Be Nice to New Jersey Week

In my department in the Scholastic New York office, there are *a lot* of Jersey girls. Whenever I learn a colleague is from New Jersey or has New Jersey connections, I make sure to ask them: pork roll, or Taylor ham?

For those of you who don't know, the first full week of July (this year, that's July 2-8) is Be Nice to New Jersey Week, a silly little holiday (probably developed in jest, to be honest) that is taken pretty seriously by a bunch of us here. It's a week when people should refrain from sharing mean jokes about the state; I recommend that people embrace all the state's positives instead (especially as we wait out the current state budget shutdown!) – including, but not limited to: our beaches, Bruce Springsteen, and local diners.

Two years ago my colleague and officemate Suzanne wrote about Be Nice to New Jersey Week and put together some lists of great Jersey reads. This year, to honor my home state, I headed into the Archives with Deimosa to find some vintage New Jersey coverage in our classroom magazines. (I've had this post brewing since I spotted this first issue on an earlier #ThowbackThursday excursion!) Here's what we found:

Junior Scholastic, October 28, 1964 - Cover Story: State of New Jersey Tercentenary: Folklore and Folk Heroes 

As if that wasn't cool enough, we went back even farther and found this amazing issue from 1938 dedicated entirely to New Jersey. The pages were so delicate Deimosa had to hold the book and turn them for me!

Junior Scholastic, October 22, 1938 - Cover Story: This Issue: New Jersey

Show us your summer reading adventure!

We’ve got some exciting news for all our summer readers out there. Today we are launching our “Show us your summer reading adventure” sweepstakes! We want to see what a reading adventure looks like to you and your kids. A reading adventure can be anything—from a backyard picnic to a trip to the Grand Canyon—just as long as you’ve got a good book in hand! We’d love to see what kinds of adventures kids and families will be having this summer, so we’re having a photo sweepstakes on social media and asking our followers to share them with us!

Here’s how it works: 

  1. Ask your kids to grab the books they plan to read this summer.
  2. Take a reading adventure together… and
  3. Take a picture! Share it with us on Twitter (@Scholastic), Instagram (@ScholasticInc), or both using the hashtag #summerreading #readingadventure & #sweepstakes.

Every Sunday from July 9 to July 31, we’ll be selecting two lucky winners (one on Twitter, and one on Instagram) to receive a reading prize pack full of books, posters, bookmarks, and some more goodies! See the official rules for the sweepstakes here.

We can’t wait to see the reading adventures you and your kids will be taking this summer! 

 

Throwback Thursday: Red, white, and blue

It's almost a holiday weekend, everyone! Here in the United States, Independence Day is rapidly approaching (I honestly can't believe it's almost July, period!), so I figured this week's Throwback Thursday would end up being pretty patriotic. However, I really can't claim credit for the final idea – it was presented to me by our three Library interns, Chloe, Alex and Zaheer. The idea? Why not make an American flag out of old books in the Archive with red, white, and blue covers!

Sounds super cute, right? I thought so too, so I set time on the calendar for the the four of us to head down there and start pulling books. In preparation, I drew out a quick guide for us to use. (Now, I know that the American flag has 50 stars and 13 stripes, but that would have been a LOT of books.)

Some takeaways? Books come in a WIDE VARIETY of sizes! Seems obvious, but when you're trying to create a uniform shape using books, you really notice the difference. Additionally, books covers are rarely just solid covers, and a book having a certain color spine doesn't necessarily indicate that same color cover. And? It was so much easier to find books with white covers from the 1950s/60s, rather than the 80s/90s. So, here's what we ended up putting together:

Pretty fun, right? If we had more floor space, maybe we could have made it even bigger! We tried to include some classic Scholastic series (Goosebumps, The Baby-sitters Club) along with the older titles; can you spot them?

Here's the list of all the books in our flag:

