Children's Books
Heidi Estrin posted on March 20,
2012 23:01
Katie Davis, host of the award-winning children's literature podcast,
Brain Burps About Books, has created a special episode focused exclusively on the Sydney Taylor Book Award. Davis is a long-time fan of author Sydney Taylor and of the award named in her memory. The special episode features interviews with each of this year's gold medalists and can be found at
http://katiedavis.com/sydney-taylor-award-winners/.
Michael J. Rosen and Robert Sabuda, author and artist of
Chanukah Lights, Susan Goldman Rubin, author of
Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein, and Robert Sharenow, author of
The Berlin Boxing Club,are the 2012 winners of the prestigious Sydney Taylor Book Award. All four winners appear in lively interview segments on
Brain Burps About Books.
The Sydney Taylor Book Award honors new books for children and teens that exemplify the highest literary standards while authentically portraying the Jewish experience. The award memorializes Sydney Taylor, author of the classic
All-of-a-Kind Family series. The winners will receive their awards at the Association of Jewish Libraries convention in Pasadena, California this June.
Brain Burps About Books
Children's author/illustrator Katie Davis has published nine books and appears monthly on the ABC affiliate show, Good Morning Connecticut, recommending great books for kids. She produces Brain Burps About Books, a podcast about kidlit, a blog and monthly newsletter. You can find her podcast at
http://katiedavis.com/category/podcast/.
Heidi Estrin posted on February 10,
2012 05:26
Eric Kimmel, author of
The Golem's Latkes
Sydney Taylor Notable Book, and winner of the National Jewish Book Award
at
Ann Koffsky's Blog
Gloria Spielman, author of
Marcel Marceau, Master of Mime
Sydney Taylor Notable Book, and finalist for the National Jewish Book Award
at
Shannon and the Sunshine Band
Richard Michelson, author of
Lipman Pike: America's First Home Run King
Sydney Taylor Notable Book, and finalist for the National Jewish Book Award
at
Blue Thread
Sydney Taylor Award Winners – Wrap-Up
All winners, all categories
at
The Whole Megillah
Thanks to everyone for participating and mazel tov on your achievements!
Heidi Estrin posted on February 09,
2012 04:43
We continue our blog tour today with two of our silver medalists, one author/illustrator for young readers, and an author who writes for teens.
Durga Yael Bernhard, author & illustrator of
Around the World in One Shabbat
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Younger Readers Category
at
Frume Sarah's World
Shirley Vernick, author of
The Blood Lie
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Teen Readers Category
at
The Fourth Musketeer
Heidi Estrin posted on February 08,
2012 10:35
Today we hear from all of our gold medalists! Mazel tov to each one of them!
Michael Rosen, author of Chanukah Lights
Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Younger Readers Category
at
A Chair, a Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy
Robert Sabuda, illustrator/paper engineer of Chanukah Lights
Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Younger Readers Category
at
Practically Paradise
Susan Goldman Rubin, author of Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein
Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Older Readers Category
at
Cynsations
Robert Sharenow, author of The Berlin Boxing Club
Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Teen Readers Category
at
Jewish Books for Children
Heidi Estrin posted on February 08,
2012 04:37
Yesterday we got a little confused by the time difference between Singapore (the location of our blogger at Gathering Books) and the US, where the Blog Tour is based. However, we NOW have for you the interview with Anne Timmons and Mo Oh, the illustrators of
Lily Renee, Escape Artist by Trina Robbins, a 2012 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Older Readers category.
Please enjoy the
interview here at the "Behind the Books" section of Gathering Books!
Heidi Estrin posted on February 07,
2012 05:48
It's Day 3 of the exciting Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour! Today we hear from the creators of an innovative graphic novel biography about a Holocaust survivor who became a comics artist, and we hear about the second installment in Morris Gleitzman's series of sensitive Holocaust novels.
Trina Robbins, author of
Lily Renee, Escape Artist: From Holocaust Survivor to Comic Book Pioneer
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Older Readers Category
at
Bildungsroman
Anne Timmons and
Mo Oh, illustrators of of
Lily Renee, Escape Artist: From Holocaust Survivor to Comic Book Pioneer
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Older Readers Category
at
Gathering Books
[Note: This is Gathering Books' "Nonfiction Monday." review of Lily Renee. The interview with the illustrators will be posted later.]
