Hundreds
of young, early readers and families joined five children’s authors and
illustrators at Spring Oaks Middle School on Jan. 31 for the district’s
Bookworm Festival. Several Spring Branch ISD elementary schools helped their
students and parents attend with Saturday bus transportation.
Children's author Dan Santat speaks to young readers at
the Bookworm Festival.
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Festival
keynote speaker Dan Santat learned only two days after the event that he had
been awarded the Randolph Caldecott Medal for picture book artistry for The
Adventures of Beekle: The Imaginary Friend. The American Library
Association issued the award, considered one of the top national prizes in
children’s literature.
Santat
talked about his most recent book, A Crankenstein Valentine, and his
love for writing and illustrating to several hundred SBISD students and
parents. Santat found his calling in creating picture books after switching
from microbiology and a future career in dentistry to art school and
uncertain future. A supportive father gave him permission to “be happy.”
“Being
a writer and an illustrator is like being a wizard. If you become a writer or
illustrator, you can take simple tools – a pencil, pad and paintbrush – and you
can make absolutely anything from nothing,” he told students and parents
gathered in the middle school cafeteria.
This
year’s Bookworm Festival was designed as a fun event celebrating emerging
readers, and those who write for them. Hundreds of students from three schools
– Hollibrook, Shadow Oaks and Woodview – rode buses to the school event. The
children’s authors attracted students and families from across Houston, too.
SBISD
teachers and librarians read authors’ books to students ahead of the festival
to familiarize students with book characters.
Bookworm
Festival authors included:
- Deborah Freedman. Author and illustrator Freedman has written three books, including Scribble, Blue Chicken and The Story of Fish & Snail (2013). Her newest book, By Mouse & Frog, will be released in April.
- Tad Hills. American writer and illustrator Hills has published nine books in the Duck & Goose series and several more in the Rocket Learns to Read series, including How Rocket Learned to Read, and Rocket Writes a Story.
- Dan Santat. In addition to his new book, A Crankenstein Valentine, this children’s author may be best known for The Guild of Geniuses, and for creating the Disney Channel animated series, The Replacements. He was awarded the Caldecott Medal literary prize for best picture book.
- Jennifer Hamburg. Houston-based Hamburg has written A Moose That Says Moo, Monkey, and Duck Quack Up. She has written for television shows on Disney Junior, PBS and Nick Jr. She won two Emmy Awards as a writing team member for Between the Lions.
- Dan Hanna. He illustrated the many “Pout-Pout Fish” series books. He has more than 10 years of experience in the animation industry, and his works and illustrations have appeared on BBC, America and the Cartoon Network.
Blue
Willow Books, a generous district partner, supported the special author event.
Festival
attendance increased in one year from 300 to 500 students and adults, said
teacher and librarian Melanie Scales of Spring Shadows Elementary School.
“All
of our authors and illustrators expressed their gratitude and pleasure at being
included in an event that was created for children and authors. They enjoyed
the opportunity to interact with readers in our community. I saw so many happy
kids, parents, educators and book people,” Scales said. “It was a magical
morning!”
The
Saturday event included two separate sessions with authors and then a closing
children’s puppet show.
During
breakout sessions, authors Tad Hills and Deborah Freedman talked openly about
the personal joys and headaches involved in writing and illustrating as a job.
Their
advice for young writers was simple – read, read, read, and then write, write,
write. “The best way to write a lot of stories is to read a lot of stories.
Read a lot of books, as many and as many types as you can,” Tad Hills said.
“All
the writers I know are big readers. They write and they read a lot, and the
best advice I have for young writers is to just write. Write something, and
then write the next something. Just keep writing and reading,” Deborah Freedman
said.
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