Quote of the Month

When love and skill work together, expect a miracle. John Ruskin




Wednesday, February 19, 2014

February Nonfiction Ten for Ten- Dino-mite

This past summer in August I participated in the annual picture books ten for ten hosted by Cathy Mere educator and blogger at Reflect & Refine: Building a Learning Community and Mandy Robek educator and blogger at Enjoy and Embrace Learning.  My post, Xena's Favorite Dog Books, revolved around a theme rather than selecting my top ten overall.  I have since discovered that they along with Julie Balen, educator and blogger at Write at the Edge initiated another such event.  In February of last year they hosted a Nonfiction Books 10 for 10.  

As soon as the announcement for this year's celebration of nonfiction hit Twitter people began speculating whether they would select their top books they could not live without or pick a theme.  It's much easier for me to pick a theme, then select those books I would recommend.  In reviewing nonfiction picture books last year, there were three outstanding titles focusing on those prehistoric giants, dinosaurs.  I have had a great time discovering new titles and making sure I included those books whose appeal is lasting.




My top ten dinosaur books are listed in a Popplet titled Dinosaurs and Other Prehistorics. (Click the title to access the Popplet.)  The image below shows how the Popplet will look.   Follow this link to the blog hosting all the other participants.  Make sure you stop by Kid Lit Frenzy hosted by educator, Alyson Beecher.  Many of us link there weekly on Wednesdays for the 2014 Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge.




Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Not Monkeying Around

Several times on Twitter, Heather Moorefield-Lang, Education Librarian at Virginia Tech and current chairperson of the American Association of School Librarians Best Websites for Teaching & Learning committee has mentioned a curation tool with which she has been experimenting.  I decided to give it a try myself today.  This tool is called Gibbon.

Gibbon currently can be used without cost.  When accessing the home page, you can join, log in or view the menu on the left side.  When you scroll down the page further you are provided with explanations about the site.  There are two main functions, playlists and learning flows.  Beneath this are featured learning flows.  Let's join the site first.






You can join using your Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn or Google+ account.  I choose to enter in a username, my email and a password.  Due to providing this information, I would recommend that students who use this application as a curation tool be over the age of thirteen. 


As soon as you select the Join button, another screen opens.  This welcomes you and asks a couple of questions.  Not knowing what to expect I chose 10 minutes per week along with the Gibbon User Manual.  You can skip this or browse through more learning flows.  If you select the browsing button you can search with a keyword or by the categories, Featured, Popular, New, Design, Programming, Startups and Marketing.  When you are browsing and see a learning flow you would like to view, mouse over it.  In the upper right-hand corner click on the plus sign.  It will be added to your profile menu.



After I choose the Gibbon User Manual the window below opened.  When you select the Start Learning button, the button title changes to Learning.  On the  right a marker indicates your spot next to an icon showing the type of learning.  You can also see the amount of time necessary to complete the chapter and the number of people who have used it.

Basically this page is a learning flow or a textbook with chapters.  Chapters can be an article, a blog, or a video; anything chosen by the creator or teacher.  A playlist is a collection of chapters from learning flows.




When you select a chapter the following window is opened.  You can Start Learning, Mark As Learned or go back to the learning flow.  When you have finished with all the chapters the next image is displayed.  I like the celebration that is provided for learners.







To start designing a learning flow go to your profile by clicking on the menu icon in the upper left-hand corner.  You can also see which learning flows you have visited.  At the bottom the tools section offers a Chrome Extension and a bookmarklet for Gibbon on your browser toolbar.  I selected Create Flow.



At the next screen you are asked to give your learning flow a title, a brief description of who would benefit from it and three tags to assist in searching for your learning flow.  At the following window, when this is done, you can begin.  



The first thing to note is you can at edit your learning flow at any time (1).  Next they invite you to install the extension or bookmarklet (2).  Then you are ready to start adding chapters to your textbook (3).


All you need to do is copy and paste a URL into the provided space or find an item and click on the +Gibbon bookmarklet on your browser toolbar.  When you add a URL a box opens beneath it asking you to explain the purpose of this chapter.  When it has been added it looks like the second image below.  The information you provide about the chapter can be edited or the entire item can be deleted.  Another nice feature is chapters can be dragged and dropped into new positions in the flow.



