Monday, April 29, 2013

Remembering E. L. Konigsburg

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“The adventure is over. Everything gets over, and nothing is ever enough. Except the part you carry with you. It's the same as going on a vacation. Some people spend all their time on a vacation taking pictures so that when they get home they can show their friends evidence that they had a good time. They don't pause to let the vacation enter inside of them and take that home.”
― E.L. Konigsburg, From The Mixed Up Files Of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler


My husband's favorite childhood book is From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. He says the story made him want to run away and live in a museum. I had a different favorite - a book that my younger sister and I read over and over called Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth, the story of two very different girls, one of whom purports to be a witch, and who is a really good friend. E. L. Konigsburg was that rare writer whose books defied categorization by gender or age group, and that explains their long-running mass appeal. She went on to write The View from Saturday about a school Academic Bowl which was on all the gifted book lists when my children were in grade school in the 1990s - such a long career for a truly talented writer!


From NYICD Blog
Konigsburg was the only person to ever win two Newbery awards in the same year, recieving the Newbery honor (honorable mention) for her first manuscript, Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth, and the Newbery Medal for her second, From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler.

She was perhaps best known for the latter work, in which a brother and sister run away from their suburban home and take up residence in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (the Met) in New York City. It is told from the point of view of the 82-year-old wealthy and eccentric Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, who is dictating the story to her attorney.

The story inspired a scene in the wonderful Wes Anderson film The Royal Tenenbaums during which siblings Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow) and Richie Tanenbaum (Luke Wilson) also run away to live in the Met. In 1997, 29 years after her initial award, Konigsburg would again win the Newbery Medal for her story The View from Saturday. After winning the award, marking the longest gap between wins for any author, she told The Associated Press in an interview: "The award represents a kind of validation that I find most gratifying."

From the Detroit News
Konigsburg, better known to millions of young readers as E.L. Konigsburg, died April 19 in Falls Church, Va., after suffering a stroke. She was 83. In "Author Talk," a book edited by Leonard Marcus, Konigsburg said her books were based on what she perceived as a missing type of children's literature.
As a girl, she said, "I never found any characters in books whose lives resembled those of my classmates, my family and me. Years later, this made me want to write for children about things as they are — about people and places that my own children would recognize as real." In "Mixed-up Files," Konigsburg tells what happens when Claudia and Jamie decide to run away from their suburban Connecticut home and hide out in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Once there, the children make themselves at home — even sleeping on a historic bed — solve an art mystery, but most importantly discover truths about themselves.


Thursday, April 18, 2013

Poetry Passion ~ Green Spring

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Daffodowndilly

She wore her yellow sun-bonnet,
She wore her greenest gown;
She turned to the south wind
And curtsied up and down.
She turned to the sunlight
And shook her yellow head,
And whispered to her neighbour:
"Winter is dead."

~ A.A. Milne








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[in Just-]

in Just-
spring          when the world is mud-
luscious the little
lame balloonman

whistles          far          and wee

and eddieandbill come
running from marbles and
piracies and it's
spring



when the world is puddle-wonderful

the queer
old balloonman whistles
far          and             wee
and bettyandisbel come dancing

from hop-scotch and jump-rope and

it's
spring
and

         the

                  goat-footed

balloonMan          whistles
far
and
wee 
~ by E. E. Cummings


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Spring Plowing

West of Omaha the freshly plowed fields
steam in the night like lakes.
The smell of the earth floods over the roads.
The field mice are moving their nests
to the higher ground of fence rows,
the old among them crying out to the owls
to take them all. The paths in the grass
are loud with the squeak of their carts.
They keep their lanterns covered.

~ Ted Kooser


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Spring Storm

He comes gusting out of the house,
the screen door a thunderclap behind him.

He moves like a black cloud
over the lawn and---stops.

A hand in his mind grabs
a purple crayon of anger
and messes the clean sky.

He sits on the steps, his eye drawing
a mustache on the face in the tree.

As his weather clears,
his rage dripping away,

wisecracks and wonderment
spring up like dandelions.

~ Jim Wayne Miller



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Spring

Nothing is so beautiful as Spring –
When weeds, in wheels, shoot long and lovely and lush;
Thrush’s eggs look little low heavens, and thrush
Through the echoing timber does so rinse and wring
The ear, it strikes like lightnings to hear him sing;
The glassy peartree leaves and blooms, they brush
The descending blue; that blue is all in a rush
With richness; the racing lambs too have fair their fling.

What is all this juice and all this joy?
A strain of the earth’s sweet being in the beginning
In Eden garden. – Have, get, before it cloy,
Before it cloud, Christ, lord, and sour with sinning,
Innocent mind and Mayday in girl and boy,
Most, O maid’s child, thy choice and worthy the winning.

~ Gerard Manley Hopkins

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Amazon Purchases the Review Site GoodReads

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Giant Amazon has bought the reader-recommendation site Goodreads:



From Goodreads Owner Otis Chandler:
Today I'm really happy to announce a new milestone for Goodreads: We are joining the Amazon family. We truly could not think of a more perfect partner for Goodreads as we both share a love of books and an appreciation for the authors who write them. We also both love to invent products and services that touch millions of people.

