Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - Recent Releases


As the year winds down, here are some recent informational picture books that were released.  I am hoping to search out more books to read before the end of the year.  I have a lot more to read before I reach my goal.

December 3, 2013


We Can Help Protect Mountain Gorillas by Gabriella Francine, Solara Vayanian; Illustrated by Phil Velikan

December 1, 2013


Weird Insects by Michael Worek

November 5, 2013


The Tiger Cubs and the Chimp: The True Story of How Anjana the Chimp Helped Raise Two Baby Tigers by Bhagavan Antle, Thea Feldman; Photographed by Barry Bland


How the World Works: Know It All, From How the Sun Shines to How the Pyramids Were Built by Clive Gifford

November 1, 2013


The Secrets of Stonehenge by Mick Manning, Brita Granstrom

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For the Good of Mankind Blog Tour - Interview with Vicki Oransky Wittenstein


by Vicki Oransky Wittenstein
Lerner/Twenty-First Century Books (October 1, 2013)

Today, as part of the For the Good of Mankind Blog Tour, author Vicki Oransky Wittenstein stops by to answer a few questions.

FOR THE GOOD OF MANKIND was fascinating to read. I appreciated how you made readers think about the implications of the research. What drew you to this topic and what made you want to write this book? 

I was appalled by the experiments . . . yet riveted. Many of the unethical experiments horrified me . . . yet they drew me in. With some digging, I uncovered numerous examples (too many) where people suffered pain, injury, humiliation, and even death. No question about it, the experiments paved the way for great medical advancements. But in the process, people’s individual rights were violated, many of whom did not give consent. Before the 1980’s, when laws were finally enacted to protect subjects, medical researchers took advantage of whomever they could—orphans, prisoners, the mentally ill and African Americans—people who were powerless to speak out, whether from lack of education, poverty, or simply because their social status deemed them “unimportant.”

How was it possible that I had not known about these experiments before? I asked my family and friends. Most people knew about the Nazi experiments on concentration camp inmates during World War II and the Tuskegee syphilis experiments. But like me, few knew about the long history of human medical experimentation dating back to ancient times. Many had read about the pharmaceutical industry’s clinical trials that are so prevalent today, but again, few had thought about the ethical implications of these trials and other human medical experiments in developing areas of medicine, such as genetic therapies, DNA sequencing and stem cell research.

I was curious about why the unethical experimentation was permitted. What events occurred throughout history that reflected and changed society’s view of medical science? So, for example, during the years of slavery, doctors freely experimented on African American slaves who were bought just for the purpose of medical experimentation. Later, medical ethics fell by the wayside during times of war when the U.S. government had to amass huge numbers of troops and prepare them for combat. And during the Cold War, the government created a climate of secrecy. Many people were unknowingly exposed to experiments with radiation, such as the eighteen random patients in hospitals across the country whom Manhattan Project doctors injected with plutonium.

I wanted readers to understand this history, debate the ethics, and learn from our past mistakes. Like most things in life, ethical human medical experimentation requires a balance. How can we pursue society’s goal of medical advancement without stepping on the individual’s right to be free from harm? Young readers today will be the future leaders in law, government, medicine and science. They will be hit from all sides with ethical questions, and they will have to act with fairness and justice. I hope the book challenges them to stand up for what they believe in.

Your book just recently came out. Have you had a chance to do any school visits yet? What type of feedback have you received from teachers (if any)? 

I haven’t visited any schools yet, but just a couple of weeks ago I was invited to speak on the nonfiction panel at the New York City Librarian’s Annual Fall Conference for librarians in New York State. Both librarians and teachers were concerned about how to use the Common Core State Standards with their students, and were happy to learn about ways to connect the book to their history and English curricula. Questions at the back of the book provoke critical analysis of each chapter. Additionally, Lerner, my publisher, has suggested student projects and debates that teachers can utilize and link to specific Common Core State Standards (the activities are available on my website and on the Lerner website).

The research behind writing books fascinates me. Listening to where authors found primary and secondary sources, sometimes leads me to ideas that I can use with students in writing exercises. What was the research process like while your worked on FOR THE GOOD OF MANKIND?

