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GLIBA: A Weekend of Excitement
By Claire Kirch, Children's Bookshelf -- Publishers Weekly, 10/9/2008
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(From l.) Jerry Pinkney, Suzanne Collins and Laurie Halse Anderson, after GLIBA’s children’s book and author breakfast.
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Children’s books were very much on booksellers’s minds at last
weekend’s Great Lakes Independent Booksellers annual trade show, held
in Dearborn, Mich. Not only were booksellers from children’s bookstores
throughout the Great Lakes region out in force, but some general
booksellers were eager to stock up on “recession-proof” children’s
books, a strategic move in a part of the country that’s reeling from
rising unemployment and home foreclosures.
Though holiday picks like The Drummer Boy by Loren Long (Philomel, Oct.), The Moon Over Star by Dianna Hutts Aston and Jerry Pinkney (Dial, Oct.), What Dogs Want for Christmas by Kandy Radzinski (Sleeping Bear Press, Sept.) and God’s Dream
by Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Douglas Carlton (Candlewick, Sept.) were
hot titles at the show, several YA titles had booksellers buzzing,
especially Eon: Dragoneye Reborn by Alison Goodman (Viking, Dec.), Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson (S&S, Oct.), and The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins (Scholastic, Sept.).
“It’s a strong children’s list this fall,” Cynthia Compton, owner of
4 Kids Books in Indianapolis, noted, “It makes for a lot of excitement
among booksellers. But there’s also a lot of anxiety for booksellers
whose budgets are limited by the economy.”
The excitement started building on Friday, when GLIBA officially
kicked off with a book awards luncheon, which included Christopher Paul
Curtis receiving the children’s chapter book award for Elijah of Buxton (Scholastic), and Loren Long (illustrator) and Randall de Sève receiving the award for children’s picture book for Toy Boat
(Philomel). The excitement continued through Saturday’s trade show,
peaking Sunday morning, during a sold-out children’s book and author
breakfast, featuring Anderson, Collins and Pinkney. The three speakers
tied important events in their own lives to pivotal episodes in the
history of this country, which shaped them as adults and inspired their
work.
“We are all connected to one another, not just in this era, but
across the centuries,” Anderson said, explaining how her discovery that
her longtime “hero,” Benjamin Franklin, owned slaves inspired her to
write Chains, the story of Isabel, an African-American slave
during the American Revolution era, who spies on her
British-sympathizer owners for the rebels.
“Slavery is the elephant in our country’s living room,” Anderson
said, noting that 10 of the first 12 U.S. presidents owned slaves, who
comprised 20% of the U.S. population before the Civil War. “It won’t go
away until we acknowledge and deal with it.”
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Signing at GLIBA: Heather Henson and
David Small, author and illustrator of
That Book Woman (Atheneum, Oct.).
Photo: Tami Furlong.
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Collins also spoke of how acknowledging the mistakes of the past is
essential in order to move forward into the future. After recounting
anecdotes of growing up in a military family, and her ongoing
fascination with Roman gladiators, she described the impact that her
father’s time in Vietnam in the ’60s had had on her life and her
writing, including The Hunger Games, the tale of a group of teenagers in a dystopian society who must fight to the death in a reality TV show.
“I knew that if George of the Jungle could survive in the jungle, my
father could survive a year in Vietnam,” she recalls thinking at the
time. That is, until one day, she saw graphic war footage on TV:
“enough to be frightened” for her father.
“The subject of children and the effects of war and violence are
very close to my heart,” Collins said, “Given the policies of the
current administration, there can’t be enough books to educate people
about this.”
The final breakfast speaker, Jerry Pinkney, told how a book’s
language has to “excite” him, how he has to be able to “pull pieces”
from his own life experiences, in order to create
illustrations. The text of The Moon Over Star inspired
him, as it reminded him of his childhood and trying to make spaceships
out of the odds and ends in his father’s workshop. But the moon itself
also inspired him, as he recalled being invited by NASA in 1982 to
witness the Columbia space launch. And, finally, Pinkney said, he related to the African-American girl in The Moon Over Star
dreaming in 1969 of flying to the moon, because at 11 years old, he had
begun to dream that even he, “an African-American child” in 1950s-era
Philadelphia, could someday become an artist—an idea “planted” in him
by cartoonist Henry Liney, who had taken an interest in his work.
“As parents, teachers, and educators, we must understand the power
of the imagination and how much you can do with a little,” Pinkney told
the 250 booksellers at the breakfast.
� 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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