BEA and back again

I made it to BEA and back in one day and lived to tell about it! Here's my BEA story: I took the 7:25 train from DC on Thursday morning--it wasn't even the high-speed train and I still got to Penn Station by 10:45. I love the train. I can read on it, for one thing, which I can't do on a bus or in the car. And it's nice to look out the window from time to time.  All those little towns!

Anyway, I walked to the Javits Center, checked my empty suitcase (I packed the bare minimum for what was meant to be overnight stay--more about that later) and wandered around the exhibit floor, where I made several very nice contacts and got a poster signed for Milly by Peter Brown and an "I went to BEA and all I got was this lousy t-shirt" t-shirt for myself.

No, that's not exactly true. But people have remarked that books (ARCs or otherwise) were in short supply at BEA this year, and that was definitely the case on Thursday. I was a little disappointed, but in the end I came home with a few coveted titles (thank you, Susan Kusel, for Wonderstruck!) and the promise of more to come in the mail. I love the mail just as much as the train.  All those fat envelopes!

This might be a good time to mention the difference between BEA and ALA's annual meetings, which I attended last year when they were held right here in DC. In my experience, ALA was more collegial (and I'm not even a librarian); there was a sense of common purpose. BEA was more competitive and businesslike, as in business was being conducted right in the booths and everyone seemed to be in a hurry to close up shop by 3. Fortunately I knew what to expect and came prepared with a mission statement and a stack of cute business cards.

Charlotte of Charlotte's Library and Pam of MotherReader had graciously agreed to share their hotel room with me Thursday night, and I met them and several other kidlit bloggers (Alex of The Children's War and Susan of Wizards Wireless among them) for a thankfully very collegial lunch.  Afterwards, Pam led the way back onto the exhibit floor (see How to Work an Event Like a MotherReader for some excellent tips), where things were already starting to wind down. Note to self: If you attend BEA next year, try getting there on Monday.

Here's where I went off the rails, so to speak.  The plan was to meet up with Charlotte and Pam (who had another event to attend) at our hotel a couple of hours after the exhibits closed, and then go to Kidlit Drink Night at a nearby bar.  But it was hot and crowded and New York City, and as I walked back to Penn Station to catch an uptown train to the Met, I caught sight of the Vamoose bus to Rosslyn.  Next thing I knew I had traded in my Friday morning ticket and was on that bus. It was 4:30.

I had to make a couple of sheepish phone calls (thank you for understanding, Charlotte and Pam!), but it was definitely the right decision for me. I was even able to read a little of Wonderstruck on the bus. Best of all, supper was waiting for me when I got home...and it was still hot.

BEA Bound

I'll be at BEA on Thursday, provided my early morning train from DC doesn't get derailed and I don't get lost walking to the Javits Center from Penn Station. Can you tell I'm a little anxious about getting there? It's the first time I've attended Book Expo America and I'll be arriving late in the morning of the last day. Here's hoping there are still lots of lovely new books to be had! And that everyone I hope to meet is still more excited than exhausted by then.

Oh, here's a wee BEA wishlist (the middle grade edition):

A Year Without Autumn by Liz Kessler (Candlewick). A certain seven-year old I know is very fond of Kessler's Emily Windsnap series! This one looks like a lovely standalone novel with an interesting time travel element.

Breadcrumbs by Anne Ursu (HarperCollins). I liked Ursu's Cronus Chronicles even more than Percy Jackson and the Olympians. This one is a fairy tale retelling (The Snow Queen) with gorgeous cover and interior illustrations by Erin McGuire (whose forthcoming picture book, French Ducks in Venice by Garrett Freymann-Weyr, is on that wishlist, too).

Brotherband Chronicles, Book 1: The Outcasts or Ranger's Apprentice: The Lost Stories by John Flanagan (Philomel).  For Leo especially (see this post for more). 

The Kronos Chronicles, Book III: The Jewel of the Kalderash by Marie Rutkoski (FSG). This one's for me, because I adored the first two, Cabinet of Wonders (my Cybils nominee that year) and The Celestial Globe.

Tuesdays at the Castle by Jessica Day George (Bloomsbury).  Princess maps ever-changing castle and saves kingdom! It has a gorgeous cover, too.

See you there!

Ranger's Apprentice

The most hotly anticipated new release for a certain 10-year-old member of the bookstogether household this spring may have been The Emperor of Nihon-Ja by John Flanagan (Philomel). The tenth and final installment in the Ranger's Apprentice series sees Will and Co. travel via Skandian ship to exotic Nihon-Ja (a sort of feudal Japan) in search of Horace, there studying Senshi fighting techniques. After a military coup overthrows Horace's friend, the Emperor Shigeru, the Araluens become entangled in the fight to restore benevolent imperial power to Nihon-Ja  This involves training (I love a good training scene) a band of woodcutters and farmers in a remote mountain fortress to do battle with the Senshi warriors under Lord Arisaka.

It was by all accounts (my husband read it, too) a satisfying conclusion to the series, tying up loose ends and romantic subplots while providing lots of the tactical detail and military action that my 10-year-old son loves, and that Flanagan does so well. Bonus points for strong female characters in Alyss and Evanlyn.

The good news for Ranger's Apprentice fans, though, is that the first volume in Flanagan's news series, Brotherband Chronicles, Book 1: The Outcasts, debuts this fall. And it's got Skandians! 

The Princess Gown

Wondering what princess-to-be Kate Middleton's wedding gown will look like? By the time most people read this, the Royal Wedding will be well underway; and soon we'll all know who designed the dress and how many yards of fabric--not to mention how many hours of stitching--went into its creation.  In honor of the day and the dress, I recommend The Princess Gown by Linda Leopold Strauss, illustrated by Malene Reynolds Laugesen (Houghton Mifflin, 2008).  Strauss's own pedigree is perfect for this story: she is descended from a family of "Embroiderers to the Queen" who made, among other things, Queen Victoria's coronation robes.

In The Princess Gown, Princess Annabel is to select her wedding gown from the offerings of all the tailors in the kingdom--but Hanna discovers a spot on the one her family has made! Quick thinking and nimble fingers save the day for the House of Abraham, and their gown's embroidered surprises--the princess's own pet squirrel and acorn among them--start a new fashion at court. I do wish the dresses were not all the same bell shape, though! Princess Annabel might want to pay attention tomorrow.