Sunday, November 02, 2008

No 29 - Personal DNA - Assess your personality

A new kind of personality test which is free, fun, fast and accurate. Test has been designed by a team of professional psychologists. It employs innovative answering techniques, allowing for increased accuracy and an enjoyable process.

Try the test now and see how you score!

(You do not need to sign up or sign in to take the test.)

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

No 28 - Percintaan Tan Hong Ming



tan hong ming

Her name is Umi ...

UMI QAZRINA

I like her ...

yasmin ahmad

Why do you like her?

tan hong ming

She's wear earing ...

She ties to her pony tail ...

erm ...

She's pretty ...

yasmin ahmad

What do you wish you could say to her?

tan hong ming

Do you want to come on a date?

urmm ... to a romantic dinner

yasmin ahmad

Does she know you like her?

tan hong ming

No, ... I keep it a secret

yasmin ahmad

Why?

tan hong ming

I don’t want the whole world to know!

yasmin ahmad

Why not?

tan hong ming


Coz everybody would laugh at me

yasmin ahmad

Why would they laugh at you?

tan hong ming

Huh?

yasmin ahmad

Why would they laugh at you?

tan hong ming

She doesn’t like me ...

yasmin ahmad

She doesn’t like you?

tan hong ming

(shakes head ...)

umi qazrina

My name is Umi Qazrina

yasmin ahmad

Who is your best friend?

umi qazrina

Tan Hong Ming

yasmin ahmad

Tan Hong Ming?

Do you like him?

Do you have a boyfriend?

umi qazrina

Tan Hong Ming ...

“Kanak Kanak Memahaminya”


"Tan Hong Ming" won a Gold Andy for Film Direction and another Gold for Public Service Advertising. This commercial was made for Petronas and was directed by Yasmin Ahmad.

Sunday, June 01, 2008

No 27 - Graphic Novel Workshop


Introduction

r media conducted its first graphic novel workshop - basic level on 31 May 2008. Participants age ranged widely and they included children, teenagers, working adults and parents. It was a whole day event.

Details

Workshop Title:
Organiser: Darul Andalus and r media
Date: 31 May 2008
Time: 0900-1730
Venue: Wisma Indah

About the workshop

The workshop was a multi-media event, using live drawing and sketching, PowerPoint presentations and slides. Included were discussions and demonstrations of basic creative techniques and basic drawing skills, as well as writing and comic conceptualisation.

Overview

r media felt glad to see the participants engaging actively in all the activities and exercises. The enthusiasm were apparent especially the younger participants. Some of them did not even want to go for the scheduled breaks as they were intent on completing their exercises.

We discovered some raw talents - with the right guidance they can become great graphic novel creators to fill the void in Malay graphic novels.

Photos

Here are some photos from the workshop.

An opening introduction by Mr Abdullah Othman, Director, Darul Andalus.


Participants Profile


Working adults


Children


Demos and Discussions


Explaining


Guiding


Live drawing


Digital colouring demo.

Groupings


Mango Group
Character name: Chomel


Apple Group
Character Name: Tuffaha


Orange Group
Character Name: Yellow


Pear Group
Character Name: Mr Smarty Pear

Participants



Sunday, March 30, 2008

No 26 - Teachers in the US are using Graphic Novels to Captivate Reluctant Readers

Not long ago, about the only way a kid could get away with reading a comic book in school was to hide it inside the covers of a textbook. Now Roberta Kaiser, the media specialist at Nautilus Middle School on Miami Beach, not only stocks her shelves with them, but demand outstrips supply by a wide margin.


Picture - top: Nautilus Middle School's Roberta Kaiser says graphic novels are so popular that she has to limit circulation to one book per student.


"I have to limit them to one at a time, but there are students who come in two to three times a day to return one and get another,'' Kaiser said.

Before anybody explodes about kids reading comic books when they're supposed to be doing quadratic equations or studying Shakespeare, know that comic books have changed, and so has reading.

Under the spiffier label of "graphic novels,'' these bound books feature every stripe of hero and story. "The themes and genres can range from science to biography, and from memoirs to yes, superheroes,'' said John Shableski of Diamond Book Distributors, which specializes in comics. "Every subject is available in the format.''

