new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: walker books, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 70
How to use this Page
You are viewing the most recent posts tagged with the words: walker books in the JacketFlap blog reader. What is a tag? Think of a tag as a keyword or category label. Tags can both help you find posts on JacketFlap.com as well as provide an easy way for you to "remember" and classify posts for later recall. Try adding a tag yourself by clicking "Add a tag" below a post's header. Scroll down through the list of Recent Posts in the left column and click on a post title that sounds interesting. You can view all posts from a specific blog by clicking the Blog name in the right column, or you can click a 'More Posts from this Blog' link in any individual post.
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 6/14/2016
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
News,
Picture Books,
One World,
Templar Publishing,
Walker Books,
Michael Foreman,
A Life in Pictures,
Michael Morpurgo,
Seven Stories,
The Mozart Question,
Andersen Press,
The General,
A Child's Garden,
Mia's Story,
Pavilion Books,
The Seeds of Friendship,
After the War Was Over,
Newspaper Boy and Origami Girl,
Painting with Rainbows - A Michael Foreman Exhibition,
The Amazing Tale of Ali Pasha,
The Tortoise and the Soldier: A Story of Courage and Friendship in World War I,
War and Peas,
War Boy,
War Game,
Why the Animals Came to Town,
Add a tag
On Friday I finally made it up to Newcastle to catch the National Centre for Children’s Books, Seven Stories’ exhibition Painting with Rainbows – A Michael Foreman Exhibition, which closes today (sorry!). The good news is that it will be heading out on tour: so far, it’s … Continue reading ... →
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 5/23/2016
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Interviews,
Young Adult,
Toni Morrison,
Beatrix Potter,
Shaun Tan,
Middle-Grade,
Gabriel Garcia Marquez,
Jane Ray,
The Arrival,
Salman Rushdie,
Maya Angelou,
Alice Walker,
Walker Books,
Amnesty International,
Zadie Smith,
Barrington Stoke,
Artichoke Hearts,
Rohinton Mistry,
Sita Brahmachari,
Macmillan Children's Books,
Ben Okri,
Let Books Be Books,
Hannah Kent,
MWD interview,
Children's and YA books about disability,
MWD Theme - All About Balance (Disability & Special Needs),
disability in children's books,
A Kestrel for a Knave,
Anita Desai,
Anna and the Swallow Man,
Barry Hines,
Brace Mouth False Teeth,
Burial Rites,
Car Wash Wish,
Charmed Earth,
Circus Space,
Gavriel Savit,
Grace Manning,
Here I Stand,
I'll Be Home for Christmas,
Isabelle Allende,
Jasmine Skies,
Kite Spirit,
Kristine Landon-Smith,
Methuen Drama,
Mira in the Present tense,
Nirmal Brahmachari,
Red Leaves,
Tamasha Theatre Company,
Waterstone's Children's Book Award,
Wole Solinka,
Add a tag
Author Sita Brahmachari‘s latest book is Car Wash Wish, her second novella for Barrington Stoke, a UK publisher who specialise in making books accessible to struggling readers, with a special emphasis on dyslexia. It’s an inter-generational story … Continue reading ... →
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 4/4/2016
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Andersen Press,
Neal Layton,
Yasmeen Ismail,
Gill Lewis,
Alliance of Radical Booksellers,
Letterbox Library,
Little Rebels Award,
Gorilla Dawn,
I Am Henry Finch,
I'm a Girl!,
The Boy at the Top of the Mountain,
The Little Bookshop and the Origami Army,
Uncle Gobb and the Dread Shed,
Awards,
News,
Events,
Oxford University Press,
Bloomsbury,
Viviane Schwarz,
Michael Rosen,
John Boyne,
Walker Books,
Michael Foreman,
Alexis Deacon,
Add a tag
The UK’s 2016 Little Rebels Award shortlist has been announced – and once again it sets a challenge for the judges… It presents a good mix of books for all ages. There are some big names among the books’ creators – and notable is Gill Lewis’s Gorilla Dawn, … Continue reading ... →
