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-- Publishers Weekly, 8/2/2007

Children's Bookshelf
August 2, 2007
 
In The News
Book News
Rights Report
Featured Reviews
On-Sale Calendar
Contact Us
More News
In Brief
Q&A
Did You Miss?
Bestsellers
From the Slush Pile
Harry Potter Update
What We're Circ'ing
People
In the Media
New in ShelfTalker

In the News

BookStream Makes a Splash

The Poughkeepsie, N.Y.-based wholesaler BookStream, which got fully up and running a year and a half ago, is about to test the children’s book waters by launching its first marketing initiative for children’s booksellers, KidSplash.

BookStream children’s buyer Carol Chittenden, president of Eight Cousins Children’s Books in Falmouth, Mass., will lead the free day-long event, which will take place at the Hilton Embassy Boston Marlborough on October 17. KidSplash, she says, is designed to help frontline booksellers feel confident that they’re presenting customers with the most interesting, beautiful, age-appropriate new books.

In addition to dividing new books into four age groups—0 to 3, 4 to 8, 8 to 12 and 12 to 15—Chittenden will discuss holiday-themed titles and offer tips for on-the-spot handselling. Author Laurie Keller will speak about her fall release, Do Unto Otters: A Book of Manners (Holt, Sept.), and Chittenden promises lots of goodies, plus breakfast and lunch. Says BookStream president Jack Herr, “Look for more of this kind of programming in the future.”

New Jersey wholesaler Bookazine is also giving personalized assistance to booksellers concerned about selecting the best new children’s books for the fall. Children’s buyer Heather Doss will provide “rep” presentations at several of the regional trade shows—Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance, New England Independent Booksellers Association and New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association. Because of show overlaps, she will be unable to attend Great Lakes, but Doss promises to make handouts of her talk available at the Bookazine booth there and at SIBA, NEIBA and NAIBA.

Next spring, according to v-p of marketing and online development Kathleen Willoughby, Bookazine will hold its second annual Bookazine Kids Event, which will focus on spring and summer ’08 releases.—Judith Rosen

  

More News

Children's Indie to Close in Texas
One store, three Harpers:
(from l.) Adrienne, Marianne
and Dana Harper
Brystone Children’s Books in Fort Worth, Tex., will close at the end of August. Owner Marianne Harper, who founded the store in 1991 and is now 63, has decided not to renew the store’s lease, which is up at the end of October, and will retire.

The closing of Brystone is a blow to children’s bookselling in Texas, leaving the state with only a handful of remaining specialty stores, including The Red Balloon in San Antonio and The Storybook Garden in Weslaco. While there are a number of stores that have exceptional children’s sections, including Austin’s BookPeople and Houston’s Blue Willow Bookstore and Brazos Bookstore—which added children’s books in the past year—there are an equal number that have shuttered in recent memory, including Toad Hall Bookstore in Austin, Jeremy’s in Houston and Treehouse Readers in Kingwood.

Marianne’s daughter Dana, who manages Brystone Books along with her sister Adrienne, says the store “could continue financially, but it would be like the Beatles without Paul McCartney.” The idea of closing was discussed some three years ago, but a firm decision was made six months ago.

“My mother is relatively young,” Dana says, “but I explain to people that bookseller age is different from real people’s age. My mother does a lot of lifting still and travels all over the city for events. I’ve tried to get her to slow down and lift boxes for her, but she won’t have it. Now she has to stop.”

Marianne, a former fourth-grade school teacher, built the store to cater primarily to teachers, who have made up 95% of the customer base. The closing date was specifically chosen so teachers could get a good deal on books—all now being sold at 40% off—prior to the start of the school year.

Dana started working at the store at age 16; she told PW her favorite memory is of the day that Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was released and the three women—mother and two daughters—dyed their hair black and dressed as Harry, with lightning bolts on their foreheads. “It was before Harry Potter was as well known,” she said, “and some customers came into the store, took one look at us and turned right around. I’m sure we’ve never seen some of them again.”

Dana says she plans to get a “regular job—with vacation time and benefits,” perhaps in a library. “I know we’re leaving a huge hole in the market,” she says. “Somebody who really loves books, works hard and enjoys business can open a store here. I would really love that and promise I’d be their first customer.”