Morris Gleitzman, author of
Then
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Teen Readers Category
at
The 3 R's
Heidi Estrin posted on February 06,
2012 04:42
Welcome to Day 2 of the 2012 Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour! Today we'll hear from the author and illustrator of
Irena's Jar of Secrets, a picture book biography of Irena Sendler, "a righteous gentile" who saved Jewish lives during the Holocaust.
Marcia Vaughan, author of
Irena's Jar of Secrets
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Older Readers Category
at
Shelf-Employed
Ron Mazellan, illustrator of
Irena's Jar of Secrets
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Older Readers Category
at
The Children's War
Heidi Estrin posted on February 05,
2012 09:39
We are thrilled to kick off the 2012 Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour today! All week long, we will be bringing you interviews with award-winning authors and illustrators, hosted on various blogs around the web. Thanks to all the bloggers for hosting tour stops! Readers, please feel free to leave comments on the participating blogs and to spread the word about these fascinating interviews!
Today we hear from two authors and an illustrator.
Susan Campbell Bartoletti, author of
Naamah and the Ark at Night
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Younger Readers Category
at
Ima On & Off the Bima
Holly Meade, illustrator of
Naamah and the Ark at Night
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Younger Readers Category
at
Into the Wardrobe
Shelley Sommer, author of
Hammerin' Hank Greenberg, Baseball Pioneer
Sydney Taylor Honor Award winner in the Older Readers Category
at
Great Kid Books
Enjoy!
Heidi Estrin posted on January 17,
2012 05:39
Michael J. Rosen and Robert Sabuda, author and artist of Chanukah Lights, Susan Goldman Rubin, author of Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein, and Robert Sharenow, author of The Berlin Boxing Club, are the 2012 winners of the prestigious Sydney Taylor Book Award. The awards were announced at the mid-winter meeting of the School, Synagogue and Community Center Division of the Association of Jewish Libraries.
The Sydney Taylor Book Award honors new books for children and teens that exemplify the highest literary standards while authentically portraying the Jewish experience. The award memorializes Sydney Taylor, author of the classic All-of-a-Kind Family series. The winners will receive their awards at the Association of Jewish Libraries convention in Pasadena, California this June.
Rosen and Sabuda will receive the 2012 gold medal in the Sydney Taylor Book Award’s Younger Readers Category for Chanukah Lights, published by Candlewick Press. This exquisite book celebrates Jewish history by pairing poetic prose with intricate paper cut pop-up art. Barbara Bietz, Chair of the Sydney Taylor Book Award Committee, said: “From the shtetl to skyscrapers, the white pop-up scenes against a background of deep rainbow colors illuminate Jewish life for the eight nights of Chanukah. Together, children and adults will marvel at the stunning scenes that magically unfold with each turn of the page.”
The gold medal in the Sydney Taylor Book Award’s Older Readers Category will be presented to Susan Goldman Rubin for Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein, published by Charlesbridge Publishing. This biography shares the inspiring story of the young musician and his commitment to succeed in spite of his family’s opposition. Through hard work, determination and a spirit that won’t quit, Bernstein’s dream is realized as he takes the stage as a conductor at Carnegie Hall. Numerous photos help bring Bernstein’s journey to life. Committee member Barbara Krasner commented: “Music Was It shows the struggle between the old and new worlds - the immigrant generation and the American generation. Susan Goldman Rubin's well-researched and polished narrative was filled with tension that today's kids can relate to.”
In 2000, Goldman Rubin received the Sydney Taylor Honor Award for Fireflies in the Dark: The Story of Friedl Dicker-Brandeis. Her book, The Cat with the Yellow Star: Coming of Age in Terezin, was a 2006 Sydney Taylor Honor Book.