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 11/20/2015
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Feiwel and Friends,
Walker Books,
One Green Apple,
Frances Lincoln,
Clarion Books,
Christy Hale,
Daniel Pennac,
Black Sheep,
Ken Spillman,
Weedflower,
Sarah Ardizzone,
Karen Gray Ruelle,
Deborah Durland DeSaix,
The Circle,
First Come the Zebra,
Lynne Barasch,
Janetta Otter-Barry Books,
Na’ima B. Robert,
MWD article,
Lee & Low (US),
Rev. Lyndon Harris,
the Forgiveness Garden,
The Grand Mosque of Paris: A Story of How Muslims Rescued Jews During the Holocaust,
Armour Publishing Singapore,
children's books about reconciliation and trust,
Books,
Young Adult,
Eye of the Wolf (L'oeil du loup),
Manjari Chakravarti,
Max Grafe,
Picture Books,
Articles,
Non-Fiction,
Cynthia Kadohata,
Atheneum Books for Young Readers,
Eve Bunting,
Lauren Thompson,
Holiday House,
Ted Lewin,
Add a tag
A few weeks ago, amidst the deepening refugee crisis from the war in Syria, many people and organisations around the world came together for the Continue reading ... →
By:
[email protected],
on 11/14/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Historical Fiction,
Author Interviews,
racism,
CBCA,
Walker Books,
After,
Christmas reads,
black dog books,
Sue Lawson,
Pan's Whisper,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Joy Lawn,
Australian YA,
Charles Perkins,
Dare You,
Freedom Ride,
Indigenous issues,
You Don't Even Know,
Add a tag
Meet Sue Lawson, author of Freedom Ride Thanks for talking to Boomerang Books, Sue. It’s a pleasure, Joy, thanks so much for asking me. Where are you based and how involved are you in the world of children’s and YA lit? We moved to Geelong two years ago from a smaller regional town. Though we […]
By:
[email protected],
on 11/3/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Carlee Yardley,
Dog and the Lost Leg,
David West,
Felicity Gardner,
The Complete Guide to a Dog's Best Friend,
Book News,
courage,
friendship,
adventure,
loyalty,
Walker Books,
Corinne Fenton,
Mates,
Andrew McLean,
New Book Releases,
black dog books,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Hachette Australia,
Romi Sharp,
Bob the Railway Dog,
Lothian Children's Books,
Add a tag
If you’re anything like me you’ll love a good dog story, especially those feel-good ones of friendship, courage and love. Typically known as our best mates, the canine variety so often teach us about loyalty, responsibility and maintaining a zest for life, and these three picture books certainly contain these elements in their own gorgeous […]
Winston the Book Wolf. Marni McGee. Illustrated by Ian Beck. 2006. Walker. 32 pages. [Source: Library]
I definitely enjoyed reading Marni McGee's Winston the Book Wolf. If you enjoy fairy tale twists OR books about books, then this is one to seek out. Winston the Wolf LOVES, LOVES, LOVES to eat words, all sorts of words. He is literally eating the words, thus one of perhaps many reasons why he is banned from the library. But someone has pity on Winston, a girl with a red hood, and shows Winston that there is a BETTER way to devour words: that way, of course, is by READING them. After Winston learns to read, he NEEDS the library; he needs more books, more stories, more words. But sadly, he is banned. Can he and his new friend find a way to sneak him into the library?!
This one is definitely worth reading and sharing.
The illustrations were a bit odd, I admit, but they mostly worked for me. Mainly because they definitely add to the story. Readers can spot, for example, three little pigs on nearly every spread. One thing I didn't quite get, however, was WHY the tables and chairs and such had to have faces.
First sentence: Winston the Wolf swished his tail as he ran past the burger stand. He did slow down to sniff, but he did not drool. Meaty treats were not what Winston had in mind. Winston wanted books, and he knew where to find them.
