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  • Children's Book Reviews

    Picture Books Ten Tiny Babies Karen Katz . S&S/McElderry , $14.99 (32p) ISBN 978-1-4169-3546-9 Kicking off with “1 tiny baby starts to run” and ending with 10 sleeping babies tucked into their cribs, Katz (Princess Baby) once again puts her kewpie doll crew through their paces, this time enumerating all the fun things that babies do, from toe wriggling and noisemaking to eati...

  • Spring Flying Starts

  • Stephenie Meyer… in Concert?

    Little, Brown will promote the August 2 release of Breaking Dawn, fourth and final book in Stephenie Meyer’s bestselling Twilight Saga, with a four-city concert tour, featuring a musical performance by Justin Furstenfeld of the group Blue October.

  • Lisa Holton Announces New Venture, Teams with HarperCollins

    The former president of Scholastic Trade Publishing has announced her new business: Fourth Story Media, a “studio” that integrates books and the Internet to develop children’s properties.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 6/16/2008

  • Kids & Reading By the Numbers

    90: % of children ages 5—17 who believe they “need to be a strong reader to get into a good college” 81: % of parents who rank reading among the top three important skills for their child 82: % of parents who wish their child engaged in more pleasure reading 80: % of children ages 5—8 who believe reading for fun is “extremely or very important” 56: % of child...

  • New Kid on the Block

    Last month, the Denmark-based media group Egmont celebrated its 130th birthday. Though it has a well-established name and presence in Europe, producing magazines, books and television shows in more than 30 countries, it's practically unknown in the U.S. The company is working to change that with the launch of Egmont USA, a children's book publisher that will be a division of British children's ...

  • Scholastic Report: Kids Still Read for Fun—Teens, Less So

    A new report released by Scholastic corroborates the findings of the company’s 2006 report on children’s reading habits, finding that pleasure reading in children begins to decline at age eight and continues to do so into the teen years.

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 6/9/2008

    This week on the Web: the voices of undocumented America; how gardens and math explain the world; an idiot girl, a pastor's daughter and two unlikely Hollywood stars reveal all (to varying degrees); family recipes for including, not deceiving, your loved ones; and two new novels from Harry "When Does He Sleep?" Turtledove. Plus: the new Patricia Cornwell and a roundup of children's titles.

  • 'The Hunger Games': A Dark Horse Breaks Out

    Though much attention this fall will likely be lavished on two hotly anticipated YA titles, Stephenie Meyer's Breaking Dawn and Christopher Paolini's Brisingr, there's always room for a breakout—a book with lesser expectations that nonetheless takes off. From all indications, a prime candidate is Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games, first in a new trilogy...

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 6/9/2008

    Picture Books Batman: The Story of the Dark Knight Ralph Cosentino . Viking , $15.99 (40p) ISBN 978-0-670-06255-3 While this introduction to Batman pays plenty of homage to the original comic’s noirish aesthetics, Cosentino (The Marvelous Misadventures of Fun-Boy) makes two astute concessions to the sensibilities of his target audience.

  • Q & A with Susan Beth Pfeffer

    With the release of her 75th novel, the dead & the gone (Harcourt), just a few days away, Susan Beth Pfeffer spoke with Bookshelf about her companion survival novels that trace how two families endure a global disaster.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 6/2/2008

  • Lerner Publishes Holocaust Tale

    Angel Girl by Laurie Friedman, illustrated by Ofra Amit (Carolrhoda, Sept.), is based on a real-life story: a boy in a German concentration camp was given food by a girl outside the fence each day; 10 years after the war ended, they met on a blind date in New York City, and have been married for 50 years.

  • Trenton Lee Stewart's 'Mysterious' Path to Success

    Trenton Lee Stewart’s debut children’s novel, The Mysterious Benedict Society, arrived on bookshelves last fall to critical praise, and it’s been selling steadily ever since.

  • News Briefs: Weisberg to Head Penguin Kids

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 5/19/2008

    This week: deep inside Abu Ghraib, fundamentalist politics, libertarian revolt, the inventing life, and paté. Plus: sentiment and the sportscaster; a sexual hobbyist tells all, again; healthy eating tips from a popular, underqualified web personality; and two short story collections for the young adults.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 5/19/2008

  • Celebrating Children's Book Week

    As Children’s Book Council board member Simon Boughton greeted the crowd at Tuesday night’s gala event at the New York Times, “Happy Children’s Book Week!” And what a week it has shaped up to be. Children’s Book Week, traditionally celebrated in November, was moved to May for the first time this year, with many events throughout the week and a renewed energy for promoting the joys of reading to the nation’s young readers.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 5/12/2008

    Picture Books Such a Silly Baby! Steffanie and Richard Lorig , illus. by Amanda Shepherd. Chronicle , $15.99 ISBN 978-0-8118-5134-3 As preschoolers will undoubtedly note with glee, the title of this book should be “Such a Silly Mommy!” After all, it's Mommy who can't manage to go on an outing without bringing home an animal instead of her offspring.

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