The research was fascinating and led to some wonderful interviews. I spoke to several bioethicists, including Jerry Menikoff, M.D., Director of the Office for Human Research Protection, who helped me understand many of the current ethical issues in the field today. I also spoke with Eva Mozes Kor, a twin and survivor of Dr. Joseph Mengele’s experiments on twins at Auschwitz. Her story deeply saddened me. But she also gave me an authentic and meaningful way to discuss a difficult topic with young readers. Similarly, a conversation I had with Joshua Shaw, whose four-year-old brother was flown to the U.S. for treatment, but instead was injected with plutonium, put a human face to a painful story. Today, students can access many primary and secondary sources online, including material from the United States Memorial Holocaust Museum, U.S. Department of Energy hearings on the radiation experiments, the laws promulgated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and many newspaper clippings and journal articles.

Can you share about any future projects that you are working on?

Right now I’m researching a fascinating book for Lerner about the history of reproductive rights in America, abroad, and in developing countries, which will explore the history of birth control and reproductive freedom from ancient herbal concoctions and birth control devices, to 20th Century pioneer Margaret Sanger and the legalization of birth control in the U.S, the invention of the Pill, and the anti-abortion movement. I’m super excited!

Do you have a favorite independent bookstore that you like to visit? 

(If you have a link to the store's website that would be great.) I have two favorite independent bookstores in New York City. BookCourt (www.bookcourt.com) is in Brooklyn, and the Bank Street Bookstore (www.bankstreetbooks.com) is located in Manhattan.

Can we get a glimpse at your TBR (to-be-read) pile? Anything that you are most excited about reading next?

 Here I am with my pile—lots of books on the history of reproductive rights!

Thanks for hosting me, Alyson.


About the author:  VICKI ORANSKY WITTENSTEIN has always been curious about new ideas, people, and places. That curiosity has taken her life in many different directions.  So far, she has been a student, a criminal prosecutor, a writer, and an advocate for children and families.  She is the author of a number of science and history articles for young readers, as well as the book Planet Hunter: Geoff Marcy and the Search for Other Earths, which won the 2013 Science Communication Award from the American Institute of Physics.  She lives with her family in Brooklyn, New York. For more information, and for a free discussion guide, visit http://vickiwittenstein.com/.
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Follow the Blog Tour:

Mon, Nov 4
proseandkahn
Tues, Nov 5
The Prosen People
Thurs, Nov 7
The Nonfiction Detectives
Fri, Nov 8
Growing with Science
Mon, Nov 11
Ms. Yingling Reads
Tues, Nov 12
Through the Wardrobe
Wed, Nov 13
Kid Lit Frenzy
Thurs, Nov14
    
GreenBeanTeenQueen
Fri, Nov 15
The Fourth Musketeer

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Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews:

Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - The Extraordinary Life of Anna Swan

Author:  Anne Renaud
Publisher: Cape Breton University Press (May 18, 2013)
Audience: Grades 3 to 5
Source: Personal Copy
Biography * Gigantism * Women's History

Description from GoodReads:

In 1846 an unusual baby girl was born in Nova Scotia. She started out large, at 13 pounds, but only kept growing. Anna Swan grew until she was nearly 8 feet tall. Billed as "The Nova Scotia Giant Girl" she spent time working for P.T. Barnum's American Museum in New York, and other similar enterprises. She traveled, and met the queen of England. She even found love with a man her own height. This is her remarkable story.

My thoughts on this book:
As I read through The Extraordinary Life of Anna Swan, I found her story to be inspiring.  Swan, with the support of her family, was able to turn her height into a means for creating a career and an opportunity for travel, which would normally not have been available to women during the 1800's.  At first, when I thought about Swan's entrance into the Barnum's Museum and Circus, I was a bit sad. What must it have been like to be made the center of attention for your size.  However, in some ways, the circus provided her with an acceptance and freedom that life at home was unable to.  Her small farming community in Nova Scotia was unaccustomed to making the accommodations that Anna needed.