© 2015 Becky Laney of
Becky's Book Reviews
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 9/16/2015
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Javier Zabala,
Elena Odriozola,
Levi Pinfold,
Phaidon Press,
Martijn van der Linden,
Laura Carlin,
A World of Your Own,
Artforum (Slovakia),
Biennale of Illustrations Bratislava (BIB),
Bingchun Huang (Mi He),
Dar Onboz Publishing House (Lebanon),
IBBY UK,
International Centre for the Picture Book in Society,
Kan Ya Ma Kan (Palestine),
Mirocomachiko,
Monika Kompaníkov,
Myung-Ae Lee,
Natalia Sаlienko,
Awards,
News,
Picture Books,
Candlewick Press,
IBBY,
Annemarie Van Haeringen,
Piet Grobler,
Renate Wacker,
Ronald Curchod,
Rose Shoumali,
The Iron Man,
Veronika Holecová,
Veronika Klímová,
Ted Hughes,
Walker Books,
Add a tag
…and to all the illustrators who have won prizes in the prestigious international BIB award in this special, 50th-anniversary year.
I have been enthusing recently about Laura Carlin’s book The Promise, written by … Continue reading ... →
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 9/14/2015
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Margarita Engle,
Walker Books,
Carmen Agra Deedy,
Nicola Davies,
Rafael Lopez,
Peachtree Publishers,
Jeanette Winter,
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,
Jamie Hogan,
Beach Lane Books,
Thomas Gonzalez,
14 Cows for America,
The Promise,
Frank Morrison,
Charlesbridge Publishing,
Laura Carlin,
WaterBridge Outreach,
Katheryn Russell-Brown,
Little Melba and Her Big Trombone,
Duckbill (India),
Lee & Low (US),
Tiger Boy,
Barbara Bundy,
Drum Dream Girl: How One Girl's Courage Changed Music,
Malala a Brave Girl from Pakistan / Iqbal a Brave Boy from Pakistan: Two Stories of Bravery,
WaterBridge Outreach Book Set,
News,
Picture Books,
Mitali Perkins,
Candlewick Press,
Add a tag

WaterBridge Outreach: Books + Water recently announced the books in English they have selected this year for donation to the different schools and libraries they support around the world. WaterBridge Outreach is a non-profit that seeks … Continue reading ... →
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 9/11/2015
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
HarperCollins,
Uma Krishnaswami,
Houghton Mifflin,
Kids Can Press,
Kadir Nelson,
Lauren Thompson,
Groundwood Books,
Tim Wynne-Jones,
Orca Books,
The Nightlife of Trees,
Ram Singh Urveti,
Books,
Picture Books,
Articles,
Candlewick Press,
Barbara Reid,
Cornelius Van Wright,
Best Friends,
Allen Say,
Bhajju Shyam,
Durga Bai,
Gita Wolf,
Feiwel and Friends,
Andrea Spalding,
Amistad,
Children's Book Press,
Dianne Hofmeyr,
E. B. Lewis,
Connie McLennan,
Frances Lincoln,
Christy Hale,
Anushka Ravishankar,
Front Street,
Dana Goldberg,
AG Ford,
Cheryl Foggo,
Dear Baobab,
Devashish Makhija,
Big Bear Hug,
Alan Marks,
Cate James,
Capucine Mazille,
Dingo's Tree,
Gladys Milroy,
Breaking the Spell: Stories of Magic and Mystery from Scotland,
MWD theme - Trees,
'Branching Across the World: Trees in Multicultural Children's Literature,
children's books about trees,
Caroline Binch,
Big Jabe,
Epigram Books (Singapore),
Bulbuli's Bamboo,
Bakame Editions (Rwanda),
Alone in the Forest,
Andrea Anastasio,
Call Me Tree / Llámame árbol,
Cézanne and the Apple Boy,
Derek Blanks,
Grandfather Goes on Strike,
Grandma Lim's Persimmons,
Zora Hurston and the Chinaberry Tree,
