I couldn’t be happier with this starred review from Publishers Weekly for ‘The Nutcracker’ Comes to America: How Three Ballet-Loving Brothers Created a Holiday Tradition. Here’s an excerpt: Balancing evocative turns of phrase with a crisp, forthright narrative, Barton delivers an involving account of how watching The Nutcracker ballet, which originated in Russia, became an […]
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Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Publishers Weekly, Millbrook, Cathy Gendron, Christensen brothers, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen, Willam Christensen, The Nutcracker Comes to America, The Nutcracker, Chris Barton, Add a tag
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ballet, The Nutcracker, Chris Barton, Jennifer Ziegler, Millbrook, Cathy Gendron, Christensen brothers, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen, Willam Christensen, Margie Myers-Culver, The Nutcracker Comes to America, Revenge of the Angels, Add a tag
A mere 12 years, 6 months, and 23 days after I saved my first file on the topic of Utah-born Willam, Harold, and Lew Christensen, today marks the launch of my newest book, ‘The Nutcracker’ Comes to America: How Three Ballet-Loving Brothers Created a Holiday Tradition. It’s published by Lerner Books/Millbrook Press and gorgeously illustrated […]
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JacketFlap tags: The Nutcracker, Chris Barton, giveaway, Lindsey Lane, The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch, Bartography Express, Christensen brothers, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen, Willam Christensen, The Nutcracker Comes to America, Mississippi Book Festival, Evidence of Things Not Seen, ballet, Add a tag
This month, one subscriber to my Bartography Express newsletter will win a copy of Evidence of Things Not Seen (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) by Lindsey Lane. If you’re not already receiving Bartography Express, click the image below for a look. If you like what you see, click “Join” in the bottom right corner, and you’ll […]
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ballet, The Nutcracker, Chris Barton, Millbrook, Cathy Gendron, Christensen brothers, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen, Willam Christensen, The Nutcracker Comes to America, Add a tag
Those of us who write for kids don’t write only for kids. We want our books to be shared and enjoyed widely. That’s why it’s so gratifying to me when one of my books for young readers gets acknowledged and appreciated by folks outside of the children’s literature world. It doesn’t happen all that often, […]
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ballet, nonfiction, The Nutcracker, Chris Barton, Millbrook, Cathy Gendron, Christensen brothers, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen, Willam Christensen, The Nutcracker Comes to America, Add a tag
Sometimes my dog will be sitting in my lap, being hugged and petted on, and he will begin to whine and whimper as if there’s still not enough affection getting expressed, as if it’s impossible that there could ever be any demonstration that would measure up to the love he feels.
It has long seemed absurd to me, but I think I finally get it. I do.
Because, y’all, I just can’t love this enough:
This is what the front of my upcoming book with Millbrook Press, ‘The Nutcracker’ Comes to America: How Three Ballet-Loving Brothers Created a Holiday Tradition, will look like. It’s illustrator Cathy Gendron‘s first picture book, and I think she’s done just an astounding job.
I love how Willam, Harold, and Lew Christensen pop right off the page even amid the terrific onstage action. I love the shade of blue that the scene is bathed in. I love the swords. I love everything about this cover.
The book will be out this coming fall, and I hope to be able to share with you some of the interior illustrations soon. (If you’re at the Texas Library Association conference in April, maybe you can even see an advance copy in person.)
But in the meantime, here’s what the entire jacket — front, back, and flaps — looks like:
Whine. Whimper.
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ballet, nonfiction, The Nutcracker, Millbrook, Pioneers & Pirouettes, Cathy Gendron, Christensen brothers, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen, Willam Christensen, The Nutcracker Comes to America, Add a tag
For a decade now, I’ve had a book in the works about Willam, Harold, and Lew Christensen, the Utah-born brothers who had a huge influence in the development of ballet in the United States. Among their many contributions are the first full-length production of The Nutcracker in the US, in 1944.
And for pretty much all that time, this project — which will be published by Millbrook in fall 2015, with illustrations by Cathy Gendron — has gone by the name Pioneers & Pirouettes.
But no more.
As of this week, my Christensen brothers book is called…
The Nutcracker Comes to America: How Three Ballet-Loving Brothers Created a Holiday Tradition
You would think that, after knowing the book by one title for so long, it would be hard to switch to a new moniker. But in this case, nope.
I love this new title — the book itself has changed over the years, the story it tells has shifted, and this new title fits perfectly what this book has become.
RIP, Pioneers & Pirouettes. And long live The Nutcracker Comes to America: How Three Ballet-Loving Brothers Created a Holiday Tradition!
*As opposed to my next book, which is still called The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch, the picture book biography of a young man who in ten years transformed from teenage field slave to US congressman. The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch will be published this coming April by Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, with illustrations by Don Tate.
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ballet, nonfiction, The Nutcracker, Don Tate, Chris Barton, Reconstruction, Eerdmans, Millbrook, Pioneers & Pirouettes, The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch, Cathy Gendron, Christensen brothers, Harold Christensen, Lew Christensen, Willam Christensen, Add a tag
Inspired by Greg Leitich Smith’s annual list of books from our Austin writing community, I thought I’d start compiling the picture book biographies scheduled for publication in 2015 (including a pair of mine).
I know there are lots more picture book biographies on their way from publishers recognized by SCBWI, so if you’re interested in helping keep this list reasonably complete and up to date, please let me know in the comments which ones ought to be added. I’ll update and republish this post on a regular basis.
The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch (Eerdmans), written by Chris Barton and illustrated by Don Tate
Drum Dream Girl: How One Girl’s Courage Changed Music (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), written by Margarita Engle and illustrated by Rafael Lopez
Earmuffs for Everyone!: How Chester Greenwood Became Known as the Inventor of Earmuffs (Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books), written and illustrated by Meghan McCarthy
Elvis: The Story of the Rock and Roll King (Henry Holt), written and illustrated by Bonnie Christensen
Emmanuel’s Dream (Schwartz & Wade), written by Laurie Ann Thompson and illustrated by Sean Qualls
Fab Four Friends: The Boys Who Became the Beatles (Christy Ottaviano Books/Henry Holt), written by Susanna Reich and illustrated by Adam Gustavson
The Founding Fathers! Those Horse-Ridin’, Fiddle-Playin’, Book-Readin’, Gun-Totin’ Gentlemen Who Started America (Atheneum), written by Jonah Winter and illustrated by: Barry Blitt
The Hole Story of the Doughnut (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), written by Pat Miller
The House that Jane Built: A Story about Jane Addams (Henry Holt/Christy Ottaviano Books), written by Tanya Lee Stone and illustrated by Kathryn Brown
In Mary’s Garden (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), written and illustrated by Tina and Carson Kugler
One Plastic Bag (Millbrook), written by Miranda Paul and illustrated by Elizabeth Zunon
Pioneers & Pirouettes: The Story of the First American Nutcracker
(Millbrook), written by Chris Barton and illustrated by Cathy GendronPoet: The Remarkable Story of George Moses Horton (Peachtree), written and illustrated by Don Tate
Step Right Up: The Story of Beautiful Jim Key (Lee & Low), written by Donna Bowman Bratton and illustrated by Daniel Minter
Trombone Shorty (Abrams), written by Troy Andrews and illustrated by Bryan Collier
Vivien Thomas – The Man Who Saved the Blue Babies (Lee & Low), written by Gwendolyn Hooks