These are not your father's comic books. Superman and Wonder Woman, yes; but also graphic novel editions of the works of Shakespeare, and many classics -- The Red Badge of Courage, Beowulf, Greek Myths, The Adventures of Robin Hood, even Canterbury Tales.
Last year, the Printz Award, an American Library Association honor for the most distinguished book for teens, went to American Born Chinese, a graphic novel by Gene Luen Yang. Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney was an original online comic about a beleaguered middle-schooler before the hard-cover edition propelled it and its sequel to The New York Times bestseller list. Bone, about a marshmallowy type creature's adventures, was self-published by Jeff Smith before Scholastic bought it, colorized it and split it into nine volumes. A million copies of the first installment, Out From Boneville, have been sold. Scholastic brought the series to the classroom by producing a teacher-friendly guide.

Comics are infiltrating the schoolhouse like never before because they are reaching that most elusive of creatures -- the reluctant reader. Faced with a generation raised in a visual environment dominated by television, the Internet and electronic games, teachers and librarians have found comics will lure readers -- especially boys -- who have a limited interest in books.
It was the how-to-get-a-boy-to-read conundrum that propelled Francoise Mouly, co-editor of Raw magazine and the New Yorker art editor, into producing comic books for young readers herself. Mouly has two children with husband Art Spiegelman, the author of Maus, a Holocaust memoir that is considered one of the granddaddies of the graphic novel format, and which won a 1992 Pulitzer Prize. Her daughter, Nadje, learned to read after a few weeks of concentrated effort. Despite being raised in the same environment -- "surrounded by books, with parents who read to them,'' her son, Dash, now 16, struggled.

"I was running out of books I could use with him,'' Mouly said, so she turned to Spiegelman's vast collection of comics -- Krazy Kat, Little Nemo, Batman. That worked. "My husband sacrificed his comics to fatherhood, but it was a good cause, and it allowed Dash to find a path to success,'' Mouly said. "It made us both realize how much of a magic bullet comics could be. Children will learn if there's something in it for them and if it's pleasurable.'' The personal experiment made Mouly realize how divorced comics had become from childhood. "Dash had friends who came to the house and had never seen comics before.''

In response, she and Spiegelman produced three comics anthologies -- the Little Lit series -- aimed specifically at readers age 8 to 12. Next month, she's launching Toon Books, which takes the comic book offensive to its youngest audience ever: beginning readers. The new line debuts in April with three titles -- Benny and Penny by Geoffrey Hayes, Silly Lilly by Agnes Rosenstiehl, and Otto's Orange Day by Frank Cammuso and Jay Lynch. The books have already been adopted by Renaissance Learning's "Accelerated Reader'' program, used in 60 percent of American classrooms.

Comics in book format are not new. In the 1940s, illustrated classics and Bible stories in bound form were produced specifically as educational material. But the entire comics genre took a massive hit when excessive violent imagery led the U.S. Senate to hold hearings in 1954 to investigate the link between comic books and juvenile delinquency. The hearings didn't find one, but they did lead to the creation of a sort of decency code, supported by much of the industry, that effectively set innovation back several decades.

As far as pendulum swings go, comic books are back and then some. Shableski, the book distributor, says sales climbed from $43 million in 2001 to $330 million in 2006.
Much of that is fueled by the embrace of schools and libraries, which in response to a perceived reading crisis among kids, have shifted their focus on getting children to read the "right'' material, to getting children to read, period. It's not just that children are more likely to read something they enjoy, it's that a comic book's combination of pictures and text holds a child's attention longer than blocks of print. Speech balloons develop an understanding of the role of dialogue in a story. Many comics readers wind up wanting to create their own, ("that never happens with a video game,'' Mouly points out), promoting not only literacy, but creativity and self-expression.

Kaiser, the middle school librarian, says her kids overwhelmingly choose the superhero and manga (Japanese) comics over the ones that cover curriculum topics. She hopes the biography and history selections will be added to teachers' lesson plans, but for the moment she's satisfied that she has figured out a way to get certain kids to make regular stops at the circulation desk.

"Some of my comics readers are reading other stuff, but some of them would not be reading at all if they were not reading comics.''

The above article first appeared in The Miami Herald. Copyright 2008 Miami Herald Media Co.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

No 25 - Colour Picker

Two wonderful sites to pick/match colour. The first is a website. All you have to do is to key in the rgb values directly.

http://www.colorblender.com/

My pick will definitely be this software simply named Pixie by Nattyware. You need to download the programme.

"Pixie is an easy-to-use, fast and tiny utility designed especially to fit the needs of Webmasters and Designers. Its a colour picker that includes a mouse tracker. Run it, simply point to a colour and it will tell you the hex, RGB, HTML, CMYK and HSV values of that colour. You can then use these values to reproduce the selected colour in your favorite programs. Pixie will also show the current x y position of your mouse pointer. Its the only tool you'll need for working with colours."