Janet Wilson,
Magabala Books,
Walker Books,
John Shelley,
Nicola Davies,
Roseanne Thong,
Tara Books,
The Boat in the Tree,
Piet Grobler,
The Wishing Tree,
Pratham Books,
Simon & Schuster,
William Miller,
Laurence Anholt,
Jerdine Nolen,
Maggie Prewett,
The Old Frangipani Tree at Flying Fish Point,
Trina Saffioti,
Second Story Press,
ZonderKidz,
Nicholas Oldland,
Karadi Tales,
Janetta Otter-Barry Books,
John Kilaka,
The Amazing Tree,
Nina Sabnani,
Sandhya Rao,
Marjorie van Heerden,
Out of the Way! Out of the Way!,
Tulika Books,
Uma Krishnaswamy,
Qin Leng,
Scholastic Canada,
Sirish Rao,
The Promise,
Walter Lorraine Books,
Under the Cherry Blossom Tree,
Marcia Vaughan,
Up the Learning Tree,
Jin Pyn Lee,
The Elephant and the Tree,
Maya Christina Gonzales,
North-South Books,
Paula Wiseman Books,
Picture a Tree,
Proiti Roy,
In Bon Bibi's Forest,
Pulak Biswas,
Priya Kuriyan,
Ibrahima Ndiaye,
The Magic Formula,
Lari Don,
Tiger on a Tree,
Laura Carlin,
Jill Milroy,
The Magic Bojabi Tree,
Sharon Wilson,
Trish Cooke,
Mita Bordoloi,
Jainal Amambing,
Oyez! Books (Malaysia),
The Proud Butterfly and the Strange Tree,
Lee & Low (US),
Look Back!,
Papillote Press,
The Grandad tree,
Irene's Wish,
Running Press Book Publishers,
Rebecca Page,
Greystoke,
judith Clay,
Julie Stiegemeyer,
K. S. Nagarajan,
Neeta Gangopadhya,
One Two Tree!,
Rev. Lyndon Harris,
Rosalind Kerven,
Solomon's Tree,
Sunita Lad Bhamray,
The Busy Beaver,
The Enchanted Forest: A Scottish Fairytale,
the Forgiveness Garden,
The Woodcutter of Gura,
Thea's Tree,
Under the Baobab Tree,
Veena Seshadri,
Victor Reece,
When Ali Became Bajrangbali,
Yong-Ha Hu,
Add a tag
Trees are so much a part of our daily lives, whether we take them for granted or find ourselves fighting for their survival: so it is perhaps unsurprising that there are many stories from all over the world that feature trees, woods or forests as a central theme or ‘character’… … Continue reading ... →
Conjured. Sarah Beth Durst. 2013. Walker. 368 pages. [Source: Library]
I definitely found Conjured by Sarah Beth Durst to be a compelling and surprisingly romantic read. What I enjoyed most about this dark YA novel is the mystery. Readers are kept clueless, just as clueless as the heroine herself. Her name, so she's been told, is Eve. What can Eve remember? Not much. And the two people "closest" to her, well, they're odd sorts. One, Malcolm, seems honorable enough, but still crazy mysterious. The other, Nicki, seems mysterious too, but, also antagonistic. Both seem anxious for Eve to recover her memories, but, are trying to pretend that it's no big deal, that the memories will come--or not--as they will. Eve definitely feels PRESSURE from almost everyone in her life.
Eve has, for better or worse, started a job at a library. She meets a boy around her own age, Zach. I would say that he's unlike any other boy she's ever met, but, since Eve has no memories at all of her past, and surprisingly few of her present, that would not be worth much. But Zach is special, and, he thinks Eve is very, very special indeed. Zach isn't the only "young person" she's met since leaving the hospital. She's also met a few others, that are STRANGE, STRANGE, SUPER-STRANGE.
Conjured is a book that celebrates MYSTERY. Eve is on a journey of self-discovery, and, the mystery she's trying to solve is herself...