Robert Sharenow will receive the 2012 gold medal in the Sydney Taylor Book Award’s Teen Readers Category for The Berlin Boxing Club, published by HarperTeen, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishing. This historical novel reveals the history of Nazi Germany through the eyes of Karl Stern, a typical 14-year-old German boy. Karl never gave much thought to being Jewish and had little connection with any religious life. When classmates bully Karl, he is forced to face the dangers in his own community. Given the opportunity to learn boxing from German champion Max Schmeling, Karl jumps at the chance. He grows strong and learns to defend himself. But as the Nazi’s gain power and his family is in peril, Karl questions who he can trust. Aimee Lurie, incoming Chair of the Award Committee noted: “The superb writing, meticulous research, and dramatic look into the world of boxing pack a punch that will leave teens mesmerized! Readers will be captivated and inspired by Karl's transformation from being the victim of anti-semitic violence to a strong, confident young man who is able to protect his family.”
Eight Sydney Taylor Honor Books were named for 2012. Naamah and the Ark at Night by Susan Campbell Bartoletti with illustrations by Holly Meade (Candlewick Press) and Around the World in One Shabbat written and illustrated by Durga Yael Bernhard (Jewish Lights Publishing) are recognized in the Younger Readers Category. Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Older Readers include: Lily Renee, Escape Artist: from Holocaust Survivor to Comic Book Pioneer by Trina Robbins with illustrations by Anne Timmons and Mo Oh (Graphic Universe, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc.), Hammerin’ Hank Greenberg: Baseball Pioneer by Shelley Sommer (Calkins Creek, an imprint Boyds Mills Press), and Irena’s Jars of Secrets by Marcia Vaughan with illustrations by Ron Mazellan (Lee & Low Books). For teen readers, the Honor Books are Then by Morris Gleitzman (Henry Holt and Company) and The Blood Lie by Shirley Reva Vernick (Cinco Puntos Press).
In addition to the medal-winners, the Award Committee designated eighteen Notable Books of Jewish Content for 2012.
# # #
THE 2012 SYDNEY TAYLOR BOOK AWARDS
ANNOUNCED BY THE ASSOCIATION OF JEWISH LIBRARIES
The Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner for Younger Readers:
Chanukah Lights by Michael J. Rosen with artwork by Robert Sabuda
(Candlewick Press)
The Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner for Older Readers:
Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein by Susan Goldman Rubin
(Charlesbridge Publishing)
The Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner for Teen Readers:
The Berlin Boxing Club by Robert Sharenow
(Harper Teen, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers)
Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Younger Readers:
Naamah and the Ark at Night by Susan Campbell Bartoletti with illustrations by Holly Meade
(Candlewick Press)
Around the World in One Shabbat written and illustrated by Durga Yael Bernhard
(Jewish Lights Publishing)
Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Older Readers:
Lily Renee, Escape Artist: from Holocaust Survivor to Comic Book Pioneer
by Trina Robbins with illustrations by Anne Timmons and Mo Oh
(Graphic Universe, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc.)
Hammerin’ Hank Greenberg: Baseball Pioneer by Shelley Sommer
(Calkins Creek, an imprint Boyds Mills Press)
Irena’s Jars of Secrets by Marcia Vaughan with illustrations by Ron Mazellan
(Lee & Low Books)
Sydney Taylor Honor Books for Teen Readers:
Then by Morris Gleitzman
(Henry Holt and Company)
The Blood Lie by Shirley Reva Vernick
(Cinco Puntos Press)
Notable Books for Younger Readers:
Picnic at Camp Shalom by Jacqueline Jules with illustrations by Debbie Melmon
(Kar-Ben, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group)
The Golem’s Latkes by Eric A. Kimmel with illustrations by Aaron Jasinski
(Marshall Cavendish Children’s Books)
Joseph and the Sabbath Fish by Eric A. Kimmel with illustrations by Martina Peluso
(Kar-Ben, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group)
Sadie’s Sukkah Breakfast by Jamie Korngold with illustrations by Julie Fortenberry
(Kar-Ben, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group)
The Shabbat Princess by Amy Meltzer with illustrations by Martha Aviles
(Kar-Ben, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group)
Lipman Pike: America’s First Home Run King by Richard Michelson with illustrations by Zachary Pullen
(Sleeping Bear Press, an imprint of Gale)
The Littlest Mountain by Barb Rosenstock with illustrations by Melanie Hall
(Kar-Ben, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group)
I Will Come Back for You: A Family in Hiding during World War II by Marisabina Russo
(Schwartz & Wade Books, an imprint of Random House)
Marcel Marceau: Master of Mime by Gloria Spielman with illustrations by Manon Gauthtier
(Kar-Ben, an imprint of Lerner Publishing Group)
One Little Chicken by Elka Weber with illustrations by Elisa Kleven
(Tricycle Press, an imprint of Random House)
Notable Books for Older Readers:
The Mishkan: Its Structure and Its Sacred Vessels by Rabbi Avrohom Biderman
(Artscroll/Mesorah Publication)
Flesh & Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy by Albert Marrin
(Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House)
The Cats in the Doll Shop by Yona Zeldis McDonough with illustrations by Heather Maione
(Viking, an imprint of the Penguin Group (USA) Inc.)