When you have finished adding chapters to your learning flow, you can invite students by sending them an email.  You can also share your learning flow on Facebook or Twitter.  Here is the link to my learning flow titled Iditarod.  The race will begin the first Saturday in March. 


Gibbon is a very new curation tool based in The Netherlands.  I spent quite a bit of time exploring the site today and trading emails with one of the developers.  You could not ask for better support; it's outstanding.  Tomorrow morning the site will be updated.  A new release is also in the works for this week. 

I am already thinking of other uses for this in the classroom setting.  A learning flow could be designed around a Mock Caldecott unit containing author/illustrator websites.  When a subject is introduced a learning flow could be generated to introduce it or to offer a more in-depth explanation.  I remember reading about an educator who used it to make an Internet scavenger hunt.  I really like the idea that when each chapter is completed (item is read or viewed), the student feels a sense of accomplishment when checking the box.  I think Gibbon is definitely an application you will want to explore and use.  I'll be adding it to my virtual toolbox. 

Monday, February 17, 2014

Four Weeks in Summer 1959

It is the year Alaska and Hawaii were admitted to the Union as the forty-ninth and fiftieth states.  It is the first time Barbie made an appearance with the other dolls in toy stores.  It is the year Time Magazine's Man of the Year was Dwight D. Eisenhower.  Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone airs on television in October on CBS following Bonanza in September on NBC.


It is also the year when an eleven-year-old boy, living in Memphis, Tennessee, takes over the newspaper route for a friend during the month of July.  These four weeks will challenge and change Little Man.  Paperboy (Delacorte Press, May, 2013), a 2014 Newbery Honor winner, written by Vince Vawter is this boy's story.  This book will challenge and change you.

I'm typing about the stabbing for a good reason. I can't talk.

Without stuttering.

While not excited about taking over Rat's (Art's) paper delivery, he knows his skill at having a ferocious fastball is responsible; unintentionally hitting his friend on the last day of sixth grade before summer.  Picking up the papers with the other boys, cutting the bundles, folding the papers, loading up the bags and throwing them or placing them on people's porches is not the problem.  The real dilemma is collecting the money each Friday evening for the papers.  He voices his concerns to Mam.

Mam, Miss Nellie Avent, an African American woman, has been the housekeeper for the boy's family for more than six years.  A Bible-reading, choir-singing but not opposed to fortune tellers and believing in the Hounds of Hell, Mam dispenses advice and love to the boy.  She treats him fairly with respect, looking him directly in the eye when they are in conversation.

The boy's parents, good people who love their son, hire a tutor to work with him on his speech.  His mother is at home when not involved in the social commitments as a member of the country club.  Even after working many hours at his job, his father usually manages to spend time playing catch with the boy.  It is a good family even if there is a secret.

Mam did warn the boy to stay away from one of the local junk men, Ara T, but he needed his knife sharpened to cut the newspaper bundles open.  Big Sack, an African American man seems to be more visible in the neighborhood lately.  It's a puzzle as to why TV Boy, at one of the houses on his route, sits and stares at the television without moving.  Mrs. Worthington, one of the most beautiful women he has ever seen, definitely has a fondness for whiskey to lessen frightening problems.  A merchant marine, Mr. Spiro, with his eloquent manner of speaking and astute methods for problem solving, reveals a home filled with untold treasures.

These are the people who populate the boy's summer days, altering his life more than he ever would have anticipated.  There are questions never answered but other resolutions forge friendships.  Heart-stopping fear is replaced with a keen sense of security.  Loyalty, justice, and love are life's greatest teachers.


From the very first sentence, building to the last thought on the final page, there is an undercurrent of tension; a things-are-going-to-happen feeling permeates this first person narrative.  Vince Vawter, using his own life experiences, creates a story so real you will begin to feel your own heart beat in sync with that of the main character.  His life becomes your life as each page is turned, your world slides away as you are transported to 1959.

The boy dislikes commas, the pauses they create, so he does not use them.  The sentences are grouped in specific blocks, unique paragraphs, of dialogue and thoughts.  Even when Little Man is stuttering the story flows, albeit more slowly.  There is still with a seamless connection to all the events.

All the characters, no matter their role in the boy's summer month, are significant pieces in the complete picture.  Distinct personalities are fully realized to the point where you wouldn't be a bit surprised to see any of them walking down the street when you look out your window in 1959 Memphis.  Each person is integral to the boy's growth; to gaining wisdom and understanding.

