Kirkus is a pretty cool website that looks at books for all sorts of people, in all sorts of genres, as well as at iPad book apps. And guess what it turned its reviewing eyes to this week? A "brisk and hilarious tale" about "A boastful young sleuth [who] obliviously aids a group of disguised dinosaurs".That's right, Dinos in Distress. Icing on the cake, our Dinos got a Kirkus Star, which they award(or so they themselves say) to "Books of Exceptional Merit".
It would have been extra nice for the writer (yours truly) and the illustrator (Claire Chavenaud) to be credited, but that info might appear along the reivew in the March print edition, right?
Meanwhile, I shall let you enjoy the review in full while I go and buy myself some wellies. And a submarine.
Wednesday, 12 February 2014
Friday, 7 February 2014
Carnegie and Greenaway long, long lists
The Guardian have the Greenaway nominees in pictures (thanks, guys!) and the Telegraph will run you through the fiction selected for the Carnegie. It has to be said that Ireland is very well represented in the Greenaway with the likes of Yasmeen Ismail, Malachy Doyle, Oliver Jeffers and PJ Lynch. David Almond and Jon Klassen appear twice on the list(s). Well done all!
Here goes:
2014 CILIP CARNEGIE MEDAL LONGLIST:
• The Boy Who Swam with Piranhas by David Almond (Walker Books)
• All the Truth That’s in Me by Julie Berry (Templar)
• The Bunker Diary by Kevin Brooks (Penguin)
• The Child's Elephant by Rachel Campbell-Johnston (David Fickling Books)
• Ghost Hawk by Susan Cooper (Bodley Head)
• After Tomorrow by Gillian Cross (Oxford University Press)
• Heroic by Phil Earle (Penguin)
• Blood Family by Anne Fine (Doubleday Children’s Books)
• Infinite Sky by CJ Flood (Simon & Schuster Children’s Books)
• Charm and Strange by Stephanie Kuehn (Electric Monkey)
• Monkey Wars by Richard Kurti (Walker Books)
• Hostage Three by Nick Lake (Bloomsbury Children’s Books)
• The Positively Last Performance by Geraldine McCaughrean (Oxford University Press)
• Brock by Anthony McGowan (Barrington Stoke)
• Binny for Short by Hilary McKay (Hodder Children’s Books)
• Far Far Away by Tom McNeal (Jonathan Cape)
• Ketchup Clouds by Annabel Pitcher (Indigo)
• Rooftoppers by Katherine Rundell (Faber & Faber)
• Liar and Spy by Rebecca Stead (Andersen Press)
• The Wall by William Sutcliffe (Bloomsbury)
2014 CILIP KATE GREENAWAY MEDAL
• One Gorilla: A Counting Book by Anthony Browne (Walker Books)
• Open Very Carefully by Nicola O'Byrne (illustrator) and Nick Bromley (author) (Nosy Crow)
• The Paper Dolls by Rebecca Cobb (illustrator) and Julia Donaldson (author)(Macmillan Children's Books)
• Weasels by Elys Dolan (Nosy Crow)
• Puss Jekyll Cat Hyde by Joyce Dunbar (illustrator) and Jill Barton (author) (Frances Lincoln Children's Books)
• Time for Bed, Fred! by Yasmeen Ismail (Bloomsbury Children’s Books)
• The Day the Crayons Quit by Oliver Jeffers (illustrator) and Drew Daywalt (author) (HarperCollins Children's Books)
• The Dark by Jon Klassen (illustrator) and Lemony Snicket (author) (Orchard Books)
• This is Not My Hat by Jon Klassen (Walker Books)
• Where My Wellies Take Me by Olivia Lomenech Gill (illustrator) and Clare and Michael Morpurgo (authors)(Templar)
• Mysterious Traveller by P. J Lynch (illustrator) and Mal Peet and Elspeth Graham (authors) (Walker Books)
• Mouse Bird Snake Wolf by David McKean (illustrator) and David Almond (author) (Walker Books)
• The Crocodile Who Didn't Like Water by Gemma Merino (Macmillan Children's Books)
• The Journey Home by Frann Preston-Gannon (Pavilion Children's Books)
• Abigail by Catherine Rayner (Tiger Tales)
• The Lemur's Tale by Ophelia Redpath (Templar)
• Oliver by Birgitta Sif (Walker Books)
• Jemmy Button by Jennifer Uman and Valerio Vidali (illustrators) and Alix Barzelay (author) (Templar)
• Too Noisy! by Ed Vere (illustrator) and Malachy Doyle (author) (Walker Books)
• Sidney, Stella and the Moon by Emma Yarlett (Templar)
Wednesday, 5 February 2014
No.Mi.Nate. The New Laureate na nÓg needs to hear from you!
It's everywhere, even on the Irish Times website. You have another 10 days to put in your nominations for the next Irish children's laureate: writers, illustrators and high achievers who can do both, take your pick. The 'only' requirements are that your nominees are Irish OR living permanently in Ireland, AND that they are really cool and madly talented people with an established body of work (one book won't do it, sorry).
This year, for the first time, you, yes YOU, are invited to give your input. Children's and class nominations are especially welcome, so go on, grab your nearest youth, put your thinking caps on, download the form and nominate!
You have until Saturday 15 February 5pm. More info here.
This year, for the first time, you, yes YOU, are invited to give your input. Children's and class nominations are especially welcome, so go on, grab your nearest youth, put your thinking caps on, download the form and nominate!
You have until Saturday 15 February 5pm. More info here.
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