Author, Anne Renaud writes about Anna Swan in a way that draws young readers in and makes them want to know more about Anna.  Readers feel both the joys and struggles that Swan faced on a daily basis. Swan's engagement and marriage to Martin Van Buren Bates (who was her size) was a definite reason to celebrate.  However, when reading about the the birth and deaths of her two children, readers feel Swan's sadness and loss.

As I read through this biography, I was reminded of another story.  Kate Klise's picture book Stand Straight, Ella Kate, which is about Ella Kate Ewing who lived in the United States.  It is unsure whether Ella Kate would have known about Anna Swan's life since she was just a teen when Swan died.  However, these two women shared much in common as a result of their shared physical stature.



Pair The Extraordinary Life of Anna Swan with the picture book Stand Straight, Ella Kate by Kate Klise, illustrated by M. Sarah Klise, which is a look at another remarkable woman from Missouri with pituitary gigantism. 


Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews:


Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday - Randolph Caldecott: The Man Who Could Not Stop Drawing


The day before Halloween and I know that I probably should be doing a Halloween Nonfiction Picture Book post, but I finally got my hands of Leonard S. Marcus' Randolph Caldecott: The Man Who Could Not Stop Drawing and just had to share this book with you.

Author/Illustrator: Leonard S. Marcus
Publisher: Farrar, Strauss, & Giroux (August 27, 2013)
Audience: 4th to 7th graders and beyond
Source: Purchased Copy
Biography * Nonfiction * Illustrators * England

Description from GoodReads:
Randolph Caldecott is best known as the namesake of the award that honors picture book illustrations, and in this inventive biography, leading children’s literature scholar Leonard Marcus examines the man behind the medal. In an era when the steam engine fueled an industrial revolution and train travel exploded people’s experience of space and time, Caldecott was inspired by his surroundings to capture action, movement, and speed in a way that had never before been seen in children’s picture books. Thoroughly researched and featuring extensive archival material and a treasure trove of previously unpublished drawings, including some from Caldecott’s very last sketchbook, Leonard Marcus’s luminous biography shows why Caldecott was indeed the father of the modern picture book and how his influence lives on in the books we love today.

My thoughts on this book:
Last year, I participated in a Caldecott Challenge where I read every Caldecott winning book and as many of the honor books that I could find.  However, I realized as I began to read Randolph Caldecott: The Man Who Could Not Stop Drawing by Leonard S. Marcus that I knew little about the man whose name is associated for one of the most prestigious honors to bestowed on an illustrator of children's books.

Randolph Caldecott (1846-1886) was born, raised, and lived in England during the 1800's.  Despite his amazing contribution to the world of children's books, Caldecott himself would not be eligible for the award that bears his name. 

Terms and Criteria (taken from the ALA website):
  1. The Medal shall be awarded annually to the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children published by an American publisher in the United States in English during the preceding year. There are no limitations as to the character of the picture book except that the illustrations be original work. Honor books may be named. These shall be books that are also truly distinguished.
  2. The award is restricted to artists who are citizens or residents of the United States.  Books published in a U.S. territory or U.S. commonwealth are eligible.
  3. The committee in its deliberations is to consider only books eligible for the award, as specified in the terms.
I found that to be somewhat sad.  It was amazing to read about his contributions to the world of children's literature and thankful for the ways that he inspired both illustrators and librarians. However, I couldn't help wonder what Caldecott would think of the criteria.

Anyway, I digress.  Back to my thoughts on the book.  Marcus does a remarkable job writing an in-depth biography of Caldecott in the format of a children's picture book.  The text is substantial.  This is no lightweight story.  Readers learn of Caldecott's early years, his career in the bank (at the young age of 15), and his eventual rise to a sustainable & profitable position as an illustrator, which was rare in those days.  In addition to excellent biographical information, the book also contains original artwork by Caldecott and by others of his time.  It shows the influences that would have impacted Caldecott as he began his career as an illustrator.  I was amused to note that on the books that Caldecott created that it would say "One of R. Caldecott's Picture Books".

Despite Caldecott's natural charisma, sense of humor and amazing talent as an illustrator, he was plagued through his life with poor health and a heart condition from an illness as a child.  As a result, the world did not fully get to witness what Caldecott may have become if he had had more time.  Caldecott died during a trip to Florida in 1886 just a month shy of his fortieth birthday.