Here are a couple of examples of writing from the book, although the number of sticky notes visible along the page edges grew as I kept reading.

In the part of Memphis where I live all the street names are sunk in the concrete on every corner in nice blue tile.  I know all the streets but I like to read the name in my head each time I come to one.  Vinton.  Harbert.  Carr.  Melrose.  Goodbar.  Peabody.

The streets are like friends that I don't have to talk to.


I felt like I was falling off a cliff and trying to grab for tree limbs or anything to slow me down like cowboys do in television shows.  
s-s-s-s But fiction is a story and s-s-s-s nonfiction is the s-s-s-s truth.
And I reply that you are referring merely to the rule of law.  I contend that one is likely to find more truth in fiction.  A good painting after all is more truthful than a photograph.  Remember that, Young Messenger, for all your days.


I can guarantee you will never forget reading Paperboy by Vince Vawter.  It is a powerful, moving portrayal reaching out to the hearts and minds of readers.  A two page author's note at the end offers explanations and invites questions.  Make sure you follow this link to Watch. Connect. Read.the blog of teacher librarian, John Schumacher.  It is a three question interview of Vince Vawter after he won the Newbery Honor plus great additional resources.  By following the link in embedded in Vince Vawter's name above you can access his website.  This link takes you to the publisher's website so you can view and read forty-two pages from the book.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Twitterville Talk #139

It's been a wonderful week on Twitter with announcements of new book releases, cover reveals, book trailers and chatter about World Read Aloud Day coming in March.  Authors and illustrators encourage one another continuously with short exchanges as they take breaks in their work.  All is right in the world of children's literature.  Daily tweets abound on how to best serve students in our libraries and classrooms.  I hope you have a wonderful weekend.  Enjoy what has been gathered here.  Look for the giveaways.  Take time for reading.





This is a very important and always timely essay, A Little Stone:  The Rippling Repercussions of Bookshaming by Priscilla Thomas.

Thanks for this tweet goes to the Nerdy Book Club.






We can't stress enough the importance of being careful about giving credit where credit is due.  Share this article with others, The 6 Types Of Creative Commons Licenses Students Should Know About.  

Thanks to teacher librarian and blogger at Reederama, Jennifer Reed for this tweet.








Several more judges for the School Library Journal 2014 Battle of the Kids' Books were announced this week.  Meet Yuyi Morales, Sarah Mylinowski, Vaunda Nelson, Patrick Ness and Lauren Oliver.

Thanks to School Library Journal for these tweets.








There is a new blog at The Horn Book called Lolly's Classroom, designed to look at books and reading from the teacher's perspective.

Thanks to The Horn Book for this tweet.








This looks like a great activity which could be used in a variety of educational settings, A Step By Step Guide To Creating A Virtual Field Trip Using Google Earth.
To the first person who can tell me the name of the person who created the guide, I will send a copy of Herman and Rosie by Gus Gordon.  Please leave your answer in the comments below or send me a DM on Twitter.


Thanks for this tweet goes to Jennifer LaGarde, teacher librarian, 2012 Library Journal Movers & Shakers, ALA/NYT I Love My Librarian winner, co-founder of #levelupbc, and blogger at The Adventures of Library Girl.





Did you see the exclusive book trailer for Zita the Spacegirl faces her toughest challenge yet:  Space Prison.  The author illustrator has written an essay about this trilogy.

Thanks to author illustrator Ben Hatke for this tweet and for providing readers with these great books.







Speaking of book trailers...here's this week's lineup from the man who finds them before anyone else. (Plus we have author videos too!)

























Booklist has listed their Top 10 Books on Sustainability for Youth: 2014.  
To the first person who tell me the title of the fifth book on the list, I will send copies of I am Abraham Lincoln and I am Amelia Earhart written by Brad Meltzer with illustrations by Christopher Eliopoulos.  Please leave your answer in the comments below or send me a DM on Twitter. (These titles have been won.)

Are you ready for the #SharpSchu Book Club this month?

Here's WONDERful news!

Make sure you don't miss any of the new book releases!  Check out Mr. Schu's Book Release Calendar.