Quoted from www.nattyware.com

Saturday, March 22, 2008

No 24 - Mosque by David Macaulay


A very informative book about the building of a mosque in the Middle Ages that can be appreciated by anyone from teenagers on up. Mosque explores the construction of a fictional, but typical, mosque in 16th century Istanbul.

The author and illustrator David Macaulay focuses on the architectural and social aspects surrounding these holy structures, so that even those with no knowledge of Islam can appreciate the significance that these buildings have in Muslim culture.

In his interview, he said that he was inspired primarily by the buildings themselves, particularly the work of the great Ottoman architect Sinan. In his own words

"The building complex in this story is fictional, as are its patrons and architect. The individual structures, however, are modeled directly on existing examples built between 1540 and 1580 in and around Istanbul, Turkey, by Sinan, the most famous architect of the Ottoman Empire....It seems to me that the best examples of religious architecture are among mankind's proudest accomplishments. When working in the service of some higher entity, we humans seem capable of surpassing our reach and perhaps even our expectations. Driven by faith, but guided ultimately by common sense, these constructions reveal a remarkable level of ingenuity, ambition, and craftsmanship rarely found in secular architecture."

-David Macaulay

This book is a definite treat for the eye and the mind.






All images are Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

No 23 - Art and Technology

Sometimes art is needed to define technology.


Great concept - simple and nice illustration and animation.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

No 22 - Graphic Novels Creating Excitement in the Literary World

There’s excitement in the literary world as publishers are churning out more literature greats in graphic novel format – Dracula, Great Expectations, Macbeth, Tom Sawyer, Treasure Island, Wind in the Willows and one of my favourite classic read – The Last of the Mohicans – to name a few.


Marvel

Marvel under its new imprint Marvel Illustrated recently released a few classic titles – The Last of the Mohicans, Treasure Island and The Three Musketeers as a miniseries. According to Marvel’s Senior VP of Sales, David Gabriel, The Last of the Mohicans was chosen to start the series because it was a boyhood favorite of Marvel’s CEO, Alan Fine.

The titles in the pipeline are The Picture of Dorian Gray, Moby Dick and get ready for this, The Iliad.* The Iliad, together with the Odyssey, are two ancient Greek epic poems traditionally attributed to Homer. The poem is commonly dated to the 8th or 7th century BC, and many scholars believe it is the oldest extant work of literature in the ancient Greek language, making it the first work of European literature.

* The word Iliad means "pertaining to Ilion" (in Latin, Ilium), the city proper, as opposed to Troy, the state centered around Ilium, over which Priam reigned. The names Ilium and Troy are often used interchangeably.



Penguin

Puffin

Penguin under its Puffin Graphics too have a string of classic titles transformed into graphic novels. Puffin had collaborated with Byron Preiss Visual Publications to produce the books. Byron Preiss is a longtime publisher of graphic novels both as a packager and through his iBooks imprint. The complete list is below:

  • Black Beauty, adapted by June Brigman (Power Pack, Brenda Starr) and Roy Richardson
  • The Call of the Wild, adapted by Neil Kleid and illustrated by Alex Niño
  • Dracula, adapted by Gary Reed (formerly of Caliber) and illustrated by Becky Cloonan (Demo, East Coast Rising), a particularly good choice for this title, with her fluid line and strong blacks making the horror story creepier.
  • Frankenstein, adapted by Gary Reed and illustrated by Frazer Irving
  • Macbeth, adapted by Arthur Byron Cover and illustrated by Tony Leonard Tamai — the story’s been revamped as science fiction with shojo manga-style art that works surprisingly well.
  • The Red Badge of Courage, adapted by Wayne Vansant (The ‘Nam) in an almost journalistic semi-realistic style, attractive and easy to read.
  • Treasure Island, adapted by Tim Hamilton
  • The Wizard of Oz, adapted by Michael Cavallero.

There is a sad twist to the series. Unfortunately the series was abandoned when Byron Preiss tragically died in a car accident.

Papercutz



Papercutz's best-selling series of comics adaptations of the world's greatest literature, Classics Illustrated now returns in two new formats: the original, featuring abridged versions of classic novels, and Classics Illustrated Deluxe, featuring longer, more expansive adaptations.

