rgz

readergirlz is a literacy and social media project for teens, awarded the National Book Foundation's Innovations in Reading Prize. The rgz blog serves as a depot for news and YA reviews from industry professionals and teens. As volunteers return full force to their own YA writing, the organization continues to hold one initiative a year to impact teen literacy. All are welcome to "like" us on Facebook!

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Thank you, Meg Cabot! (+ Tiara Time!)




Here's a big THANK YOU to the amazing Meg Cabot for joining us at readergirlz this month! Things we learned about marvelous Meg include:

1. She loved Slumdog Millionaire.
2. She writes in bed to rock music on headphones.
3. The spying-on-neighbor scenes in How to Be Popular were based in truth! "I used to spy on my neighbor when we were teens! It was fun! (but we never went out...we weren’t even friends!)" says Meg.

We had so much fun this month!

Also, we can't let her go without telling everyone about this awesome Tiara Auction in honor of Forever Princess, the tenth and final book in the best-selling PRINCESS DIARIES series (out now!). More than 25 actors, authors, illustrators, designers, organizations and TV personalities have decorated tiaras in celebration of the book (Meg's is the one up top). Want to see Sarah Dessen's? That's it, above left!

The tiaras will be auctioned online at cMarket from January 1-31 with all proceeds benefiting programs for teens at The New York Public Library’s 87 branches.

And, if you're in NYC, Meg will be speaking about Forever Princess at The New York Public Library’s Humanities and Social Sciences Library at 42nd Street and Fifth Avenue on Friday, January 9th at 7:00 p.m. The free event is open to the public and will take place in the Celeste Bartos Forum of the landmark building.

Just one more way Ms. Cabot helps the world sparkle! Come back and see us anytime, Meg!

Monday, December 29, 2008

Secrets of Charm

We only have a couple of days left with Meg Cabot and her fabulous How to Be Popular (join the final days in the forum!), so I had to bring up a book, Secrets of Charm, that I found on ebay this year. It's a hilarious primer for girls about how to be glamorous and alluring and graceful at all times.

It includes instructions on how to sit on the ground elegantly ("Hold your back and head erect. Otherwise your spine curves and your shoulders droop to make a shambles of your figure that not even a winter coat could hide.")

Plus tips for buying a hat ("How many times have you been disappointed in a new hat? What a bonbon it was in the store, and what a bitter dish on arrival!")

And even advice on "Jaw Limbering" ("To relax the jaw, move it in a circular motion and say, 'How about going to town, now?' and "the stores abound with new brown gowns.'")

Hi-larious! This one is a fantastic read. If you've ever stumbled upon a fun and outdated tome, do tell.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Little Willow's Book Bag

This Week's Picks
Geek Charming by Robin Palmer (coming out in February; companion to Cindy Ella)
Kisses and Lies by Lauren Henderson (coming out mid-January; sequel to Kiss Me, Kill Me)

For Your Younger Sister
Toy Dance Party: Being the Further Adventures of a Bossyboots Stingray, a Courageous Buffalo, and a Hopeful Round Someone Called Plastic by Emily Jenkins, illustrated by Paul O. Zelinsky (sequel to Toys Go Out)
Solving Zoe by Barbara Dee (coming out in April)

Picture Books
A Pirate's Night Before Christmas by Philip Yates
Cookies: Bite-Size Life Lessons by Amy Krouse Rosenthal, illustrated by Jane Dyer
Olivia Helps With Christmas by Ian Falconer

This Month's Spotlighted Title
How to Be Popular by Meg Cabot

Friday, December 26, 2008

Cover Stories: Living Dead Girl by Elizabeth Scott

livingdeadgirl.jpg Elizabeth Scott is an awesome author who writes heartfelt stories about first love and friendships and parental relationships (I've adored Bloom and the upcoming Something, Maybe, and can't wait to read the rest of her canon, which includes Stealing Heaven, Perfect You, and the upcoming Love You, Hate You, Miss You). Living Dead Girl is unlike most of her other work in that it's the story of a girl who was kidnapped at a young age and faces horrific abuse. It's not a G-rated tale, and the cover represents the novel's ominous feeling very well.