© 2015 Becky Laney of
Becky's Book Reviews
By:
[email protected],
on 9/6/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Book News,
compassion,
Freedom,
nature,
Environment,
Seagull,
Walker Books,
humanity,
Bob Graham,
New Book Releases,
Random House Australia,
Working Title Press,
danny snell,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Romi Sharp,
How the Sun Got to Coco's House,
Ollie and the Wind,
Ronojoy Ghosh,
Add a tag
The scent of Spring is in the air. But that’s not all that’s lifting us up. From the tiny details to the wider world, our environment has so much to offer. For different reasons, these following picture books discover beauty and how the elements of nature can capture our hearts and strengthen our human kindness. […]
By:
[email protected],
on 7/14/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Book News,
poem,
rhyme,
song,
Walker Books,
Jackie Hosking,
Janeen Brian,
roland harvey,
New Book Releases,
Cheryll Johns,
Scholastic Australia,
Omnibus Books,
Claire Richards,
Colin Buchanan,
Laura Wood,
Marjorie Crosby-Fairall,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Tony Wilson,
Ed Allen,
Book Reviews - Poetry,
The Croc and the Platypus,
Romi Sharp,
10 Clumsy Emus,
10 Cheeky Possums,
10 Spooky Bats,
Little Barry Bilby had a Fly upon his Nose,
Silly Squid! Poems about the Sea,
The Cow Tripped Over the Moon,
Add a tag
Children connect with songs and rhymes. This innate quality allows young readers and listeners the ability to play and experiment with sounds with ease. Not only do these lyrical stories lend themselves to a range of engaging and interactive experiences, but their audience is also given opportunities to learn the mechanics of language, sequences and […]
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 7/13/2015
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Walker Books,
Nicola Davies,
The Promise,
Laura Carlin,
MWD Reviews,
MWD book reviews,
MWD theme - Trees,
'Branching Across the World: Trees in Multicultural Children's Literature,
children's books about trees,
Books,
Picture Books,
Add a tag

The Promise
written by Nicola Davies, illustrated by Laura Carlin
(Walker Books, 2013)
Set in a grim, grey, arid urban landscape where ‘Nothing grew. Everything was broken. … Continue reading ... →
By:
[email protected],
on 6/29/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Book News,
Fox,
Walker Books,
Children's Book Council of Australia,
margaret wild,
New Book Releases,
Judith Rossell,
Little Hare Books,
Harry and Hopper,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Ritva Voutila,
The Treasure Box,
The Stone Lion,
Romi Sharp,
Bogtrotter,
Davy and the Duckling,
Lucy Goosey,
Picture Book of the Year Awards,
The Very Best of Friends,
Add a tag
Margaret Wild is a much-loved, award-winning author with over 70 titles to her name, having great success with acclaimed books including Fox, The Very Best of Friends, Harry and Hopper, Lucy Goosey, Davy and the Duckling, and The Treasure Box. Her books extend to a wide range of themes, and are characteristically known for their […]
By:
[email protected],
on 5/25/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Karen Blair,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
The Five Mile Press,
B is for Bedtime,
Romi Sharp,
Baby Beats,
Chooky-doodle-doo,
Early Childhood Notable Book,
Fish Jam,
Jan Whiten,
Kylie Howarth,
Sinead Hanley,
Book News,
Walker Books,
Children's Book Council of Australia,
New Book Releases,
Little Hare Books,
Anna Pignataro,
Margaret Hamilton,
Add a tag
Music and books have many benefits in common for a baby’s long-term development. Learning about patterns and sequencing, counting, memory, expressing language and emotions are all powerful advantages to being exposed to these experiences. And when combined, this makes for a most engaging, dynamic and instrumental union. Here we explore a few upbeat and rhythmic […]
By:
Becky Laney,
on 4/26/2015
Blog:
Becky's Book Reviews
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
books reviewed in 2015,
books reread in 2015,
YA Fiction,
YA Historical Fiction,
YA Fantasy,
YA Romance,
2012,
Walker Books,
Bloomsbury USA,
review copy,
Add a tag
Scarlet. A.C. Gaughen. 2012. Walker. 292 pages. [Source: Library]
I first read Scarlet
last year. I really enjoyed it, but, not as much as I ended up enjoying the second book in the series, Lady Thief.
