Home > Blog > Month: October 2015

Month: October 2015


  • #DrawingDiversity: 'Ask Me' by Bernard Waber, illustrations by Suzy Lee





    Ask Me by Bernard Waber, illustrations by Suzy Lee (hmhkids​, July 2015).

  • Submit to the 90-Second Newbery Film Festival!

    The deadline to submit for the 2015 festival is October 23. Factors to consider when making your video include: Filming location Shooting schedule Costumes and props Video production and editing …

  • Pottermore Launches as the Digital Heart of the Wizarding World, with New Writing by J.K. Rowling About the Origins of the Potter Family

    Pottermore.com today reveals its newly imagined website and positioning as the digital heart of J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World with a major redesign and packed with exclusive writing, features, and news. …

  • Humble Audiobooks Bundle: Goosebumps Presented by Scholastic

    The promotion will run from today, October 7, to October 21, 11 AM Pacific. Customers can name their price for the bundle of R.L. Stine books: Classic Goosebumps #04: The …

  • Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Unveils HMH Marketplace: A New Online Destination to Discover, Share and Sell Digital Learning Tools and Teacher-Created Content

    BOSTON, MA — Global learning company Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH) today announced HMH Marketplace — an online destination for educators to discover, share and sell resources that enhance the teaching and learning …

  • Inside the Kerlan Collection of Children's Literature

    Curated by librarian Lisa Von Drasek, the collection includes manuscripts by classic and contemporary authors and illustrators, from Arnold Lobel to Kate DiCamillo. Drafts are also on file, providing a …

  • Kate DiCamillo to Publish a New Middle Grade Novel

    Raymie Nightingale centers on a spunky 10-year-old named Raymie Clarke, whose father has just run away with a local dental hygienist. Raymie realizes that it’s up to her to get …

  • Libraries for Youth in Prison

    A disproportionate number of the teens in correctional facilities are minorities and those labeled “at risk” due to their social and economic disadvantages. In an effort to overcome these obstacles, …

  • The YA Canon

    While bloggers, critics, and fans have rounded up Best of YA book lists, readers continue to debate the merits of various books, and what defines quality YA literature. In thinking …

  • Happy Birthday, David Shannon!

    Born in 1959 in Washington, D.C., and raised in Washington State, Shannon showed early signs of being an artist. At just five years old he created his first picture book, …

  • Pharrell, Penguin, and First Book Launch #ReadHAPPY Campaign

    Each time the hashtag #ReadHAPPY is used on social media, a book donation will be made — for a total of up to 50,000 books. The initiative coincides with the …

  • WNDB's Debut Walter Dean Myers Award Ceremony

    The award and grant program was established in memory of the late author and National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature. Myers was a dedicated champion of diverse literature. The ceremony will be …

  • The 30 Million Word Gap

    Suskind discusses the three Ts in supporting language development: Tune in: Be mindful of what is holding your child’s attention. Talk more: Find opportunities to narrate your activities and introduce new words. …

  • It Will Take a Village to Raise Diversity in the Children’s Book Industry

    By Jerry Craft

    In 1992, I created a comic strip called Mama’s Boyz because there were so few that starred black characters. It was picked up by King Features and distributed weekly to close to 900 papers for almost 20 years.

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    In 1995, I sent a Mama’s Boyz book sample to several publishers. And they sent them all back. One editor even added a note saying that they, “would NEVER be interested in my black-sitcom style of humor.” It wasn’t just THAT they rejected my work. It was HOW they did it. So I changed my goal.

    Note to self #1: Avoid publishers!

    In 1997, I self-published, Mama’s Boyz: As American as Sweet Potato Pie!, but even though it had a foreword by one of the most famous cartoonists in the world, Lynn Johnston (creator of the popular For Better or For Worse) and I had received some pretty good press in mainstream publications, my customers were still 99.9% African American boys.

    But it still did pretty well. As a result, a few years later, I got a call from Alex Simmons, who had written comic books such as Archie, Batman, and Scooby Doo. He pitched a series of graphic novels based on historical African-American figures to a major publisher, and they wanted me to illustrate them. I was thrilled! But just as it was gathering steam, our editor (African American) left the company and the project fizzled out.