So I had to ask Elizabeth: How did the cover come about? Here she is:

"My editor at Simon Pulse always talks to me about the cover--the kind of look they're going for--and usually I see samples that they're thinking about using, which come from stock photos, or pictures that have already been taken. For LIVING DEAD GIRL, though, Simon Pulse had a photographer, Russell Gordon, take the pictures.

"The very first cover was just a dress, and I liked it, but worried that it wasn't going to be eye-catching enough. With so many books out there, it's really important to have a cover that pops visually and that will grab a potential readers' attention.

"The final cover was shot in Central Park, I believe (I know it was a park in Manhattan!) and Russell very patiently took about a million shots of different dresses on fall leaves. Oddly enough, the picture that ended up being chosen was one where Russell's leg had accidentally gotten into the shot, but as soon as I saw it, I *knew* it was the right one--it conveyed a sense of menace that the shots of just a dress didn't, and really did a great job of showing what the book is about--and all without words!"

Thanks, Elizabeth! I agree. You guys?

PS-For a chance to win a book by Elizabeth, visit my blog and enter by Monday 12/29!


Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Music Interrupted

Eeek! I was just over at MySpace checking that everything is spot on as usual, and I discovered Project Playlist is now officially blocked from running on MySpace! Ack!



We've been building playlists this way for almost 2 years. *sigh* I'm thinking they are trying to get us to use their tools instead. This is going to take me a bit to figure out. Here's the full report:

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10127653-36.html?tag=mncol%3Btxt

Meg's songs for HOW TO BE POPULAR are still running on our website and you can hear them there. If you are missing them at MySpace, here's the text list below at least.

Sorry for the inconvenience. Trying to rock on,

Photobucket

Let the Good Times Roll - The Cars
Brown Sugar - The Rolling Stones
God Save the Queen - Sex Pistols
Young Americans - David Bowie
Psycho Killer - Talking Heads
My Sharona - The Knack
London Calling - The Clash
Heart of Glass - Blondie
Blitzkrieg Bop - The Ramones
Cantina Band - Star Wars


The Gift of Giving

So, it's Christmas Eve, and if you're celebrating tomorrow, you've likely got all your gifts wrapped up and ready to go. But if you've forgotten someone, or you just feel like adding a extra little something, here's a thought: How about donating (money or time) to a cause you admire in someone's name?



Then just write out a card to that person, telling them which organization is getting some love in their honor. Not sure where to donate? Luckily, John and Hank Green, the vlogbrothers, have given us lots of choices with their Project For Awesome, where lots of vloggers submitted YouTube videos about their favorite charities. So go to YouTube, search "project for awesome," and find out about tons of amazing options for this perfect last-minute gift.

Seriously, it's a heartwarmer. Happy Holidays!

Monday, December 22, 2008

rgz SALON: Suzanne Collins' Hunger Games, reviewed by Nancy Pearl

Nancy Pearl speaks about the pleasures of reading to library and community groups throughout the world and comments on books regularly on NPR's Morning Edition. She's the author of Book Crush: For Kids and Teens: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment, and Interest; Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment, and Reason; and More Book Lust: 1,000 New Reading Recommendations for Every Mood, Moment, and Reason, all published by Sasquatch books. Plus, she has her own librarian action figure. How cool is that?!

We're honored to have her here as part of the rgz SALON, a feature where four of the top kidlit experts clue us in to the best YA novels they've read recently. Here's Nancy!

