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Year: 2015


  • International Thriller Writers Name 'Nearly Found' as the 2015 Best Young Adult Novel

    The winning title, Nearly Found, is a sequel to Cosimano’s 2014 work, Nearly Gone. Kathy Dawson Books, a Penguin Young Readers imprint, published Nearly Found in June 2015. (ThrillerWriters.org)

  • Rainbow Boxes to Deliver LGBTQIA Children's Books to Libraries and Shelters Nationwide

    McCarthy and Capetta have put much thought into creating Rainbow Boxes with titles that represent diverse sexualities, gender identities, and racial and ethnic backgrounds, in a wide range of genres. …

  • New Survey Shows 97% of Educators Use Some Form of Digital Content, but Frequency Lags

    BOSTON, MA — Global learning company Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH) announced today the launch of the HMH Educator Confidence Report, a new annual report that surveys over 1,000 teachers and school and …

  • The Thirty Million Words Initiative

    Suskind first became aware of the obstacles to language development after performing surgery to restore hearing in deaf children. Children from low-income families spoke significantly less than those of wealthier …

  • Laini Taylor Fans Unlock a New Chapter of Writing

    The readers composed posts with some of their favorite quotes from Taylor’s series along with the #UnlockLainiTaylor hashtag. Fans were not only treated to new content, but notes straight from …

  • Malala Yousafzai Launches #BooksNotBullets Campaign

    Followers are invited to post a photo of themselves with one of their favorite books, and a statement on why they support “books not bullets.” (GalleyCat)

  • The New York Historical Society Announces 2015 Children's History Book Prize Recipient: Helen Frost For Salt

    NEW YORK, NY — Dr. Louise Mirrer, President and CEO of the New-York Historical Society, announced today that author Helen Frost will receive New-York Historical’s 2015 Children’s History Book Prize …

  • Josephine Angelini Has Written a New Worldwalker Novella

    The publication of this project was timed to come out prior to the second installment of this young adult trilogy. The Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group will release book two, entitled …

  • Summer Reading and Literacy Apps

    Highlights from the list include: The Monkey Word School Adventure (ages 3 & up), which teaches young children fundamental literacy skills through mini-games and adventures. PlayTales (4-12), a free collection …

  • Neil Gaiman to Write a Sequel for 'Odd and the Frost Giants'

    The story for this book features vikings and characters from Norse mythology. It has been confirmed that Chris Riddell, who has created illustrations for several Neil Gaiman children’s books, will …

  • Patrick McDonnell And Naoko Stoop to Collaborate on a Picture Book Project

    Megan Tingley, a publisher at Little, Brown Books For Young Readers, managed the acquisitions process. Tingley negotiated the terms of the agreement with Henry Dunow, a literary agent at Carlson …

  • New Disney Segment to Combine Consumer Products And Interactive Divisions

    BURBANK, CA — In response to changing consumer preferences in a marketplace increasingly influenced by technology, The Walt Disney Company today announced a realignment of two of its divisions, Disney Consumer Products …

  • Happy Birthday, Jack Gantos!

    Gantos was born on July 2, 1951 in Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania. His family moved around a lot during his childhood, and Gantos struggled to adjust to different school environments. In …

  • Pope Francis Receives New Latin Edition of International Bestseller Diary of a Wimpy Kid at The Vatican

    New York, NY — Before a packed crowd of the faithful in St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City, Pope Francis received a copy of the forthcoming Latin edition of the …

  • Booklist of Diverse Nonfiction Literature for Young Readers

    The list features high-quality nonfiction in the social sciences and humanities representing people of color. With titles for early (0-4 years) to advanced readers (12 and up), the list draws …

  • Expand Your Comics Conversation with the Comic Book Club Handbook!

    Learn how to start and make the most of book clubs for comics and graphic novels with the Comic Book Club Handbook, a new resource produced by Comic Book Legal Defense Fund in …

  • James Patterson Increases School Library Donation Pledge to $1.75 Million

    The team at the Scholastic Reading Club will join Patterson in his charitable efforts. This organization has promised to match each grant dollar with bonus points which will be gifted to the …

  • Original 'Madeline' Paintings Sold at Auction

    Bemelmans’ charming, color-saturated illustrations undeniably set the books apart…Bemelmans’ art conjures a childlike, fairy tale world, where being different makes a little girl special and celebrated, and where the world …

  • Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators Partners with We Need Diverse Books on Summer Internship Program

    Membership in SCBWI will provide these first five interns with broad networking opportunities within the publishing industry. SCBWI regional, national, and international conferences bring together a who’s who of publishing …

  • Love Wins, but I’m on Deadline

    Contributed to CBC Diversity by Tim Federle

    Well, on Friday I woke up in California to the news that Love Won today, and before I’d even had my coffee. California, because I’m here for the American Library Association meeting, where I’m signing swag and even picking up an audiobook honor for narrating my novel Five, Six, Seven, Nate! — which, yes, features a kiss between two middle school boys, and thus qualifies as “The LGBT, and Sometimes Y-Category!” of diversity.

