Atheneum Books for Young Readers


Atheneum Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing, is known for publishing enduring literary middle grade, teen, and picture book titles. Since its foundation in 1961 by legendary editor Jean Karl, the imprint has garnered over two dozen Newbery and Caldecott Medals and honors, as well as receiving countless accolades in the form of the Coretta Scott King medals, National Book Award nominations, Pen USA Literary Awards, and the Mildred L. Batchelder Award. Their list includes elegant literary fiction, like 2013 National Book Award Finalists The Thing About Luck by Cynthia Kadohata and The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp by Kathy Appelt; heart-wrenching teen novels such as Nothing by Janne Teller; and hilarious picture books, like Kelly DiPucchio and Scott Campbell’s Zombie in Love.

One exciting new title:
The True Blue Scouts of Sugarman Swamp by Kathy Appelt
Meet Bingo and J’miah, raccoon brothers on a mission to save Sugar Man Swamp in this National Book Award Finalist, which Kirkus called “a rollicking, ripping tall tale” in a starred review.
Published July 2013.

One classic title:
Olivia by Ian Falcone
According to Hilary Knight, “Eloise has met her match” in Olivia, the precocious porcine star of Ian Falconer’s Caldecott Honor book. Now Olivia has a whole series of books, board books, early readers, and even a TV show. Her most recent escapade, Olivia and the Fairy Princesses, spent four months on the New York Times Bestseller List. 
Published October 2000.

One title you may not have heard about:
Violet Mackerel’s Brilliant Plot by Anna Branford
The seven-year-old heroine of a delightful chapter book series, Violet appreciates the little things in life, and believes that finding a tiny treasure usually leads to having a genius idea. So when she spots a small china bird that she just has to have, Violet forms an imaginative plan for getting it and her charming methods are anything but ordinary!
Published August 2012.

Rachel Zegar, Senior Designer at HarperCollins Children’s Books.

What was your first job in children’s publishing? How did you climb the ranks to senior designer?
I was first hired as a design assistant in the Children’s Books Department at HarperCollins. From there, I was promoted to assistant designer, designer and senior designer.

 How long have you worked at Harper Children’s?
10 years!

 What was the first book you worked on at Harper?
The first book I ever touched was O Holy Night: Christmas With the Boys Choir of Harlem by Faith Ringgold, which I scanned the art for. It was amazing seeing the book when it was finally published after actually handling the art. The first picture book I designed on my own was Ten Naughty Little Monkeys by Suzanne Williams and illustrated by Suzanne Watts. I now read that book to my son at least once a week!

Can you describe your typical day?
Coffee, Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, emailing illustrators, sending books out to the printer, meetings with editors, color correcting, more coffee, and lots of paper cuts.

What’s one skill you’ve acquired in your job that you never thought you’d need?Learning copy editing marks.

What’s the best piece of advice you ever received?
Never fall in love with an idea. Designers have to employ this advice A LOT since there are so many people giving input on the project. In the end, it’s the author and illustrator’s book, so we have to respect their desires. I have learned how to better argue for my ideas as my career has progressed, though.

What is one of the worst (it doesn’t have to be the worst) mistake you’ve made? How did you get beyond it?
Years ago, I designed a book about a dog using photography, and I didn’t notice that one of the dogs had his “lipstick” showing. Luckily, it was caught in an f&g by a customer, and we fixed it before the final printing!

 Is there a designer or illustrator who’s work you really admire? Why?
Jessica Hische is an amazing hand letterer. Everything she touches is beautiful! Check out her work here ▸▸

What is your favorite word?
OK’d or OK (meaning approved!)

What was your favorite book as a child?
Harold and the Purple Crayon
by Crockett Johnson was my favorite book. I remember asking my mom to borrow it from the library every week, and it’s probably why my favorite color is purple. I also loved The Nutshell Library by Maurice Sendak. Pierre was my favorite out of the four books. One of my fondest memories at Harper was actually when I met Maurice Sendak. It was only for a minute but he signed two books for me and made me promise not to sell them — he had a great sense of humor. The books are now on display out of reach in my son’s room until he learns that books are not for chewing and ripping.

What are you reading now? Or what was the last book you read you really enjoyed?Allegiant by Veronica Roth. Don’t worry, I won’t give any spoilers!

Extreme Trivia Challenge 10th Anniversary!

Seven teams competed for the glory of the Golden Bunny trophies in the 10th annual Extreme Trivia Challenge this November — in a contest that was anything but trivial.