So. Scarlet is a retelling of Robin Hood. The narrator is "Will Scarlet" a young woman posing as one of Robin's men. All of the gang know her secret, though they didn't all learn at once. But most of the villagers don't. Scarlet is a thief with a past, a past that will catch up with her by the end of the novel. Through Scarlet's perspective, readers get to know Rob (Robin Hood), John Little, Much, and Tuck. Readers also get to know about the dangerous and cruel Guy Gisbourne. He's been hired to find Robin Hood and his gang and kill them...
How did I feel about Scarlet the second time I read it? I enjoyed it so much more! I think one of the reasons I love rereading is because I can relax and enjoy how everything comes together. The first time I was focused on the potential of the premise, on the mystery--who was this Scarlet?--and on the action--will The Hood and his gang be able to save everyone?! The second time I was able to focus on the development of characters and relationships. I already had a connection with the characters, a LOVE for them, so that helped this reading experience tremendously.
I'll be rereading Lady Thief before I read the third in the series, Lion Heart, which releases in May.
© 2015 Becky Laney of
Becky's Book Reviews
By:
[email protected],
on 4/22/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Book News,
Picture Books,
Australia,
new zealand,
legacy,
Anzac Biscuits,
Walker Books,
Glenda Millard,
Frané Lessac,
Mark Greenwood,
Scholastic Press,
notable,
craig smith,
New Book Releases,
owen swan,
Allen & Unwin,
Dimity Powell,
Centenary,
ANZAC,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Midnight: the story of a light horse,
Romi Sharp,
Phil Cummings,
wartime,
Children's Book Council of Australia awards,
I Was Only Nineteen,
John Schumann,
Once a Shepherd,
Phil Lesnie,
Add a tag
In just a couple of days we commemorate the legacy of the brave soldiers and the tragic events of World War 1 that occurred one hundred years ago. A beautiful selection of ANZAC books for children have been reviewed by Dimity here, but here’s a few more that certainly captured my heart with their touching […]
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 4/15/2015
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Margaret Chamberlain,
Elizabeth Laird,
Frances Lincoln,
Janetta Otter-Barry Books,
Wendy Cooling,
Gill Lewis,
Made by Raffi,
Girl With a White Dog,
I Love Mel,
Jessica Shepherd,
Joan Lingard,
Kim Reynolds,
Letterbox Library,
Little Rebels Award,
Mel Elliott,
Nadine Dreams of Home,
Pearl Power,
Scarlet Ibis,
Shh! We Have a Plan,
Trouble on Cable Street,
Anne Booth,
Alliance of Radical Booksellers,
Craig Pomranz,
Bernard Ashley,
News,
Events,
Barrington Stoke,
Chris Haughton,
Catnip Books,
Child’s Play,
Oxford University Press,
Grandma,
Walker Books,
Add a tag
The UK’s 2015 Little Rebels Award shortlist has been announced – and it’s an exciting, diverse selection of eight books, featuring both new and well-established book creators.

