Follett Library Resources Follett Library Resources

Providing Books, A/V, & More to K-12 Schools

Follett Library Resources

>

Follett Library Resources
Follett Library Resources Follett Library Resources
FLR
FLR
Featuring...
image
> What’s New
image
> Latest State Award Lists
image
> School Library Journal Lists
image
> Science & Social Studies Classroom Resources for Grades 3-6
image
> NewsBank
image
> Playaway Digital Audiobooks
image
> Read-At-Home Backpacks
image
> More...
From Our Customers...

"I have found Follett Library Resources to be outstanding in every way and have used them for many years."
> Read More

Susan Sharp
Library Media Specialist
West Noble Middle School
Ligonier, IN

May 2008

National Asian Pacific Heritage Month

Latino Books Month

May 4-8

International Reading Association Annual Conference 2008 -
Atlanta, GA

May 5

Cinco de Mayo

May 6

National Teacher’s Day

> View Full Calendar

James Marshall Wins the 2007 Laura Ingalls Wilder Award

Laura Ingalls Wilder 2007 Winner

Author/illustrator James Marshall has been awarded the 2007 Laura Ingalls Wilder Award. Marshall was the author and illustrator of the "George and Martha" books, the "Fox" easy reader series, "The Cut-Ups" and "Goldilocks and the Three Bears" – a Caldecott honor winner in 1989. He also illustrated the "Miss Nelson" books and "The Stupids" series, written by Harry Allard. Marshall died in 1992.

"Marshall conveyed a world of emotion with the placement of a dot or the wrinkle of a line," said Wilder Award Committee Chair Roger Sutton. "In both his drawings and impeccably succinct texts, he displayed a comic genius infused with wit and kindness."

Goldilocks and the Three BearsThe Wilder Award honors an author or illustrator, published in the United States, whose books have made a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children. The award was announced January 22 at the American Library Association (ALA) Midwinter Conference in Seattle. The award is administered by the Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC), a division of the ALA, and is named for its first recipient in 1954.

Born in San Antonio in 1942, Marshall was a self-taught artist. After an injury cut short his pursuit of a career in music playing the viola, he found his life’s work in children’s books. His first book was "Plink, Plink, Plink," written by Byrd Baylor and published by Houghton in 1971.

George and MarthaDrawing from a career that spanned just over 20 years, dozens of Marshall’s books remain favorites with audiences ranging from young children to college students and adults. The enduring friendship of George and Martha, the wily grace of Fox, the irrepressible resilience of the Stanley Q. Stupid family and the benevolent dictatorship of Miss Nelson (aka Viola Swamp) are testimonies to human nature in all its complexity.

In an introduction to the collected "George and Martha" books, Maurice Sendak writes that "Marshall is the last of a long line of masters that began in the late 19th century with the preeminent English illustrator Randolph Caldecott; then continued in our century with Jean de Brunhoff in France and Edward Ardizzone in England; and then via Tomi Ungerer arrived full blast in America, where the laurel leaf settled finally, splendidly, on the judicious, humane, witty, and astonishingly clever head of James Marshall."

In "George and Martha: One Fine Day," George the hippo offers some wisdom that speaks as much of his creator as it does to Martha: "If you love what you do, you’ll be very good at it too."

Administered by the Association for Library Service to Children, a division of the American Library Association, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award was first given to its namesake in 1954. The award, a bronze medal, honors an author or illustrator whose books, published in the United States, have made, over a period of years, a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children.

Above information is provided courtesy of American Library Association.

image
image
image