W.H. Hudson - Green Mansions
Eric Carle & Kazuo Iwamura - Where Are You Going? To See My Friend!
Jackie French Koller - Someday
Carolyn Keene - The Nancy Drew Notebooks: The Lost Locker
Grace Maccarona - Cars! Cars! Cars!
Norman Bridwell - Clifford Va De Viaje
Norman Bridwell - Clifford's Tricks
The Scholastic Dictionary of Synonyms, Antonyms, Homonyms
Jo Litchfield - Primeros Números
Sandra Markle - Science Dares You! Make Fake Blood
J.K. Rowling - Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Ann M. Martin - The Baby-sitters Club: Friends Forever - Claudia Gets Her Guy
Suzanne Collins - Catching Fire
Rafe Martin - The World Before This One
R.L. Stine - Goosebumps: Beware, the Snowman
Jovial Bob Stine - Blips! The First Book of Video Game Funnies
Vivian Schurfranz - Renee
Peter Filichia - A Boy's-Eye View of Girls
Malcolm Rose - Formula For Murder
Ann M. Martin - The Baby-sitters Club Super Special #13: Aloha, Baby-sitters!
Jane Austen - Emma
Jennifer Baker - To Have and to Hold
Sharon Sherman - The Babysitter's Guide
R.L. Stine - Goosebumps: The Barking Ghost
Dan Gutman - The Kid Who Became President
Empires Beyond Europe
Larry Bortstein - Ali
R.L. Stine - Goosebumps: Say Cheese and Die!
Ann M. Martin - The Baby-sitters Club Mystery #31: Mary Anne and the Music Box Secret
Sonia Black and Devra Newberger - 101 Outer Space Jokes
Ann M. Martin - The Kids in Ms. Colman's Class: Class Play
Avi - Perloo the Bold
Ann M. Martin - The Baby-sitters Club Super Special #2: Baby-sitters' Summer Vacation
Leonard Gershe - Butterflies Are Free
Small World
Shane Armstrong - I Like Shapes
Christine Loomis - In the Diner
Scholastic Literacy Place: Gammar Resource Book - Grade 1
Scholastic's The Magic School Bus Activity Guide
Kate Waters and Madeline Slovenz-Low - Lion Dancer: Ernie Wan's Chinese New Year
Jeanne Betancourt - Pony Pals: Lost and Found Pony
Marion Garthwaite - Bright Particular Star
Peter Lerangis - Antarctica: Journey to the Pole
Ann M. Martin - The Baby-sitters Club: Friends Forever - Claudia and the Friendship Feud
Famous Stories
Dear America: All the Stars in the Sky - The Santa Fe Trail Diary of Florrie Mark Ryder
Norman Borisoff - You Might Even Like It
A.E. Johnson - A Blues I Can Whistle
K.A. Applegate - Animorphs: The Mutation
George Vecsey - Harlem Globetrotters
Jeanne Betancourt - Pony Pals: The Winning Pony

Books make the best birthday gifts

On my 8th birthday my grandmother got me something I'll never forget: my first Sweet Valley Twins book.

As a twin myself, it was the perfect choice. That single gift started as long love affair with the series, and with reading in general. In the local bookstore where I bought the rest of my Sweet Valley books I also discovered The Baby-sitters Club (they were displayed next to each other, naturally) and other series that would go on to leave indelible marks on my childhood.

Books, I've found, make the best birthday gifts. Other books I've been gifted over the years include large, heavy hardcovers I was hesitant to splurge on myself (like The Selected Letters of Willa Cather), beautiful first editions of Edith Wharton titles (my favorite author!), and new releases I hadn't realized were in stores yet. Books can be such a surprise! The gift of a book, in many ways, tell us as much about the gifter as it does the gifted.

These days I give books as gifts as often as I can, particularly to the children in my life. My niece loves Branches books, my nephew loves Clifford. My daughter is into scary tales and my son likes anything with rounded corners that he can stick in his mouth. (He's a baby.)

What books have you been gifted over the years?

Toby Goes Bananas Twitter takeover

Toby Goes Bananas, a new graphic novel from Franck Girard and Serge Block, released this week and in honor of its release, @GraphixBooks (our graphic novel imprint) hosted a #TobyTakeover on Twitter. Each hour on Saturday, @GraphixBooks tweeted out a panel from the book that, collectively, comprised a special excerpt and introduced us to some of the key characters in Toby's life!

We've rounded up all of the panels here. See more at #TobyTakeover!

 

Celebrating June 27 book releases from Scholastic!

Today on OOM we’re celebrating some book birthdays for new releases from Scholastic, out today! Check out the list below of great reads for all ages, and let us know what you’re most excited to read.

Little Ones (Ages 3 and under)

Picture Books (Ages 3–8)

Young Readers (5–10)

Middle Grade (Ages 8–12)

Young Adult (Ages 12 and up)

The Scholastic Summer Reading Challenge: Week 7 recap

Can you believe we are already seven weeks into the Scholastic Summer Reading Challenge?! Considering kids have been diligently logging summer reading minutes since May, it's hard to believe the official start of summer was just last week!

Let's take a look at some week 7 highlights.

On the podcast: Telling the stories of refugees

We have a new podcast episode! This week, we discuss the refugee crisis with actor Mandy Patinkin, his wife, Kathryn Grody, and author Alan Gratz.

