Book Lists

Indie Spotlight: Birchbark Books , Minneapolis MN

birchbark logoImagine a bookstore founded and owned by a world-renowned poet and author for adults and children. Such a unique store exists. It’s Birchbark Books in Minneapolis, created fourteen years ago by Louise Erdrich as part of her passion to ensure that true stories of the native people are told and known, and their laguages not forgotten. Birchbark Books is a teaching store, infused with a generous and welcoming spirit.  We’re talking today with store manager Susan White, about whom the website says. “If you are lucky enough to visit when Susan White is there, you will feel mysteriously better all day.”birchbark storefront

MUF:  Susan, who comes to Birchbark Books, in person and online? What experiences do you strive to provide for native readers? For non-native readers?
Susan: Ours is a neighborhood store, only 800 square ft., but people visit from all over the world, especially from France, Germany, and Great Britain, and from all over North America.  Last week we had visitors from New Zealand. People make pilgrimages!  Our online catalog serves customer in th U.S. and Canada. What makes us so unique is that we serve many communities.  Our mission is to provide accurate and truthful books about native people of the Midwest and all over the country, but we are also a carefully curated full-range bookstore for children and adults.Birchbark Interior

MUF: Your catalog and staff recommendations include so many interesting titles that we have seen nowhere else, and especially intriguing books written for, or appropriate for, children.  As middle-grade authors, we would love to know some of the titles, you particularly recommend to boys and girls ages eight to twelve?birchbark house
Susan: All our children’s books, whether native or not, are chosen for truth and beauty.   Recommendations?  First of all would be Louise Erdrich’s award-winning Birchbark House Series (The Birchbark House, The Game of Silence, The Porcupine Year).  Louise grew up on Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House on the Prairie series and loved it, but she  knew Laura’s mother was wrong when she said “there is nothing here.” Louise set the Birchbark House novels in the same place to show how much was there when seen from the eyes of the native Ojibwe.  How I Became a Ghost is by Tim Tingle , who sets his series in the 1835 Trail of Tears and writes from the character of a boy who didn’t survive it.  Moose Tracks and Wolf Shadows by Mary Cassanova are especially great for reluctant readers.  I would also recommend Summer of the Wolves, by Polly Carlson-Voiles and a native-title picture book, Black Elk’s Vision, A Lakota Story, by S.D. Nelson.Birchbark How I Became a GhostBirchbark Black ElkBirchbark-- summer of the wolves

Birchbark moose tracksMUF: We’re told that one of the most wonderful things one can take away from a visit to Birchbark Books—guaranteed forgiveness— is absolutely free.  Please tell our readers about the forgiveness booth and other features of your shop—reading spaces, native arts— that create its special atmosphere.
Susan: The forgiveness booth is meant to replace the confessional booth.  Everyone is forgiven and you don’t have to confess anything. You can get a glimpse of it in Bill Moyers’ interview of Louise : http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04092010/watch2.html. 

Despite our small size, we carry not only books but native arts, cards, and jewelry in the store, which we buy directly from the artists.  There is a loft where kids can go to read, and the younger ones can hang out in the Hobbit Hole below. 

The Forgiveness Booth

The Forgiveness Booth

Dharma

Dharma’s favorites: DOG SONGS by Mary Oliver and E.B. WHITE ON DOGS

MUF: Everyone who works at Birchbark Books seems to have a dog helping them peruse the books.  Do these four-footed aides spend their days in the shop, or do they mostly work from home?
Susan: We usually have a dog in the store.  Most often it’s my own dog Dharma.  She’s the Queen Bee and has good bookstore manners.

MUF: Do your native language materials include some introductory books for the curious beginner?
Susan: We’re part of the native language revitalization movement, especially of the Dakota, Ojibwe and Lakota languages.  We carry language materials for adults and children, including several children’s books with CDs.  Some of these materials are hard to find, and we have a large and varied selection.  Louise and her sister Heid have formed Wiigwaas (Birchbark) Press that publishes books in Ojibwe only.  So far they have three books of animal stories. We also have many bilingual books.

MUF:Do you have any  events at the store that would be of special interest to middle-graders?  Anything coming up this spring?
Susan: Of course we don’t have a lot of space for events, but we have had author signings with many young adult and children’s authors, including Phyllis Root.  This spring we’re planning to do feature her new book, Plant a Pocket of Prairie, illustrated by Betsy Bowen.  It’s coming out in May.screenshot_1266

MUF: If a family from out of town made a day visit to Birchbark Books, would there be a family-friendly place nearby where they could get a snack or a meal afterward?  And if they could stay a little longer, are there some other unique activities or places of interest nearby that they shouldn’t miss?Birchbark crafts
Susan:  Right next door is the Kenwood Restaurant, and at the end of the block is Bockley Gallery (www.bockleygallery.com)with works by contemporary native artists.  We’re only two blocks from Lake of the Isles where there are trails for hiking. And of course there are many museums and attractions throughout Minneapolis.

MUF: Thank you so much, Susan, for sharing this wonderful store and its passion with us.  Readers, if you have visited Birchbark Books or are intrigued and think you would like to, please leave a comment.

Sue Cowing is the author of the puppet-and-boy novel You Will Call Me Drog, Carolrhoda 2011, Usborne UK 2012

 

Autobiographies of Middle-Grade Authors

When my 5th grader announced that his class was doing a unit on writer autobiographies, it was all I could do not to run off with the list of suggested books. I love knowing the behind-the-scenes stories, which would also explain why I watch VH1’s Pop-Up videos and listen to director’s commentaries on movies. (For more about the curriculum, click here.)

