A Visit with Sergio Ruzzier

It’s a pleasure to welcome author-illustrator Sergio Ruzzier to 7-Imp today. He visits to discuss and share images (both preliminary images and final art) from his most recent books, all published this year.
It’s a pleasure to welcome author-illustrator Sergio Ruzzier to 7-Imp today. He visits to discuss and share images (both preliminary images and final art) from his most recent books, all published this year.
Over at Calling Caldecott, Elisa Gall and Jonathan Hunt ask why more holiday books don’t win the Caldecott and write about some holiday-themed picture books they’ve seen this year that they admire (including the one pictured here).
If you’re interested in reading more, that conversation is here.
I’ve a review over at the Horn Book of Brendan Wenzel’s newest picture book, Inside Cat (Chronicle, October 2021).
That review is here, and below are some spreads.
Enjoy!
Last week at the Horn Book’s Calling Caldecott, we posed the question: Should ALA establish an award specifically for graphic novels and comics, since currently none exists? Come and join the discussion, if you’re so inclined. That is here.
And today Niki Marion and Alec Chunn discuss the 2021 graphic novels they would love to see garner some Caldecott love, what they call the “CaldeComics.” Their discussion is here.
p.s. This isn’t about a graphic novel, but don’t miss Sabrina Montenigro’s post about Selina Alko’s I Is for Immigrants.
It has been troubling to me to see the number of news stories about states (including mine) passing legislation to ban discussions in classrooms and libraries that address the racism that is very much a part of America’s past — and present. This has a huge effect on the books that are then shared in classrooms. As you can read here, the people going after critical race theory are engaging in overexaggerations of what it really is. We will never progress with regards to racial equality in this country without giving students truthful accounts of our country’s racist past and present, and giving young people the skill set to critically examine how systemic racism has and continues to shape this country is but one step toward that progress.
Cue Nikole Hannah-Jones’s The 1619 Project. You may be familiar with its New York Times’s and/or podcast iterations, and now it’s in book form. (I haven’t read it yet, but it’s on my holiday wish list.) Hannah-Jones also joined Renée Watson to pen the powerful picture book The 1619 Project: Born on the Water (Kokila, November 2021). Read the rest of this entry »
Hadi Mohammadi’s evocatively named In the Meadow of Fantasies (Elsewhere Editions, November 2021), illustrated by Nooshin Safkhoo and translated from the Persian by Sara Khalili, was originally published in Iran in 2017 and is now on shelves here in the U.S. It tells a tender and beguiling story about a child’s imagination and is a story of generosity: “Not a folktale, not a poem, not a dream,” writes the Publishers Weekly review, “but some whirling mixture of the three, this lulling recitation by Iranian author Mohammadi affirms generosity as a natural impulse.”
Did you see the 2021 New York Times/New York Public Library Best Illustrated Children’s Books list? Martha Parravano and I discuss the list over at the Horn Book.
Head here!