Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Happy Birthday!

 Happy 200th Birthday, Charles Dickens!!

Today is the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles John Huffam Dickens, who needs very little, if any introduction.  A Victorian writer who was well-known and well-read even during his lifetime, no small feat at the time, Dickens has remained popular to this day, and is regarded as one of the Great Writers of all time.

At his death at age 58, he had written many well-known novels, plays, serials, poetry and short story collections.  Many film adaptations and related works have come about since his death, and his life and works are even celebrated in several Dickens festivals around the world.
 
Check out the special treatment Dickens is receiving today on Google:

delaisse.blogspot.com
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Dickens
www.google.com

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Happy Birthday!

Happy Birthday to Bryan Collier, Illustrator, and Denise Fleming, Author/Illustrator!

Bryan Collier is best known for his unique illustrations of children's book biographies of famous African-American individuals, such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Rosa Parks and Muhammad Ali.  His work ranges from American historical figures (presidents, John Lennon) to Afro-centric characters.  His work is a beautiful mosaic of mixed media and color.







Denise Fleming is the author of many popular children's books, of which she is also the illustrator/artist.  From ABC books to books about her household cats, Denise enjoys the process she uses to make her characters vibrant.  Painstakingly processing her own dyed paper pulp and using layers to create her designs, she ensures that her artistry shows in every inch of her work.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Happy Birthday!

Edith Wharton (1862-1937)

Born into a wealthy family, Edith Wharton combined her intimate knowledge of privileged life and society with wit, sarcasm and psychoanalysis to create insightful stories of the upper class, and it's Depression-era decline.  Also known for her poetry and ghost stories, Wharton is perhaps best known today for The House of Mirth, Ethan Frome, and The Age of Innocence. She was also a designer with a love of travel, gardens and fine homes.  She designed an estate in Massachusetts, called The Mount, which is testament to her tasteful, classic design technique.













http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith_Wharton
http://womenwriters.net

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Happy Birthday!

Happy Birthday to my favorite master of the macabre!

Edgar Allan Poe (1809 - 1849) 
Poe is credited as being one of the first American writers of the short story, witing perhaps the first detective fiction (The Murders in the Rue Morgue) and even writing some of the earliest science fiction.  He earned a living solely by writing, unusual at the time, which was cause for much financial hardship and difficulty in his life.  

Poe wrote many now popular gothic short stories (The Pit and the Pendulum, The Tell-tale Heart, The Cask of Amontillado) and also wrote some well-known poetry, the most famous of which is The Raven.  He has been remembered historically, but has also been fictionalized in many stories and movies, the latest of which, The Raven, starring John Cusack, enlists the help of the fictionalized Poe in solving murders inspired by his stories.

It is difficult to believe that fewer than 10 people attended Poe's funeral at the time of his death.  He has been honored with elaborate funeral 'reenactments' and a grand gravesite marker, as well as yearly vigils by "The Poe Toaster", who yearly (from 1949 to 2009, the year of Poe's bicentennial) visited Poe's grave on his birthday, leaving 3 roses and cognac in his honor.  In honor of one of my favorite authors... Happy Birthday, Poe!!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/17/edgar-allan-poe-grave_n_1211688.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Allan_Poe
www.theravenmovie.com/
http://arieshouseofgreetingcards.com

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Happy Birthday!

Happy Birthday to...

Alan Alexander Milne (1882 - 1956)

Creator of Winnie-the-Pooh, and all things Hundred-Acre Wood.  In 1920, Christopher Robin Milne was born, and his toy bear, pig, donkey, tiger and kangaroo became the inspiration for the famous Pooh stories.  A. A. Milne wrote plays, a novel, an autobiography, and political nonfiction, however, he is best known for the creation of these special children's stories.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Happy Birthday!

Happy Birthday to
 
Jack London (1876-1916)
Author, best known for Call of the Wild and White Fang

 
John Singer Sargent (1856-1925)
Artist known for his soft, lush, Edwardian portraits
 
 


Friday, January 6, 2012

On the Menu

     I have just finished reading the first book of The Books of Elsewhere series, The Shadows.  It is the story of Olive, a girl who moves into an old Victorian house with all the trimmings of the original owners, a very unique personality and many secrets.  Bearing several striking initial similarities to Coraline by Neil Gaiman (a story which I adore!), the book pulled me in and kept my attention, particularly near the end, where excitement and potential peril lurked in every old, immovable painting in the house.  With the help of some very unique residents of the house, Olive strives through danger, in order to stake her family's claim on the house and make it a place of her own.

     I loved the book, and am quite frustrated that I read the first several months before the second book comes out.  Scheduled for release in June 2012, Spellbound continues Olive's story as she and a new neighbor friend seek a spellbook hidden somewhere in the old house.  I am looking forward to this release very much, and hope to maybe procure a copy at one of the Spring library conventions!

     As a follow up to the fantastical fantasy of The Shadows, I have decided to break from my contemporary fiction fixation and take a step back with an old classic, Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe.  The copy I am currently reading (not the same as pictured above) is a much-abridged version of the story, adapted for a young audience.  Striving to read selections from my school library in order to make very specific recommendations, I anticipate this version to only take a few days to read.  Cliff's Notes versions are never a bad thing, are they?  :)  With brevity, comes introduction.  Perhaps I will follow up with "the real thing" once this pocket version is complete.
     An obsessive audio-book listener,  I must voraciously move from one to another.  The current channeling of my obsession is Inkspell, the follow-up to the well-known Inkheart by Cornelia Funke.  Although this title follows Meggie, Mo and Resa, along with other favorites (Dustfinger, Farid, Fenoglio) and not-so-favorites (Basta, Mortola) that were introduced in the first book, and although the prose is often as poetic as Fenoglio's lyric ink-weaving, the plot in this one seems to be a bit more overbearing, with the introduction of an almost confusing amount of new characters, and a plot that more hops around than twists.  I am enjoying the audio version though, very much, as it is narrated by Brendan Frasier, who lends a unique tone, accent, timbre and rate to each character's voice.  It is entertaining while driving or working without distraction, but in order to be appreciated, should be enjoyed without much activity going on.  Otherwise, the intricacies of world-jumping and plot twisting would be as confusing as reading the story in Funke's native Deutsch.


MIA

Well, I have inexplicably absent for several months now, but am happy to announce that in early November, I started work as a School Library Media Specialist for a PK-5 school in Dallas.  I am so happy to finally be doing what I truly want to do... sharing my love of literature, reading and discovery with children!  I have been thrilled to find that the students are excited to visit the library, have a hunger for books and share their excitement with their friends!  

There have been challenges.  Primarily, my school is sharing space with a host campus, and in order to make the move to a smaller space, the collection was drastically weeded.  Due to the excitement and interest of students, I was quickly able to build a 'wish list' and develop a rather large collection to add to what we have.  Luckily, the time for making purchases had not been shut off for me (having arrived late in the school year), and I hope to bring a treasure of new items to my school!

Students will soon have much greater access to many of their requested items, such as the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, Pinkalicious, etc., Bone and other graphic novels, many new fiction and non-fiction, biographies and reference, as well as DVDs like The Magic School Bus and Bill Nye the Science Guy.  Thank goodness for funding to bring treasures to students who are so anxious to discover and share!  

That is what this is all about!