May 18, 2013

Mother and Daughter Book Launch (Burlington, Ontario)


A wonderful new twist for a book launch!


Mother and Daughter authors

Sylvia McNicoll and J. M. Filipowicz

invite you to the launch of their new books


Dying to Go Viral
by Sylvia McNicoll
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
978-1554552719
232 pp.
Wardroids
by J. M. Filipowicz
Double Dragon eBooks
978-1771150941
165 pp.
 
on 

June 9, 2013

 2 p.m.

at

A Different Drummer Bookstore
513 Locust Street
Burlington, Ontario 

(905) 639-0925



What you can expect to do:
• Listen to two unique perspectives on YA vs Sci Fi
• Enjoy Mars bars squares and refreshments
• Pick up autographed first editions of 
Sylvia McNicoll's Dying to go Viral 
and 
J. M. Filipowicz's Wardroids

                                                                 

May 17, 2013

2013 Forest of Reading winners announced at Festival of Trees

Of course, the winners of the Ontario Library Association's Forest of Reading's book awards are listed on my CanLit for LittleCanadians: Awards page, but the news is too big not to share it on my main page.  It's just too fantastic!

After two glorious days of great weather, words and winning, young readers in Ontario learned the results of their reading and voting for the Forest of Reading award programs, a readers' choice award.  On May 15 and May 16, at the Festival of Trees event at Toronto's Harbourfront, young readers celebrated their reading accomplishments, shared the joy of reading great youngCanLit, played games for books, met numerous authors and illustrators, and enthusiastically learned their selections for the favourite books in each program. And authors, illustrators and publishers enjoyed the well-deserved and uproarious cheers and recognition from fans of fantastic youngCanLit.

It's impossible to name all those who made this reading program and the Festival of Trees such a success but I will try.  And, though I've said it before, I'll say it again and again and again,
congratulations to:
• the readers on their amazing selections from exemplary lists of Canadian literature for young people;
• the countless volunteers and OLA staff (Meredith Tutching directing at the helm) who ensure that Ontario young people read the best titles and who help bring the Festival of Trees to fruition (pun intended);
• the authors and illustrators honoured with Forest of Reading nominations;
• the authors and illustrators who enjoyed the undeniable adoration of thousands of reading fans;
• the publishers who are recognizing the importance of publishing and promoting children's and YA literature in Canada; and
• the winners and honourees in each reading program. 

Here are the winners and honour books for each reading program:



Blue Spruce

WINNER
Kate and Pippin: An Unlikely Love Story
by Martin Springett
Illustrated by Isobel Springett
Puffin Canada/Pengiun Group



HONOUR BOOKS

Splinters
by Kevin Sylvester
Tundra Books
 




 
 
Don't Laugh at Giraffe
by Rebecca Bender
Pajama Press
  









Silver Birch EXPRESS

   WINNER
Margaret and the Moth Tree
by Brit Trogen & Kari Trogen
Kids Can Press


HONOUR BOOKS

Dalen & Gole: Scandal in Port Angus
by Mike Deas
Orca
  




Harry Houdini: The Legend of the World's Greatest Escape Artist
by Janice Weaver
Illustrated by Chris Lane
Abrams Books for Young Readers/ABRAMS











Silver Birch FICTION

 WINNER
Making Bombs For Hitler
by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch
Scholastic Canada


HONOUR BOOKS

Missing
by Becky Citra
Orca Book Publisher







 
A Tinfoil Sky
by Cyndi Sand-Eveland
Tundra Books











Silver Birch NON-FICTION

WINNER



No Shelter Here: Making the World a Kinder Place for Dogs
by Rob Laidlaw
Pajama Press

HONOUR BOOKS


50 Underwear Questions: A Bare-All History
by Tanya Lloyd Kyi
Illustrated by Ross Kinnaird
Annick Press 







Case Files: 40 Murders and Mysteries Solved by Science
by Larry Verstraete
Scholastic Canada








 
Le prix Peuplier

            Lauréat               



Le zoo de Yayaho
par Geneviève Lemieux
Illustré par Bruno St-Aubin
Bayard Canada Livres inc.



                              HONOUR BOOKS                                        

Salto: L'ultime défi
par Pierre Labrie
Illustré par Tristan Demers
Boomerang éditeur jeunesse inc.




 

Prince Olivier et le dragon
par Caroline Merola
Les éditions Imagine












Le Prix Tamarac

                   Lauréat


Le mystère des jumelles Barnes
par Carole Tremblay
Bayard Canada Livres 


HONOUR BOOKS

Hackerboy
par Julie Champagne
Bayard Canada Livres 





Biodôme: Dans le sens du poil
par Frédéric Antoine
Illustré par Yohann Morin
Boomerang éditeur jeunesse











Le Prix Tamarac EXPRESS

                   Lauréat


Billy Stuart: 1. Les Zintrépides
par Alain M. Bergeron
Illustré par Sampar
Éditions Michel Quintin


HONOUR BOOKS

Du soccer extrême
par François Gravel
Illustré par Philippe Germain
Les éditions FouLire inc.





Ziiip Sur Terre!
par Johanne Mercier
Illustré par Gabrielle Grimard
Les éditions FouLire inc.











