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  • Hop on the Bus!

    The Winter Tour is HERE!

    Win a Skype author visit busThe last leg of our Skype tour has pulled out of the driveway!  Enter our most recent giveway here.  For more information, please read the FAQ.

  • OhMG News!

    Oh MG! Middle-grade news Critter February 20, 2012: Aloud and Proud!

    World Read Aloud Day is right around the corner—March 7. How will you celebrate?

    According to Litworld, the nonprofit organization sponsoring the event, 793 million people worldwide remain illiterate today. “World Read Aloud Day motivates children, teens, and adults around the world to celebrate the power of words, especially those words that are shared from one person to another, and creates a community of readers advocating for every child’s right to a safe education and access to books and technology.”

    For more about Litworld and for suggestions on how to participate…


    February 16, 2012: Yolen Grant Honors Mid-list Authors

    Publishers Weekly reported today that author Jane Yolen and the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators have established a new grant honoring mid-list authors.

    Says Yolen, "In these difficult book times, well-reviewed and honored authors often find themselves stalled in their writing lives and find they are having trouble selling new work. In our attention to up-and-coming authors, we, the reading public, often ignore these mid-list writers who struggle to remain true to their personal vision and craft. This grant is to say: SCBWI honors you, we recognize you, we are paying attention to your work.”

    The first grant was awarded to Mary Whittington, author of Carmina Come Dance, The Patchwork Lady, Troll Games, and Winter's Child. Nominations for the 2013 grant will be taken June 1-November 3.

    For more information…

     

    February 4, 2012: Sweet Reads

    Check out these February new releases...

     

    January 29, 2012: Tweet Tips 

    Coming soon to a Twitter feed near you...

    The #MGlitchat team—which includes Mixed-up Files founder Elissa Cruz—will be hosting a series of Twitter chats in February called “Tips from the Pros.” Each week, authors, agents, editors and publicists will share their tips about writing and publishing MG books in today’s market. Want to join the fun? Check the MGlitchat blog for a list of dates, times, and guest experts.

     

    January 26, 2011: Ring! Ring!

    What’s it like to win the Newbery? “I picked up the phone, and it was like history changed,” Jack Gantos says of the call informing him he’d just won the Newbery Medal for his novel Dead End in Norvelt. For more about his reaction, check out this article in Publishers Weekly. It was a busy week for Mr. Gantos, who also won the 2012 Scott O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction.

     

    January 26, 2012: Jewish-Themed Books Honored

    Winners of the Sydney Taylor Book Award were announced January 17. The award is given annually to new books for children and teens that exemplify the highest literary standards while authentically portraying the Jewish experience. The award memorializes Sydney Taylor, author of the All-of-a-Kind Family series.

    The gold medal in the older readers category went to Susan Goldman Rubin for Music Was It: Young Leonard Bernstein. Honor books were Lily Renee, Escape Artist: from Holocaust Survivor to Comic Book Pioneer by Trina Robbins with illustrations by Anne Timmons and Mo Oh; Hammerin' Hank Greenberg: Baseball Pioneer by Shelley Sommer; and Irena’s Jars of Secrets by Marcia Vaughan.

    For more…

     

    January 23, 2012: The Newbery Medal Goes to…

     Jack Gantos for his middle-grade novel Dead End in Norvelt!

    According to the publisher, Dead End in Norvelt tells the “entirely true” and “wildly fictional” story of two months in the life of a kid named Jack Gantos, “whose plans for vacation excitement are shot down when he is grounded for life by his feuding parents, and whose nose spews bad blood at every little shock he gets.” 

    Newbery Honors went to two books: Inside Out & Back Again by Thanhha Lai, which also won the National Book Award last year, and Breaking Stalin’s Nose by Eugene Yelchin.

    Other winners today were:

    • Kadir Nelson, who won the Coretta Scott King Book Award for Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans;

    • Joan Bauer, author of Close to Famous, and Brian Selznick, author of Wonderstruck, who received The Schneider Family Book Award for books that embody an artistic expression of the disability experience;

    • Susan Cooper, author of the classic The Dark Is Rising Sequence, who won The Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults; and

    • Guadalupe Garcia McCall, who won the Pura Belpré Author Award for Under the Mesquite.