Gregor the Overlander, Suzanne Collins' first novel, is one of my all-time
 favorite fantasies. A brave eleven-year-old hero, page-turning adventures, moral dilemmas, and a super ending made it a perfect book for middle-grade 
readers. Now, in The Hunger Games (the first volume of an intended trilogy), Collins has written a remarkable and thought provoking novel for teens about the oppression and dehumanization of its citizens by an all-powerful central government, evoking George Orwell’s 1984 and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. At the same time, it’s an impossible-to-put-down action-adventure-romance story. Panem is a wealthy and powerful city in post-apocalyptic North America; it’s surrounded by twelve outlying, poverty stricken districts that serve, in effect, as colonies providing the resources needed to maintain the capitol’s wealth. Sometime in the past the districts attempted a rebellion, which Panem brutally put down. As a reminder to the districts of their powerlessness, the Capitol requires each one to choose, by lot, one boy and one girl between the ages of 12 and 18 to participate in the annual Hunger Games, the ultimate TV game show, a fight to the death on live TV, in which the last contestant alive wins fame and fortune. The Games are treated as a huge celebration in the Capitol, with pre-game up-close-and-personal interviews of each “Tribute,” betting on, and opportunities to send aid to, one’s favorites, and round the clock watch parties. The story is told in the voice of 16-year-old Katniss Everdeen, who we get to know and care about deeply during the course of the novel. When her beloved 12-year-old sister, Prim, is chosen by lot to be the girl tribute from district 12 (formerly know as Appalachia), Katniss bravely, and to the astonishment of all (but within the rules of the game), volunteers to take her place, and sets off on the most dangerous, and exciting, “adventure” of her life. And the reader gets to accompany her every step of the way. One of the things I found so remarkable (and disorienting and disturbing) about this book is the way it was able to pull me, emotionally, into the excitement of the celebration and the adventure of the game itself, almost as if I were experiencing it as a wealthy citizen of the Capitol, even though I knew, intellectually, that what I was reading about was a government forcing children to kill other children. The Hunger Games, surely destined to be a classic of teen literature, is a superb choice for book discussion groups of all ages.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

National Haiku Day!

Happy National Haiku Day!

Read, write, or share a haiku today. Or visit the Haiku Society of America. Thanks for letting me know, Little Willow!

Here's mine for the celebration:

Holly Tree

The crow hops among
curled leaves cupping snowed berries.
Flakes fall in my eyes.

Lorie Ann Grover, 2008

Anyone else want to share?

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Little Willow's Book Bag

This Week's Picks
Band Geeked Out by Josie Bloss (coming out in April)
Ten Things I Hate About Me by Randa Abdel-Fattah

For Your Younger Sister
Sunny Holiday by Coleen Murtagh Paratore

This Month's Spotlighted Title
How to Be Popular by Meg Cabot

Friday, December 19, 2008

New site! I Heart Daily

Hey, readergirlz!

I just wanted to announce my new venture. iheartdaily.com is a free email newsletter and website that delivers one item each day from the world of entertainment, fashion, beauty or news. (And that means we’ll totally cover great YA books, of course!)

Each day, you’ll find out about one thing we think you’ll like. The band you should hear, the girl who’s making a difference in the world, the new lip gloss color that looks good on everyone, the undiscovered author who is writing amazing books. You’ll never hear about stuff we hate, just stuff we heart. We’re nice that way.

Come check out the site and sign up for the newsletter if you like what you see!

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Press Release: End of the Year Celebrations!

For more information contact:

Sara Easterly, Publicist for readergirlz

Sara Easterly & Friends,sara@saraeasterly.com

206-632-8588

READERGIRLZ CELEBRATES ANOTHER YEAR OF BIG SUCCESSES

Thousands of teens influenced by the organization in its mission to promote teen literacy

Dec. 18, 2008 (Seattle, Wash.)As 2008 draws to a close, readergirlz (rgz) reflects on a year of successes in its quest to promote teen literacy and leadership in girls. Wrapping up its second year, the organization has many successes to celebrate:

  • Receiving a distinguished 2007 James Patterson PageTurner Grant.
  • Partnering with 20 book publishers to give 10,000 books to teens patients in hospitals across the United States and Canada as part of rgz Operation TBD.
  • Launching rgz TV (www.youtube.com/readergirlz), a series of candid interviews with award-winning authors the likes of Sonya Sones, Paula Yoo, John Green and Sarah Dessen.
  • Hosting more than a dozen celebrated authors in nightly themed chats as part of rgz Night Bites—a celebration of Young Adult Library Services Association's (YALSA's) Teen Read Week™. The accompanying book trailer was viewed more than 6,600 times.
  • Expanding with a new franchise named readertotz, a unique board book blog that aims to raise awareness of the infant toddler book as a significant format of children's literature.
  • Bringing new divas into the mix: Melissa Walker, author of the popular and award-winning Violet series (Violet on the Runway, Violet by Design, and Violet in Private); and Holly Cupala, debut novelist of the tentatively titled A Light That Never Goes Out (HarperCollins, 2010).
  • Creating the rgz salon, a book-reviewing collective of several esteemed names in young-adult literature: Nancy Pearl, NPR Book Lust Reviewer/librarian; Rene Kirkpatrick, Book Buyer/Seller at Third Place Books in Seattle; Sharon Levin, librarian; and Judy Nelson, librarian and past president of YALSA.
  • Receiving a "Best Web Site Award" by the American Library Association's Association for Library Services to Children, (ALSC).
  • Speaking at the Washington and Oregon Library Media Association Convention, the YPulse Conference, the Kidlit Blogging Conference, and on a panel with Colleen Mondor from GuysLitWire to YALSA librarians about engaging teens to read through social networks.
  • Being featured in a READ poster with nationwide distribution.
  • Garnering coverage in GalleyCat, Publishers Weekly Children's Bookshelf, Fuse #8, School Library Journal and Christian Science Monitor.

Most notable, rgz has touched the lives of thousands of teen readers. The organization has more than 8,500 friends on its MySpace profile (www.myspace.com/readergirlz), with more than 50,000 views, along with over 3,000 views on its new blog (http://readergirlz.blogspot.com). The rgz website (www.readergirlz.com) attracts more than 400 unique visitors per week and 1,800 unique visitors each month.

"I love being a part of readergirlz," said one forum regular. "I feel so special! I feel like I finally belong somewhere, finally!"

"I love reading even more now since you girls have inspired me!!!" said another readergirl.

Looking ahead to 2009, rgz isn't planning on slowing down:

  • Operation TBD will be back by popular demand—the organization is currently accepting book and audiobook donations from publishers to distribute in April to thousands of teens in hospitals as part of Operation TBD '09.
  • Several of the rgz divas will speak at the Texas Library Association Annual Conference in April.
  • Blogging teen dynamo Miss Erin (http://misserinmarie.blogspot.com) will head up a rgz Street Team dedicated to contributing young adult book reviews.
  • Renowned blogger Shelf Elf (http://shelfelf.wordpress.com) will join the postergirlz.
  • rgz will be announcing an exciting partnership with GuysLitWire (guyslitwire.blogspot.com).
  • Mitali Perkins will transition to rgz Talent Scout to keep tabs on the latest industry buzz.
  • readertotz founders Lorie Ann Grover and Joan Holub will contribute weekly blog posts that feature the best contributions in the board-book arena and recommend monthly community service projects appropriate for families with young children to enjoy.

About readergirlz

readergirlz is the foremost online book community for teen girls, led by five critically acclaimed YA authors—Dia Calhoun (Avielle of Rhia), Holly Cupala (A Light That Never Goes Out) Lorie Ann Grover (On Pointe), Justina Chen Headley (Girl Overboard), and Melissa Walker (the Violet series). readergirlz is the recipient of a 2007 James Patterson PageTurner Award.

To promote teen literacy and leadership in girls, readergirlz features a different YA novel and corresponding community service project every month. For more information about readergirlz, please visit www.readergirlz.com and www.myspace.com/readergirlz, or contact divas@readergirlz.com.