I'm excited about this for three reasons:

1. With the reach and resources of Amazon, Goodreads can introduce more readers to our vibrant community of book lovers and create an even better experience for our members.
2. Our members have been asking us to bring the Goodreads experience to an e-reader for a long time. Now we're looking forward to bringing Goodreads to the most popular e-reader in the world, Kindle, and further reinventing what reading can be.
3. Amazon supports us continuing to grow our vision as an independent entity, under the Goodreads brand and with our unique culture.

It's important to be clear that Goodreads and the awesome team behind it are not going away. Goodreads will continue to be the wonderful community that we all cherish. We plan to continue offering you everything that you love about the site—the ability to track what you read, discover great books, discuss and share them with fellow book lovers, and connect directly with your favorite authors—and your reviews and ratings will remain here on Goodreads. And it's incredibly important to us that we remain a home for all types of readers, no matter if you read on paper, audio, digitally, from scrolls, or even stone tablets.

For all of you Kindle readers, there's obviously an extra bonus in this announcement. You've asked us for a long time to be able to integrate your Kindle and Goodreads experiences. Making that option a reality is one of our top priorities.

(More at Link)

Publisher's Weekly
Amazon has acquired Goodreads.com, a Web site featuring user-generated reviews of books. The purchase comes amid mounting rumors that Goodreads, which CEO Otis Chandler launched in 2007, might start selling books directly from its site.

. . . Goodreads will remain headquartered in San Francisco. The site currently has over 16 million members, averages 37 million unique visitors a month, and has over 30,000 book clubs.

When asked how Goodreads would be integrated into Amazon, and the all-important question of how, and when, a retail component might be rolled into the site--currently users can buy books through a host of third party retailers, including Amazon--both Chandler and Russ Grandinetti, Amazon v-p, Kindle content, skirted the subject. When pressed, Chandler said: "We don't have any plans to change anything about the buy links in the short term, but in the long term we're going to do what's best for our users."

The merger could be a business opportunity for rival sites to pick up business from booksellers who have to go elsewhere now that Amazon controls Goodreads. For instance LibraryThing founder Tim Spalding wrote:
With Amazon in the drivers’ seat, you can bet that B&N, Kobo and Indies are going to drop and be dropped by Goodreads like a hot potato. If any non-Amazon “buy” buttons remain, they’re going to be buried deep. And B&N is hardly going to encourage people to use Goodreads now that every item of data Goodreads get goes to build Amazon and the Kindle features Goodreads is promising. In short, we gained a lot of friends today.

More from Tim Spalding Here.

The blog Book Riot has posted a list of other review sites where disgruntled members could land.
12 Alternatives to Goodreads from Book Riot

Basically, the idea of Amazon swallowing up what some people saw as an intellectual haven fostered nervousness and some anger among the Bibliophiles. Let's just say they weren't that impressed.





A Goodreads Spoiled: All Your Books Are Belong To Amazon
~ Headline by Brian Ford on ReadWrite

Amazon purchase of Goodreads stuns book industry...many readers and authors reacted negatively to the news. American writers' organisation the Authors' Guild called the acquisition a "truly devastating act of vertical integration" which meant that "Amazon's control of online bookselling approaches the insurmountable". Bestselling legal thriller author Scott Turow, president of the Guild, said it was "a textbook example of how modern internet monopolies can be built".
~ Guardian UK

Amazon’s acquisition of Goodreads will ... enhance the market position of the market’s largest player. If Amazon owns Goodreads, then no other book retailer does. It seems entirely possible that some other book retailer could have combined with Goodreads to offer Amazon some serious competition. If this is a done deal, we’ll never know.
~ Joel Waldfogel on Digitopoly








Seventy Years of The Little Prince

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Houghton Mifflin Harcourt has created several new editions of Antoine de Saint-Exupery's classic The Little Prince to celebrate 70 years of publishing the book in the United States.

From Publisher's Weekly
Born in Lyons, France, Saint-Exupéry wrote The Little Prince while living in the U.S. during a two-year, self-imposed exile from the Nazi occupation of his home country. A year after the book’s publication, the author disappeared over the Mediterranean while flying a reconnaissance mission for his French air squadron. He left behind a legacy that included eight additional books, among them Southern Mail, Night Flight, and Wind, Sand, and Stars.


. . . Released March 5, The Little Prince 70th Anniversary Gift Set packages a hardcover with a CD featuring actor Viggo Mortensen reading the unabridged text of Richard Howard’s 2000 translation from the French. A code included on the CD case enables visitors to the book’s Web site to download the narration onto computers and MP3 players. Other features of the site include a widget containing quotes from the classic and a clip of Mortensen’s recording.




. . . The Little Prince Paperback, also published on March 5, includes Saint-Exupéry’s original full-color art, a foreword by Wicked author Gregory Maguire, a reader’s guide, and a Common Core exemplar guide. This edition targets the book to the YA audience for the first time...





