#DecDisplays – Grade 8 / 13 year olds

Following on from Friday's post, here are 4 posters for Grade 8 / 13 year olds - the G8 protagonists poster, our G8 core collection selection, the same for Year 9 at Tanglin Trust School (thanks Katie Day) and Oberoi International School's OIS Reads! Middle Grade poster (thanks Sarah Ducharme). By Nadine Bailey – middle … Continue reading #DecDisplays – Grade 8 / 13 year olds

#DecDisplay – Grade 7 / 12 year olds

Following on from yesterday's post, here are 4 posters for our Grade 7 / 12 year olds - the G7 protagonists poster, our G7 core collection selection, the same for Year 8 at Tanglin Trust School (thanks Katie Day) and Oberoi International School's OIS Reads! Middle Grade poster (thanks Sarah Ducharme). By Nadine Bailey – … Continue reading #DecDisplay – Grade 7 / 12 year olds

#DecDisplay – Grade 6 / 11 year olds

Living up to the quote attributed to Edison "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." we librarians try to find ways that we can get books into the hands of our students that will be "the one(s)" that set up them up for reading success. Today features some of the … Continue reading #DecDisplay – Grade 6 / 11 year olds

#DecDisplays – Syria

Isn't it great to finally have a bit of good news? Today's two posters have books, nonfiction, memoir, biography and fiction for all ages - adult, YA, Middle Grade and picture books about Syria. Usually I wait until the month of the national day to put together a country poster, but today I squeezed in … Continue reading #DecDisplays – Syria

#DecDisplays – Dystopian sense-making

Our Grade 7 students do a dystopian unit in their English Language Arts (ELA) class, and I came across this nifty categorisation in a poster by Jeri Hurd (sans the sub-pages / images). Since I find our students are increasingly stimulated by imagery, rather than just text, I adapted the poster to include 7 sub-posters … Continue reading #DecDisplays – Dystopian sense-making

#DecDisplays – Poverty and wealth

You know that famous quote of Michael Moore “I really didn't realize the librarians were, you know, such a dangerous group. They are subversive. You think they're just sitting there at the desk, all quiet and everything. They're like plotting the revolution, man. I wouldn't mess with them." well I really try my best to … Continue reading #DecDisplays – Poverty and wealth

#ItalianLitMonth n.19: My White Whale: Translating Daniele Del Giudice

by Anne Milano Appel I first came upon Daniele Del Giudice in a bookstore window in Rome, while waiting for a bus on Via Vittorio Emanuele. In the window was a copy of his Staccando l'ombra da terra and I went in and bought it. As I read it, I got a sense that this … Continue reading #ItalianLitMonth n.19: My White Whale: Translating Daniele Del Giudice

#ItalianLitMonth n.5: Jenny McPhee, Translator of Lies and Sorcery, Interviewed by Lisa Mullenneaux

Jenny McPhee is the author of the novels The Center of Things, No Ordinary Matter, and A Man of No Moon and co-authored Girls: Ordinary Girls and Their Extraordinary Pursuits. Her translations from the Italian include works by Anna Banti, Massimo Bontempelli, Natalia Ginzburg, Giacomo Leopardi, Primo Levi, Anna Maria Ortese, Curzio Malaparte, Pope John … Continue reading #ItalianLitMonth n.5: Jenny McPhee, Translator of Lies and Sorcery, Interviewed by Lisa Mullenneaux

#WorldKidLit Wednesday: Two Little Red Mittens

Sweet but not saccharine, heartwarming but not maudlin, Two Little Red Mittens is a charming, old-fashioned story. A picture book for children ages seven and under, the gentle tale features an anthropomorphic pair of red mittens:         Left and right, they always went out as a pair, wrapping Little One’s hands in … Continue reading #WorldKidLit Wednesday: Two Little Red Mittens