Alan's forthcoming book, Refugee (available July 25, 2017), follows three children as they flee from three different evils in three different time periods. Josef is a Jewish boy fleeing Nazi Germany in the 1930s on a ship bound for Cuba. Isabel is a Cuban girl whose family leaves Cuba on a homemade raft bound for Florida in 1994. And Mahmoud is a Syrian boy whose family begins the perilous trek to Europe when his homeland is torn apart by violence and destruction in 2015.

Alan joins us via Skype to discuss the inspiration for Refugee, the research that he did to bring each child's story to life, and why it is so important that we shed light on these often untold stories — especially with our own children.

In the second half of the episode, actor Mandy Patinkin (Homeland, The Princess Bride) joins us in the studio with his wife, actress and writer Kathryn Grody, to talk about their work with the International Rescue Committee. Mandy and Kathryn have traveled to refugee camps in Serbia and Greece to meet with the men, women, and children who are living in legal limbo. They share stories of the people they've met, like 10-year-old artist Farhad Nouri, or the Alassy family.

This episode is long and emotional, but well worth the listen. Pop in your earbuds and press play here, or on iTunes or Google Play.

Our favorite fictional beaches

I grew up in a beach town; the salt water is in my blood. I like to read "beach reads" (whatever they are) all year round. But now that it's summer, I feel free to shine some sunlight on all the books I love that take place at the beach!

From board books to wordless picture books, from classic middle grade novels to contemporary YAs, from evocative literary fiction to adult thrillers, there are beachy books for every type of reader. So even if you're land-locked this summer, you can feel the sand in your toes when you pick up one of these titles.

Here are some of my all-time favorite books that take place at the beach:

Wave by Suzy Lee: I like this book so much I decorated my daughter's nursery with its artwork! A wordless picture book, the story tells of a young girl frolicking in the waves. If you squint your eyes just right, you can picture yourself right there with her.

Second Chance Summer by Morgan Matson: I used to roll my eyes when people talked about the beauty of lake beaches. They're not really beaches! But then I read this YA novel and, well, now I'm a convert. Lake beaches are beaches. And this book features a compelling one.

Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter: The coast of Italy. I feel like I don't have to say anything more. (Adult)

A Hundred Summers by Beatriz Williams: Is there any place else like the rocky coastal shores of the Northeast? This soapy (in the best way) adult novel is set in the 1930s and features a coastline I dream about.

Summer Sisters by Judy Blume: The ultimate beach book, which I legitimately re-read once a year, preferably while floating in a pool. (My water-stained, dog-eared copy proves it.)

And of course, The Baby-sitters Club Super Special #10: Sea City, Here We Come! by Ann M. Martin: I can't leave a BSC book out of any list I create, and this one has always been a favorite. Martin based her fictional Sea City on the Jersey shore and as a native it's always felt authentic. I still read it every summer!

The other bloggers offered some of their recs for their favorite fictional beaches, too. Stephanie loved Aquamarine by Alice Hoffman, a story is about two friends named Hailey and Claire who find a mermaid in a local swimming pool after a storm.

Emily LOVES the picture book Beach by Elisha Cooper—another beach girl (she grew up on the Gulf Coast of Florida), she believes the absolute best times to go to the beach are in the early morning before all the tourists have arrived, and just before sunset, when it’s starting to clear out. (I can confirm this to be true.) She says, "Looking at those spreads in this picture book reminds me of the many peaceful hours I spent on an almost empty beach growing up!"

I have another fellow Jersey Shore blogger in Alex, who grew up just a few miles north of me. She says, "When I think of fictional beach scenes I immediately think of Nights in Rodanthe by Nicholas Sparks. Maybe it’s because I am secretly a hopeless romantic and the idea of falling in love at the beach is alluring to me, or maybe it’s the fact that my husband and I vacation in North Carolina during the summers, but this books pulls at all my summer loving heart strings."

Our summer intern Allison says the beach in Henry & Mudge and the Forever Sea by Cynthia Rylant is her favorite, because the whole book is a beach scene! "I chose this scene because it was one of my favorite book series as a child and it combined two of my favorite things: beaches and dogs."

And Julia chose Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels. Much of the second book, The Story of a New Name, takes place in an Italian beach town. (See my note above about Italian beaches!) Julia says, "I love Ferrante’s writing because she can sustain long periods of intense human emotion for hundreds of pages, and it’s riveting and exhausting. There’s no better example of this intensity than during Lenu and Lila’s summer on the beach in The Story of a New Name."

 

Share your own favorite fictional beaches over at #summerreading, why dontcha?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pages

Subscribe to On Our Minds RSS