She adds, “I know I will miss it, but I don’t think I’ll miss it as much as my dog. She’s used to coming here seven days a week. I just know when we stop coming, she’ll sit by the door and cry.”—Edward Nawotka

Harry Potter Update

There's Got to Be a Morning After...
J.K. Rowling, on
the
Today Show.
There may have been a few quiet days at the end of July when millions of Potter fans were consumed by reading Deathly Hallows, but soon after eager readers digested Rowling's final volume they were ready to talk about and analyze the book—right along with the author.

In Rowling's interview with Meredith Vieira, which aired on the Today Show (July 26 and 27) and Dateline (July 29), the author answered questions submitted by fans and illuminated many of the more complex plot points of HP7. To have a look at her responses, which obviously include spoilers, click here.

But that appeared to be just a warm-up for Rowling's post-Potter ruminations. Harry's creator fielded as many questions as possible from the 120,000 submitted by fans during her live 90-minute web chat sponsored by publisher Bloomsbury on Monday, July 30. Serving up lots of spoilers, Rowling even expanded upon what she included in Deathly Hallows, imagining what various favorite characters went on to do after book 7 ended. See the complete transcript here.

Unfortunately, Rowling could do interviews and web chats for the rest of her days and never cover all the nuances of Harry’s wizarding world. That’s perhaps a downside of her books achieving such massive popularity. When Vieira commented in the Today/Dateline interview “you left us hanging a little bit,” the author amusingly acknowledged that when it comes to pleasing persistent Potterphiles her work is never truly done. “It would have been humanly impossible to answer every single question that fans have,” Rowling replied. “Because I’m dealing with a level of obsession in some of my fans that will not rest until they know the middle names of Harry’s great-great-grandparents.”

Hmmm…wonder what those names were...

Scholastic announced today that it sold 11.5 million copies of Deathly Hallows in its first 10 days, and has gone back to press for an additional two million copies; the total in-print figure now stands at 14 million. —Shannon Maughan

Book News

A Green Call to Arms
“Did you see the article in this morning’s New York Times?,” climate change activist Laurie David asks, the moment she picks up the phone. She means a front-page piece on global warming in the northeastern U.S., but she could be referring to any day’s headlines. David views every climate report as an unconditional call to action, for all ages. “We’re looking at some other severe weather [event] every year,” she says. “Politicians like Charlie Crist in Florida are now making big statements and trying to lead the way” on sustainable energy use. 

David, the producer of the Academy Award-winning An Inconvenient Truth and the HBO documentary Too Hot Not to Handle, brings her environmental message to young readers this fall. With her coauthor and friend Cambria Gordon, David has completed The Down-to-Earth Guide to Global Warming (Scholastic/Orchard, Sept.). Through timely data and memorable metaphors, the Guide describes climate crisis and suggests real ways children can make a difference. The authors will promote their Guide on the Today Show on September 19.

“This book is graphically exciting, hip and young, and it gives kids a ton of information on every page without kids realizing they’re getting the information,” David says. “It’s a fun book to read on global warming,” she adds, admitting the dissonance of the phrase but emphasizing that she
and Gordon balance humor and seriousness. (Illustrator Stephen Schudlich created the cartoons, charts and graphs, and the Scholastic design team complemented his drawings with photographs.)


In Brief

Postcards from the Road

Mark Peter Hughes, the children's author who decided "I think I can," quit his job and took off on a cross-country trip in a bright yellow van with his wife and three kids to promote Lemonade Mouth (Delacorte), reached the halfway point of his travels this week. He's only had to make two side trips to Honda dealers
en route: one in Texas to replace the radio antenna and the second in Oklahoma for oil.

Hughes remains upbeat, despite the fact that he hasn't had time to do any writing or much reading—he's only up to page 100 of HP7—since he hit the road. "It sounds corny, but we're truly having the time of our lives," he told Bookshelf. "The way we're thinking about this is it's a family vacation where we're stopping at bookstores. It's difficult to know if it's effective promoting my book. But I think the real benefit is the relationship with booksellers."