    For a complete list of winners and honorees in all categories, visit the ALA Web site…

     

    January 23, 2012: Mixed-up Files Authors Honored at ALA

    A huge shout out to Wendy Shang and Sheela Chari, two of our very own Mixed-up Files members, who were honored at today’s ALA winter meeting. Shang was awarded The Asian/Pacific American Award for Children’s Literature for her middle-grade novel The Great Wall of Lucy Wu. Sheela Chari, author of Vanished, a middle-grade mystery, received the honor in the same category. The awards, which are selected by the Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association, recognize works of exceptional literary and artistic merit that highlight Asian/Pacific Americans and their heritage.

    For more on the awards...

      

    January 22, 2012: Esme’s Picks

    Esme Raji Codell, author of Sahara Special and other fine middle-grade titles, discusses her picks for the Newbery medal…


    January 19, 2012: The Mystery Revealed

     Finalists for the 2011 Edgar Award have been announced. The award, given annually by the Mystery Writers of America, is widely considered to be the most prestigious in its genre. In the running for best middle-grade mystery are:

    Horton Halfpott by Tom Angleberger

    It Happened on a Train by Mac Barnett

    Vanished by Sheela Chari

    Icefall by Matthew J. Kirby

    The Wizard of Dark Street by Shawn Thomas Odyssey

    Special congratulations to finalist and Mixed-up Files member Sheela Chari, who launched Vanished on our blog this summer!

    For more on Sheela and Vanished

    For a complete list of Edgar finalists in all categories, including young adult and adult…

     

    January 18, 2012: The OWL Hoots in March

    Jill, a 7th grade English teacher and blogger, is looking for authors, readers, and other bloggers to join her in celebrating March Middle-grade Madness on “The O.W.L.” blog (Outrageously Wonderful Literature for the Middle Grades).  Says Jill, “I'm putting together a fun March where I'll do nothing but highlight middle-grade books, but I need a little help.” Visit The OWL to learn more about writing a guest post, posting a review, or hosting a giveaway.

     

    January 16, 2012: The Medals Are Coming! The Medals Are Coming!

    Betsy Bird, New York City public librarian and School Library Journal blogger, reveals her predictions for the 2011 Newbery and Caldecott Awards here.... The actual awards will be announced January 23 at the midwinter meeting of the American Library Association. Stay tuned!

     

    January 4, 2012: Narrowing the Field

    Finalists for the 2011 CYBIL awards were announced this week. Awards will be given across a wide range of categories including fiction, nonfiction, fantasy and science fiction, graphic novels, and poetry. On the short list for middle-grade fiction is The Great Wall of Lucy Wu by our very own Mixed-up member Wendy Shang.

    For the complete list of CYBIL finalists...

    For more on Wendy and The Great Wall of Lucy Wu...

     

    January 4, 2012: Blogger Picks Indie Bests 

    Children’s author, editor, and “Rogue Librarian” blogger Edward T. Sullivan lists his picks for the best books from independent publishers in 2011…

     

    January 3, 2012: Author and Ambassador: Walter Dean Myers

    Walter Dean Myers, five-time winner of the Coretta Scott King Award and two Newbery Honors, has been named National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature by Librarian of Congress James H. Billington. Myers, who succeeds author Katherine Paterson, has chosen “Reading Is Not Optional” as the theme of his two-year term of service.

    “Walter Dean Myers is one of America’s preeminent authors of books for young people,” says Dr. Billington. “He is a lifelong advocate for reading for young people, and he has practiced what he preaches in schools and detention centers across the country.” 

    The National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature is named by the Librarian of Congress based on recommendations from a selection committee representing many segments of the book community. The selection criteria include the candidate’s contribution to young people’s literature and ability to relate to children. The position was created to raise national awareness of the importance of young people’s literature as it relates to lifelong literacy, education, and the development and betterment of the lives of young people.