When Life Gives You OJ by Erica S. Perl
(Knopf Books for Young Readers)
Irena Sendler and the Children of the Warsaw Ghetto by Susan Goldman Rubin
with illustrations by Bill Fransworth (Holiday House)
Terezin: Voices from the Holocaust by Ruth Thomson
(Candlewick Press)
Notable Books for Teens:
OyMG by Amy Fellner Dominy
(Walker & Company)
Requiem: Poems of the Terezin Ghetto by Paul Janeczko
(Candlewick Press)
Heidi Estrin posted on September 21,
2011 10:31
The 13th Annual Jewish Children's Book Writers & Illustrators Conference will be on Sunday, November 20, 2011 from 9 am until 5 pm. This year's conference will be held at Temple Emanu-El on Manhattan's Upper East Side.
The program includes AJL representatives who will speak about the Sydney Taylor Book Award and Manuscript Award.
Registration for this conference is now open! Visit
http://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/page.php?80 for more information and to sign up.
Heidi Estrin posted on September 01,
2011 04:48
Author Eric Kimmel has recently published a new children’s story entitled
Joseph and the Sabbath Fish. AJL member Lisa Silverman compares his version to the beloved Marilyn Hirsh book,
Joseph Who Loved the Sabbath, in this article from the
Jewish Journal of Los Angeles.
http://www.jewishjournal.com/books/article/the_battle_of_the_fishy_folktales_20110830/
Heidi Estrin posted on July 12,
2011 11:31
Gathering Sparks by Howard Schwartz, illustrated by Kristina Swarner is the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner for Younger Readers. Howard joined us in Montreal and wanted to share his article about the 16th Century teaching of Tikkun Olam that inspired the book. Let's all gather sparks together!
You can read Howard's article in Tikkun Magazine at
http://www.tikkun.org/nextgen/how-the-ari-created-a-myth-and-transformed-judaism.
Heidi Estrin posted on March 29,
2011 09:53
Sydney Taylor Book Award Committee member Barbara Krasner has created an expert-packed workshop to guide Jewish children's writers in new directions with guest faculty and AJL member Linda Silver, author of
Best Jewish Books for Children and Teens, to help. The workshop will take place at the homeplace of the Founders of Highlights for Children near Honesdale, Pennsylvania, May 15-18, 2011.
Additional guest faculty includes Margery Cuyler, publisher, Marshall Cavendish Children’s Books and its new Jewish imprint, Shofar Books; Ruth Katcher, Egmont editor-at-large; Natalie Blitt, expert on Jewish children’s literature and former program director and book selection committee chair, The PJ Library; Debra Hess, Senior Editor, Highlights for Children; and Laurel Snyder, author of
Baxter, the Pig Who Wanted to Be Kosher and
Penny Dreadful.
Find complete information at
http://www.highlightsfoundation.org/pages/current/FWsched_jewishThemed_11.html.
Heidi Estrin posted on March 04,
2011 07:34
10:00AM to 3:00PM - SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 2011
Featured Speakers:
Sid Jacobson was editor in chief at Harvey Comics, where he created Richie Rich, and was the executive editor at Marvel Comics. His collaborations with illustrator Ernie Colon include the fascinating 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation, and the new illustrated biography of Anne Frank entitled, Anne Frank: The Anne Frank House Authorized Graphic Biography.