Here Hughes's family joins him and bookseller Kevin Brooks in front of The Depot Bookstore and Cafe in Mill Valley, Calif. —Judith Rosen


John Green: YA Author, YouTube Phenomenon
John Green (Looking for Alaska; An Abundance of Katherines) and his brother Hank decided to embark on an experiment. Throughout 2007, the brothers have forgone any written correspondence, instead sending each other public video blogs each day posted on their Brotherhood2 Web site and on YouTube. But with a recent video that Hank sent John entitled “Accio Deadly Hallows!,” the brothers found their already sizeable audience skyrocketing. The video has been viewed over 500,000 times and received over 6800 comments on YouTube, and traffic to the Brotherhood2 Web site has more than tripled. In all, their videos have been watched 1.27 million times. And counting.

An Intrepid Wanderer Surfaces
Can you spot him in the stands? (Click here to see a larger version.) Waldo is on tour this summer to promote Candlewick's new paperback editions of the Where's Waldo? books, the first time they have been in paperback in the U.S. He's been traveling to minor league ballparks, throwing out the first pitch, mingling in the crowd, and has even been sighted on the Jumbotron.


Q&A
Robin Brande
Bookshelf talked with Robin Brande, author of Evolution, Me and Other Freaks of Nature (Knopf, Aug.)

What inspired you to tackle such a controversial topic?

I have my own sordid Baptist girl background. And what goes on with the religious right in this country has always been on my mind. There has been more support for religion in the schools and we've seen more discussion of religion in politics.

I am also an avid Bible reader and I like to weave that into my stories. While reading the parable of the talents, it occurred to me, "That would be an explanation for evolution."

read more

Featured Reviews

The Lemonade Club
Patricia Polacco. Philomel, $16.99 (48p) ISBN 978-0-399-24540-4
Miss Wichelman, an enthusiastic fifth-grade teacher, assures her students they can be anything they want to be ("If you dream it… then you can BE it!"). She keeps a basket of lemons in her classroom, repeatedly asking, "And if life hands you a lemon…. Just add water and sugar and what do you have?" Her students know to respond, "Lemonade!" But this philosophy is tested when Marilyn is diagnosed with leukemia; looking at the lemons, her best friend Traci thinks, "No matter how much sugar was added, there wasn't going to be lemonade this time." After enduring grueling chemotherapy that leaves her bald, Marilyn returns to school to find that her classmates have all shaved their heads in support. Miss Wichelman is also bald, but (she eventually reveals to Traci and Marilyn at a meeting of the trio's Lemonade Club) it is because she is being treated for breast cancer. When the teacher confides that her illness has dampened her enthusiasm for applying to medical school, Marilyn bellows, "You aren't going to let something like cancer stomp on your dreams, are you?" In an uplifting finale, the teacher gets married, attended by Traci and Marilyn in lemon-colored dresses, and goes on to become a doctor. As is often the case with Polacco's stories, this lump-in-the-throat, inspiring tale comes straight from real life; Traci is her daughter. The artist's characteristic illustration style works particularly well here
to evoke a wide emotional range while maintaining an essentially sunny mood. Ages
6-up. (Sept.)


The Poison Apples
Lily Archer. Feiwel and Friends, $16.95 (288p) ISBN 978-0-312-36762-6
Archer makes a wickedly funny debut with this contemporary tale of three evil stepmothers and their banished daughters who cross paths at boarding school. Molly Miller is the only one of the girls who wants to be at Putnam Mount McKinsey, which offers her an escape from both her mundane small town and Candy Lamb, the former homecoming queen who broke up her parents' marriage and now reigns as queen of the household (Molly's mom, meanwhile, reels from the shock in a psychiatric hospital).Alice Bingley-Beckerman's father has moved into his Broadway-actress bride's tiny Manhattan apartment; there is no room for Alice. And Reena Paruchuri, along with her brother Pradeep, get sent east when their formerly dignified father marries a yoga instructor half his age. Drawn together by their common dysfunctional backgrounds and a keen desire to seek revenge, Molly, Alice and Reena form the Poison Apples Club. Alternating among their perspectives with considerable wit, the author traces the girls' adjustments to the new school, their search for friends, and their romantic trials and tribulations as they plot to destroy their parents' marriages. The teens' initial misjudgments of one another fuel much of the initial comedy, while Archer's knowing prose gives even the old-fashioned moral a hip ring. Ages 12-up. (Sept.)

see all of this week's reviews
including our web exclusive Annex
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On-Sale Calendar


