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  • Taking Steps into the Digital Future

    E-books may date from the early 1970s, when Michael Hart launched Project Gutenberg, but the revolution in e-books for kids has only just begun. True, three novels from Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series were library distributor Overdrive's three most downloaded e-books for 2008, but adult and children's digital books combined still make up a small percentage of book sales—less than 1% of ...

  • Children's Books for Spring: A - C

    ABBEVILLE KIDS Series Turn-the-Wheel by Peter Lawson introduces four board books with steering wheels ($5.95 each, boxed set $22.95, 3-up). ABRAMS Budgie & Boo ($15.95) by David McPhail tells of two gardeners—a bear and a bunny—who are best friends. (3-6) Chicken Butt! ($12.95) by Erica S.

  • Children's Books for Spring: P

    PARACLETE PRESS Paperback Praying in Color: Kids' Edition ($14.99) by Sybil MacBeth is an adaptation of this adult book about creative ways to pray. (7-12) PARRAGON BOOKS First Bible Stories for Boys and First Bible Stories for Girls ($TBA), illus. by Andrew Geeson and Sophie Keen, retell Old and New Testament tales.

  • Children's Books for Spring: I - O

    IMMEDIUM (Consortium, dist.) Chaff n' Skaffs: Mai and the Lost Moskivvy ($15.99) by Amanda Chin and Luke Feldman, illus. by Feldman. When a lost mosquito interrupts Mai's sleep, her friend Chaff suggests they escort it home. (4-8) You Might Be a Monster and Other Stories I Made Up ($15.99) by Atta Boy.

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 2/16/2009

    This week on the Web: Merry Presidents' Day, everyone! Plus: the return of Susie Orbach, the surprising debut of Cadillac Man, the direct way to ending addiction, how to "fix" the way you think about your business, and more.

  • New Imprints Stake a Claim

    Lately, the word of the day in publishing has been “reduction,” be it in head counts or acquisitions. And while several children's imprints have been lost in recent months due to restructuring, retirements, etc., 2009 will see the arrival of a new children's publisher, Egmont USA (see “New Kid on the Block,” June 16, 2008), as well as a number of new imprints.

  • Fiction Reviews

    White Is for Witching Helen Oyeyemi . Doubleday/Talese , $24.95 (240p) ISBN 978-0-385-52605-0 Oyeyemi delivers her third passionate and unusual book, a neo-gothic tale revolving around Miranda and Eliot Silver, fraternal twins of Haitian descent raised in a British house haunted by generations of afflicted, displaced family members, including their mother.

  • Children's Books for Spring: H

    HACHETTE/FAITHWORDS Paperback Series All About Us continues with Be Strong & Curvaceous and Who Made You a Princess? by Shelley Adina ($9.99 each, 12-up). And Miracle Girls adds Breaking Up Is Hard to Do by Anne Dayton and May Vanderbilt ($9.99, 12-up). HARPERCOLLINS Blueberry Girl ($17.99) by Neil Gaiman, illus.

  • YA Book Sells to Disney; Pub Rights Pending

    After Hollywood interest was brewing last week for Clete Smith's YA novel, Grandma's Intergalactic Bed & Breakfast, Jody Hotchkiss of Hotchkiss & Associates has closed on a deal for film rights with Disney. The lit rights, being handled by Sterling Lord's George Nicholson, remain up for grabs.

  • Scholastic Media Has Big Plans for Clifford

    “It only takes a little…to BE BIG!” The motto for Scholastic Media’s new Clifford The Big Red Dog BE BIG! campaign delivers the message at the heart of this initiative: small actions based on Clifford’s Big Ideas—among them sharing, helping others, being responsible, playing fair and working together—can make the world a better place.

  • ‘The Year We Disappeared’ to Appear on National TV

    This Saturday, February 14, at 10 p.m., CBS News’s 48 Hours will air an investigation of the case chronicled in The Year We Disappeared (Bloomsbury, Aug. 2008), in which Cylin Busby and her father, John Busby, describe the chain of events that occurred 30 years ago when John, then a police officer in Falmouth, Mass., was shot in the face, and he and his family were forced into hiding.

  • Q & A with K.L. Going

    Children's Bookshelf spoke with K.L. Going about her new novel, King of the Screwups (Harcourt).

  • Huzzahs for Humphrey

    It’s not unusual for rodent characters to make it big in the world of children’s books. Currently, a humble hamster named Humphrey is riding his yellow hamster ball to popularity as star of a series of books by Betty G. Birney.

  • Comics Briefly

    NYCC09: Read Will Eisner on iPhone; Marvel Sets X-Men Stage; Focus on the DC Universe; Marvel at 70; Business of Webcomics; Women In Comics. Plus O'Neil NYU Comics Course and Death Note II on DVD

  • Marvel Makes Motion Comics, DC Teases New Format

    Marvel annaounced as new "motion comics" format and DC teased other new formats at yhe recent New York Comic-Con.

  • Life in Comics: Can Creativity Save Comics from Troubled Times?

    The writer muses on what revolution this economic crisis will bring to the comics medium.

  • Children’s Comics Poised for Growth

    Properties aimed at readers 13 years old and under were prominent both on the floor and in the panels and the booths for publishers such as First Second, Top Shelf, Oni Press and Archie Comics were bustling.

  • New York Manga-Con 2009

    Despite fewer manga publishers exhibiting this year, those on hand put there best manga forward.

  • What Recession? Strong Fan Turnout for NYCC 2009

    Despite the recession, tens of thousands of fans streamed into the Javits Center for the New York Comic-con.

  • Scott Pilgrim Wins the Convention!

    The oddest thing about the alternative graphic-novel publishers exhibiting at this year's New York Comic-Con was that, even though almost none of them had major new releases, they mostly reported decent-to-excellent sales.

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