt...

  • Big Sales, Small Press: Bunker Hill's New England Holiday Hit

    A picture book published by a small New Hampshire press could be among the biggest success stories in New England this holiday season. Bunker Hill has already sold through its first printing of 3,500 copies of Willem Lange's Favor Johnson: A Christmas Story, illustrated by Bert Dodson. Last week Favor Johnson was the bestselling children's book at Northshire Books in Manchester Center, Vt., beating out titles from much larger houses...

  • Scholastic’s ‘Winter’s Tail’ Makes Waves

    A baby bottlenose dolphin who was seriously hurt when she became tangled in a Florida crab trap is the star of Winter’s Tail: How One Little Dolphin Learned to Swim Again by Juliana, Isabella and Craig Hatkoff, published by Scholastic Press in October. Now swimming happily in a pool at Clearwater Marine Aquarium, Winter is making a splash elsewhere as well...

  • Licensing Hotline: December 2009

    Penguin Young Readers Group is going after boys with three new licenses: the Jim Henson Company's Dinosaur Train, an animated, science-focused series on PBS Kids; Nickelodeon and Dreamworks' Penguins of Madagascar, a TV series based on the feature films; and Chaotic, a trading card/online game and TV franchise. Click through to read about licensing launches for Pinkalicious and Biscuit, a tie-in for Little Pickle Press, and lots more licensing news.

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