    For more about Myers…

    For more about the award…

     


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Catch The Bus! Win An Author Visit!

Giveaways


What would you do if a middle-grade author showed up in your classroom? Shriek? Lock the doors and windows? Ask where she gets her ideas and how many drafts a finished book takes?

Your class, book club, scout troop, or group can meet a real middle-grade author if the Mixed-Up Middle-Grade Skype Tour rolls into your driveway.

We’ve loaded the Mixed-Up Tour Bus full of middle grade authors. Who exactly?

Kathy Erskine (Mockingbird),

Tricia Springstubb (What Happened On Fox Street),

Sarah Aronson (Beyond Lucky),

Uma Krishnaswami (The Grand Plan To Fix Everything),

Tom Angleberger (The Strange Case Of Origami Yoda),

Jennifer Neilsen (Elliot And The Goblin War ),

Erin Moulton (Flutter),

Sydney Salter (Jungle Crossing),

Bobbie Pyron (A Dog’s Way Home),

Beverly Patt (Best Friends, Forever) ,

Kate Messner (Sugar and Ice),

Rosanne Parry (Second Fiddle) ,

Tami Lewis Brown (The Map Of Me),

Wendy Shang (The Great Wall of Lucy Wu),

Kimberley Griffiths Little (The Healing Spell),

Sheela Chari (Vanished),

Sayantani DasGupta (The Demon Slayers And Other Stories),

Katherine Schlick Noe (Something To Hold),

Hillary Homzie (The Hot List), and

Jen Blom (Possum Summer)

!!!!!!

Amazing!

As far as we know there’s never been another author tour with so many authors, so many destinations, and so many WINNERS!

Over the next year we’ll be drawing winners for full fledged Skype author visits, copies of each author’s latest book, and as much swag as we can load into the bus.

Here’s how the Mixed-Up Middle-Grade Skype Tour works-

Each season a group of five or more authors will set off in the Mixed-Up Middle-Grade Tour Bus. You’ll have about a month to enter your class, club, or group to win a Skype visit from one of that season’s authors, along with a copy of their book, and more. For every retweet and/or Facebook reposting you’ll get another entry. To increase your class or group’s chances invite other adults- parents, teachers, or group members to leave comments here, too. Each entry must be made in a separate comment.

At the end of the month we’ll draw a winner for each Skype author visit. You’ll have six months from that date to schedule and conduct the visit. Authors and winners are paired randomly- you don’t enter to win a visit from a particular author. But we all write books appropriate for a middle-grade audience and we all do GREAT SCHOOL VISITS.

What will you need for a Skype visit? A computer, an internet connection, speakers, a winning entry and most of all an excited audience of middle-grade readers. If you’re not familiar with Skype our experts here at the Mixed-Up Files can help set you up.

It’s all Easy Peasy.

What’s that? I hear the rumble of the Mixed-Up Tour Bus right now…

The Spring/Summer Tour has headed out!


In the front row there’s Sydney Salter next to Bobbie Pyron- no Bobbie dogs are not allowed on the bus! Okay… just this once.


Behind them Tom Angleberger is busy folding little paper squares into odd Star Wars figures and calling the author behind him “Larry”. No, Tom. Her name is Kate Messner.


And on Kate’s right there’s Beverly Patt! Sure, Beverly. Kate will be your best friend, forever.

Wait! Who’s that running to catch the bus? It’s Hillary Homzie! Glad you made it Hillary. We almost left without you!

Would you like Sydney, Bobbie, Tom, Kate, Hillary or Beverly to visit your class? Each winner will receive a full Skype author visit and a copy of the author’s featured book. Check out the official RULES here. Leave a comment. Retweet it and/or repost on Facebook or your blog for more chances to win. And please leave a separate comment for each entry, retweet, or repost. We’ll draw the lucky winners on May 2 and post their names along with their author pairings here at the Mixed-Up Files on May 3!

Who can enter? Anyone 18 or over – a teacher, parent, librarian, friend… anybody as long as your school or group has specifically agreed to host a Skype author visit if you win.