William J. Rubin is the executive editor of Nachshon Press and the chief architect of the National Jewish Book Award winner, Homeland: The Illustrated History of the State of Israel.
Barry Deutsch is the 2011 Sydney Taylor Award winner for Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword.
Anastasia Betts is a well-known education professional with an expertise in graphic literature.
10:00 AM Registration and Bagels
10:30 AM Questions and Answers about graphic literature with authors Sid Jacobson, Barry Deutsch and William Rubin
12:00 PM Buffet Lunch with special presentation by Sydney Taylor Award winner Barry Deutsch
1:15 PM History of graphic literature for children with Anastasia Betts
2:30 PM Literature marketplace and autographing by local children's literature authors
Manuscript consultations available
Conference will be held at American Jewish University,
15600 Mulholland Dr., Los Angeles, CA
Sponsored by Sinai Temple Blumenthal Library, Association of Jewish Libraries, AJLSC, and American Jewish University
For reservations and information call Susan Dubin at (818) 886-6415, or send email to Lisa Silverman, lsilverman at sinaitemple dot org.
Registration: $55 (includes lunch); $45 for AJL members, and $45 for a manuscript consult.
Heidi Estrin posted on February 11,
2011 10:35
Today is the final day, the "grand finale" if you will, of the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour. We hope you've been enjoying the interviews with our gold and silver medalists, and that you'll continue to follow their work.
Don't forget, in addition to these medalists we've featured in the blog tour, we've also got lots of fine books on this year's Notables list. Be sure to check out those books too;
here's a PDF listing every book recognized by the awards committee for 2011.
Here are the last two stops on our blog tour. Enjoy!
Once is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Teen Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Morris Gleitzman at
The Fourth Musketeer with blogger Margo Tanenbaum.
Here's a teaser:
Margo: Could you also comment on why you prefer to call Once and its sequels novels about friendship, rather than novels about the Holocaust?
Morris: My starting point for these books, even before I decided to set them against the Holocaust, was friendship. I've long been interested in how young people today feel growing up in a world that increasingly seems to be the product of the worst of our human tendencies. I like to write stories that don't shy away from that worst, but which also never lose sight of the best we're capable of. And I think loving friendships are where most of us get to show our best.
Read more...

Finally, we have a wrap-up of the Blog Tour with a virtual panel featuring various winners over at
The Whole Megillah with blogger Barbara Krasner.
Here's a teaser:
Barbara: What trends do you see coming our way?
Kristina Swarner: I’ve been approached about electronic books more often lately, and have been thinking about ways to make illustrations move or interact with the readers.
Dana Reinhardt: It’s tough out there for writers of realistic fiction. But thanks to organizations like the Association of Jewish Libraries, sometimes these smaller books get attention and ultimately find their audience.
Sarah Gershman: I see more of an openness to talking about G-d, particularly in books aimed at both affiliated and unaffiliated families.
Read more...
To learn more about the Sydney Taylor Book Award, please visit the Association of Jewish Libraries. You can hear podcasts of past winners receiving their awards at the AJL convention at
jewishlibraries.org/podcast.
Thanks for reading the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour!
Heidi Estrin posted on February 10,
2011 11:03
Welcome back to the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour! We've got three more amazing interviews for you today.
Kristina Swarner is the illustrator of two books recognized in the Younger Readers Category this year! She illustrated
Gathering Sparks by Howard Schwartz (Sydney Taylor Book Award Winner) as well as
Modeh Ani by Sarah Gershman (Sydney Taylor Honor Book).
Read an interview with Kristina at
The SCBWI Children's Market Blog with blogger Alice Pope.
Here's a teaser:
Alice: Your style is so soft and beautiful--it has an ethereal quality. Will you tell us about your technique?
Kristina: I begin with a black and white linoleum print that helps me get the positive and negative shapes and the underlying texture. Then I go over it with watercolor and colored pencil. I try to leave the white of the paper where I can, so things like stars really glow.