Red Maple Fiction

WINNER
 
The Vindico
by Wesley King
G.P. Putnam's Sons/Penguin Group


HONOUR BOOKS

This Dark Endeavour
by Kenneth Oppel
HarperCollins
The Vampire Stalker
by Allison Van Diepen
Point/Scholastic










Red Maple Non-Fiction

WINNER

Real Justice: Fourteen And Sentenced To Death
by Bill Swan
James Lorimer & Company


HONOUR BOOKs

Last Airlift: A Vietnamese Orphan's Rescue from War
by Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch
Pajama Press






Running To Extremes: Ray Zahab's Amazing Ultramarathon Journey
by Steve Pitt with Ray Zahab
Puffin Canada/Penguin Group











White Pine FICTION

WINNER
Dark Inside
by Jeyn Roberts
Simon & Schuster BFYR/Simon & Schuster

HONOUR BOOKS

All Good Children
by Catherine Austen
Orca Book Publishers








Witchlanders
by Lena Coakley
Atheneum Books For Young Readers/Simon & Schuster









                                                                                                                
Thrilling news for all authors, illustrators and publishers!

Enjoyed all the more for being selected 
by young Canadian readers!

Congratulations to everyone!

Book Launch: Outcast by Adrienne Kress (Toronto)

Get your best 1950's gear on

and head to

The Dominion Pub
500 Queen Street East
Toronto

on June 6, 2013
for 7 p.m.

to help launch

the newest young adult book

Outcast
Diversion Books
978-1-62681061-7
283 pp.
June, 2013

from

author Adrienne Kress

whose other books include

The Friday Society (Dial, 2012)
Alex and the Ironic Gentleman (Scholastic Canada, 2007)
Timothy and the Dragon's Gate (Scholastic Canada, 2010)

Outcast focuses on 16-year-old Riley Carver whose community has been living in fear for six years since "angels" starting coming down from the skies and taking people.  When one shows up in her backyard, she shoots him with her mother's shotgun.  But, instead of a dead body, she gets a really hot, living guy who thinks it's 1956. (Details courtesy of goodreads.com)

Dress up, 
go to the Launch, 
have some great Fun
 and 
get the Book!

May 14, 2013

Namesake

by Sue MacLeod
Pajama Press
978-1927485293
232 pp.
Ages 12+
May 1, 2013

In current-day Halifax, teen Jane Grey and fellow classmates in her Advanced Placement History are embarking on their research projects and it would seem obvious that she would focus on her Namesake, Lady Jane Grey.

Just a bit of a history lesson for those unfamiliar with the Nine Days Queen.  In 1553, due to the machinations of her parents and the Duke of Northumberland, Lady Jane Grey was made heir to the King of England, Edward VI.  She had already wed the son of the Duke of Northumberland, so when Edward VI passed, the Duke declared Lady Jane to be Queen of England, sure that he could control the throne through her.   However, according to succession, Lady Jane's cousin Mary, King Edward VI's half-sister and King Henry VIII's daughter, would be next Queen.  Imprisoned until the arrival of soon-to-be Queen Mary I, Lady Jane was hopeful of a pardon because becoming Queen had never been her intention.  However, with her parents and the Duke playing the odds with her against Mary, and because her strong belief in her Protestant faith conflicted with Mary's Catholicism, a pardon was not granted and Lady Jane was executed.

In the twenty-first century, Jane discovers a small book called Booke of Prayre while unpacking her backpack of library books.  Reading aloud from it, Jane is transported mysteriously to the environs of the Tower of London, eavesdropping on two women, Mistress Tilney and Mistress Ellen gossiping about "our lady." Repeated visits to 1553 has Jane making the acquaintance of Lady Jane Grey and learning of her fate, her hopes, her regrets and her position on her faith.  Knowing what historically happened to Lady Jane, Jane wonders about her purpose in being sent back.  Was she to help the Lady convert to Catholicism?  Was she to help Lady Grey escape? Or was she there simply to provide her with companionship?

Dealing with her own tenuous situation at home, Jane is sympathetic to Lady Jane's dilemma, recognizing the similarity in the extent of their dire circumstances and inability to change them.  Since the death of her father, Jane has come to recognize that her mother Analise works in one of three modes: Mode One is Single Mother as Hero; Mode Two is the Nothing mode; and Mode Three is Hell.  Though a competent English professor, Analise harbours much anger related to her husband's death, and deals with it using alcohol which just exacerbates her mood swings and colours her interactions with Jane.  Not surprising that Jane has concerns when her history group must meet at eachother's homes for study and editing sessions.  And with best friend Megan hanging out with the tactless Crisco and wrapped up in a boyfriend situation, Jane is feeling more and more isolated and unable to find support.  For Jane, slipping back into 1553 gives her an opportunity to exert some control.

While Namesake may be initially seen as a standard time-slip novel, with a contemporary character going back in time to learn something which she could apply to her own life, the book goes beyond this by Jane trying to take an active role in Lady Jane's situation, even to the point of altering history if need be.  Jane educates Lady Jane on the vernacular and popular culture of her Halifax and Canada.  And while Lady Jane does begin to try out some of her new vocabulary, she uses it as a foreign language, not dropping the occasional work into her own speech.  Sue MacLeod has given Lady Jane a voice so authentic that her use of newly-acquired vocabulary provides for some much-needed humour.  Her voice is true and melodic, never wavering from that of a sixteenth-century young woman.

I am especially pleased by the direction the author takes Jane's time slip, allowing for the two young women, just sixteen, to share their lives and their stories, and Jane anticipating bringing Lady Jane back with her.  But, when Lady Jane does slip into Jane's time, it spurs a new relationship between Jane and her neighbour, the elderly woman she has nicknamed Mrs. Lynde (à la Green Gables), who surprisingly becomes her salvation.

The history is true, the twists unique and the touches of humour and romance are heart-warming. And Namesake still delivers an open ending that takes the reader to a more hopeful situation than Lady Jane's true horrific ending.