My Favourite Picture Books

November 22, 2011
Early this month, I learned that November is Picture Book Month and Picture Book Idea Month. This made me think about my favourite picture books, and two or three titles in particular. I decided to tweet one. And then I thought, Why not tweet a favourite picture book each day of the month? So that's what I've been doing (follow @dimitra_c or see the list, to date, below).

I love picture books. I don't read as many as I used to, particularly a few years ago when I had to review a lot of picture books as part of my job. I still read them to the children in my life on a regular basis, and the children's section of any bookstore is almost always the first place I visit.

I think it's ironic (oh gosh, am I using that word correctly?) that I love picture books so much even though I have a tendency to overlook the pictures and focus on the text. I often have to slow myself down and look—really look—at the pictures.

Two books written by authors who are also illustrators helped me to appreciate what pictures can bring to a story, and the different ways they can convey information, emotion, the passage of time, and more:

  • Picture This: How pictures work by Molly Bang 
  • Writing With Pictures: How to write and illustrate children's books by Uri Shulevitz
But it's reading to and with my goddaughter and her brother—and other children—that really taught me to pay attention to the pictures. They point out things I don't notice, make connections, find inconsistencies, and ask questions (oh the questions…). I have sometimes glanced at their faces while I'm reading, or just before we turn a page, and I see their eyes flickering all over the page.

The books on my list all made an impression when I first encountered them and have stayed with me ever since. They moved me somehow, or made me laugh. And they stand up to repeated readings (though I must admit there are a couple here I haven't read in a while...).

I'm not sure I'll be able to come up with enough titles that meet these criteria to continue tweeting until the end of the month. The first eight or so came easily, off the top of my head, but I've had to do some thinking since. There are dozens and dozens of wonderful picture books that I like very much, but only the ones I love should be on this list.

My Favourite Picture Books
  • I Have an Olive Tree by Eve Bunting, Karen Barbour (my all-time favourite)
  • Come On Rain! by Karen Hesse, Jon J. Muth
  • Everybody Needs a Rock by Byrd Baylor, Peter Parnall
  • Yo! Yes? by Chris Raschka
  • How the Grinch Stole Christmas by Dr. Seuss (my favourite book to read aloud)
  • I Love My Bear by Jules Feiffer
  • The Perfume of Memory by Michelle Nikly, Jean Claverie
  • Who Built the Pyramid? by Meredith Hooper, Robin Heighway-Bury (from Candlewick Press, one of my favourite publishers of kids' books)
  • Beautiful Oops! by Barney Saltzberg
  • Good Night Gorilla by Peggy Rathman
  • Sheila Rae the Brave by Kevin Henkes
  • Thunder Cake by Patricia Polacco
  • Click Clack Moo Cows That Type by Doreen Cronin, Betsy Lewin
  • The Boy, A Kitchen, and His Cave by Catherine K. Contopoulos
  • Poems for the Very Young selected by Michael Rosen, art Bob Graham
  • If the World Were a Village by David J. Smith
  • Red is Best by Kathy Stinson, Rob Baird Lewis
  • Owl Moon by Jane Yolen, John Shoenherr
  • Weslandia by Paul Fleischman, Kevin Hawkes
PS Most if what I know about editing children's books I learned in May 2004 at a two-day seminar sponsored by the EAC and taught by Debbie Rogosin, then an editor with Kids Can Press. Thank you Debbie!

Links
  • Picture Book Month
    http://picturebookmonth.com/
  • Picture Book Idea Month
    http://taralazar.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/piboidmo-official-sign-up-starts-today-right-here-right-now/
  • Picture This
    http://www.mollybang.com/Pages/picture.html
  • Writing With Pictures
    http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/books/Writing-Pictures-How-Write-Illustrate-Uri-Shulevitz/9780823059355-item.html
 

Plain language + POD + Baroque opera = professional development

November 17, 2011
As a freelancer, anything that helps me develop skills, meet new people, and learn new things counts as professional development. And I've enjoyed lots of professional development over the last two weeks. Here are the highlights:

Plain Language: Building Results
http://www.editors.ca/branches/toronto/seminars/plain_language%3A_building_results.html
This full-day EAC seminar was as good as I expected it to be. I'm not often asked to write or edit anything specifically in plain language, but I wa...

Continue reading...
 

Don't Want To Finish That Book? Go Ahead, Put It Down

October 17, 2011
Last week, I returned a non-fiction book to the library that I hadn't finished reading. Earlier this year, I started a novel but put it down, for good, after a couple of chapters. I used to feel bad about doing that. I used to feel as though I had to read a book all the way through to the end, no matter what. Two people convinced me otherwise (though it took a while for their advice to sink in).

The first was my grade 10 geography teacher, Mr. Atkinson (I honestly don't remember his first name...

Continue reading...
 

On Moderating a Panel for the First Time

October 13, 2011
Last month, I moderated a panel discussion for the first time. The topic was queries, the panellists were fellow editors, and the audience were members and friends of the Editors' Association of Canada. The whole process was more fun, more work, and stressful than I had expected it to be.

Here are 4 things I learned about organizing and moderating a panel discussion:


Be prepared

A panel discussion is a conversation—you can't "prepare" it beforehand the way you can a presentation, lecture, or s...

Continue reading...
 

I Love Type!

September 28, 2011
I recently watched the feature-length documentary Helvetica, about what is likely the most ubiquitous typeface in our environment (on signs, packaging, products, and so on). In a little booklet tucked into the DVD case, the filmmaker writes about how he got the idea for the film, how he travelled around the world to interview type designers and film examples of Helvetica in different cities, and how he was surprised at all the attention his film garnered when it came out. Who knew a film abo...
Continue reading...
 

What I Bought at Word on the Street Toronto 2011

September 26, 2011
Local News by Glen Downie (Wolsak and Wynn), because I really enjoyed his first collection of poems

Compositions: Notes on the written word
by Naomi Beth Wakan (Wolsak and Wynn), because I like reading about writing more than actually writing (and because I got a free pick when I purchased the above!)

The Thieves of Manhattan
by Adam Langer (Spiegel & Grau), an author I've never heard of and a genre I don't read very often, because I heard the salesperson describing it to someone else. Handsel...

Continue reading...
 

Lunch with Dimitra is...


questions and ideas about editing, writing, publishing, and education, inspired in part by my role as Program Chair for the Toronto branch of the Editors' Association of Canada (EAC).
blog comments powered by Disqus
Make a Free Website with Yola.