    Note to self #2: Why didn’t you listen to note #1? You big dummy!

    In 2007, I published my second book Mama’s Boyz: Home Schoolin’. And it wasn’t until a librarian in Stamford, Connecticut, GAVE out copies to her reading group, that I realized that other kids could actually enjoy my work too. I mean boys AND girls. Black, white, Latino, Asian… In fact, my biggest fans turned out to be two sisters of Indian ancestry. “I would have never bought this book for my daughters,” their mother told me, “but they absolutely LOVE it!” This made me realize that it wasn’t the kids who didn’t want my book, it was the parents who didn’t want their kids to want my book. The school book fairs where I sold the most, were the ones where the kids had their own money, and mom and dad were nowhere to be found.

    Note to self #3: Avoid parents!

    One day at a book festival, an adorable little blonde cherub around five years old grabbed a copy of Please Don’t Yell at We!

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    and ran off as fast as she could. Her mother demanded that she bring the book back. She refused, hiding it behind her back. She REALLY wanted that book. Seeing me watching, the woman promptly walked over to her daughter, whispered something, and pointed to me. The girl quickly, and sadly, handed over the book, which she then put back on my table.

    Note to self #4: UGH! I only have two stupid rules and I keep breaking them. See Note #3!!! No wonder no one wants to publish you!!!


    Fast forward to 2013, when I wrote my first middle-grade novel The Offenders: Saving the World While Serving Detention!,

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    the story of five middle-school bullies (three boys and two girls of different ethnicities) who gain super powers. But instead of transforming into cool superheroes, they are forced to take on the characteristics of the kids they pick on. Now they’re the ones who are being teased, and by the same kids who they are trying to help! I even hired my own two teenage sons as co-writers to make the dialogue more believable.! This time, I chose to only put silhouettes of the characters on the cover to see if that would impact sales. After all, over the years, I saw firsthand how trying to get people to stop at a table full of books with brown faces is like trying to drag a boy down the doll aisle at Wal-Mart

    Now that I had the book, I needed to do something different at the book fairs, starting with my appearance. My wife and I came up with “The Uniform.” My Mama’s Boyz sweatshirt was replaced by a buttoned dress shirt; no sunglasses; no baseball cap; definitely no hoodie. I even shaved off my goatee and left only my mustache. And as far as the table goes, I would ONLY put out The Offenders. During my next two events, where I normally did poorly, The Offenders was one of their best sellers! I even had a few schools order them in bulk to teach their kids about bullying.

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    In late 2013, Scholastic offered me the opportunity to illustrate The Zero Degree Zombie Zone, written by Patrik Henry Bass and edited by Andrea Davis Pinkney.

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    What I loved about The Zero Degree Zombie Zone was that even though the four main kids are black, it wasn’t boxed in as “a black book.” I suddenly reached a whole new level of exposure, attending my first ever signing at BEA and a ton of other great events, including the National Book Festival in Washington, DC. I was even reimbursed for gas! Then one day I checked the mail, and there was a pin and a certificate from the Junior Library Guild. Wow!

    And now, I’m proud to announce that I am currently working on a yet-untitled graphic novel to be published by another major publisher in 2017. It’s the story of Jordan Banks, an aspiring artist whose mom makes him go to a prestigious prep school instead.

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    I’d like to leave you with a few suggestions for those of us who REALLY want to see more diversity in the children’s book industry:

