Jamie Michalak's Blog, page 23

January 26, 2015

The Little Crooked Bookshelf


A SNICKER OF MAGIC
by Natalie Lloyd


This week's pick is from Cottager Anika Denise
What it's all about…
Twelve-year-old Felicity Pickle arrives in Midnight Gulch, Tennessee, to discover all the magic "has gone up out of this place," driven away by a mysterious curse. Felicity's a girl with a little magic of her own. She's a "word collector," who can see words hover in the air around people and places. She wants more than anything to convince her nomadic mother to allow them to put down roots, and Midnight Gulch is the first place she sees the word "home." But first, she must unravel the mystery of the missing magic, breaking the spell that's been cast over the town . . . and her mother's broken heart.

Why it's on The Little Crooked Bookshelf...
First of all … a word collector! A little girl who sees words shimmering in the air is poetic and lovely, and particularly appealing to those of us who spin them for a living. We especially love the words Felicity spins from her own imagination: spindiddly, factofabulous, clutzerdoodle.

Our favorite lines...
"I didn't say another word to Mama that night, but I could feel something good even then: the YES in my heart, the swirling-around my belly, the prickly tingling all the way from the freckle on my finger to the tip of my pinky toe. That much wonderful could only mean one thing:

There was still magic in Midnight Gulch.

This is how I turned it loose. . ."

Why kids will love it...
Don't you? After reading those lines? There's a magical town, an ice cream factory, a word-collecting girl, a secret magical someone called "the Beedle," a mystery to be solved, the loneliness of being twelve, and Lloyd's delicious prose. Need we say more?

Why grown-ups will love it...
This is one to savor and read aloud tucked into bed at night with your kids. Natalie Lloyd is clearly a word collector. . . and all of her words are magical.
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Published on January 26, 2015 05:25

January 25, 2015

Sunday Brunch in the Cottage

Once a month, the Cottagers meet for a Sunday brunch to discuss our works-in-progress and latest adventures. We're also getting ready for a blizzard, so for today's brunch, we made warm comfort food--lasagna, freshly baked bread, and brownies.

Add a stack of books and a roaring fire, and we're ready for you, snow!


Today's Menu Giada's lasagna rolls a baguette from Seven Stars Bakerymixed greens saladKara's ridiculously delicious chocolate brownies and of course, a bottle of Prosecco Almost ready! The bread is in the oven.
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Published on January 25, 2015 05:01

January 23, 2015

SURPRISE DELIVERY Literary Lunch… for Petal and Poppy!

Our fabulous caterer Nina from Mamabelly.com was off on an adventure when Petal and Poppy stopped by to visit Mr. Pig in the cottage. And since none of us does lunch as well as Nina, we served them some boring old cheese and crackers. (Sorry, Nina.)
Well, Nina could not resist making a special surprise lunch to deliver especially to Petal and Poppy to celebrate their book: Petal and Poppy and the Penguin - written by Lisa Clough and illustrated by Ed Briant .

In Petal and Poppy and the Penguin , Petal and Poppy discover a penguin in their garden! Petal is too afraid to let him into the house at first but soon this cute, friendly and very talented penguin wins her over.

Nina from Mamabelly.com made a Petal and Poppy lunch - of course with penguin! Packed are:a Petal sunbutter sandwicha Poppy peanut butter sandwichand a salad with carrots, grape tomatoes, cheese and cherry flavored cranberries. Our lunch was inspired by this page from the book  Petal and Poppy and the Penguin .


Make sure you go and read all of Petal and Poppy's fun adventures!

Isn't Penguin cute as he is sitting in his BabyBel Cheese and grape tomato hot balloon drifting in cherry flavored cranberry clouds and flying over lettuce and carrot fields?
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Published on January 23, 2015 09:55

January 21, 2015

Loved-to-Pieces . . . with ZACHARIAH OHORA!

Good morning! Mr. Pig here. I'm so very excited to welcome author-illustrator Zachariah OHora to the Cottage! The kidlitosphere is buzzing about WOLFIE THE BUNNY, his new book with Cottager friend and favorite Ame Dyckman. We can't wait to get our hands on a copy when it releases on February 17th!

