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It's My Blogoversary!
You will be happy to know I successfully fought the temptation to rewrite the lyrics of Tony Toni Tone's "It's Our Anniversary" for today, the first anniversary of my blog.
Those of you unfortunate enough to have listened to Top 40 radio in the early 90s are cursing me out anyway, for simply having mentioned it. If you feel the need to earworm me back, do. It's only fair.
Anyway, yes, on Halloween 2007, I made my inaugural post, a review of Robot Dreams, by Sara Varon. Before that, I'd blogged discreetly on LiveJournal for several years, but the First Annual Kidlitosphere Conference inspired me to indiscretion.
Thanks to all who read my blog, whether you comment or only lurk! (I confess some favoritism for those who comment occasionally, because I know who they are!) There's a whole lot more of you now than there were when I started, and I'm grateful for your interest and support as I write about things that interest me anyway. I'm glad you find (at least some of) it interesting, too!
Fortress of Books
I've mentioned before how much I love the Boston Globe blog The Big Picture. Here's an image that caught my attention: a vast library projected onto the Tower of David in Jerusalem's Old City.
Magical, huh? Looks like a wizardly library to me. Click the photo to see it at full resolution. It's #21 on the page. (Sorry about the hot-linkage, guys...)
More photo fun: If you love vintage photos, check out Shorpy: History in HD, which offers high-definition photos from the 1850s to the 1950s. You can even purchase prints. (Via AL Direct.)
Mix 'n' Match
Sometimes my posts seem but a faint echo of the clamor all over the Kidlitosphere... but hey, for the sake of posterity, I'll chime in anyway.
First, the second annual Kidlitosphere Conference has come and gone. For a taste of what you (and I) missed, check out the numerous wrap-ups by attendees.
Second, nominations are now open for the third annual Cybil Awards. This is your chance to nominate your favorite books of 2008 for these blogger-run children's and YA literature awards. Jen Robinson explains in further detail. Nominations are only open until October 15, so make sure your favorites get on the list for consideration!
And for something completely different: I love the Chicago Tribune's online historical photo galleries. Hundreds of fascinating photos, some idyllic, some brutal, evoke eras past in the Windy City.
The current feature is Stroll the White City, photos from the Chicago World's Fair a whopping 115 years ago. What a spectacle! It's pretty much impossible to imagine Chicago putting on such an extravagant show ever again—all the beautiful (temporary) buildings, the amazing artifacts from all over the world, the throngs of people! Then again, there's that whole 2016 Olympic bid.
Cheers to the Kidlitosphere
The Kidlitosphere 2008 Conference in Portland, Oregon, should be kicking off any moment now. Knowing how much fun it was last year, I'm envious. On the other hand, I've got a glorious, free weekend ahead. I'm looking forward to all you bloggers' reports when it's over!
10K Gun Salute for Abby (the) Librarian
Abby (the) Librarian is celebrating the 10,000 hit mark for her blog with a book giveaway! Leave a comment on the entry to be entered in the raffle.
Abby is a Chicago-area children's librarian and posts terrific book reviews and ideas for storytime, craft, and other children's programs. Particularly if you are a teacher or librarian, I recommend adding her blog to your roll for everyday reading!
Dispatches from American Libraries
I was so chagrined at having deleted the other week's American Libraries Direct newsletter that contained a link to my Spinal Exam post, I vowed never to delete AL Direct without reading it again. Here's the proof that, last week at last, I followed through! Some highlights:
- Librarians, let this be a lesson to you: niceness will get you nowhere. It's time to peer down your nose, draw your mouth into a sour puss, and brandish the shushing finger. ALA has the story: Mean Library Salary Up 2 Percent to $58,960 in 2008. (Thanks to my supervisor for pointing this out!)
Silliness aside, the most surprising thing about this story is the salary figure. (Let's just put it this way: I'll be working quite a long time before I touch $59K, at which point inflation will have pushed the average even higher.) The survey was based on both public and academic librarians, and I have the feeling the academics were skewing it upward. - Have you admired those celebrity READ posters hanging in your library? Have you ever wished that was you in the picture, holding your favorite book? Now you can make a mini READ poster of your own with this toy, thanks to the Shifted Librarian and fd's Flickr Toys (no Flickr account necessary). Here's my own READ poster, starring Mini Me (circa age 3):

(The original photo is here. Yes, even then, I was quite the little reader. I wish I had a clue what those books were. The only one I recognize for sure is the Disney Winnie-the-Pooh and the Honey Tree at left, though I think I see the despised Scuffy the Tugboat lurking at the rear.) - Kati at Alternative Teen Services has written an interesting article, My So-Called Picture Book, suggesting ways picture books can be used with people of all ages, especially teens. She focuses on picture books that speak to readers more mature than the preschool to second grade set, whether overtly or on an underlying level. Some examples: Samsara Dog (Manos and Vivos), Uncle Bobby's Wedding (Brannen), and Wolves (Gravett). Definitely worth a look, especially for teachers who work with teens.
