Monica Edinger's Blog
September 1, 2021
Hello
Sorry for the radio silence. I have been sleeping, watching TV, listening to books, reading books, managing my emails, playing with Ruby, and dealing with Facebook.
I have listened to Megan Whalen Turner’s The Return of the Thief. I have read a Sitting in St. James by Rita Williams-Garcia. I have perused Carole Boston Weatherford’s Unspeakable: The Tulsa Race Massacre and Lynne Rae Perkins’ The Museum of Everything. I will do posts about them later.
I have watched The Mysterious Benedict S...
July 19, 2019
The Latest His Dark Materials Trailer
This looks amazing. CANNOT WAIT!
July 16, 2019
Neal Shusterman’s The Toll, the Finale to the Arc of a Scythe Series, a Spoiler-Free Teaser
On the last day of ALA, I did a final wander of the exhibits right before they closed and received an unexpected and wonderful gift — a bound manuscript of Neal Shusterman‘s The Toll, the finale of his Arc of a Scythe series. (FYI: I was just at the right place at the right time — they had only brought a handful — and I don’t believe I would have been given it if I’d gone by earlier.) No worries, no spoilers here; I’m just letting fans know that I thought it wonderful. On Goodreads I wrote:
I...
June 28, 2019
Last Week in DC
Had a lovely time visiting Washington DC last week, mostly for ALA’s annual convention, but not completely. Some highlights:
Visiting the United States Holocaust Museum. I was last there when it opened, but am now contemplating telling my father’s story (who came from Germany in 1936 at age 14) and wanted to see specifically how the museum presented the rise of the Third Reich. Took a ton of pictures and was especially interested in the other visitors. They were respectful and quiet in a way...June 17, 2019
Learning More About Boston Globe-Horn Book Picture Book Winner, The Patchwork Bike
Had fun coming up, along with fellow committee members Kim and Cindy, with questions for the creators of The Patchwork Bike, Maxine Beneba Clarke and illustrator Van Thanh Rudd, for Horn Book. Check them out here. Also, they are working on a sequel — The Patchwork Sky. Very, very cool.
June 12, 2019
Teaching and Learning About Slavery: Worthwhile New Article About This Topic in Children’s Books
Jennifer Frank’s Teaching Tolerance article, “Lies My Bookshelf Told Me: Slavery in Children’s Literature” is an excellent addition to what is already out there on this topic. With a fresh and clear-sighted tone, Frank unpacks this for those who may have not yet considered it. Several voices are included in the article, among them the University of Pennsylvania’s Professor Ebony Elizabeth Thomas, a leading academic expert it in this topic (and someone I’ve known and admired for decades). Th...
May 30, 2019
Our Boston Globe Horn Book Award Winners!
Yesterday morning Horn Book Magazine editor Roger Sutton announced the winners at the beginning of School Library Journal’s Day of Dialog. You can see the recording of that here. Participating in this process was a wonderful experience and I can’t thank Roger enough for inviting me to chair the committee and for my thoughtful, flexible, hard reading, hard-working, smart, and enjoyable fellow travelers — Kim L. Parker and Cindy Ritter. Ladies, it was grand and I can’t wait to celebrate these b...
May 23, 2019
The 2019 Boston Globe Horn Book Awards Reveal
This past weekend I was sequestered at Simmons University, deliberating with Kim L. Parker and Cindy Ritter (with ample tasty donuts and pastries). After a long and stimulating day (after many months of heavy reading), we had our winners and honors. Next Wednesday, May 29th, Horn Book editor Roger Sutton will announce them at SLJ’s Day of Dialog and I can’t wait to see what you all think. From this blog post:
On Wednesday, May 29, 2019, at 8:30 am EDT, The Horn Book, Inc., Editor in Chief...
May 20, 2019
Good Endings
I’m not a GoT fan, but have followed the discussion of the finale with interest as it is so in the public right now. The following from this article caught my attention:
Yet how many readers have fallen for and fallen into Tolkien and Rowling’s worlds, only to let out a disbelieving protest in the final pages? “Gollum would never have stumbled with the ring into Mount Doom?” “Voldemort’s death makes no sense.”
Huh? is my response. The ending of Harry Potter wasn’t about Voldemort, but other t...
May 10, 2019
A STEM Unit Centered Around Andrea Davis Pinkney’s The Red Pencil
Last year I began exploring the possibility of a literature-connected STEM unit for my 4th-grade students around refugees with my school’s Engineering chair, Dr. Michael Sloan Warren. Early on I suggested we center it around Andrea Davis Pinkney’s beautiful verse-novel, The Red Pencil (which I had reviewed for the New York Times). We also used a number of refugee-centered picture-books, among them some I also reviewed for the Times. Having recently finished running the unit, we are thrilled...