3/29/12

Poetry Books in April

Our regular book-of-the-week feature will be on hiatus during April 2012 as we will be featuring books of poetry by New Hampshire poets (and recommended by other Granite Staters) throughout the month.

If you would like to feature our "NH Celebrates Poetry" project on your website, please pick up the widget you will find on the right-hand panel of our Book Notes blog. If you already have the widget we used for our 2009 celebration on your site then you are all set as new content will display in that widget too.

Happy National Poetry Month!

3/23/12

Book of the Week #12

Dr. Seuss: American Icon by Philip Nel (NY: Continuum, 2004)

Philip Nel (who as far as I know has no connection to NH), has written an in-depth study of the work of Dr. Seuss (who does have a connection to NH). If you are looking for a celebration of the Dr. Seuss you know and love, this is not your book. If you are looking for an in-depth study of the poetical structure, the political influence, and the artistic sensibilities of Theodore Seuss Geisel this is the place to begin. The extensive bibliography will point you to where you should go next as well.

"Published in time for the centenary of Seuss's birth in March 2004, Dr. Seuss: American Icon, celebrates one of the most influential authors and artists of the 20th century: Theodor Seuss Geisel, best known as 'Dr. Seuss'. Dr Seuss's ascendance from children's author to American icon confirms that his cultural significance rests not just with the beginning reader, but with the scholar, the artist, and the poet. Seuss's Beginner Books(starting with The Cat in the Hat in 1957) have obscured the enormous range of his contributions to American literature. Similarly his art, unfairly overlooked because it appears in children's books, cartoons, and commercials, actually covers a range of styles, including Surrealism, Art Nouveau, and Cubism. Bringing to light the adult perspective behind the children's writer, Philip Nel examines Seuss's lesser-known works, such as the 'adult book' The Seven Lady Godivas (1939), and the live-action musical The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953). The book also features the most comprehensive Seuss bibliography ever produced, documenting his prodigious output. As well as establishing Seuss's place among poets and artists, Dr. Seuss: American Icon links the Seuss people know and the Seuss people do not know." (publisher's blurb)

3/21/12

NH Schools and LAL


There were 736 entries in the 2012 Letters About Literature competition received from New Hampshire students. The students that identified their schools go to:

Barnard School, South Hampton
Broken Ground School, Concord
Crossroads Academy, Lyme
Dunbarton Elementary School, Dunbarton
Gilford High School, Gilford
Haverhill Cooperative MS, North Haverhill
Hollis Brookline Middle School, Hollis
Hopkinton Middle/High School, Contoocook
Infant Jesus School, Nashua
Lisbon Regional School, Lisbon
Londonderry High School, Londonderry
Londonderry Middle School, Londonderry
Milford Middle School, Milford
Mt. Vernon Village School, Mount Vernon
Oyster River Middle School, Durham
Plainfield Elementary School, Meriden
Rundelett Middle School, Concord
Sandwich Central School, Center Sandwich
Seacoast Charter School, Kingston
Southside Middle School, Manchester
St. Mary Academy, Dover
Stratham Memorial School, Stratham
Three Rivers School, Pembroke
Trinity Christian School, Keene
Warren Village School, Warren

By the end of March the students whose letters are selected as New Hampshire semi-finalists will be notified by mail that their work was selected.

3/14/12

Book of the Week #11

What to Do When You Worry Too Much: A Kid's Guide to Overcoming Anxiety by Dawn Huebner, illustrated by Bonnie Matthews (Washington, DC: Imagination Press/American Psychological Association, 2006).

Dr. Dawn Huebner, a psychologist and author who lives in Exeter, NH, wrote this book as part of her series, the What-to-Do Guides for Kids. These books help children who are struggling with common yet troubling childhood issues.Each book teaches a set of cognitive-behavioral strategies to help children overcome thier problems.

The worry book teaches kids to deal with their worries using techniques based on the "principals known as containment, externalization, and competing demands." (p. 4) That quote is the most scientific/complicated sounding sentence in the whole book (and it is from the introduction for parents and caregivers.) The techniques are explained using ideas and language that kids can understand, like boxes, weird-looking monsters, and tomato plants. Each idea has a drawing/writing activity page after it to give the child a place to solidify their version of the tool or technique they just learned.