Thanks to John Schumacher, teacher librarian, co-host of the monthly #SharpSchu Book Club, 2011 Library Journal Movers & Shakers, 2014 Newbery Medal Committee member, and blogger at Watch. Connect. Read. for these tweets.





This post speaks to how we approach...everything, Wear Your Heart on Your Sleeve (and Walls and Actions and)

This is extremely important when working with readers, Slice Of Life-Matching Books To Readers-Readers Matter!

And then there is this---Why Invest in Libraries


Thanks to educator and blogger at Read, Write, Reflect, Katherine Sokolowski for these tweets.







And the story continues, JK Rowling backtracks on 'Harry Potter heresy'


Thanks to Children's Bookshelf of Publishers Weekly for this tweet.







This could be a great discussion piece for inside and outside the classroom, Can Re-Illustration Ever Be Justified?

Thanks to Travis Jonker, teacher librarian, 2014 Caldecott Medal Committee member, and blogger at 100 Scope Notes, for this tweet.







The most recent podcast has been posted, take a break and listen to an interview with author illustrator, Aaron Zenz.


Thanks for this tweet goes to elementary library media specialist, co-founder of #levelupbc, 2013 Library Journal Movers & Shakers Tech Leader and blogger at The Busy Librarian, Matthew C. Winner.





In case you might have missed it, this post, Bless It All, by Donalyn Miller is outstanding.

Thanks to Donalyn Miller, teacher, author of The Book Whisperer: Awakening the Inner Reader in Every Child and Reading in the Wild: The Book Whisperer's Keys to Cultivating Lifelong Reading Habits, co-founder of the Nerdy Book Club and blogger at Donalyn Miller for this tweet.





I love this video which introduces The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art.


The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art from Kate Geis on Vimeo.


Thanks for this tweet goes to The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art.







This is good news to users of Thinglink, "Thinglink" Announces Free Virtual Classrooms

Thanks to educator and blogger at Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day..., Larry Ferlazzo, for this tweet and this post.










Here's an interesting piece, Do People Need Libraries in the Digital Age?

Thanks to Shelly (Diaz) Vale, School Library Journal, Book Review Senior Editor, for this tweet.





What do you think about this?  Infographic: The Internet Is Making Kids Stupid

Thanks for this tweet goes to Debbie Alvarez, teacher librarian and blogger at The Styling Librarian.










The Cybils Awards were announced this week.  Check out the winners!
To the first person who can tell me the title of the nonfiction winner for elementary and middle grade, I will send a copy of What's Your Favorite Animal? by Eric Carle and Friends.  Please leave your answer in the comments below or send me a DM on Twitter. (This copy has been won.)

Thanks to author Madelyn Rosenberg (The Canary in the Coal Mine) for this tweet.







Begin early and don't stop!  How reading your baby a bedtime story is as important as FEEDING them-and could even get them a good job and a happy marriage

Thanks to librarian and blogger at Waking Brain Cells, Tasha Saecker, for this tweet.






Enjoy this collection of quotes, favorite tweets, announcements of book releases, cover reveals and Valentine's Day greetings and...some pictures Xena liked.




































Friday, February 14, 2014

It's In The Air

As a whole we are a people who could be called makers of lists.  It seems we are constantly creating them before events; grocery lists, daily to-do lists, trip packing lists, to-accomplish-my-goal lists, holiday shopping lists, or things to experience before I die lists.  It would be a challenge to go through any day without seeing a best list of something.  Lists are a way to remember, document and highlight messages and moments.

Lists can be easily compiled without limitations but if we have a specific number of items in mind, they are a tad more difficult.  We want to make sure of the importance of every single line in this list.  In Ten Things I Love About You (Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., December 27, 2012) written and illustrated by Daniel Kirk, we discover, along with two friends, how truly valuable a list can be.

Ring!
Ring!
Hello Pig!
Hello Rabbit!

Rabbit has traveled the path connecting his home to Pig's with a specific purpose in mind.  He is making a list, a very important list.  Pig acts surprised to see Rabbit making a list.  He is even more amazed to read the title of this list.

Ten things you love...
about me?  Wow, ten!

The problem for Rabbit is, even though Pig is his very best friend, he is stuck.  He only has one thing on the list so far.  Since Pig is the perfect pal, he has come to him for help. (At this point, I find myself chuckling every time.)