In addition to illustrating Wolfie, Mr. OHora is the genius behind the picture books No Fits, Nilson, My Cousin Momo, and Stop Snoring, Bernard! 
Influential children's librarian and School Library Journal blogger Betsy Bird said this of OHora: "Clearly the man knows where to find the picture book sweet spot. A visual feast as well as a treat to the ear, this is a book that’s going to find an audience no matter where it goes." 
So what did this rising star in children's books love to read as a child? We asked the question—and Zachariah told us one of the sweetest Loved-to-Pieces stories EVER!
Read on!
"When I was a kid, my Grandmother lived in the woods of Connecticut and she had a giant wicker basket full of toys and books. The book I reached for every time was Clyde and Wendy Watson's Father Fox's Pennyrhymes.

The rhymes were silly and I loved staring at all the little foxes, seeing what they were wearing and what each on of them was doing. And how about those trees?! All those leaves?! It was a book of poems but also kind of a comic book from another century.


My cousin and I loved how mischievous the foxes could be. Like this Aunt's house they just come in and trash. That definitely appealed to my six year old boy self. Especially in a house that as much as were allowed to do what we wanted, there were a line that couldn't be crossed (like playing with Grandpa's pipes)!

But my absolute favorite spread, both the poem and the artwork, was this one. My cousin and I would make my Grandmom read it over and over and we would roll on the floor with laughter at the thought of someone eating the buttons of their shirt!


I never had an actual copy of the book myself. So it was a special treat to see it at my Grandmother's. I don't know if it was the setting (her house was very country style) but combined with the old fashioned dress of the foxes and their little world, I assumed this book was some kind of relic from the 1800s instead of a National Book Award Nominee for 1972!

Years later, I would recite this poem to my two young boys Oskar and Teddy and they would giggle with laughter just as my cousin and I did thirty-odd years ago.

I came across a copy at a bookstore in New York and it reminded me that I should Google Wendy & Clyde Watson.
Imagine my surprise when I found out that Wendy was still alive and well. Apparently the book came out in the 1970s and not the 1870s as I had presumed. I was further surprised to find out that Clyde Watson was her sister! Not her husband as I had presumed as well.
The biggest shock was realizing that we followed each other on Twitter! THAT Wendy Watson?! It couldn't be! I emailed her that evening, fanboyed out on her, told her all about how I recited the button poems to Oskar and Teddy. 
That Christmas, a package came in the mail with a copy of Father Fox's Pennyrhymes signed by Clyde and Wendy."

Zachariah OHora is an illustrator and author of a number of children's books. His debut Stop Snoring, Bernard! was awarded the Society of Illustrators Founder's Award, and his book No Fits Nilson! was the Huffington Post Best Picture Book of the Year for 2013. He lives and works in Narberth, PA. To learn more about his books and art, visit him at his website Fuzzytown


Wolfie The Bunnyby Ame Dyckmanillustrated by Zachariah OHoraLittle, Brown (February 17, 2015)
Families of all kinds will delight in this sweet tale of new babies, sibling rivalry, bravery, unconditional love...and veggies!

The Bunny family has adopted a wolf son, and daughter Dot is the only one who realizes Wolfie can--and might--eat them all up! Dot tries to get through to her parents, but they are too smitten to listen. A new brother takes getting used to, and when (in a twist of fate) it's Wolfie who's threatened, can Dot save the day?
★"OHora's distinctive folk-naïf spreads poke gentle fun at hipster families. . . " —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"A tongue in cheek tale of a wolf in bunny clothing. It's pretty adorable." —Kirkus 


No Fits, Nilsonby Zachariah OHora
Dial (June 2013)

★ A Kirkus Reviews Best Picture Book of 2013, a New York Public Library Book for Reading and Sharing, and The Huffington Post's Best Overall Picture Book of 2013!

"OHora’s rough, woodcutlike acrylic paintings are a delight, and there are quirky details to be savored everywhere… Nilson’s (and Amelia’s) struggle to behave will leave a lasting impression." —Publishers Weekly

"OHora’s acrylic illustrations evince a crispness of finish, smoothness of color, and strength of black line that suggests particularly lively woodcuts, and a streamlined retro palette...enhances the graphic strength." —Bulletin of Center for Children's Books
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Published on January 21, 2015 04:04

Loved-to-Pieces. . . with ZACHARIAH OHORA!

Good morning! Mr. Pig, here. I'm so very excited to welcome author-illustrator Zachariah OHora to the Cottage! The world is buzzing about WOLFIE THE BUNNY, his new book with cottager friend and favorite Ame Dyckman. We can't wait to get our hands on a copy when it releases on February 17th!

