The
clock is ticking down to tomorrow Tuesday, April 2, which happens to be International Children’s Book Day.
The
April date traditionally commemorates the birth date of the first author to
claim my heart, Hans Christian Andersen.
This
year’s ICBD official sponsorship was awarded to USBBY (the United States Board
on Books for Young People) which serves as the U.S. national section of IBBY (the
International Board on Books for Young People) which promotes international
understanding and good will through
books for children and adolescents.
Spreading
the joy of books around the world is easy and doable.
Just
check out USBBY’s blog for easy-to-replicate programs for readers, writers,
teachers and parents.
The
website also offers links to USBBY’S 2013 Outstanding International Books List
which recognizes books originally published outside the U.S. and now available
from U.S. publishers.
Many of the list’s books focus on
international themes, reflecting shared commonalities of youth and a diversity
of experiences all around the world.
And FYI: the 10th IBBY Regional Conference “BookJoy Around the World” comes to St. Louis October 18th
through 20th.
Australian author Mem Fox offers the
Briley Lecture. US and International
children’s book creators, including Ashley Bryan and Pat Mora, extend the
celebration.
International children’s books were again
front and center at last week’s Bologna Children’s Book Fair.
Publishers Weekly offered full coverage plus photos of this 50th anniversary
event, including the emphasis on middle grade and realistic fiction, “firsts,”
insights from agents, editors, publishers and children’s book creators and the awarding
of the international Astrid Lindgren Prize to Argentinian author, illustrator and musician
Isol for writing picture books "from the eye level of a child.”
Writing under the pen name of Marisol Misenta, Isol created more than a dozen books for children, including La bella Griselda, It’s Useful to Have a Duck, Petit, the Monster and Nocturne: Dream Recipes. She was
chosen from a field of 207 nominated candidates from 67 countries.
International children’s book creators also took front
and center this past weekend in Paris at the first-ever internatonal SCBWI Europolitan
Conference, “Vive la Creativite.”
Check out the SCBWIEUROCON blog for updates from
participants and
their tweets too. The Conference hashtag
is #SCBWIEuroCon.
Just work your way down our blog page’s
right-hand border.
And, be sure to return Wednesday to try your hand at our Wednesday
Writing Workout, created by Dutch TeachingAuthor Mina Witteman,
SCBWI-Netherlands Regional Advisor
and a
co-organizer of Eurocon.
Hint, hint: Mina recently attended the Grimm
Symposium in the Efteling Fairytale Forest in the Netherlands which celebrated
200 years of Grimm fairytales.
Book Joy to all!
And, Happy Birthday, Mr. Andersen!
Esther Hershenhorn
1 comment:
Thanks, Esther. I'd forgotten that. I will post to my groups.
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