I was not disappointed. While most autobiographies focus on adult lives, autobiographies by children’s authors take their time with childhoods, providing readers with a fascinating look at growing up in different times and places, while some parts of childhood remain the same. Readers can also find the beginnings of some of their favorite stories, and wonder how their own lives might provide similar inspiration.  Here is a list of memoirs I enjoyed, along with a suggestion of who might also enjoy them.

Boy

Boy by Roald Dahl: Fans of Roald Dahl will be delighted to find many of the roots of his stories in his delightful memoir. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, for instance, had its beginnings in Dahl’s childhood fascination with sweet shops, and particularly the love/hate relationship between proprietors and customers. Dahl has a lovely knack for recalling the terrors and pleasures of childhood. There are also bonus points for those of us who can’t resist a good English boarding school story. (Do you know what a tuck box is?!)

Knucklehead

Knucklehead by Jon Scieszka: From the comic-book appeal of the cover to the wild-growing-up stories, this book all but dares reluctant readers to pick up the book. As one of six brothers, Knucklehead will show readers that Scieszka comes by his zany sensibilities (Time Warp Trio, Spaceheadz and our family favorite, Cowboy and Octopus) very honestly. Readers will find out how to play Slaughterball (and why it was a good thing Scieszka’s mother was a nurse) and how Jon and his brothers livened up the family crèche with toy soldiers.

Abracadabra Kid

The Abracadabra Kid by Sid Fleischman: Born in 1920, Fleischman takes readers to a place that is both familiar and strangely different, with mentions of boot hooks and a level of freedom that most children today would find unsettling. Lovers of magic will find that the book is aptly named, since much of the book focuses on Fleischman’s love of magic, and may want to continue on to his biography of magician Harry Houdini (Escape!) and a novel about a family of magicians set in the Old West called Mr. Mysterious and Company.  History buffs will enjoy Fleischman’s accounts of how he made a living with magic and his service during the war years of the United States.

26 Fairmount

26 Fairmount Avenue by Tomie dePaola: My family and I enjoyed this Newbery Honor-winning book as a recording, done by the author – a rare treat – and it is full of dePaola’s trademark charm. DePaola recounts short stories from his life in 1930’s Connecticut, complete with the first day of school, holidays and living with two grandmothers. Perfect for transitional readers who have fond memories of Strega Nona and The Barkers.

Bad Boy

Bad Boy by Walter Dean Myers: Myers takes his eye for unflinching detail and trains it on his own life in Bad Boy. Starting with his own complicated childhood – he was raised by his father’s ex-wife and second husband – Myers takes readers on his journey toward being a writer as an African-American man in mid-century America. This memoir is probably best suited for slightly older readers, and I would recommend reading this book with Myers’s very thorough and insightful Just Write: Here’s How. Readers may be especially inspired by Myers generous partnership with a young writer named Ross Workman, with whom he co-wrote the book Kick.

Girl Yamhill

I still have a few books on my to-read list that I should mention here. A Girl from Yamhill by one of my favorites, Beverly Cleary, will be read this year, and my 5th grader, who read Jerry Spinelli’s autobiography and is very picky about his reading, recommends Knots in My Yo-Yo String. For adult fiction writers, I also adored Amy Tan’s The Opposite of Fate, a memoir that proves that truth is indeed stranger than fiction.

Please share any recommended writer autobiographies or memoirs in the comments below!

 

The Thing about Birthdays

                    b-day cake

Two weeks ago, my daughter turned twelve. I celebrated the milestone by threatening to pluck out the eyes of any boys who happened to notice her climb toward womanhood.

Not sure what I’ll do once she becomes a teenager.

A week later, my son turned ten. I wrestled him to the ground and gave him a wedgie. I’m not getting any younger. He’s not getting any smaller. Figure I have to whoop him while I can.

Anyway, all those birthdays got me thinking. While my middle-aged self grudgingly accepts each birthday as a reminder that my knees are getting achier and my hair is getting thinner, my kids’ birthdays remain highpoints of celebration and anticipation. A birthday-kid may only be one day older than the day before, but it feels bigger than that.

And since birthdays hold a lot more significance for the middle-grade crowd than the middle-aged crowd, they often play a major role in middle-grade stories, too. Here are a handful of books where a kid’s “special day” helps get the story moving:

 Harry Potter

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone

by J. K. Rowling

Come on, you’ve read this. Harry turns eleven. Everything changes.

11 Birthdays

by Wendy Mass

Amanda Ellerby’s eleventh birthday doesn’t go so well. So it’s kind of a bad thing that when she wakes up every morning, it’s her birthday again.

(Don’t neglect the other three birthday-based books in the Willow Falls series: Finally, 13 Gifts, and The Last Present.)

11 birthdays

   the challengers

Galaxy Games: The Challengers

by Greg R.   Fishbone

This is the first book of the Galaxy Games series by MUFs very own Greg R. Fishbone! For his eleventh birthday, Ty Sato has a star named in his honor. Only it’s soon discovered that Ty’s star is not a star at all—it’s a spaceship bringing news that will change Ty’s life…and maybe the world.

Wringer

by Jerry Spinelli

This Newbery Honor book takes a twist on birthday-based stories because the protagonist, Palmer LaRue, isn’t looking forward to his tenth birthday at all. In fact, it’s something he dreads.

wringer    

    Savvy

Savvy

by Ingrid Law

Yet another Newbery Honor book, Savvy tells the story of Mibs Beaumont, an almost-thirteen-year-old who comes from a family with a secret—each member gets a supernatural talent when they turn thirteen.

So what birthday-based stories have you read and enjoyed? Feel free to post a favorite title (or two or three).