September 2007
  1 The Boys' Book and The Girls' Book: How to Be the Best at Everything by Dominique Enright and Guy Macdonald, illus. by Niki Catlow (Scholastic Nonfiction, $9.99 ISBN 978-0-545-01628-5; 01629-2). 100,000 copies each.
Into the Mist by Patrick Carman (Scholastic Press, $11.99 ISBN 978-0-439-89952-9). 100,000 copies.
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (Little, Brown, $16.99 ISBN 978-0-316-01368-0). 100,000 copies.
I Am Invited to a Party! and There Is a Bird on Your Head! by Mo Willems (Hyperion, $8.99 each ISBN 978-1-4231-0687-6; -0686-9). 125,000 copies each.
Hero by Perry Moore (Hyperion, $16.99 ISBN 978-1-4231-0195-6). 100,000 copies.

  3 Curious George Discovery Day (Houghton, $13.95 ISBN 978-0-618-73761-1). 150,000 copies.

  4 Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity by Mo Willems (Hyperion, $16.99 ISBN 978-1-4231-0299-1). 250,000 copies.

 10 Peek in My Pocket by David A. Carter and Sarah Weeks (Harcourt/Red Wagon, $10.95 ISBN 978-0-15205807-4). 100,000 first printing.

 11 Judy Moody & Stink: The Holly Joliday by Megan McDonald, illus. by Peter H. Reynolds (Candlewick, $14.99 ISBN 978-0-7636-3237-3). 100,000 copies.
Bear Feels Sick by Karma Wilson, illus. by Jane Chapman (S&S/McElderry, $16.99 ISBN 978-0-689-85985-4). 100,000 copies.

 18 The Nixie's Song (Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles) by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi (S&S, $10.99 ISBN 978-0-689-87131-3). 350,000 copies.
Iron Thunder by Avi (Hyperion, $15.99 ISBN 978-1-4231-0446-9). 100,000 copies.
The Night Tourist by Katherine Marsh (Hyperion, $17.99 ISBN 978-1-4231-0689-0). 100,000 copies.

 25 How the Grinch Stole Christmas! A 50th Anniversary Retrospective by Dr. Seuss (Random House, $24.99 978-0-375-83847-7). 150,000 copies.
Before I Die by Jenny Downham (Random House/Fickling, $15.99 ISBN 978-0-385-75155-1). 100,000 copies.
The Mysterious Edge of the Heroic World by E.L. Konigsburg (Atheneum/Seo, $16.99 ISBN 978-1-416-94972-5). 100,000 copies.
600 Black Spots by David A. Carter (Little Simon, $19.99 ISBN 978-1-416-94092-0). 100,000 copies.
Barnstormers: Tales of the Travelin' Nine: Game 2 by Phil Bildner, illus. by Loren Long (S&S, $10.99 ISBN 978-1-416-91864-6). 100,000 copies.
Disney Fairies: Pixie Hollow Pop-Up by Kitty Richards (Disney Press, $19.99 ISBN 978-14231-0615-9). 150,000 copies.
The Mistmantle Chronicles Book Three: The Heir of Mistmantle by M.I. McAllister (Hyperion/Miramax, $17.99 ISBN 978-0-7868-5490-5). 100,000 copies.
Enchanted: The Movie Storybook by Sarah Nathan (Disney Press, $8.99 ISBN 978-1-4231-0911-2). 100,000 copies.

  
Click here for PW's complete
2006-2007 On-Sale Calendar
  
What We're Circ'ing

Judith A. Dubin,
youth librarian at West Bloomfield Township Public Library, West Bloomfield, Mich., talks about the Babymouse series (Random House).

Babymouse has found her fans! In this graphic novel series from the sister-and-brother team of Jennifer L. Holm and Matthew Holm, cupcake loving, pink-heart-wearing Babymouse may be a cartoon character, but she faces the same daily trials and tribulations as most girls. A recent graphic novel display in our Youth Department has spurred an increase in the circulation of our graphic novel collection, with Babymouse leading the pack. Several moms (including some of our own librarians with daughters) have become fans after reading the series with their daughters. A patron even took the time to write us a note thanking us for our graphic novel collection and said, "My daughter has dyslexia and these are the only books she can read from start to finish on her own." We can't get new Babymouse titles in fast enough!