    PUBLISHERS:
    • Hire people who know how to find diverse talent and content. I would have never gotten to do the Scholastic book if not for Andrea Davis Pinkney.
    • Look for people who have a proven track record, and give them the freedom to bring THEIR ideas to life. People like Wade and Cheryl Hudson, Eric Velasquez, Zetta Elliott, Shadra Strickland… have been thriving in this industry for decades. Tap into that.
    • Let diverse authors and illustrators create stories that are fun and exciting. Too many books for kids of color are biographies about slavery and the Civil Rights Movement. If the only books that white kids had were on Thomas Jefferson and Teddy Roosevelt, then maybe they wouldn’t be so excited about reading either.
    • Black illustrators can draw white characters, too — we’re versatile and would LOVE to work on a major title! You don’t have to wait until you find a manuscript about a black kid to hire us. A book on George Washington Carver will NEVER sell as wel l as a book on George Washington. And a book on George Washington will NEVER sell like Diary of a Wimpy Kid.
    • If you’ve done a book starring a character of color before and it didn’t do well, please don’t say, “Well, we tried it and it didn’t work, so let’s never do that again.” Maybe it wasn’t the right book! White books fail all the time, but you keep making them.

    WHITE PARENTS:
    • If your kid wants a book that stars people of color, let them get it. It won’t hurt them.

    BLACK PARENTS:
    • Our friends give our kids books starring white protagonists all the time, but we never give THEIR kids books starring kids of color. So start!
    • Sales are like voting; every one counts. So if you see authors who make the kinds of books that you think are important to your kids, please support them. And ask your library to order them as well.

    GATEKEEPERS:
    • You have an enormous effect on book sales. I know librarians who ONLY order books that get great reviews from 2 or 3 publications. Find that Little Engine That Could, and give it a push.
    • Use reviewers who get it. You can’t send a vegetarian to review a steak house. So stop.
    • Include diverse books in discussions with other books on the same topic. Books like The Offenders should be discussed alongside other books on bullying or superheroes.

    SCHOOLS:
    • Include our books in your class reading lists. It will have an enormous impact — and not just on the kids of color. Black authors are like the Whos in Horton Hears a Who: “We are here! We are here!” If the only time your kids see an African American is on the news, in sports, or in movies, they are already forming detrimental opinions that they will carry into adulthood.
    • You don’t have to wait until Black History Month to invite us to do a school visit. We have the same impact in October, or May, or even November!
    And last but definitely not least,

    AUTHORS FOR DIVERSITY:
    • If you’re writing about characters from backgrounds that you know nothing about, do the research. For The Offenders, because one of the characters is adopted, I interviewed parents who had adopted kids from other cultures. For the Latino boy, I let my Latino friends critique it.

    We all have a job to do, so let’s get to work!

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    Jerry Craft has illustrated and written close to two dozen children’s books. He is the creator of Mama’s Boyz, a comic strip that was distributed by King Features for almost two decades, making him one of the few syndicated black cartoonists ever. He has won five African American Literary Awards and is currently working on a graphic novel for early 2017 release. Visit his website at www.jerrycraft.net, and follow him on Facebook and Twitter. He can be contacted at jerrycraft@aol.com

  • Scholastic to Publish 'DC Comics: Secret Hero Society'

    New York, NY — Scholastic (NASDAQ: SCHL), the global children’s publishing, education and media company, has acquired rights to three ‘DC Comics: Secret Hero Society’ illustrated novels, based on beloved DC …

  • The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art Announces $2,000,000 Gift to the Endowment

    (Amherst, MA—October 1, 2015) On September 24, The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art announced its largest ever gift to endowment at its annual Carle Honors fundraiser in New …

  • Who Was Beatrix Potter?

    The product of a strict home, Potter relished her summers in Scotland and the Lake District, where she immersed herself in the outdoors. Her love of animals and nature shines …

  • Publisher Neal Porter in Conversation

    Porter originally aspired to be a theater critic. Though he’s gone on to work in a different medium, he thinks of the picture book “as a proscenium stage, with the action …

  • Scholastic Contributes to Syrian Refugee Reflief Efforts Through Save the Children

    The Scholastic Possible Fund Donates $25,000 for Immediate Aid and Pledges Books for Long-Term Recovery NEW YORK – October 1, 2015 – Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL), the global children’s publishing, education and media …

  • Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Integrates with Award-Winning Osmo Platform, Uniting Physical and Digital Game-Based Learning

    BOSTON, MA – Global learning company Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH) (NASDAQ: HMHC) today announced a new partnership with Osmo, creators of the award-winning platform that is revolutionizing the way children play and …


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