Sarah Ellis and Arthur Ransome

We went out of the country for our two author’s this week.

50. This Canadian author trained as a librarian and children’s literature specialist. When she was in her 30’s, she started writing and her books started winning awards. Several of them have won the Sheila A. Egoff Children’s Literature Prize.  She says her favorite book is “Alice in Wonderland” written by one of our featured authors from the last trivia post. Maybe that inspired the humor in her picture book, The Queen’s Feet.

Sarah Ellis is probably best known for her award-winning novels, but she also writes books about the craft of writing. One of my favorites is From Reader to Writer:  Teaching Writing through Classic Children’s Books. In the front of the book she has used her librarian’s research skills to create a web of classic authors and whose books they read and were influenced by. It is fascinating to find out such tidbits such as C.S. Lewis read Beatrix Potter’s books.

Some books by Sarah Ellis:

51. This English author is best known for his very popular series of books about four children and their adventures during school holidays in the country. He was inspired to write the books after his own summer adventure of teaching a family friend’s five children to sail. At the time he was a respected journalist, but he quit and devoted his time to write children’s literature. His books, in turn, influenced many other children’s authors.

A summary of Arthur Ransome’s life reads like a thriller spy novel, but he is best known as the author of the Swallows and Amazons series. In his books, four children spend their summers sailing about an island without the intervention of adults. Underpinning the stories are details of real life skills, like how to pitch a tent.

Sarah Ellis writes that J.R.R. Tolkien’s children liked to read the Swallows and Amazons books.

Titles by Arthur Ransome:

Children’s Author Trivia Volume 24

Our trivia questions are a bit late this week, but here they are:trivia-logo

50. This Canadian author trained as a librarian and children’s literature specialist. When she was in her 30’s, she started writing and her books started winning awards. Several of them have won the Sheila A. Egoff Children’s Literature Prize.  She says her favorite book is “Alice in Wonderland” written by one of our featured authors from the last trivia post. Maybe that inspired the humor in her picture book, The Queen’s Feet.

51. This English author is best known for his very popular series of books about four children and their adventures during school holidays in the country. He was inspired to write the books after his own summer adventure of teaching a family friend’s five children to sail. At the time he was a respected journalist, but he quit and devoted his time to write children’s literature. His books, in turn, influenced many other children’s authors.

Do you know who these authors are?

Edit: The answers are now posted.

Susan Cooper and Lewis Carroll

Once again, our super trivia buffs identified both authors from last week.

48. Our first author grew up in Britain, where she began writing imaginative books that incorporate many autobiographical details. She moved to the United States when she married her first husband, a professor at MIT. She continued to write newspaper articles, screenplays, and books for adults as well as award-winning books for children. The last book in her series, The Grey King, was a Newbery Medal winner. She also sometimes wrote with an famous actor who would eventually become her second husband.

Susan Cooper is probably best known for her The Dark is Rising series, which are woven around British myths and legends. Those resulted in The Seeker movie. She is also known for marrying Hume Cronyn after his first wife, Jessica Tandy, passed away.

People might not be quite so familiar with her lovely picture books, including, Matthew’s Dragon, Tam Lin, Danny and the Kings, Frog, and The Magician’s Boy.

This video biography is a nice summary:

Some of Susan Cooper’s books:

49. Now here’s some real trivia. This famous author from the 1800’s was actually a mathematician by training. He used a pseudonym for his children’s books. His real name was Charles Dodgson. Do you know what his pseudonym was?

We all know Lewis Carroll, who wrote Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, etc. His real name, however, was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson.

Many of Lewis Carroll’s books are now in the public domain and readily available electronically on the Internet, such as at Literature.org, which has online versions, or Project Gutenberg (do a search), which also offers e-book versions.

Versions are also still in print, too.

Hiding In Deserts

Hiding in Deserts by by Deborah Underwood is part of an educational series about animals camouflaged in their environments. Like others in the series, each section shows an animal hidden in an appropriate setting and then the next page shows the animal revealed as the background is faded away.

Although there are several books about camouflage available these days, I liked this one for its straightforward, no-nonsense presentation. It is also recommended by the National Science Teacher’s Association.

Activities to use with this book:
BrainPop Jr. has some camouflage information and activities

Reading level: Ages 5-7
Publisher: Heinemann Raintree Educational Books (September 2010)
ISBN-10: 1432940333
ISBN-13: 978-1432940331

nonfictionmonday

Nonfiction Monday is a blogging celebration of nonfiction books for kids. We invite you to join us. For more information and a schedule, stop by the new Nonfiction Monday blog to see who is hosting each week. This week’s post is at NC Teacher Stuff.