In addition to illustrating Wolfie, Mr. OHora is the genius behind the picture books No Fits, Nilson, My Cousin Momo and Stop Snoring, Bernard! 
Influential children's librarian and School Library Journal blogger Betsy Bird said this of OHora: "Clearly the man knows where to find the picture book sweet spot. A visual feast as well as a treat to the ear, this is a book that’s going to find an audience no matter where it goes." 
So what did this rising star in children's books love to read as a child? We asked the question—and Zachariah told us one of the sweetest loved-to-pieces stories EVER! Read on!
"When I was a kid, my Grandmother lived in the woods of Connecticut and she had a giant wicker basket full of toys and books. The book I reached for every time was Clyde and Wendy Watson's Father Foxes Pennyrhymes.

The rhymes were silly and I loved staring at all the little foxes, seeing what they were wearing and what each on of them was doing. And how about those trees?! All those leaves?! It was a book of poems but also kind of a comic book from another century.


My cousin and I loved how mischievous the foxes could be. Like this Aunt's house they just come in and trash. That definitely appealed to my six year old boy self. Especially in a house that as much as were allowed to do what we wanted, there were a line that couldn't be crossed (like playing with Grandpa's pipes)!

But my absolute favorite spread, both the poem and the artwork, was this one. My cousin and I would make my Grandmom read it over and over and we would roll on the floor with laughter at the thought of someone eating the buttons of their shirt!


I never had an actual copy of the book myself. So it was a special treat to see it at my Grandmother's. I don't know if it was the setting (her house was very country style) but combined with the old fashioned dress of the foxes and their little world, I assumed this book was some kind of relic from the 1800's instead of a National Book Award Nominee for 1972!

Years later, I would recite this poem to my two young boys Oskar and Teddy and they would giggle with laughter just as my cousin and I did thirty-odd years ago.

I came across a copy at a bookstore in New York and it reminded me that I should Google Wendy & Clyde Watson.
Imagine my surprise when I found out that Wendy was still alive and well. Apparently the book came out in the 1970's and not the 1870's as I had presumed. I was further surprised to find out that Clyde Watson was her sister! Not her husband as I had presumed as well.
The biggest shock was realizing that we followed each other on Twitter! THAT Wendy Watson?! It couldn't be! I emailed her that evening, fanboyed out on her, told her all about how I recited the button poems to Oskar and Teddy. 
That Christmas, a package came in the mail with a copy of Father Foxes Pennyrhymes signed by Clyde and Wendy."

Zachariah OHora is an illustrator and author of a number of children's books. His debut Stop Snoring, Bernard! was awarded the Society of Illustrators Founder's Award, and his book No Fits Nilson! was the Huffington Post Best Picture Book of the Year for 2013. He lives and works in Narberth, PA. To learn more about his books and art, visit him at his website Fuzzytown


Wolfie The Bunnyby Ame Dyckmanillustrated by Zachariah OHoraLittle, Brown (February 17, 2015)
Families of all kinds will delight in this sweet tale of new babies, sibling rivalry, bravery, unconditional love...and veggies!

The Bunny family has adopted a wolf son, and daughter Dot is the only one who realizes Wolfie can--and might--eat them all up! Dot tries to get through to her parents, but they are too smitten to listen. A new brother takes getting used to, and when (in a twist of fate) it's Wolfie who's threatened, can Dot save the day?
★"OHora's distinctive folk-naïf spreads poke gentle fun at hipster families. . . " —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"A tongue in cheek tale of a wolf in bunny clothing. It's pretty adorable." —Kirkus 


No Fits, Nilsonby Zachariah OHora
Dial (June 2013)

★ A Kirkus Reviews Best Picture Book of 2013, a New York Public Library Book for Reading and Sharing, and The Huffington Post's Best Overall Picture Book of 2013!

"OHora’s rough, woodcutlike acrylic paintings are a delight, and there are quirky details to be savored everywhere… Nilson’s (and Amelia’s) struggle to behave will leave a lasting impression." —Publishers Weekly

"OHora’s acrylic illustrations evince a crispness of finish, smoothness of color, and strength of black line that suggests particularly lively woodcuts, and a streamlined retro palette...enhances the graphic strength." —Bulletin of Center for Children's Books
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Published on January 21, 2015 04:04

January 19, 2015

Quote of the Week (Special Edition)

From Martin's Big Words by Doreen Rappaport. Illustrated by Bryan Collier (Hyperion 2001)
Illustration © 2001 Brian Collier 
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Published on January 19, 2015 08:39

January 16, 2015

Quote of the Week

“If something doesn't creep into a drawing that you're not prepared for, you might as well not have drawn it.” 