Great Expectations and Wind in the Willows were chosen to kick off the re-launch because, according to the publisher “ …both are gorgeous and intelligent well thought-out adaptations that set an excellent tone for our line…”

The volumes are perfectly designed for library shelves, with sturdy bindings and a large enough size for kids to get a good look at the contents. The artwork is beautifully reproduced—crisp and clear—and each book contains background about the series’ history and a brief bio of the artist/adaptor. In fact, The Wind in the Willows was recently cited in SLJ's March cover story, “Graphic Novels Rule!: The Latest and Greatest Comics for Young Kids,” by Michele Gorman, highlighting 25 outstanding graphic novels guaranteed “to attract a new generation of young readers.”

Incidentally Papercutz, is also the publisher of graphic-novel series such as The Hardy Boys,and Nancy Drew.

Graphic Classics



The approach by Graphic Classics is somewhat different. Instead of publishing individual titles based on the classics, they had based their classic-to-graphic novel series by featuring the world’s greatest authors - from Arthur Conan Doyle to Robert Louis Stevenson - and their works. Their impressive line of adaptations included some of the greatest stories ever written like Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer, Edgar Alan Poe’s The Fall of The House of Usher, Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes series, H G Wells’ War of the Worlds and The Invisible Man and my all-time favourite, Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.

No 21 - The Case for Comics

Comics have come a long way since its Superman [1] and Batman [2] days in the 1930s. From being the bane of the scholastic community, comic books have continued to evolve over the years and have broadened its scope both in the art form, character development and purpose. Recent issues of Superman (the character still thriving after 70 years!) saw the Man of Steel battling homelessness, animal abuse and pollution. In Batman: The Ultimate Evil, the Dark Knight battles paedophiles.




Given the positive changes that occurred in the comics industry as well as their ability to attract young readers, the scholarly world has finally begun to re-examine their potential as educational tools.

Brief History

Comics is the art of visual story telling (less commonly known as sequential art). When and where comics originated is debatable but telling stories using pictures have been around since the beginning of time. The discovery of the cave paintings in Spain in 1879 [3] attest to this fact. Telling pictures are also evident in Egyptian hieroglyphics [4], Japanese emaki [5], and the Bayeux Tapestry [6].





Comics Today


Comics today have evolved to become a sophisticated medium, in both visual and literary qualities, in the form of graphic novels. Graphic novel is defined as a novel whose narrative is related through a combination of text and art, often in comic-strip form.

The term graphic novel goes hand in hand with the name Will Eisner [7], universally acknowledged as one of the great masters of sequential art. A compelling visual storyteller, Eisner is considered to be one of the most influential comic book artists of all time. He has be called the “Leonardo of the comic book form” and the “single person most responsible for giving comics its brain.”



The Future


The potentials of graphic novels are being realised in the field of education across Europe, Japan and the USA. As the web, mobile content, social networking and video games become the language of youth culture; educationists and librarians there are convinced that graphic novels will become an even more important tool for literacy and education.

Graphic novels offer appealing stories and engaging visuals that reach out to reluctant readers, visual learners, and others who may shy away from traditional, print-heavy books. Yet graphic novels offer the same benefits of regular books: introducing young people to new vocabulary, “book language,” and stories and information to teach them about their world and spark their imaginations.

Graphic Novel Categories


As with regular books, graphic novels are categorised under fiction and non-fiction and both have its sub-categories.

1 Fiction

* Science fiction
* Fantasy
* Drama
* Humour
* Crime
* …

2 Non-fiction

* Historical
* Literature / Language
* Biographical
* Religion
* Political
* …

Like any form of pop culture (movies, television programmes, books, magazines, video games etc.) graphic novels should be chosen responsibly, by parents or teachers. Its themes and appropriateness of its content varies with age groups.


[1] Created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian artist Joe Shuster in 1932 and sold to Detective Comics, Inc. in 1938. Superman first appeared in Action Comics #1 in June 1938.

[2] Co-created by artist Bob Kane and writer Bill Finger and published by DC Comics. The character made his first appearance in Detective Comics #27 in May 1939.

[3] In 1879, amateur archaeologist Marcelino Sanz de Sautuola was led by his five-year-old daughter to discover the cave’s drawings. The cave was excavated by Sautuola and archaeologist Juan Vilanova y Piera from the University of Madrid, resulting in a much acclaimed publication in 1880, which interpreted the paintings as Paleolithic in origin.

[4] A hieroglyph is a character of a logographic or partly logographic writing system. This ancient Egyptian writing consisted of over 2,000 hieroglyphic characters where each hieroglyphic character represents a common object from their day.