Ó2008 readergirlz

###

LIVE! Tonight! Meg Cabot!

Join the readergirlz forum tonight at 9pm EST/6pm PST as we chat LIVE with Meg Cabot! Tiaras optional.

And during the day, to psych up, visit Girl Week at Reviewer X's blog.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Cover Stories: Something Happened by Greg Logsted

somethinghappenedcover.jpg Greg Logsted is gave his Cover Story to my blog last week (that's his final cover at left), and I wanted to share it with readergirlz as well!

His novel, Something Happened, is about Billy, an 8th grader struggling with the death of his dad. His mom is very distant, and his friends just don't get what he's going through. His new English teacher, though, the young and beautiful Miss Gate, offers friendship... and maybe more.

I'm really interested to read this book, which was originally going to be a Middle Grade book but then was bumped up to the older age group--Young Adult. I like that it's from the point of view of a 13-year-old boy, too--that feels new to me. Plus: Scandal!

Without further ado, here's Greg:

romance_and_cigarettes_movie_poster.jpg "My first idea for the cover of Something Happened was the cover image from a movie "Romance & Cigarettes" that had a woman lying on her back, holding a cigarette, wearing red heels and, um, suggestive clothing. Because the original title for Something Happened was "Sock Puppets in Love" - which I scrapped because, great as it was, it didn't fit the serious tone of the book - I thought she could have a sock puppet in her hand instead of the cigarette. Well, of course a cover with a cigarette and a woman in suggestive clothing wasn't appropriate for a YA book - even I recognized that! I did share my "Romance & Cigarette" idea when asked my thoughts - for some odd reason, no one went for it. Btw, I do not smoke.

SH.jpg













"The original cover design (above, full jacket) was cartoon-like with a yellow background and a car driving on a zig-zaggy street - a far cry from the beautiful colors and tight sweater we wound up with for the final cover. Truthfully, the original cover was a lot of fun...for a completely different kind of book (just like the original title).

"Because they eventually decided to publish it as a YA rather then a MG, the cover changed. The woman used as a model for the final cover actually works at Simon & Schuster. But she's headless in the picture and no one has ever told me her name, unfortunately. Still, she does look like the kind of woman a teenage boy would find, um, hot.

"As for the final cover, I honestly was pleased with it. I love it."

I think it's pretty enticing too, and it sounds perfect for the mood of the book. What are your thoughts on the covers?

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

rgz LIVE! with Meg Cabot on December 18th!

http://www.thedebutanteball.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/11/meg-cabot-cali-smith-473c.jpg

We are chatting it up with Meg on Thursday, December 18th, 6:00 pm, Pacific, at the rgz MySpace group forum! Hope you all can make it. Meg is just a blast! She's up for talking about all of her work so feel free to drop in. We'll share some holiday cheer with each other.

http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/images/n43/n218862.jpg

Lorie Ann Grover ~rgz diva/author

Monday, December 15, 2008

Twilight Dolls: Creepy But Fashionable



I don't know about you guys, but I'm a little freaked out by the Twilight dolls. Heard this news from trendhunter.com via ypulse.com... the dolls will be out in spring 2009.

On the plus side, I do love their Pacific Northwest fashion sense. Bring back flannels and grays, browns and dark blues, please!



What do you think?

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Little Willow's Book Bag

This Week's Picks
Something, Maybe by Elizabeth Scott (coming out in March)
Bad Girls Don't Die by Katie Alender (coming out in April)
After the Moment by Garret Freymann-Weyr (coming out in May)

For Your Younger Siblings
Judy Moody Goes to College by Megan McDonald, illustrated by Peter Reynolds
The Elephant and Piggie books by Mo Willems
The Girl in the Castle Inside the Museum by Kate Bernheimer
Give a Goat by Jan Schrock West

This Month's Spotlighted Title
How to Be Popular by Meg Cabot

Friday, December 12, 2008

Books as Gifts!



