A Visit to the Nuremberg Toy Fair


Cynthia Compton - February 6, 2019


Welcome to Nuremberg, Germany, and the 2019 Spielwarenmesse Toy Fair! This year I was thrilled to be invited to join a group of colleagues from the American Specialty Toy Association in an “exchange visit” of sorts to the world’s largest Toy Fair — some 12 FULL HALLS of toys, games and the magical stuff of play. If you have visited the Javits Center (and back in the day, the Fifth Ave. Toy Building) for New York Toy Fair, you know how enormous and overwhelming that show can be. The Nuremberg event, held from Jan 30 to Feb 3, hosted 70,000 visitors from 130 countries, with exhibitors grouped into 12 product categories ranging from infant play to high technology, from trains to dolls, games and building sets. The sheer size and scope of the event is both inspiring and exhausting, and while we walked for what seemed like miles of aisles each day, I am very sure that we only sampled a portion of the event. I thought I would share a few photos, to entice you all to join me next year!
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Mystery Date with a Book


Elizabeth Bluemle - February 5, 2019

This is one of Book Culture’s mystery books. Can you guess the book inside?


Flying Pig co-founder Josie Leavitt may be retired from bookselling (though she takes substitute shifts now and then), but she still loves books and indie bookstores. Recently, she was in NYC and visited Book Culture on the Upper West Side. She found herself intrigued by their display of ‘mystery date’ books: books wrapped in brown paper with no title, author, or publisher noted, just a few enticing clues to make readers want to take a chance on a blind date with the hidden title.
Josie and her partner took a chance on four of these unknown books and were delighted with their choices. They’ve read three of the four so far and all, Josie reported, “were right on target.” One was a short story collection her partner said she wouldn’t have picked up on her own, and she LOVED it.
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Catapulting into Art with Eugene Yelchin and M.T. Anderson


Meghan Dietsche Goel - February 1, 2019

When I was growing up, my parents were active members of the Art Institute of Chicago, and I remember following them through many a family weekend outing. It’s wonderful to have those memories anchoring my connection to museums. The thing is, though, that I don’t remember feeling terribly engaged as my family moved from room to room, quietly contemplating the art—and I don’t think I’m the only kid who has ever felt that way. That’s why I am so inspired by the Blanton Museum of Art’s K–12 education program, which centers around dialogue, creativity, and interaction. And that’s why I’ve loved collaborating on the Art of the Book program with them. Designed to use the work of extraordinary illustrators as a jumping off point for art, the Art of the Book is one of my very favorite programs—partly because I feel like I get as much out of it as the kids do.
We’ve been trying to coordinate at least one event per school year, and I’ve previously shared posts about the fun we had with Javaka Steptoe and Armand Baltazar. This month, we were lucky enough to welcome M.T. Anderson and Eugene Yelchin to talk about The Assassination of Brangwain Spurge with 200 seventh graders from area middle schools. Continue reading

Important Things About ‘The Important Thing About Margaret Wise Brown’


Kenny Brechner - January 31, 2019

Going through a picture book frontlist kit is a bit like walking down a long corridor lined with ornate doors. We poke our head through every door. Many lead to the familiar places suggested by the book jackets which adorn them. Yet our expectations are often slightly askew, either pleasantly or otherwise. Every now and then, however, we cross a doorway and find ourselves in a markedly different place than we had been prepared for, a place whose quality grows stronger with every step.
That was my experience when I stepped within The Important Thing About Margaret Wise Brown yesterday. It is a picture book biography by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Sarah Jacoby. I knew right away I wanted to write about this book. Later in the day I realized something else unexpected, that my ShelfTalker pal Meghan Dietsche Goel had already written about the book, in the same context I was planning on! Denied! What now?
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There’s a Wall in the Middle of This Storytime


Cynthia Compton - January 30, 2019

I was very excited for this week’s Paint-a-Story at the shop, both because I love Jon Agee’s There’s a Wall in the Middle of This Book, and because I could finally use some materials for our accompanying art project that I had stashed in the garage months ago — following a long, very satisfying rummage at our local hardware store, where the clearance shelves are a treasure trove of creative possibility for preschoolers and adults who like big messes. (OK, I was really there to look for a new garbage disposal… but how long can you do THAT?)  As I have written about in Paint-a-Story Mondays; or, The Messier the Better, each Monday morning we gather with 25-35 preschool children and their grownups to read a picture book aloud and complete a “very messy” art project — sometimes experimenting with the materials or style of the book’s illustrator, and sometimes using found materials (and a lot of glitter and glue) to expand on the story and its theme. Our staff selects the book and provides the materials, but much of what is created by our guests is original, inspired, and worth oh-so-much-more than a refrigerator door gallery showing. Our objective is to be more concerned with process than product, believing that open-ended experimentation with materials within the shadow of good stories makes literature real and tangible to young people — truly, we believe this is true for readers of all ages.
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Hits, Misses, a Different List, and Some Award Stats