Hey! Stop! Catch that bus!

Tami Lewis Brown will be driving the Mixed-Up Middle-Grade Skype Tour bus… just like Margie Tempest, the twelve-year-old main character/under-aged driver in Tami’s middle-grade novel, THE MAP OF ME, coming out this August from Farrar Straus & Giroux.

48 Comments

47 Comments

  1. Deb Marshall  •  Apr 6, 2011 @7:59 am

    AMAZING indeed! Be good on the bus everyone, you know the rules and Tami I know you’ll keep em all in line, no fighting for dibs on the back seats. If not Margie can have a little talk with them?

  2. Karen B. Schwartz  •  Apr 6, 2011 @10:32 am

    What a fun tour!

  3. Colby Sharp  •  Apr 6, 2011 @12:32 pm

    Sounds like a tour that is need of lots of groupies. Count me in!

  4. Tami Lewis Brown  •  Apr 6, 2011 @1:52 pm

    We’ve saved you a seat, Colby!

  5. Diana Greenwood  •  Apr 6, 2011 @1:54 pm

    Wear your seat belts and have fun!

  6. Jennifer  •  Apr 6, 2011 @3:24 pm

    No spitballs, please! Have a great time!

  7. Natalie Aguirre  •  Apr 6, 2011 @5:14 pm

    Don’t enter me because I’m not a teacher. But what a great idea!

  8. Destiny Lawyer  •  Apr 6, 2011 @6:12 pm

    This would be amazing for my middle schoolers as we live in rural Vermont and rarely get famous authors out our way!

  9. PragmaticMom  •  Apr 6, 2011 @6:19 pm

    I would love to win for my two kids’ book clubs! They love author visits! What a great line up!

  10. Ben Curran  •  Apr 6, 2011 @8:18 pm

    My class would LOVE an author visit like this. We heart skype and we heart books. Good combo. Please enter us. AND I’ve already blogged about it here: http://mrcurran.blogspot.com/2011/04/please-help-us-win.html

    THANKS

    Ben Curran
    Detroit, MI

  11. Sara Zoe  •  Apr 6, 2011 @9:21 pm

    Our school Our school! Our kids have never had an author visit and they love these books!

  12. Destiny Lawyer  •  Apr 7, 2011 @5:17 am

    I just finished reading Mockingbird to my sixth graders. They loved it!

  13. Danielle  •  Apr 7, 2011 @8:26 am

    I want Mr. Curran’s class in Detroit, MI to win!

  14. Tena  •  Apr 7, 2011 @1:37 pm

    My students would love to catch the bus!

  15. Tena  •  Apr 7, 2011 @1:40 pm

    kinnick72 just tweeted about Catching the Bus!

  16. Tena  •  Apr 7, 2011 @1:43 pm

    Just posted to my blog at http://www.nelsonuniverse.blogspot.com!

  17. Tena  •  Apr 7, 2011 @1:47 pm

    Just posted to our Facebook page!

    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nelson-Universe/150378705005391?sk=wall

    sheelachari Reply:

    @Tena, Thanks, Tena!

  18. Jennifer  •  Apr 7, 2011 @6:43 pm

    I’d love to win for my middle grade book club, Reading in the Middle. We are small but enthusiastic!

  19. Marilyn Gammon  •  Apr 8, 2011 @12:33 am

    Love this idea and this great group of authors. My class would love a visit from this school bus.

  20. Mrs. Gutierrez  •  Apr 8, 2011 @3:54 pm

    The Smithville Elementary Library wants to hope on the bus! Check out our blog post! http://smithvilleelementarylibrary.blogspot.com/2011/04/help-ses-win-skype-visit.html

  21. Mrs. Gutierrez  •  Apr 8, 2011 @3:56 pm

    Oops! We want to “hop” on the bus, not “hope!” But we are HOPING that the bus will make a stop in Smithville! http://bit.ly/sesbus

  22. Tricia  •  Apr 8, 2011 @7:43 pm

    Can we sing “The Wheels on the Bus” on the bus?

