I'm excited to join Mandy Robek, Julie Balen, and Cathy Mere (hosts) for the #nf10for10 event, featuring 10 favorite nonfiction picture books. I always love adding to my to-read stacks and seeing what wonderful nonfiction has been enjoyed by all in the past year. I like to group my choices around a theme topic, so this year, I chose "books about books" since I just read a 2020 ALA Youth Media award winner about Aaron Lansky, Yiddish book rescuer. Here we go!
The Book Rescuer: How a Mensch from Massachusetts Saved Yiddish Literature for Generations to Come by Sue Macy, Illustrated by Stacy Innerst
Loved this one and found it fascinating the lengths someone would take to save history. |
The Important Thing about Margaret Wise Brown by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Sarah Jacoby
Quirky, honest biography of Margaret Wise Brown. Being a fan of Brown's for so many years, I gained an appreciation of who she really was thanks to Mac Barnett not shying away from her sometimes strange and controversial characteristics and behavior. She was a colorful, bold woman writer. Interesting that her books were banned at times for not being typical and accepted children's stories. Loved Sarah Jacoby's illustrations! |
Planting Stories: The Life of Librarian and Storyteller Pura Belpre by Anika Aldamuy Denise, illustrated by Paola Escobar
I loved learning about Pura Belpre in this beautifully illustrated picture book biography! |
Schomburg: The Man Who Built a Libary by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Eric Velasquez
I didn't know anything about Afro-Peurto Rican Arturo Schomburg, so this biography taught me a lot! I had to laugh that he fired a librarian who used the Dewey Decimal System instead of his own way of shelving his massive collection by arranging them "by size and color, like a bouquet". |
The Book Itch: Freedom, Truth, & Harlem's Greatest Bookstore by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson, illustrated by R. Gregory Christie
A winner of the 2016 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor Award, The Book Itch is an account based on the true story of Lewis Michaux Sr.'s National Memorial African Bookstore in Harlem. He opened it in the 1930s and had to battle the notion that "Black people don't read." Told in his son's (Lewis Michaux Jr.) point of view, his dad proved everyone wrong by making it a place for prominent people such as Malcolm X (who was friends with Lews Michaux Sr.), Muhammed Ali, Eartha Kitt, and Langston Hughes to exchange ideas and buy books. "The House of Common Sense and the Home of Proper Propaganda", just down the street from the Apollo Theater, was forced to close its doors in 1975, but the legacy lives on in words.
Thomas Jefferson Builds a Library by Barb Rosenstock, illustrated by John O'Brien
This book was especially enjoyable to read since I bought it in the Library of Congress book store after seeing Jefferson's collection! I love the story of Jefferson's obsession with books and reading and the legacy he left to the Library of Congress. And who wouldn't want a table that revolves so that you could read several books at once?! I enjoyed O'Brien's lively illustrations, also. |
The Librarian of Basra: A True Story of Iraq by Jeanette Winter
This is a remarkable story of Alia Muhammad Baker who was the librarian in Basra, Iraq when it was invaded in April, 2003. She was determined to save the books in her library. The governor wouldn't help her, so she took the rescue mission into her own hands. With the aid of friends and neighbors, she hid 70% of the books before the library burned down. From the Good Mountain: How Gutenberg Changed the World by James Rumford
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Miss Moore Thought Otherwise by Jan Pinborough, illustrated by Debby Atwell
Can you imagine libraries without children? Or thinking that children's books weren't very important? Neither could Annie Carroll Moore from Limerick, Maine. In the 1870s women weren't expected to be educated. Most people thought they should be quiet homemakers. Annie, however, had different ideas and studied to become a lawyer. One day, Annie heard the exciting news that libraries were hiring women as librarians, so she moved to Brooklyn, NY to enroll in the Pratt Institute library school. Once she became a librarian she challenged the idea that children shouldn't be allowed in libraries and most certainly shouldn't touch library books or take them home. Once Annie was put in charge of the children's sections of thirty-six branches of the New York Public Library, she created children's rooms, pulled dull books off the shelves and replaced them with adventurous ones, wrote book reviews and book lists, and got to know publishers and authors of children's books. She inspired librarians across the country and world to do the same.
Some Writer! The Story of E.B. White by Melissa Sweet
Oh, be still my heart. This is Some Book! There's something about E.B. White that makes me all teary, and the fact that one of my favorite children's illustrators/authors wrote a long picture book biography about him makes me especially teary!!! The whole thing is a masterpiece. It's so lovingly and expertly written and illustrated - capturing White's essence perfectly. Thank you, Melissa Sweet - this is a gift to the world. I'm going to cherish this book. |
Now off to see what others have picked!