 

Our very special emcees included returning host, Jon Scieszka, and brand new host, Casey Scieszka. Children’s literature questions flew fast and furious, including throwback questions taken from trivias past and “Quick Like a Bunny” rounds which tasked teams to come up with as many correct answers as they could while precious seconds ticked off the clock. When the final question was answered and all the points were tallied, Team 7 managed to pull off a close win and take home the 10th anniversary Golden Bunny trophies as well as signed copies of Battle Bunny, Mr. Scieszka’s newest book!

 

Congratulations 1st place winners, Team 7!

Emily Heddleson, Becca Shapiro,Sarah Jane Abbott,Colleen Venable and Jennifer Ung, with cheerleader Michael Coutler.

And a special mention to our second place team, Team 2:

Kamilla Benko, Sarah Evans, Katherine Harrison, Rotem Moscovich, Amy Rosenbaum and Navah Wolfe.

Thank you to everyone who came out to participate in our challenge, and a very special thanks to Jon and Casey Scieszka for being such amazing hosts. Here’s to 10 more years of ECC Trivia!

See all the great photos on our Facebook page ▸▸

 

 

A Very Happy Halloween Mixer

On October 30th, the ECC celebrated Halloween with our good friends at YPG!

The event was held at The Dove Parlour, a classy cocktail bar in downtown Manhattan. As promised, there were happy hour specials, too much candy, and spooktacular contests! An array of literary costumes came out including Pippi Longstocking, the Mad Hatter, the tiny fish from This Is Not My Hat, Beatrice Prior, Arthur the aardvark, Olivia the pig, and Fionna the human. The winner of the costume contest was Eileen Savage (Viking Children’s Books) as a stunning Mary Poppins! There were about 70 young publishing folk in attendance — The Dove Parlour was filled to capacity with literary Halloween fun.

 

Agent/Editor Speed Networking

Who needs speed dating when you can spend an evening speed networking?

On October 1st, nearly 60 editors and agents gathered at The Australian for the Early Career Committee’s annual agent/editor mixer. Attendees spent the first hour mixing and mingling over drinks and lovely conversations about all things bookish. Editors and agents were then paired up with each other to have concise, two-minute one-on-one sessions where they were able to hash out the nitty-gritty details of what they do, what they’re looking for, and what they think about the current trends in children’s book publishing. In the end, business cards were exchanged, new friendships and valuable business connections were forged, and delicious French fries were consumed. A productive evening was had by all!

 

Petey and Pru and the Hullaballoo

As an editor, I love words. Big words. Sesquipedalian words, if you will.

If you’re not familiar with “sesquipedalian,” this marvelous picture book can enlighten you. Petey and Pru are squabbling children, who get into cacophonous clashes as the scale of their antics increase. Five-dollar-words are coupled with hilarious illustrations that provide a rollicking, delightful read. The book is so delightful and joyous in its celebration of words (and the squirrely shenanigans of sibling rivalry) that it will have kids begging for re-reads.

 

Looking Glass Wars

There is something about Lewis Carroll’s seminal works, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There, which lend themselves to endless re-imagining, so while the first in Frank Bodden’s Looking Glass Wars trilogy may not exactly tread new ground, it manages to distinguish itself with a cast of characters who step onto the page with their own histories and motives, practically begging to be expanded upon, and easily able to stand on their own without leaning too heavily on the Victorian tale they were inspired by. The third book in the trilogy was released this year, but for those of us who seem to constantly be at the mercy of our pocket watches, this is a perfect enough time to catch up on the first.

Alyss Heart, Princess of Wonderland, has a fairy tale life. She is next in line to the throne, has an incredibly powerful imagination (the story’s stand-in for magic), and a host of faithful friends and advisors; including the floppy eared albino tutor, Bibwit Harte (an anagram for white rabbit), her top-hatted body guard, Hatter Maddigan, and her friend, Dodge. But this perfect life is predictably shattered when her Aunt Redd seizes the Queendom with an army of playing cards and a larger-than-life cat. In the ensuing battle, Alyss is forced to flee Wonderland through a looking glass where she finds herself in bland, imagination-wilting Victorian England. She is taken in by a family, and her tales of Wonderland are taken to be the ramblings of a child, particularly by a mild-mannered, aspiring author, Charles Dodgson. As Alyss grows into a young adult, she begins to believe that Wonderland was nothing but a dream herself, until her past bursts back, and she comes face to face with what has become of Wonderland under the totalitarian rule of the Redd Queen.

The story is fast paced and action packed. Machines and magic stand comfortably together to create a unique steampunk fairy tale. As stated, the characters are the real draw; dark distortions of their Carollian counterparts with backstories and motivations which the book only has time to touch upon before bounding to the next battle. Fortunately, Bodden has expanded upon his wicked Wonderland in other novels, comics, and even a upcoming movie adaptation. In short, this is one deep rabbit hole.