From the press release by the … Continue reading ... →
By: Marjorie Coughlan,
on 4/13/2015
Blog:
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Paulo Coelho,
Maya Angelou,
Alice Walker,
Walker Books,
Helen Oxenbury,
Ntozake Shange,
The Color Purple,
death in children's books,
Possessing the Secret of Joy,
Alex Ayliffe,
Waiting for Baby,
Sharon Wilson,
Trish Cooke,
MWD interview,
MWD theme - Trees,
'Branching Across the World: Trees in Multicultural Children's Literature,
children's books about trees,
bereavement in children's books,
Caroline Binch,
children's books set in Dominica,
Children's books set in the Caribbean,
For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow is Enuf,
Full Full Full of Love,
Hey Crazy Riddle!,
Look Back!,
Papillote Press,
Paul Howard,
Polly Pattullo,
So Much!,
The Grandad tree,
Zoom!,
Interviews,
Picture Books,
Add a tag
Trish Cooke is the award-winning author of such acclaimed and enduring picture books as Full, Full, Full of Love and So Much!, which was recently included in UK book list ‘The 50 Best Culturally Diverse Children’s Books‘. … Continue reading ... →
By:
[email protected],
on 4/7/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Book News,
Red,
Author Interviews,
Walker Books,
Libby Gleeson,
Freya Blackwood,
New Book Releases,
Amy and Louis,
The Great Bear,
Leila Rudge,
Romi Sharp,
Banjo and Ruby Red,
Clancy and Millie and the Very Fine House,
Go To Sleep Jessie!,
I am Susannah,
Mahtab's Story,
Mum Goes to Work,
Shutting the Chooks In,
The Cleo Stories,
Add a tag
A true master of her craft is one that writes to elicit a multi-sensory experience from the very sight and sound of her words. She makes you feel, she makes you ponder, she creates suspense, excitement, and sorrow. All aimed to tug at your heartstrings, and all equally gratifying. The acclaimed multi award-winning author that […]
By:
[email protected],
on 3/13/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Book News,
mal peet,
Walker Books,
Tamar,
Exposure,
Keeper,
Cloud Tea Monkeys,
Elspeth Graham,
The Golden Day,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Joy Lawn,
SWF,
Life An exploded Diagram,
The penalty,
Ursula Dubosasrsky,
Add a tag
Mal Peet was a delight to read and meet. I can’t describe him as a YA author because he would loathe that description, refusing to see his writing pigeonholed into age categories. But clearly both young adults and adults appreciated his novels, and children his picture books. He has left a legacy of memorable books […]
By:
[email protected],
on 1/17/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
multicultural,
Book News,
diversity,
indigenous,
flora,
Claire Saxby,
Australia Day,
Walker Books,
Frané Lessac,
Donna Gynell,
fauna,
Trudie Trewin,
New Book Releases,
Jeremy,
Windy Hollow Books,
Tania McCartney,
Calpepper's Place,
Working Title Press,
danny snell,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Big Red Kangaroo,
Graham Byrne,
Chris Faille,
Tina Snerling,
An Aussie Year,
EK Books,
Romi Sharp,
A is for Australia,
Add a tag
January 26th marks the date in which Australians reflect upon our cultural history and celebrate the accomplishments since the first fleet landed on Sydney’s shores in 1788. Here are a select few picture books aimed at providing children with some background knowledge of our beautiful land, flora, fauna and multicultural diversity. There is plenty of […]
By:
[email protected],
on 1/6/2015
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
Book News,
friendship,
seasons,
beach,
shaun tan,
Claire Saxby,
recycling,
Alison Lester,
Walker Books,
Sue Whiting,
Random House Australia,
dianne wolfer,
Fremantle Press,
Lothian,
Allen & Unwin,
reassurance,
Karen Blair,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Tom Jellett,
Granny Grommet and Me,
Seadog,
Rules of Summer,
Romi Sharp,
A Swim in the Sea,
Kyle Hughes-Odgers,
On a Small Island,
Meredith Thomas,
Noni the Pony Goes to the Beach,
Add a tag
In Australia we’re in the midst of Summer, although here in Melbourne we’ve already had all four seasons in one, sometimes even in one day! A great way to familiarise children with all that the season encompasses is through engaging language experiences. That means providing children opportunities to see, do, touch, listen, read and think […]
By:
[email protected],
on 11/24/2014
Blog:
Perpetually Adolescent
(
Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags:
marketing,
Author Interviews,
Tana French,
Walker Books,
Spark,
Bob Graham,
Jon Klassen,
eleanor catton,
Gillian Flynn,
A Bus Called Heaven,
This is Not My Hat,
Gone Girl,
Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult,
Joy Lawn,
Rachael Craw,
children's and YA fiction,
Koala Awards,
The Luminaries,
Add a tag
Thanks for talking to Boomerang Books, Claire Smith. You’re the marketing assistant at Walker Books, Australia, and you’re going to share your Christmas picks with us. But first let’s find out about you and some books you’ve been working with. Walker Books (based in Sydney) is known for its children’s and YA books. Which do […]
View Next 25 Posts