[5] Emakimono, often simply called emaki, is a horizontal, illustrated narrative form created during the 11th to 16th centuries in Japan. Unique to Japan, emakimono combines both text and pictures, and is drawn, painted, or stamped on a handscroll. They depict battles, romance, religion, folk tales, and stories of the supernatural world. It is seen as the origin of modern manga.

[6] The Bayeux Tapestry (French: Tapisserie de Bayeux) is a 50 cm by 70 m (20 in by 230 ft) long embroidered cloth which depicts the events leading up to the 1066 Norman invasion of England as well as the events of the invasion itself. The Tapestry is annotated in Latin. It is presently exhibited in a special museum in Bayeux, Normandy, France.

[7] William Erwin Eisner (March 6, 1917 – January 3, 2005) was an acclaimed American comics writer, artist and entrepreneur. He is considered one of the most important contributors to the development of the medium and is known for the cartooning studio he founded; for his highly influential series The Spirit; for his use of comics as an instructional medium; for his leading role in establishing the graphic novel as a form of literature with his book A Contract with God and Other Tenement Stories; and for his educational work about the medium as exemplified by his book Comics and Sequential Art.

To download the above article in jpeg - please click on the images below:



Wednesday, February 27, 2008

No 20 - Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title of the Year

If you don't already know, the Bookseller magazine has just announced the shortlist for the Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title of the Year. The nominees are:

I Was Tortured By the Pygmy Love Queen
How to Write a How to Write Book
Are Women Human? And Other International Dialogues
Cheese Problems Solved
If You Want Closure in Your Relationship, Start With Your Legs
People who Mattered in Southend and Beyond: From King Canute to Dr Feelgood

The Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year is a humorous literary award, normally given each year to the book with the oddest title. The award was created by Horace Bent, and first presented in 1978 by the British magazine Bookseller. Nominees are selected from submissions sent in by librarians, publishers, and booksellers, and the final winner is voted for by the public

The details for each nomination can be found here.

My pick for the winner will definitely be:

Are Women Human? And Other International Dialogues
By Catharine A MacKinnon (Harvard University Press)


This is a question long debated by biologists, psychotherapists and misogynists the world over. Annoyingly, MacKinnon doesn’t claim to have the definitive answer. Instead, her book is a "critique of the trans-national status quo that also envisions the transforming possibilities of human rights . . . this bracing book makes us look as never before at an ongoing war too long undeclared."

Oddest title is crowned

28 March 2008

If You Want Closure in Your Relationship, Start With Your Legs was crowned the winner of the Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year.

Friday, February 22, 2008

No 19 - oScope Visual Search

For those who surf a lot here is a new way to search stuff. Introducing oScope Visual Search, a free online service developed by a great team of highly talented and skillful people at oSkope media gmbh in Zurich and Berlin. Unlike other search engines oSkope allows you to search for items on different web services like eBay, Amazon, flickr, and YouTube and gives you a visual result. There are other cool bits as well like if you search for videos under YouTube, you can play the video directly without leaving for another site. You can also save your favorite videos, images in "My Folder". You can change the image size as well as layout style.

It is really amazing. Go on give it a try it - have some fun. I searched my name under YouTube and this came out:

Saturday, February 16, 2008

No 18 - Cairo


Check out Cairo - the graphic novel.

Book Description

Journalist G. Willow Wilson brings an extraordinary fable to Vertigo with CAIRO, an original graphic novel illustrated by Turkish artist M.K. Perker, himself a contributor to The New York Times and The New Yorker. Set in bustling modern-day Cairo, this magical-realism thriller interweaves the lives of a drug runner, a down-on-his-luck journalist, an American expatriate, a young activist, an Israeli soldier, and a genie as they navigate the city's streets and spiritual underworld to find a stolen hooka sought by a wrathful gangster-magician.

About the Creators

G. Willow Wilson is an American author and essayist who divides her time between Egypt and the US. Her articles about modern religion and the Middle East have appeared in publications including the Atlantic Monthly, the New York Times Magazine and the Canada National Post.

This is her first foray into graphic novels. Read her interview about Cairo here.

M. K. Perker

M. K. Perker was born in Istanbul in 1972. He studied animation and started his professional career at the age of 16 as a comic book artist. Between 1990 and 2001 he contributed to almost all major newspapers and magazines in Turkey, including Esquire, Harper's Bazaar and Cosmopolitan as an illustrator, editorial cartoonist and art director. Perker's first book, a collection of short comic stories, appeared in 1998 followed by a second in 2000. Since relocating to New York City in 2001 his work has appeared in a wide range of publications from The New York Times to MAD Magazine. Perker lives in New York City.