We are loving all the online buzz about giving books as holiday presents this year! Here are a few spots where you can get must-buy advice and add your own purchases to the recommendation lists:

First, Book Reporter tells us all the many reasons why books are the perfect gift!

The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks author (and National Book Award nominee) E. Lockhart's recommended list for "boyfriend and teenagers."

Our own Little Willow blogs on sparknotes.com about the right book picks for all sorts of recipients, plus book-related gift ideas (think literary music mixes, writing journals, and multiple copies of a title for a new book club!)

Amor and Summer Secrets author Diana Rodriguez Wallach brings us The 12 Books of Christmas!

Yahoo!'s SHINE recommends gifts for the literary fan.

Add the titles you've picked out to the growing list at When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Buy Books.

Who else has a list of great book gift ideas? Let us know.

UPDATED: A fantastic list from Chasing Ray!

Happy book shopping!

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Martha Brockenbrough, our media specialist

On Saturday, I (Holly) joined strangers and friends alike to celebrate Martha Brockenbrough's new book, Things that Make Us [Sic] at her Third Place Books event. Highlights included having my grammar fortune told by Grammarella (I'm a comma: "You help people pause for reflection and comprehension. You're like a breath of fresh air."), seeing Joni Sensel, author of The Humming of Numbers, and chatting about visions and revisions, and hearing Jolie Stekly's Big News (woohoo, Jolie!).

Here's a shot of us, pinched from Jolie's blog (Joni, Martha, Holly, Jolie):


I was a Martha fan long before I met her, and she's just as hilarious and approachable and brilliant in person as in her columns, books, and SPOGG (The Society for the Promotion of Good Grammar). Here, she chats about Bob Dylan, laying, lying, and...naughty chickens:



Holly Cupala, Author & rgz diva

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Thanks for the Blog Love!













We are so happy that Sarah, of Sarah's Random Musings, and Jen, of Jen Robinson's Book Page, have named the readergirlz blog among their favorites!

We got the I Love Your Blog award from Sarah and the Butterfly "Coolest Blog" Award from Jen. Both come with logos, featured here, and both ask that we pass on the love. Wow. We read so many blogs that we're not sure where to start! Author sites and blogs are among our favorites, so here are links to the authors we've featured this year and where they write when they're not, you know, writing books:

Kirby Larson, author of Hattie Big Sky
Nikki Grimes, author of Bronx Masquerade
Sarah Dessen, author of Just Listen
Kelly Bingham, author of Shark Girl
Shannon Hale, author of Book of a Thousand Days
Laurie Halse Anderson, author of Prom
Jay Asher, author of 13 Reasons Why
Melissa Walker, author of Violet in Private (+ new rgz diva!)
Paula Yoo, author of Good Enough
Rachel Cohn, co-author of Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist
Ellen Emerson White, author of Long May She Reign
Meg Cabot, author of How to be Popular

Get lost in these authors' worlds, readergirlz! Thanks to Jen and Sarah for the awards and the inspiration.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Great Blogosphere Reads This Week

We can't resist sharing these interesting YA discussions!

* 2009 debut author Neesha Meminger on Race and YA Lit (Racialicious.com):
"All you have to do is stroll through the aisles of a bookstore to see that the fantasy, mystery, romance genres are stocked full. And not with fantasy, mystery, or romance by authors of Color."

* New Rochelle's Talk of the Sound on a New Rochelle school that's censoring (ie, tearing up!) Girl, Interrupted in the classroom:
"Pages from the middle of the book have been torn out by the school district after having been deemed 'inappropriate' by school officials due to sexual content and strong language."

* The LA Times on Stephenie Meyer's online connection with fans:
"It wasn't just that Meyer's fans came to her blog, but that she went to theirs, writing posts and commenting on the things they had written."

Enjoy, readergirlz!