Smart
New Help for Parents Choosing Childrens Books
Contact: Renee Haines
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Office (619) 594-4298
rhaines@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, Thursday, May 26, 2005 In the
booming business of childrens books, theres smart new
help for consumers this summer with a unique partnership between
the Parents Choice Foundation and leading literary scholars
from San Diego State University.
Free online book reviews by faculty at the universitys
National Center for the Study of Childrens Literature are
being posted at www.parents-choice.org, the Web site of the nonprofit
Parents Choice, the countrys oldest reviewer of childrens
books.
With recent double-digit increases in childrens
book sales fueled by blockbusters like the Harry Potter and Lemony
Snicket series, thousands of new kids book titles are being
introduced each year.
There are more good childrens books
available than at any time I can remember, says Alida Allison,
a professor of English and comparative literature at SDSU and now
a Parents Choice reviewer. Superb writers are now doing
these books.
SDSU is one of the first universities in the country
(and also the largest) to accord advanced-degree status to the academic
study of childrens and adolescent literature within the universitys
masters program of the Department of English and Comparative
Literature.
It was the departments online Childrens
Book Review Service that this year attracted the attention of Parents
Choice, leading to the partnership agreement. The book review service
was founded by Allison in 1998 for students and teachers.
Under the new partnership, SDSU faculty and graduate
students will provide 100 reviews a year under the direction of
Allison to the What Weve Been Reading Feature
on the Parents Choice site. SDSUs National Center for
the Study of Childrens Literature, one of only a few American
nominating bodies for Swedens prestigious Astrid Lindgren
Award for childrens literature, also will provide jurors for
the annual Parents Choice Awards.
We look forward to working with leading experts
at the National Center for the Study of Childrens Literature
in recommending the very best literature for young readers,
Parents Choice Director Claire Green said in announcing the
new partnership. By partnering with SDSU, we will create one
of the largest single sources for reviews of childrens books.
Allisons consumer-friendly reviews are as
easy to read, fun and sensible as the professors own book
for the youngest set, The Toddlers Potty Book,
which has sold more than half a million copies. Her advice for parents
is simple: know your own child. Book reviews and age guidelines
must be tailored to fit a childs interests and reading skills.
Shes a great fan of fantasy books. One
of the things you can do for your kids is to focus not just on how-to
books, but also on books where their minds can wander. Another
suggestion is that parents not be quick to dismiss books that address
controversial or even violent themes.
In a world where a kid can turn on the television and see
someone being blown up in Baghdad, it can be a service to expose
children to problems of the world in a way they can understand,
she says. Controversial themes are less shocking, it seems
to me, when theyre presented between the covers of a book,
Allison says. If youre concerned, read it. Often books
that are condemned are condemned by people who have not read them.
Among a few of her favorite new and classic books
for children:
Stories for Children by Isaac Beshevis Singer,
containing 36 folk tales written by the Nobel Prize winner.
The Mouse and His Child by Russell Hoban,
another childrens classic.
The Lady Grace Mysteries by Lady Grace Cavendish
(nee Patricia Finney), which Allison describes as Nancy Drew
in Elizabethan times.
Haroun and the Sea of Stories by renowned
author Salmon Rushdie.
The Circuit by Francisco Jimenez, about
growing up in a family of migrant workers in California.
Leons Story by Leon Tillage, about
a black child growing up in Chicago It blows students away
when they read it, Allison says.
The Life of Pi by Yann Martel, a fantasy-adventure
by the winner of Englands Booker Prize.
The Curious Incident of the Boy in the Night
Time by Mark Haddon, about an autistic boy with exceptional math
skills. Its brilliant, Allison says.
The Travels of Benjamin of Tudela by Uri
Shulevitz, about travels through three continents in the year 1159.
The Magicians Boy by Susan Cooper,
another award-winning writer of adult fiction.
Public libraries are extraordinary resources
to find such books, says Allison, who also advises taking children
along to the local bookstore. Taking a kid to a bookstore
is an experience that is complimenting the intelligence of a child.
Youre saying, we trust you, Allison says.
San Diego State University is the oldest and largest
higher education institution in the San Diego region. Since it was
founded in 1897, the university has grown to offer bachelors
degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees in 72 areas and doctorates
in 16 areas. SDSUs nearly 33,000 students participate in an
academic curriculum distinguished by direct faculty contact and
an increasing international emphasis that prepares students for
a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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