No 17 - LookyBook

Finally a site that allows you to browse great children's picture books from cover to cover. Looky Book allows you to look at picture books in their entirety—from cover to cover, at your own pace.

You can also create your own booklist (My Bookshelf) and share your favourite books with others.

One my favourites is:

Sparkle and Spin: A Book about Words.
It starts with an ice-cream cone and ends with only the cone.

Have fun looking!

No 16 - JacketFlap


© 2008 Jacketflap.com

Move over Friendster and FaceBook, here comes JacketFlap.

JacketFlap is a social networking community where you can connect with more than 1,600 published authors and illustrators of books for Children and Young Adults.

Calling all writers, illustrators and publishers, register now. It's free!

No 15 - World Book Day


A good initiative to encourage reading amongst children - refer to attached site:

http://www.worldbookday.com/

The core activity of World Book Day (WBD) is to spread the habit of reading - covering schools and pre-schools. On World Book Day - 1st of March - participating bookshops/publishers will distribute schools packs, display material and distribute World Book Day £1 or €1.50 Book Tokens. These tokens can be used to exchange for books that are specially published for the occasion. These books are priced at £1 or €1.50 hence the name. As a special contribution to World Book Day’s 10th Birthday celebrations there will be ten rather than six specially created £1 Books, pre-schools and secondary schools need to register to participate, as in previous years.

Other activities of WBD are:

Spread the Word - aimed at older children and adults - to ensure that the whole population is encouraged to be involved in reading

Quick Reads - where special titles will be published on World Book Day for those who have lost or are yet to develop the habit of reading for pleasure

Better by the Book - which will enable people or organisations to donate NEW books to hospitals, hospices and other settings via the bookshops themselves

I think it's about time that Malay/Muslim book-literature-related organisations come up with creative activities to encourage reading.

No 14 - Kalima Launch

Severe lack of foreign language books translated into Arabic prompts The Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage (ADACH) of the United Arab Emirates – the same organization responsible for the Abu Dhabi Book Fair - to launch a program - Kalima - to translate hundreds of foreign language works into Arabic.

Kalima is the Arabic for “word”.

Read more ...

No 13 - Toon Books

Françoise Mouly, New Yorker art director and wife of acclaimed cartoonist Art Spiegelman launches a new line of book comics called Toon Books. This new line is aimed at readers ages four and up and are designed to nurture basic reading skills and encourage a love of visual storytelling.

An excerpt from Toon Books' official website states

"TOON Books represent a whole new approach to books for emerging readers — a rethinking as radical as the first time Theodore Geisel* put a hat on a cat."

*Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known to the world as the beloved Dr. Seuss.

Among its Spring 2008 titles is Otto's Orange Day about a cat named Otto who meets a magical genie and wishes for everything to be orange. Cover and sample pages below - extracted from www.toon-books.com.



Toon Books
THE LITTLE LIT LIBRARY is a division of RAW JUNIOR, LLC, 27 Greene Street, NEW YORK, NY 10013.
© and ™ 2007 RAW JUNIOR, LLC, all rights reserved

No 12 - Brown Bookshelf

Authors Launch Brown Bookshelf

Five authors have banded together to create The Brown Bookshelf, an online community dedicated to promoting children’s fiction by African-American authors and illustrators. The group, which launched November 1, is the brainchild of authors Paula Chase Hyman (the Del Rio Bay Clique series, Kensington) and Varian Johnson (Red Polka Dot in a World Full of Plaid, Genesis Press), who “met” via online author message boards.


I am hoping to form this sort of alliance - so that local writers and illustrators can support each other by imparting knowledge and skills, sharing resources and as a group, help to promote the culture of reading and buying books by local writers and illustrators.

No 11 - Nestlé Children’s Book Prize

Have you heard the news ...

Nestlé and Booktrust have agreed to end the Nestlé Children’s Book Prize after 23 years of partnership.

The revelation was a sad one - nonetheless - here are the last winners for the prize:

2007 gold medal winners

9 to 11 years category
Shadow Forest by Matt Haig (Bodley Head)



6 to 8 years category
Ottoline and the Yellow Cat by Chris Riddell (Macmillan Children's Books)



5 years and under category
When a Monster is Born by Sean Taylor and Nick Sharratt (Orchard Books)