Elizabeth Bluemle - January 29, 2019

The children’s literature equivalent of the Oscars—aka the American Library Association’s Youth Media Awards—were announced on Monday morning, and 66 books from 23 publishers took home 77 awards (plus 10 adult titles from the Alex Awards). Forty-seven awards (excluding the Alex Awards) went to women; 30 went to men.
So many beautiful, enduring books were included, along with some surprising omissions. And oh, the humanity! Only two Newbery Honor books?! I loved the choices, and judges, our shelves also have room for a couple more! (Scroll down for a complete list of winners and honors, grouped by age range instead of separated by award.)
Readers, what books were you sad, surprised, and/or outraged not to see on these lists? I’ll join that conversation in the comments.
Several books took home multiple awards: one book, The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo (HarperTeen) took home three, and the following books each took home two: Darius the Great Is Not Okay by Adib Khorram (Dial), The Parker Inheritance by Varian Johnson (Scholastic/Levine), Thank You, Omu! by Oge Mora (Little, Brown), The Unwanted: Stories of the Syrian Refugees by Don Brown (HMH), What the Night Sings by Vesper Stamper (Knopf), and When Angels Sing: The Story of Rock Legend Carlos Santana by Michael Mahin, illustrated by Jose Ramirez (Atheneum).
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“Every Good Book Is at Least a Little Bit Strange”


Meghan Dietsche Goel - January 25, 2019

Last week I chronicled the fun that our children’s booksellers had with a table full of picture book samples, and there were so many stand-out picks there that we can’t wait to sell. But as a children’s bookseller, one of the titles that particularly stood out was Mac Barnett and Sarah Jacoby’s The Important Thing About Margaret Wise Brown.
As we dip and weave through Margaret Wise Brown’s life, landing on small but illuminating moments on each page, a woman with pragmatic sensibilities, off-kilter idiosyncrasies, childlike wonder, an uncommon affinity for rabbits, and maybe even a dash of ambition comes into focus. Winningly odd and childlike in scope, it boils the life of this vibrant literary giant down into 42 pages—one for each year of her life—while very specifically not trying too hard to fit the entirety of that life into these pages at all.
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Wednesday at WI 14!


Kenny Brechner - January 24, 2019

As I write this it is 4:27 p.m. on Wednesday in Albuquerque, the first full day of Winter Institute 14. It is true that I’ve been here since Saturday doing clandestine activities for the ABA Board but we’re not going to discuss that or even acknowledge it. Our mission here is succinct. It’s all about today.

Pictured l. to r. are my delightful mentees, Jesper Provstgaard Kristiansen of Indeks Retail in Denmark, and new bookstore owners Dan Brewster of Prologue Bookshop in Columbus, Ohio, and Tina Greene-Bevington of Bay Books in Suttons Bay, Mich.


The official day started with meeting my three mentees before the Breakfast Keynote by Girls Who Code founder Reshma Saujani. Following her keynote, booksellers separated into 11 groups for a discussion based on the address. The discussions were each led by an ABA Board member.
Reshma’s new book is Brave Not Perfect: Fear Less, Fail More and Live Bolder. It was expected that the discussions would be centered on a general application of that principle to bookselling; however, the keynote was based strongly on gender-specific character development with boys trained to be brave and learn from failure while girls are trained to be handcuffed by perfectionism and a counter-productive adherence to empathy at the cost of progressive personal engagement and development.
I decided to take Reshma’s advice and go with bravery over sterile perfectionism and brought forward a topic I have thought about for many years: the gender divide in children’s bookselling. If you spend time working in elementary schools you will be aware that there are very few male teachers in the building. The same is certainly true of engaged male children’s booksellers. This is so despite the vital importance of children’s books as an economic driver to bookstore sales and customer loyalty.
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A Round of Rep Visits


Cynthia Compton - January 23, 2019

Late January brings frigid temperatures and ice storms, a ubiquitous layer of sidewalk salt crunching underfoot in the entryway of my store where it was tracked in by little boots and the wheels of strollers, and a calendar marked with appointments as publishers reps all present their spring/summer seasons lists. The phone calls begin right after New Year’s: “Cynthia, I’m headed to town in a few weeks. Is Tuesday or Wednesday afternoon better for you? I will send a box of catalogs and samples, but the mark-ups are already in your inbox.”
Publisher rep appointments are a spot of sunshine in the bitter grey days and swirling snow of January here in Indiana. The store is quiet, we are a bit flush with cash from the holidays, and we really miss seeing our colleagues from the bookselling community. Sales reps, like the Pony Express, bring us packages and treats, but they also bring news.
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The Trembling Edge of an Author’s Career


Elizabeth Bluemle - January 22, 2019

It’s so exciting to encounter authors right as their careers tremble on the edge of shooting off into the skies. It might be a grand splash of an arrival, with national bestseller repercussions, or it may be a quieter arrival, in which the school and library world suddenly seems to have discovered and fallen in love with an author en masse. When you read a fresh book and know that it’s going to be a game-changer, it’s a brilliant feeling. It’s like a low thrill that builds in your blood and grows stronger and stronger as your joy and delight in a book is shared by more and more readers. I have that feeling again! More on that in a bit.
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