This book is part of the Family Resource Connection collection (which is a recommendation in and of itself) and came to my attention because it was written about by one of the New Hampshire students who entered the 2012 Letters About Literature competition. (I learn about a lot of cool books for kids that way!)

3/7/12

2012 Ladybug Nominees

The Ladybug Picture Book Award committee has chosen the nominees for the 2012 Ladybug Picture Book Award. New Hampshire children, from preschool to third grade, will select the winning picture book when they vote in November 2012.

Full catalog records for all of the nominated titles are available in the NHU-PAC. Voting materials will be posted on the Ladybug web page in August. If you want to get ahead of the crowd you can go ahead and order your Ladybug Stickers anytime.

And the 2012 nominees are:
  • Blackout by John Rocco (Hyperion, 2011)   
  • Calvin Can't Fly: The Story of a Bookworm Birdie by Jennifer Berne & Keith Bendis (Sterling, 2010)
  • Cloudette by Tom Lichtenheld (Henry Holt, 2011)
  • Me Jane by Patrick McDonnell (Little, Brown, 2011)
  • Neville by Norton Juster & G. Brian Karas    (Schwartz & Wade, 2011)  
  • Perfect Square by Michael Hall (Greenwillow, 2011)  
  • Pete the Cat: I Love My White Shoes by Eric Litwin & James Dean (Harper Collins, 2010)  
  • Stars by Mary Lyn Ray & Marla Frazee (
    Beach Lane
    Books, 2011)  
  • Swirl by Swirl: Spirals in Nature by Joyce Sidman & Beth Krommes (Houghton Mifflin, 2011)  
  • Three Hens and a Peacock by Lester Laminack & Henry Cole   (Peachtree, 2011)

3/6/12

Book of the Week #10

The Storm at the Door by Stefan Merrill Block (NY: Random House, 2011)
"The past is not past for Katharine Merrill. Even after two decades of volatile marriage, Katharine still believes she can have the life that she felt promised to her by those first exhilarating days with her husband, Frederick. For two months, just before Frederick left to fight in World War II, Katharine received his total attentiveness, his limitless charms, his astonishing range of intellect and wit. Over the years, however, as Frederick's behavior and moods have darkened, Katharine has covered for him, trying to rein in his great manic passions and bridge his deep wells of sadness: an unending project of keeping up appearances and hoping for the best. But the project is failing. Increasingly, Frederick's erratic behavior, amplified by alcohol, distresses Katharine and their four daughters and gives his friends and family cause to worry for his sanity. When, in the summer of 1962, a cocktail party ends with her husband in handcuffs, Katharine makes a fateful decision: She commits Frederick to Mayflower Home, America's most revered mental asylum. There, on the grounds of the opulent hospital populated by great poets, intellectuals, and madmen, Frederick tries to transform his incarceration into a creative exercise, to take each meaningless passing moment and find the art within it. But as he lies on his room's single mattress, Frederick wonders how he ever managed to be all that he once was: a father, a husband, a business executive. Under the faltering guidance of a self-obsessed psychiatrist, Frederick and his fellow patients must try to navigate their way through a gray zone of depression, addiction, and insanity. Meanwhile, as she struggles to raise four young daughters, Katharine tries to find her way back to Frederick through her own ambiguities, delusions, and the damages done by her rose-colored belief in a life she no longer lives. Inspired by elements of the lives of the author's grandparents, this haunting love story shifts through time and reaches across generations. Along the way, Stefan Merrill Block stunningly illuminates an age-old truth: even if one's daily life appears ordinary, one can still wage a silent, secret, extraordinary war." (publisher's blurb) 
What the publisher neglects to tell you, and what makes this a suitable book-of-the-week, is that Katharine lives in New Hampshire (at a summer house on Lake Winnepesauke and at home in an unnamed town somewhere north of the Lake).