Read more...
Life, After is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Teen Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Sarah Darer Littman at
Into the Wardrobe with blogger Tarie.
Here's a teaser:
Tarie: What does winning a Sydney Taylor Honor Award for Life, After mean to you?
Sarah: I can't tell you how incredibly honored I feel to be twice honored by the AJL. When my first book, Confessions of a Closet Catholic won the Sydney Taylor Award for Older Readers in 2006, I was new on the scene and there was a part of me that thought maybe it was a fluke, especially since I followed up my win with a terrible case of second book blues (probably not helped by the fact that I was going through a very lengthy and painful divorce at the time). This time, it is perhaps even more meaningful because I feel like, "Wow, maybe they didn't make a horrible mistake that first time after all!"
Read more...
Hush is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Teen Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Eishes Chayil at
Frume Sarah's World with blogger Frume Sarah.
Here's a teaser:
Frume:As our synagogue educator is fond of asking, what is your goal? What do you hope that this book will do for others?
Eishes:It was the only way to have a voice heard that would not be heard otherwise. It was witnessing the agony and devastating trauma that abuse brings on its victims and realizing that I was lucky (or cursed) enough to be a writer, and can tell the story they can not.
Read more...
Tune in tomorrow for the final day of our blog tour! We'll feature an interview with
Morris Gleitzman (
Once) at
The Fourth Musketeer, and we'll have a wrap-up with all the winners over at
The Whole Megillah. We hope you've been enjoying the blog tour and we'll see you tomorrow!
Heidi Estrin posted on February 09,
2011 06:25
Welcome back to the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour! Today we've got interviews with each of our gold medal-winning authors!
Gathering Sparks is the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Younger Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Howard Schwartz at
Boston Bibliophile with blogger Marie Cloutier.
Here's a teaser:
Marie: Who do you see as the audience for the book?
Howard: Since the repair of the world is such a big job, I hope that everyone will do their part. So while the Ari lived in an exclusively Jewish world in Safed, his myth should be an inspiration not only for Jews, but for everyone. Of course, Jewish people can be especially proud that a genius like the Ari [Rabbi Isaac Luria] created a myth to inspire and guide the people to work together in harmony to make the world a better place. But the basic teaching of tikkun olam can be appreciated by everyone, Jewish or not.
Read more...
Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword is the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Older Readers Category.
Read an interview with author/illustrator
Barry Deutsch at
BewilderBlog with blogger Laurel Snyder.
Here's a teaser:
Laurel: Did you just wake up one day and say, “Aha! What the world really needs is an Ortho-fantasy-graphic novel!”
Barry:Yes, that’s exactly it!
I think Hereville was mostly inspired by Lis Harris’ book Holy Days, which has a lot of appealing stories of daily Hasidic life. I read Holy Days 10 or 15 years before I created Hereville, but I thought it would be a great setting for a comic book, so it was in the back of my brain, waiting to be used.
Read more...
The Things a Brother Knows is the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Teen Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Dana Reinhardt at
A Chair, a Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy with blogger Liz Burns.
Here's a teaser:
Liz B: After reading The Things a Brother Knows, two things in particular stay with the reader. First, the family and friends of Levi Katznelson are amazing. I want to go his house for Friday dinner. Second, there are no easy answers, but much to think about, when it comes to sending young people to fight wars. What inspired this story? In creating such a complex world, were you a “plunger” or “plotter”?
Dana: For better or worse, I’m a plunger. This does tend to get me into trouble when I reach a certain point in my writing, as I inevitably do, where I have no idea where the story is going next. I start with characters. I begin at the beginning. I usually have some sense of where they’re going, and often I find out later that it’s somewhere I didn’t imagine.
With this book I started with listening to the radio and hearing the voices of the mothers of returning soldiers telling the stories of their changed and damaged sons, and I started to wonder about the other son, the brother who didn’t go. What has his life been like the last few years? What will it be like now that his brother is back? This is where I found Levi and the rest of the Katznelsons. They’d love to have you over for Friday night dinner, by the way.
Read more...
