
Thursday, June 17, 2010
From the Dump to E-Books

Friday, May 28, 2010
Hey! What's that on Your Shirt???
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Something Like a Poem
In early May I took 12 students from the Chatham University graduate program in creative writing to Spain. We stayed at Hort de Gloria near the village of Sella about 40 minutes from Alicante. We hiked and rock climbed, kayaked in the sea, visited Grenada and worked on the organic farm.
Monday, May 17, 2010
A Beach Tail Compared to Crockett Johnson!
Fans of Crockett Johnson’s classic, Harold and the Purple Crayon, will find some of the same endearing exploratory themes in this realistic story of a young boy with a stick who takes a linear journey into the unknown and back. When Gregory draws a lion in the sand at the beach, his father gives him permission to play, but he cannot go in the water and he cannot leave the lion. Gregory draws the lion’s tail longer and longer, until he realizes he has strayed far from his father’s umbrella. He follows the tail back to where he started and where his father has been watching all along. This story will capture the imagination of young children longing to explore on their own. Gregory’s mild anxiety when he realizes he has strayed too far is resolved by his own resourcefulness, an ending young readers will find safe and satisfying. The close-up illustrations of Gregory carry readers along as if they are at his side, and the sandy appearance of the drawings reflects the beach setting perfectly. This is a reassuring tale of adventure. Recommended. Jennifer MacKay, Senior Content Editor, American Book Publishing. Salt Lake City, UT
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Two Chapbooks of Poems just published
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Sangoel Nominated for the Carol W. Field award! And More....
Issue: April 15, 2010
A Beach Tail.
Williams, Karen Lynn (Author) , Cooper, Floyd (Illustrator)
Feb 2010. 32 p. Boyds Mills, hardcover, $17.95. (9781590787120).
The titular tail refers here to a lion drawn in the sand by Gregory, an intrepid boy who, in extending the tail
with a stick, winds up exploring a broad length of beach without quite disobeying his dad’s directive to not
wander way. As the boy goes further and further, he comes across such common seaside sights as a
jellyfish, a crumbling sand castle, a horseshoe crab, and a ghost crab. Finally realizing the distance he has
traveled, he traces his tail, with its swirls and zigzags, back past the objects he has found. Williams, who
always takes readers on a worthwhile journey, accentuates her straightforward telling with the repetitive
sounds of the shore (“Swish-swoosh”), which also punctuate Gregory’s embellishments of the long tail.
Cooper’s warm, peachy-brown palette splendidly evokes the seaside setting, and his talent for expressive
faces and texture (he won the 2009 Coretta Scott King Award for The Blacker the Berry) works to draw in
viewers. A lovely collaboration suited for every collection.
— Karen Cruze
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Another Star!
*A BEACH TAIL by Karen Lynn Williams Starred Review
A charming tale of creativity and discovery. When Gregory draws a lion in
the sand, his father suggests that it needs a tail and a name. As the child
begins making a tail with a stick, Dad reminds him, “Don’t go into the
water, and don’t leave Sandy.” Although Gregory does not go into the water,
his interpretation of not leaving Sandy is highly suspect. As he continues
to draw the tail, it leads him a long way down the beach. Gregory winds it
around a purple jellyfish, a sandcastle, a horseshoe crab, and more, until
he reaches a jetty. He turns around and has lost sight of Dad, but
fortunately is clever enough to follow the tail back past his landmarks,
until he finds part of Sandy, whose body has been washed away. Greorgy is
happy and relieved to see his father sitting under the blue umbrella on the
dolphin towel. The pastel illustrations use a soft, muted palette and have
a grainy, beachlike feel to them. Cooper does an outstanding job of using
perspective to underscore the immensity of the beach and sea. Gregory’s
facial expressions are full of wonder and curiosity as he finds small
discoveries during this adventure. A wonderful summer tale to share
one-on-one or with a group.—Anne Beier, Hendrick Hudson Free Library,
Montrose, NY