Rabbit even cheerfully suggests that Pig might want to make a list too.  Pig, in his no nonsense manner, clearly states he is rather busy.  That very remark gives Rabbit the second thing he loves about Pig.

Rabbit leaves Pig's home intent on completing his tender tally.  Shortly thereafter he again comes to visit Pig.  Although he is trying, the third thing is not coming to him.

During the course of their conversation, Pig's responses trigger six more things Rabbit loves about Pig.   At this point Pig's patience is beginning to unravel. Oblivious to Pig's mood and happy the list is growing, the optimistic bunny heads back to his home.  Inevitably he arrives for the third time at Pig's place.  This time, it's Rabbit who is surprised.  The two realize they are more alike than either of them knew.


Told entirely in dialog, Daniel Kirk depicts all the charm and humor of this friendship while introducing readers to these delightful characters.  Rabbit's enthusiasm, his ability to turn a sentence into a positive point for his list, creates the special contrast between the two chums.  This comparison generates a gentle tension making the twist at the end even better.  Here is a single example.

Rabbit, I'm really busy now.
Could you come back later,
and we'll do something fun?

Fantastic!
Number 5---I love Pig
because he's full of
good ideas.


Can't you just feel the joy when looking at the matching jacket and cover?  Look at those two leaping into the air, laughter spread across their faces.  On the back in a small picture they are hugging, eyes closed in pleasure, smiling.  Already you know this book is going to be filled with plenty of grins on every page.  The opening and closing endpapers done in turquoise and white with a loose brown border picture a map of Rabbit's and Pig's homes complete with trees, hills, flying birds, a tire swing, a garden, a hop-scotch board, a swimming pond and basketball net.  It makes you want to join their world, if only for a day.

The technique Daniel Kirk used for making his pictures could not have been more perfect for his two subjects.

The illustrations in this book were made by scanning ink-on-paper drawings and painted plywood panels into the computer and adding textures and colors in Photoshop. 

The rustic simplicity of the alternating single page, small images on a single page and the two-page spreads enhance the pacing superbly.  Expressive eyes, mouths and those perky whiskers of Rabbit's tell their own story.  I can't look at Rabbit's bare feet and Pig's tennis shoes without smiling.

I think one of my favorite groups of pictures is of Pig's increasing frustration.  He wants to get back to his work.  Beneath his two pictures Rabbit blissfully continues adding to his list.


I can't think of a better way to celebrate Valentine's Day then by sharing Ten Things I Love About You written and illustrated by Daniel Kirk.  Rejoicing in friendships any time is wonderful but today it's extra special.  Wouldn't it be great to give a book to someone today with a bookmark or card enclosed listing the ten things you love about them?   Go!  Do it right now!  Spread some sunshine!

If you wish to know more about the other books Daniel Kirk has written and illustrated please follow the link embedded in his name above which takes you to his website.

In the spirit of the day here is my list.

Ten Things I Love About Xena


  1. I love Xena because she taught me the joy in seeing things for the first time all over again.
  2. I love Xena because she kept me company on long walks along the Lake and in the woods.
  3. I love Xena because she takes me out at night so I can see beautiful star constellations, spellbinding moons, meteor showers and the Northern Lights.
  4. I love Xena because of her loyal protection when we've come in harm's way.
  5. I love Xena because she makes me laugh when I need it the most (and even when I don't).
  6. I love Xena for teaching me to slow down and be patient as she ages.
  7. I love Xena for lying across my feet when I'm writing and curling up next to me when I'm reading.
  8. I love Xena for waking me in the morning with her slobbery kisses.
  9. I love Xena for teaching me love means letting go when the other may be suffering.
  10. I love Xena because she has always been my friend when no others were. 
Some people will look at Xena and see only a dog.  I see a constant companion filled with unconditional love.


Thursday, February 13, 2014

Valentine's Day Eve Skype-Tom Angleberger

This is a short post to extend our utmost thanks to author Tom Angleberger for generously offering up free thirty minute Skype visits to the galaxy last month.  I could hardly believe my good fortune at seeing his tweet.  After a quick text to a colleague to confirm her class's availability, I was able to secure a spot for us on his calendar.

As the class entered the library today, you could sense the excitement.  From the moment Tom Angleberger appeared on screen he entertained and engaged our students.  The air was supercharged with his energy.  He spoke about his books, talked about his favorite books by other authors, made a list of the students' favorite books, taught us how to make Origami Yoda and answered student questions.