Rights Report


Candlewick Press and Walker Books have jointly acquired a picture book by Chinese illustrator Jimmy Liao.
It is his first book with a Western publishing house. The Monster Who Ate Darkness, written by Joyce Dunbar, is scheduled to be published in fall 2008. Liao has published more than 27 books in his native Taiwan, which have sold over five million copies.


Jessica Rothenberg at Razorbill has bought world rights to a middle-grade novel, Hottie, by screenwriter Jonathan Bernstein, in a two-book deal. The projected pub date for Hottie is Spring 2009.


Liz Bicknell of Candlewick press has acquired two YA novels by Canadian author Tim Wynne-Jones. The first of the two, The Children of the Snye, is tentatively scheduled for spring 2009. The deal was made with Barry Goldblatt of Barry Goldblatt Literary Agency.

People


Lisa Lyons has been named president of Kids Can Press. She has been interim head of the company since last year. Reporting to Lyons are Karen Boersma, v-p, publisher; Judy Brunsek, v-p, sales and maarketing; and Patti McMullen, v-p, finance and operations.


Random House Children's Books announced two promotions. Rachael Cole has been promoted to senior designer at Schwartz & Wade Books; she was previously designer. And Stephanie Lane has been promoted to senior editor, from editor, at Delacorte Press Books for Young Readers.

Did You Miss?


From the pages of PW


Hundreds of bookstores across the country held Harry Potter parties to herald the arrival of Deathly Hallows. Check out our extensive photo-essay of Potter shindigs, costumes and celebrations here.

In the Media


From the Times of London: His Dark Materials author Philip Pullman is at work on a "big, big book," The Book of Dust, which he says will contain his response to accusations that the three books in his trilogy portrayed organized religion as repressive.


From the Globe and Mail in Toronto: The Outsiders turns 40 years old next month, and S.E. Hinton looks back at the novel she started writing when she was was 15. Her response when fans ask for a sequel? "To me, the book is over, and the very fact that so many kids don't want it to be over with is a sign that I ended it in the right place."


From the Wisconsin State Journal: A Milwaukee father is following up
the success of his self-published picture book, Why Mommy Is a Democrat, with Why Daddy Is a Democrat, in counterpoint to a California company's conservative offerings that include Help! Mom! There Are Liberals Under My Bed!


From the Los Angeles Times: "It's acknowledged now
that some of the most exciting novelists today are writing for kids," says an article about the Harry Potter halo effect.


From Business Week: A story about the logistical challenge of getting 12 million Harry Potter books to their destinations on time,
but not too early...


From the New York Times: Pirated translations of the new Harry Potter book are hitting the streets in China, along with fraudulent editions with names like Harry Potter and Leopard-Walk-Up-to-Dragon and Harry Potter and the Big Funnel.


Also in the Times: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows sold 8.3 million copies in one day. But thanks to rampant discounting, few retailers made any money on it. The one segment that turned a profit? Indie booksellers.

Bestsellers


Series and Tie-ins Bestsellers
July 2007

  1. Harry Potter.
    J.K. Rowling. Scholastic/Levine
  2. Clique. Lisi Harrison. Little, Brown
    find out more...       
  3. Junie B. Jones. Barbara Park, illus.
    by Denise Brunkus. Random House
  4. Percy Jackson and the Olympians.
    Rick Riordan. Hyperion/Miramax
  5. Magic Tree House. Mary Pope Osborne, illus. by Sal Murdocca. Random House

Behind the Bestsellers



All of the books in Lisi Harrison's Clique series for middle-graders feature clever titles that riff on popular phrases, movie titles, etc. She and her editor, Cindy Eagan, have marathon brainstorming sessions to dream up each new title. "We throw lots of ideas around," Eagan says. "Many of them are horrible but hilarious. We'll be at wits' end and all of a sudden something will pop." Their latest invention is Sealed with a Diss, which pubbed earlier this month. Next up? Bratfest at Tiffany's, due out next February.

New in ShelfTalker


This week on Alison's blog, she finds some children's book graffiti, and writes a treatise on the bookseller's best friend: the totebag. Have a look here.

Contact Us


Dear Bookshelf Readers,


Hope you enjoyed this week's issue. We'd
love to hear from you with any comments and suggestions—drop us a note here.

—The Editors





From the Slush Pile

Click here to read Tales from the Slush Pile from the beginning

 

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