If you are a fan of children's picture books, then you will want to add this book to your personal collection.  It would also be a wonderful addition to a classroom or school library. Look for a copy of Randolph Caldecott: The Man Who Could Not Stop Drawing at your local library or independent book store.         

Randolph Caldecott: The Music Video - This is a couple of years old but still great.




The Caldecott Medal 75th Anniversary Logo designed by Brian Selznik:


Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews:

Common Core IRL: In Real Libraries - The Day of the Dead/El Día de los Muertos


It's time for another installment of  Common Core IRL: In Real Libraries.  This time we are doing something a little different.  Since Halloween is fast approaching, we decided to focus on scary stories, and other related topics.  Being in Southern California, I decided to talk about Día de los Muertos or Day of the Dead which is celebrated on November 1st and 2nd. 

Don't forget to check out the other posts as part of this series, and see what everyone has for you

     * Louise Capizzo, children’s librarian & Cathy Potter, school librarian: The Nonfiction Detectives
     * Mary Ann Scheuer, school librarian: Great Kid Books
     * Travis Jonker, school librarian: 100 Scope Notes

Check out the following picture books and app for use with Pre-K to 2nd grade.

The Day of the Dead/El Día de los Muertos
Author/Illustrator: Bob Barner
Translated by: Teresa Mlawer
Publisher: Holiday House (2010)
ISBN: 978-0823423811
Read Aloud: Pre-K to 2nd grade
Independent Reading Level: High 1st grade to 3rd grade.
Language: English and Spanish
Source: Purchased

My thoughts on this book:
When I was working at a school site with a Dual Language Immersion Program/Spanish, we used this book as part of our learning about The Day of the Dead in our younger classes.   Text is written in both English and then also shown in Spanish.

This is one of my favorite picture books for explaining about the Day of the Dead for younger students.  It simply explains what the Day of the Dead is and how it is celebrated.  The author provides notes about the Day of the Dead at the end of the book.  The illustrations are bright, and reflect the culturally aspect of the story.
 

Clatter Bash!: A Day of the Dead Celebration
Author/Illustrator: Richard Keep
Publisher: Peachtree Publishers (2004)
ISBN: 978-1561454617
Read Aloud: Pre-K to 2nd grade
Independent Reading Level: Kindergarten to First grade
Source: Purchased

My thoughts on this book:
Clatter Bash! is designed for younger readers.  The story is told through the use of very rhythmic sounding words with some Spanish words interspersed throughout the pages.  The perspective of the story seems to be more from the skeletons who are celebrating the holiday.  Children would need some explanation as to why the skeletons are having a party. 

Though the text of the book is simple, the endnotes provide readers with a nice explanation of the Day of the Dead and the various symbols related to the day.  The illustrations in the book are colorful and very festive.  The use of color and style fit well with the origins of this holiday.


Rosita y Conchita: A Peek 'n Play Story App
by Mobad
Released: October 25, 2012
Language: English and Spanish
Devices: Designed for both iPad and iPhone

My thoughts on this book app:
This book app tells the story of twin girls, Conchita and Rosita.  One of the twins has passed away.  As Conchita seeks to remember her sister Rosita, readers are led through the various preparations and activities that families go through as part of remembering and honoring the dead.  

Though some parents may be concerned about sharing a story with young children about the death of a sibling, this is sensitively done in a way that helps younger children understand what the Day of the Dead is all about.  Parents and teachers should review the app prior to sharing it with students in case there are any individual concerns that need to be considered.

The app allows readers to either hear the story being read or to read the story on their own.  The story can be read in either English or Spanish.  Children also learn about how to make sugar skulls, and learn how to draw Rosita at the end.   The illustrations are colorful and reflect the art of the holiday.
  

How to incorporate this into the Common Core State Standards:
There are multiple way these texts can be integrated into the Common Core Standards; however, one suggestion would be to look at how two different texts can be similar and different, and to discuss the relationship between text and illustrations (Integration of Knowledge and Ideas). 

Don't forget to link up your nonfiction reviews...