Across the Blogoverse...
I want to highlight a few blogs I've been enjoying lately. These blogs don't appear in this site's blogroll (which desperately needs to be updated again...sigh) because they aren't children's/YA book-related, but they're fun/interesting sites that might interest you, the reader, just the same!
- The Big Picture - This photo blog by The Boston Globe is a treasure. Three days a week, they post about 10-20ish high-res (for the web) photos on a given timely theme. One of my favorite entries was last week's Beating the Heat, 22 photos of people around the world cooling off this summer, from the claustrophobic throng in a Chinese swimming pool to Palestinian women bathing fully dressed to children playing in an Oklahoma water park. Some topics are sobering, others celebrate life, but all of them are a window to life around the world.
- Library Praxis - My associate (for lack of a better term) Emily and some of her cohorts write this blog on the politics and theory of librarianship. They're usually talking about academic libraries, but many of the principles apply to public and school libraries as well. I enjoy the discussions there.
- Ray the Singing Cab Driver - Ray is something of a fixture in Chicago. He's a singer-songwriter who literally takes his show on the road. He also has a stage band, for which my husband is the drummer. Ray is an eccentric character; his life philosophy is to lead the kind of life he'd like to read a book or see a movie about. He's had a boatload of interesting experiences and is also a damn fine storyteller. I greatly enjoyed his recent story about the one and only time he's been arrested.
My blog reading has improved about a hundred fold since I switched from Bloglines to Google Reader. Why did I never know how much better Google Reader is before? Posts don't vanish after I read them. I can "star" posts I want to read or return to later, making it SO much easier to track posts on which I've commented! I can search the contents of one, some, or all of the blogs I read, making it SO much easier to find that post that talked about X but I can't remember when or where I read it! Yay, Google Reader!
In fact, I'm going to use Google Reader's "starred item" feature RIGHT NOW and pull up the link to July's Carnival of Children's Literature, hosted by Read-Imagine-Talk. There are a lot of fun and interesting kidlit-related posts up there, and it's always fun to see what blogs I've been missing all this time.
Did I mention that Google Reader makes it easier to add a new feed than Bloglines does? It's true!
On a completely different note: for all I pick on Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series (I'm on Team None-of-the-Above / Get-a-Life-Bella), I've placed my reserve at the library on Breaking Dawn. Like the Elephant's Child, I have insatiable curiosity. I shudder to think how many hundreds of people may be ahead of me.
Web 2.0 Ransom Notes
What's the Fourth Harry Potter Book?
Some of the best things in life—the best online resources, anyway— really are free. For example, I don't know what my department would do without Mid-Continent Public Library's amazing Juvenile Series and Sequels resource.
Wondering the order of the Betsy-Tacy books? Getting Anthony Horowitz's series mixed up in your mind? Browse thousands of children's and YA series by author name, series title, book title, and series subject. You'll get a neat list in clean text of series in sequential order!
My department uses this resource just about every day, sometimes several times a day. Very rarely have I found errors or omissions.
Actually, I do know what we'd do without without this resource: we'd go to Amazon.com and deal with long load times and multiple edition/publication date confusion. But we don't have to, because MCPL has put this absolutely fantastic resource out on the web, free for all.
Looks like MCPL also has a weekly radio show, The Library Guys. Each week they interview an author and plug library programs. Many of their author interviews are available for download. I sense a definite bias toward mystery and suspense for adults, but still: cool!
30 Is the New 13
Oh, my sweet lord... My friend C. just clued me in to 30 Is the New 13. Sada writes, "I am blogging my way through a suitcase full of stories—ahem, chapter books—and assorted other embarrassing relics from my childhood."
Sada's first subject for retrospective analysis is That's What Friends Are For, about the adventures of an exquisitely cool nine-year-old named Liz Craw. It's a thing of beauty. I'm crying, it's so beautiful.
(I have my own box of incriminating literary material from my youth, but at this time I don't quite have the guts to put it out for the whole world to see. Maybe some other day...)