Tune in tomorrow for interviews with
Kristina Swarner (illustrator,
Gathering Sparks and
Modeh Ani) at Alice Pope's SCBWI Children's Market Blog,
Sarah Darer Littman (
Life, After) at Into the Wardrobe, and
Eishes Chayil (
Hush) at Frume Sarah's World.
Heidi Estrin posted on February 08,
2011 06:07
Welcome to Day 3 of the 2011 Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour! We've got three more exciting interviews for you today.
Cakes and Miracles: A Purim Tale is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Younger Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Barbara Diamond Goldin at
Great Kid Books with blogger Mary Ann Scheuer.
Here's a teaser:
Mary Ann: What was the inspiration for this story, Cakes and Miracles? Does it come from a specific folktale?
Barbara: The inspiration for Cakes and Miracles came from a dream where, in my sleep, I put together aspects of tales I’d been reading in a new way. I love Isaac B. Singer stories, and had just read one about a blind boy and girl who were friends. I was also reading a book by Bella Chagall, where she mentioned that on Purim in her home town, people gave each other not only hamentashen, but also cookies in the shapes of violins, etc. That night I had a dream about a blind boy who makes cookies in wonderful shapes. As soon as I woke up, I wrote these ideas down. Then I had to fill in the story.
Read more...
Jaime Zollars
is the illustrator of
Cakes and Miracles.
Read an interview with Jaime at
The Book of Life with blogger Heidi Estrin.
Here's a teaser:
Heidi: Cakes and Miracles was originally published in 1991 with illustrations by Erika Weihs. Did you refer to the original illustrations in any way as you worked on this book, or did you start completely fresh?
Jaime: I started completely fresh on this title. My first instinct was to look at the original book first, but then I decided that it would only limit my thinking if I peeked too early in the process. Once I had my sketches in, I did order the book to see how it was first illustrated.
Read more...
Black Radishes is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Older Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Susan Lynn Meyer at
The Three R's - Reading, 'Riting & Research with blogger Joyce Hostetter.
Here's a teaser:
Joyce: Talk to us about research – how you approach it, what you’ve learned about how to research, and about your favorite way to gather info.
Susan: What works best for me is a “total immersion” method of research for historical fiction. I read everything I can about the period, especially first-hand accounts, such as memoirs. I love reading newspapers from the time, because they give you a very vivid sense of what daily life was like. They can be painful to read, too, because of their immediacy—they are written just as terrible things are happening, and the writers are living through those terrible times and don’t know yet how the events will turn out.
Read more...
Tune in tomorrow for interviews with
Howard Schwartz (
Gathering Sparks) at
Boston Bibliophile,
Barry Deutsch (
Hereville) at
BewilderBlog, and
Dana Reinhardt (
The Things a Brother Knows) at
A Chair, a Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy.
http://greatkidbooks.blogspot.com/2011/02/sydney-taylor-award-blog-tour-chatting.html
Heidi Estrin posted on February 07,
2011 07:14
Welcome back to the Sydney Taylor Book Award Blog Tour! We've got three more exciting interviews for you today.
[caption id="" align="alignleft" width="138" caption="Emma's Poem"]

[/caption]
Emma's Poem: The Voice of the Statue of Liberty is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Younger Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Linda Glaser at
ASHarmony with blogger Elizabeth Lipp.
Here's a teaser:
Elizabeth: Linda, I was surprised to read that you struggled as a young reader. How does your struggles as a young reader inform your writing for young readers?
Linda: Yes. I did struggle with reading when I was a kid. In fact, I thought I'd never learn how. That may be why I use a clear simple style when I write for children. I was the type of reader who needed that. And now, I want my books to be accessible to all children--including those who find reading difficult. When I do school visits I always let kids know that I struggled to read. I figure there are probably some kids listening who are heartened to hear that I know what they are going through and that there is hope.
Read more...
Claire Nivola is the illustrator of
Emma's Poem.
Read an interview with Claire at
Lori Calabrese with blogger (wait for it) Lori Calabrese.
Here's a teaser:
Lori: Emma Lazarus's famous lines inspired the way we envision America's exceptional freedom and the way we hold it dear today. How were you inspired to create the amazing illustrations in Emma's Poem?