. . . Due out on April 16, The Little Prince Graphic Novel
is a new edition of Sfar’s adaptation, which has sold more than 500,000 copies since its 2010 publication in a jacketed hardcover format. “Joann Sfar is an incredibly talented artist and storyteller,” says (Editor Cynthia) Platt. “Though his original graphic novel found a large readership, with this more affordable paper-over-board edition, we hope to deepen its audience.”


Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Six Quotes from Bridget Jones's Diary



Some of my favorite quotes from Bridget Jones's Diary: A Novel
by Helen Fielding, in no particular order.
And I love the movie, too! :)

~~~~~~~~~~

It is a truth universally acknowledged that as soon as one part of your life starts looking up, another falls to pieces.

~~~~~~~~~~

As women glide from their twenties to thirties, Shazzer argues, the balance of power subtly shifts. Even the most outrageous minxes lose their nerve, wrestling with the first twinges of existential angst: fears of dying alone and being found three weeks later half-eaten by an Alsatian.

~~~~~~~~~~

“It struck me as pretty ridiculous to be called Mr. Darcy and to stand on your own looking snooty at a party. It's like being called Heathcliff and insisting on spending the entire evening in the garden, shouting "Cathy" and banging your head against a tree.”

~~~~~~~~~~

Resolution number one: Obviously will lose twenty pounds. Number two: Always put last night's panties in the laundry basket. Equally important, will find sensible boyfriend to go out with and not continue to form romantic attachments to any of the following: alcoholics, workaholics, commitment phobic's, peeping toms, megalomaniacs, emotional fuckwits or perverts. And especially will not fantasize about a particular person who embodies all these things”

~~~~~~~~~~

Being a woman is worse than being a farmer there is so much harvesting and crop spraying to be done: legs to be waxed, underarms shaved, eyebrows plucked, feet pumiced, skin exfoliated and moisturised, spots cleansed, roots dyed, eyelashes tinted, nails filed, cellulite massaged, stomach muscles exercised.


~~~~~~~~~~


Oh God. valentine's Day tomorrow. Why? Why? Why is (the) entire world geared to make people not involved in romance feel stupid when everyone knows romance does not work anyway. Look at (the) royal family. Look at Mum and Dad.”

~~~~~~~~~~



Bookish Pics


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SteamPunk Mini-Book from Saimba


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Cozy Kid's Nook From ooh_food on Flickr

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Book Club I Font from Bygg Studios

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From The Magic Forest Tumblr


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"Literary Devices" by Grant Snider

Scholastic Unveils New Harry Potter Cover

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Here is the new cover and I love the way Diagon Alley looks with the textured cobblestones, candles, and crooked buildings of ancient age, but I don't quite understand the two people with rabbit ears and faces. After quite a bit of discussion on Harry Potter Network, we decided that the rabbit people are supposed to be Goblins from Gringotts, even though it never says in the books or on Pottermore that they have pointy ears. Yet JKR made a drawing from HP and the Sorcerer's Stone that showed a goblin with pointed ears, and we know she was involved with the way they appear in the movies. In the books, it is actually House Elves that have pointed large "bat-like" ears, but maybe all these little people are connected in some way.

The new artist, Kazu Kibuishi, has done several interviews:


From Publisher's Weekly:
The new artwork is by Kazu Kibuishi ... creator of the bestselling graphic novel series Amulet (Scholastic/Graphix). “Initially I didn’t want to see it done,” Kibuishi told PW, “because I love the original covers so much. I’m a huge fan. But after thinking about it for a while, I figured if someone were going to do it, I should try it.”
. . . Kibuishi believes he may have it a bit easier than Mary GrandPré, the artist who created the original U.S. covers for the Harry Potter books. “I have the advantage of seeing the books in historical context,” Kibuishi says. However, he notes that he has put pressure on himself, wanting to live up to GrandPré’s example. “I’ve never worked so hard on single images in my life!” he says. “I’m an author as well and I know how much work I put into my own covers, so I thought ‘this [the Harry Potter project] won’t be bad.’ But when I came to do it, I realized how much more this project meant to me. I want to get it right.”


Via Snitchseeker

What was your inspiration for the new cover for ‘Sorcerer's Stone’?
Kibuishi: That one was the clearest cover for me to do. It probably best signifies the idea of Harry becoming a new perennial classic. I feel like over time [Harry Potter] is going to be looked at like we look at a Dickens novel or a Wells novel. I wanted to give the covers that classic look. It was like I was doing almost a kind of fan art of Harry Potter, but done in the style of classic literature. The initial cover was very Dickens. I was thinking of “Great Expectations” or “A Christmas Carol.” I have a film background and I’m a big fan of movie poster. It’s probably reflective of some of my favorite movie posters as well.

Did you use artist Mary GrandPre’s work as a jumping off point?
Kibuishi: Her work stands alone in its own way. They are like icons….As I said, I came at it as more as an art historian. Taking a look at how we have sort of accepted Harry into our culture and trying to invent it for a new generation of readers. I tried to sever as many ties as I could and try to think about it from a completely fresh perspective while paying respect to the work that came before.
I made stylistic tributes to Mary’s work. There are little elements and flourishes that I probably wouldn’t have done myself, but they’re so subtle, in the technique that I’m not sure someone would notice.

~~~ More At Link . . .