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    Which I’m extremely grateful for.

    But this marriage equality news also came at a VERY tricky time, because all I’ve wanted to do all day is scroll through Twitter and Facebook, and occasionally even pop over to Fox News to see what slant they’re putting on it, BUT I promised I’d write a CBC Diversity Post due TODAY, and I’ve been thinking: “But what about?” What can I say that hasn’t been said before, by brilliantly diverse people who are better writers than I’ll ever be?

    And then it came to me: I’ll write a Buzzfeed-like list-icle, which is my secret weapon these days for tricking myself into starting and finishing things. I cannot possibly come up with enough good ideas to write another guest blog post, let alone a new novel (don’t tell my editor), but I CAN write the Top 5 Things Diversity Means to Me.

    Here goes.

    1. Diversity means telling the truth.

    2. Diversity means that when I sat down to write Better Nate Than Ever I never consciously thought, “Ooh, I should include a gay character in this section.” It just was. It had to be. I was writing about the theater, about a younger version of myself who is obsessed with Broadway and dreams of getting to a place that might fully embrace him for all of his quirks. So, duh. Diversity wasn’t a political act, diversity was just midtown Manhattan at rush hour. Diversity meant populating Nate’s story with people whom he’d really come across along the way, namely: bullies young and old, friends black and white, allies gay and straight.

    3. Diversity means being part of a community.

    4. It has been thrilling to watch the #WeNeedDiverseBooks movement go from hashtag to action. I feel lucky to be the smallest part of it (I’m only 5’7”), and to lend my voice to the G of the LGBT spectrum. The children’s book community—from writers to editors to readers to those true civil rights champions: librarians—seems so eager to hang out together these days, to commiserate, to swap stories and show off our scars. It can be a vaguely lonely thing to be a writer, sitting around eating macaroons in your boxer shorts and wondering when the elves will arrive to finish your manuscript. To be a novelist in 2015, diverse or otherwise, means going on Twitter when you’re SUPPOSED to be writing more than 140 characters, and seeing that you are very much not alone.

    5. Diversity can mean push-back!

    6. My own middle school canceled a school visit — and one meant to launch Better Nate Than Ever — only a week before my trip back home. I am certain the cancellation was due to themes in the book (Nate being called a “fag,” for one), and it makes my heart heavy but I understand it, too. School boards are mighty. So are parents. For every 20 messages I receive from young (and not-so-young) people saying “Thank you for writing a realistic character who represents the queer experience,” I also think back on my 1-star Amazon reviews that are written from a place of disgust. Diversity means not everyone is going to like you. But you know what? A primary responsibility of adulthood is recognizing which things are problems and which things are just annoyances. And that’s why God gave us the Mute button. So, yeah: sometimes Diversity means blocking the haters.

    7. Diversity means the future.

    8. Diversity means that someday we might be (nearly?) universally accepting of each other as a society; so multi-colored as to become one color, so comfortable with our sexuality and love for one another that we’ll have to scratch our heads and look up the Wikipedia entry for “Stonewall riots,” and recall that they weren’t merely science fiction. If DIVERGENT and HUNGER GAMES are the ultimate YA dystopians, perhaps Diversity is writing toward a type of utopia.

    9. Diversity means telling the story only you can tell.

    10. Diversity means closing your eyes and trying to transcribe, in as lyrical or comical or whatever-ical a way as you can, the way you’ve seen the world or the way you’d like to see it. Diversity means, literally, according to the dictionary, variety. And that means if a bookstore had a “Diverse Books” section — and many are starting to! — we might see a few shelves that cover the widest spectrum in the entire shop, from the way people look to the way they’re treated to the way they feel about themselves. And in that sense, diversity means the real world.

    One last little note, before I jump into ALA festivities and attempt to wear a rainbow boa without sneezing: Diversity is an important topic, but it doesn’t have to be held with a reverence that makes people nervous around it. You’re allowed to find the funny in diversity. I know I do. I have to. If I hadn’t found laughter in my life — whether as a kid, who was always the last one picked for dodgeball, or as an adult, who still gets occasional sneers if I hold my (imaginary) boyfriend’s hand in public — then I’m not sure I’d have made it to this day. The one where I’ve got an open document in another tab, waiting to tell another story, starting on page 1.

    I’m not necessarily PLANNING on writing a “diverse book,” but I am planning on writing realistic fiction — which is basically the same thing, you know? And thank goodness for that.

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    Tim Federle’s debut novel, Better Nate Than Ever, was named a New York Times Notable Children’s Book of 2013 and an ALA Stonewall Honor Book. Five, Six, Seven, Nate!, the sequel to Better Nate Than Ever, was named a Best Book of 2014 by the American Booksellers Association, and won the Lambda Literary Award. Say hi at TimFederle.com and connect on Twitter and Instagram @TimFederle.


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