Claire: Most inspiring for me was the photographic record of the time - pictures of newly arrived immigrants, photographs of the statue itself partially uncrated, of the statue once erected seen from the decks of ships arriving in the N.Y. harbor. Photography was still in its infancy then, but often those early black and white pictures documenting the arrival of a refugee or a family carrying all its modest belongings provided a powerful, deeply telling, and poignant record.
Read more...
One Is Not a Lonely Number is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Older Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Evelyn Krieger at
Ima On and Off the Bima with blogger Phyllis Sommer.
Here's a teaser:
Phyllis: What inspired you to write this story? I see from your biography that you are one of six kids, what brought you to a story about an only child?
Evelyn: When you are the oldest of six kids, its only natural to occasionally wonder what it's like to be an only child.As part of my preparation for the book, I interviewed only children--both kids and adults. I remember a first grader who wanted a sibling so badly that he invented his mother's pregnancy for show and tell. And I fell for it!
Read more...
Tune in tomorrow for interviews with
Barbara Diamond Goldin (
Cakes and Miracles: A Purim Tale) at
Great Kid Books,
Jaime Zollars (illustrator,
Cakes and Miracles) at
The Book of Life, and
Susan Lynn Meyer (
Black Radishes) at
The Three R's - Reading, 'Riting, & Research.
Heidi Estrin posted on February 06,
2011 09:02
The Sydney Taylor Book Award 2011 Blog Tour begins today with three stops!
Resistance is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Older Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Carla Jablonski at
Jewish Comics with blogger Steven Bergson.
Here's a teaser:
Steven: When did the idea for writing the Resistance books come to you? Was there a particular event that occurred which inspired you to write it?
Carla: The war in Iraq, actually, got me wondering about what it would be like to live in an occupied country. I was also interested in the tensions between an experience as it is happening vs. history or hindsight.
Read more...
Leland Purvis is the illustrator of the graphic novel,
Resistance.
Read an interview with Leland at
Shelf-Employed with blogger Lisa Taylor.
Here's a teaser:
Lisa: In
Resistance, you often use Paul’s sketchbook to portray people or events in the story. I found it interesting that, in most cases, Paul’s sketchbook depicts events not through the filtered eye of the young boy, but as they are. In my mind, that tells a story in itself - that the behavior of Nazi Germany was so horrific that exaggeration, even for an imaginative young boy, is impossible. Was that the point that you were trying to make, or does the sketchbook have another purpose in the story?
Leland: The sketchbook serves a couple of purposes, which is why you were sensing a dual-role, essentially. On the one hand it was a narrative device by which Paul could be valuable to the Maquis resistance in a credible way. Also it does provide a look into Paul's head about his reaction to the town and people around him. We very much included panels that were strictly Paul's P.O.V. This has continued into the sequels.
Read more...
Modeh Ani: A Good Morning Book is a 2011 Sydney Taylor Honor Book in the Younger Readers Category. Its predecessor,
The Bedtime Sh'ma, was the 2008 Sydney Taylor Book Award winner in the Younger Readers Category.
Read an interview with author
Sarah Gershman at
Biblio File with blogger Jennie Rothschild.
Here's a teaser:
Jennie: Many Jews do not write out God and instead use a substitute, such as G-d. However, throughout your book, you use God. Why did you make this decision and do you have a response to those who are critical of it (I noticed it came up in the Amazon reviews of the Bedtime Sh'ma.)
Sarah: My main motivation was to make the book accessible to people of all backgrounds. That being said, there are also Rabbinic opinions that say that writing God in English is not the same thing as writing God's full name in Hebrew. We were careful not to do that in the Hebrew portions of the book, as well as on the Bedtime Sh'ma CD.
Read more...
Tune in tomorrow for interviews with
Linda Glaser (author,
Emma's Poem: The Voice of the Statue of Liberty) at
ASHarmony,
Claire Nivola (illustrator,
Emma's Poem) at
Lori Calabrese, and
Evelyn Krieger (
One is Not a Lonely Number) at
Ima On and Off the Bima.