I know it will be a day for all the students to remember.  I know their teacher, Mrs. Madison, and I will not forget it.  Amazing you are, Tom Angleberger!

Cherished Creatures

Within a heartbeat they can tell you.  Not only do they have an answer but they want to know what yours is.  No matter how many books the library may have or resources you provide, it's simply never enough.  Truthfully over the years I have learned more than I ever knew I wanted to know about a large variety of animals because of students' quests to discover everything about their favorite animal, domestic and wild.

The extent of their interest is not limited to facts either; each having an uncanny ability in their individual style to recreate their animal visually.  How exciting for all of us that Eric Carle and thirteen other illustrators decide to share their choices.  What's Your Favorite Animal? (Henry Holt and Company, January 2014) not only answers the question but entertains with text and pictures by each.

I have always liked all animals.  

So begins the story Eric Carle tells of his cat who liked to chase and fetch a string bean until she decided it was better off tucked away from view.  A ladder would definitely be needed to see eye to eye with Tom Lichtenheld's animal friend after a trip to Africa or the zoo.  You will be hard pressed not to gasp and utter yikes after seeing the smile on Mo Willems' crawling critter's face.

A Christmas tradition with a happy ending, especially for the main course, is a tale with timeless appeal as revealed by Peter Sis.  Giving us a whole new perspective on one of nature's slowest movers, Chris Raschka reminds us patience has great rewards.  Nick Bruel's Bad Kitty is up to his typical tricks.  Could it be because of a favorite animal choice?

Let's see now.  Who could possibly like a high-jumping bunny, these-pillows-are-my-spot dog, or a boastful elephant?  It might be Rosemary Wells, Lane Smith, Jon Klassen, Susan Jeffers, or Peter McCarty?  Or perhaps one of them has voiced their love of a duck (without a hat) or a herd of wild white horses?

A memory of cows coming to life at night, a kinship felt with penguins and a colorful connection to leopards fill the pages by Lucy Cousins, Steven Kellogg and Erin Stead. (No, I did not put them in order.) Just when you think you might suffer from happiness overload due to the wonderful words and colorful pictures on these pages, the final two host childhood pictures of each artist with a short biographical sketch.  Who could ask for anything more?


An amusing incident, a whimsical poem, a message of hope, personal reflections from now and then, and tales full of hilarity reach out, pulling readers into the realms of these fourteen individuals who, fortunately for us, populate the children's literature community.  All the wit and wonder we love about their work is condensed into these two page spreads; how they choose to speak about their favorite animal is a direct reflection of them as authors and illustrators.  You will find yourself alternating between a slow smile, a giggle, a guffaw, a sigh, and nod of understanding more than once. These fourteen people say much with few words.


Eric Carle's notable cut-paper collage decorates the front dust jacket with a list of the contributors and their animals on the back.  Upon removing the jacket readers see all fourteen creatures spread across both sides of the cover with the artists' signatures next to their work.  The pristine white background makes all the elements pop off the pages.  Sunny golden opening and closing endpapers brushed in paint announce the total joy to be found in this book.

Even without their name as part of the text or a signature within the illustration, each visual clearly identifies the creator; vividly displaying their unique styles and mediums.  The deft paper cuts for a cat's fur, the fluffy cloud cleverly becoming a beehive hairdo for the ruby-lipped giraffe, the loose swirls of orange, amber and blue making a home for a snail, small delicate lines and softened brush strokes bringing the essence of penguins to the page or cow paintings papering a wall as a boy dreams one into life, not only feature an animal but the considerable talents each illustrator brings to this book and everything they do.  Every single one is a masterpiece.


This variety in selected animals, narratives and illustrators is exactly what makes What's Your Favorite Animal? by Eric Carle and Friends a true treasure that everyone should read and own.  It's like holding an art gallery in your hands.  The end flap states:

All royalties from this book will be donated to The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art which was founded by Eric and Barbara Carl in 2002.  

Links to each of the contributors' websites (when possible) have been placed in their names above.  Follow this link to the publisher's website for a peek inside this title.  Enjoy the videos collected by some of the artists.  If you have other videos you would like me to include feel free to leave a link in the comments below.