  23. Sheila Del'Homme  •  Apr 8, 2011 @8:42 pm

    My daughter would love a Skype visit at Smithville Elementary Library.

  24. Sheila Del'Homme  •  Apr 8, 2011 @8:45 pm

    My daughter would love a ride on the tour bus at Smithville Elementary Library. Come on to Smithville.

  25. Ms. Murray  •  Apr 8, 2011 @9:02 pm

    What a great opportunity for kids! Thank you so much for fueling up this bus tour! Our kids will LOVE this. Smithville Elementary would be a great bus stop. http://bit.ly/sesbus

  26. Mrs. Grant  •  Apr 8, 2011 @9:16 pm

    Make Smithville Elementary one of the stops! Our students would love the opportunity to meet authors.

  27. Amie Borst  •  Apr 8, 2011 @9:22 pm

    LOVE this! and Tricia, I’ll sing with you….but ONLY if you promise to make fun sound effects!

  28. Mrs. Gutierrez  •  Apr 8, 2011 @10:00 pm

    @seslibrary tweeted about the tour!

  29. Mrs. Gutierrez  •  Apr 8, 2011 @10:12 pm

    Check us out on Facebook! We want to see that bus pulling in to Smithville!

  30. Mrs. Schaatt  •  Apr 8, 2011 @10:26 pm

    Smithville Elementary would love to meet the authors!

  31. Ms. Murray  •  Apr 9, 2011 @4:16 pm

    Smithville Elementary is tweeting @sestigers about the tour.

  32. GreenBeanTeenQueen  •  Apr 11, 2011 @4:00 pm

    This is such a fantastic idea!! Please enter me (on behalf of my library of course!)

  33. I. EL-Amin  •  Apr 11, 2011 @5:28 pm

    I would like Mr. Curran’s class in Detroit, MI. To Win!

  34. K. Halsall  •  Apr 13, 2011 @12:43 pm

    Our Middle School would LOVE to participate! Please enter Auburn Middle School in Warrenton VA! We will be wating at the bus stop!

  35. Jean Brodahl  •  Apr 13, 2011 @7:57 pm

    Pick us! Pick us! Our school would love a visit! The wheels on the bus go round and round!

  36. Murry Edwards  •  Apr 14, 2011 @5:28 am

    Wow! What a wonderful way to bring authors to a group!

  37. Lara Ivey  •  Apr 14, 2011 @8:16 am

    Our family is CRAZY about books and authors! We go BONKERS for books! Having a SKYPE visit for the class would put us over the top with excitement. Can’t wait to hear more.

  38. GreenBeanTeenQueen  •  Apr 14, 2011 @2:37 pm
  39. David Byrnes  •  Apr 15, 2011 @11:30 am
  40. Sarah  •  Apr 15, 2011 @2:01 pm

    This is such a great idea!

  41. Colby Sharp  •  Apr 15, 2011 @2:59 pm

    Check out our class Origami Yoda video on our class wiki: lastroomontheright.wikispaces.com

  42. Becky  •  Apr 16, 2011 @12:24 am

    I would love to win! What a great idea!

  43. Becky  •  Apr 16, 2011 @12:29 am

    I just tweeted about this contest too! http://twitter.com/#!/LiBecky And, shout out to GreenBeanTeenQueen, whose blog informed me about this awesome contest!

  44. Heather T  •  Apr 17, 2011 @8:49 am

    I would like Mr. Curran’s class in Detroit, MI. To Win!

  45. Heather Temske  •  Apr 17, 2011 @8:57 am

    What an exciting opportunity! We would love for the bus to swing down to Atlanta Georgia. It’s a beautiful time of year for chatting about books.

  46. Ms. Murray  •  Apr 17, 2011 @10:46 pm

    Smithville Elementary is ready for a great Skype visit from the bus tour.

  47. Wendy Derechin  •  May 3, 2011 @7:26 pm

    The Mother-Daughter Book Club (soon to be 7th graders with their moms) in Sleepy Hollow, NY would be extremely grateful and elated to win a skype visit!!!