― Edward Gorey






Pin it!

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Published on January 16, 2015 04:42

January 14, 2015

What Kind of Bear Are YOU?: A Personality Quiz


Quizzes by Quibblo.com: Click HERE to take the quiz!

And now for something completely different. . . . We're wild about Jeannie Brett's gorgeous and informative picture book WILD ABOUT BEARS! 


It made Mr. Pig wonder . . . what kind of bear would he be if he were a bear? Admit it. You've always wondered the same question yourself. Take the quiz above to find out the answer, and then check it against Jeannie's illustrations below!

The Polar Bear from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett. 

The Brown Bear from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett.  [image error] The Asiatic Black Bear from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett. [image error] The Sloth Bear from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett. The North American Black Bear from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett. The Spectacled Bear from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett. The Giant Panda from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett.


The Sun Bear from Wild About Bears. Illustration copyright 2014 by Jeannie Brett.
***********
About the book
WILD ABOUT BEARS
by Jeannie Brett
Charlesbridge Publishing, March 2014
HC ISBN: 978-1-58089-418-0
PB ISBN: 978-1-58089-419-7 

Discover shared traits and behaviors as well as unique characteristics of the polar bear, brown bear, North American black bear, spectacled bear, Asiatic black bear, sloth bear, sun bear, and giant panda. Readers will marvel at the adaptations each has developed to survive in a challenging world.

“With its clear text and illustrations, this introduction is just the ticket for younger elementary readers.” —Kirkus
 
“After initial introductory paragraphs, Brett scatters brief, captionlike sentences throughout her warm, naturalistic watercolor scenes…A solid introduction to bears, their habits, and the challenges they face.”  —Publishers Weekly


About Jeannie Brett
Jeannie Brett lives on the coast of Maine and spends most days in her studio, illustrating cats, bears, horses, kids, and other assorted mammals, along with writing words to accompany them. Occasionally she does the same from her Montana home.

Jeannie enjoys visiting elementary schools and libraries. She shares her process and art, along with her passion for nature, animals, and books!

Her latest book is Wild About Bears, written and illustrated by Jeannie Brett and published by Charlesbridge Publishing. Decorated Horses, also illustrated by Jeannie Brett and written by Dorothy Hinshaw Patent, will be published by Charlesbridge Publishing in early spring of 2015. Her model for Decorated Horses was Bailey Boy, her pet horse.
Jeannie and her horse, Bailey.

For more info about Jeannie, visit her at www.jeanniebrett.com or www.wildaboutbears.com.
Like her on facebook at Jeannie Brett, Wild About Bears, and My Cat, Coon Cat.
 

 
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Published on January 14, 2015 06:36

January 12, 2015

The Little Crooked Bookshelf

Jazzy in the Jungle 
by Lucy Cousins

This week's pick is from Cottager Kristen Tracy.

What it's all about . . .

A baby lemur plays hide-and-seek from his mother in a colorful and delightful jungle story.
 
Why it’s on the Crooked Bookshelf . . .

It’s fun to look for baby lemurs. And it’s even more fun with all the jungle animals helping.
 

Our favorite lines . . .

Mama JoJo looks by the tumtum trees. Where are you, Baby Jazzy?
 

Our favorite illustration . . .



From JAZZY IN THE JUNGLE. Illustration copyright 2013 by Lucy Cousins.Why kids will love it . . .

It’s a colorful book with lift-up flaps that create a vivid and multi-layered jungle. The anteater is quite fetching.
 

Why grown-ups will love it . . .
It’s sweet and humorous and a good way to teach a child about all the animals that live in the jungle.
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Published on January 12, 2015 05:37

January 9, 2015

Quote of the Week



With special thanks to Benjamin Chaud and Chronicle Books for allowing us to share this image. Benjamin is author and illustrator of The Bear's Song, The Bear's Sea Escape, I Didn't Do My Homework Because and others.
Je suis Charlie. 
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Published on January 09, 2015 04:44