Cast your vote for the future
Labels: Awards, Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards, School Library Journal
The Horn Book editor's rants and raves
Labels: Awards, Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards, School Library Journal
Labels: Censorship, Philip Pullman, Religion
Labels: Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards, Don't Drink and Write
Labels: Cliques, Get over yourself, Girls reading
Labels: Interplanetary understanding, Prizes, YA
Labels: Censorship, Great American Novel, Ill-gotten gains
Labels: Fantasy, Interplanetary understanding, Reading for pleasure
Labels: Fantasy, Get over yourself
From the NYT report on the Emmy Awards, interviewing David Shore, executive producer of House:
“There are awards for [popularity]; they’re called ratings,” Mr. Shore said. “There are really good shows on cable, and even if only 10 people are watching them, if they’re good they should be recognized.”
Labels: Fairy tales, Girls reading
Labels: Intercultural understanding
Labels: Don't Drink and Write, Girls reading, You are so going to hell
Labels: Authors, Coleen Salley, nonconformity, storytelling
Labels: Authors, Children's writers as sneaks, Get over yourself, TV
Labels: Get over yourself
Labels: Censorship, Gay Penguins, This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things, You are so going to hell
Labels: Notes from the Horn Book, Parents, Teaching
Whoever wrote that – whoever read that and believed it – needs to be reminded that without us, without our work, our talent, our willingness to put up with almost anything in the way of reduced royalties, humiliating treatment over jacket design, endless travels to this bookshop, that school, that library, anything to help our books reach the readers – without us there would be no editors, no designers, no marketing teams, no publicity people, no secretaries, no helpful personal assistants, no senior executives, no expense account lunches, no pension schemes, no company cars, no sales conferences in attractive places, no publishing industry whatsoever. Any of the people who do those other things could be replaced with very little difference. Take us away, and you’ve lost everything. The people who matter most? Authors and illustrators are the people who matter most, and no publisher with any sense of what’s right and true would have allowed that sentence, and that attitude, to stand.
Labels: Authors, bookselling, Covers, Parents, Philip Pullman
The fathers-of-the-groom walking up the aisle at Ethan and Becca's wedding in Sedona last Saturday. The monsoon took down the chuppah but we all soldiered on, and there was nary a drop during the ceremony. The officiant said that there was an ancient Sedona tradition (uh-huh) that rain on a wedding day was good luck, but come on--what else are they going to say?
Labels: Bullies, Censorship, Poetry

Labels: Bullies, Censorship, Ill-gotten gains, Librarianship, women in white