Monday, May 7, 2012

Children's Book Week 2012

Today marks the start of Children's Book Week.  This year's wonderful poster is by David Wiesner depicting a cast of favorite children's book characters. The following is a post from the archives of The Children's War about some of the past posters created for this special annual event.

Be sure to visit the Children's Book Week website for participatory events around the country, to find the winners of the Children's Choice Book Awards and to download a free bookmark.







The following was originally posted on May 5, 2011:
Books, especially for young readers, have always been considered to be a weapon during wars because of the influence they can have on the reader. This was as true for the Allied Powers as much as it was for the Axis Powers during World War II. Despite paper shortages everywhere, a good number of children’s books were still written and published between 1939 and 1945.

Children’s Book Week, sponsored by the Children’s Book Council, has been celebrating books and reading and encouraging youthful readers since 1919. Each year the Council commissions a poster by a well-known illustrator of children’s books for the purpose of commemorating this week.

75 Years of Children’s Book Week Posters contains the first 69 posters for Children’s Book Week. This is a book well worth close examination if you are a reader who really appreciates the work of each illustrator in the books you read. According to the publisher’s description of the book, these posters are not only first rate illustrations, but the also reflect the history, social climate and wider concerns of the country at the time each was created.

This made me think of one of my favorite quotes about children’s books by A.S.W. Rosenbach, who was a famous rare book seller and collector of children’s book. In 1933, in the introduction to his own book Early American Children’s Books, Rosenbach wrote:

“…more than any other class of literature, [children’s books] reflect the minds of the generation that produced them. Hence no better guide to the history and development of any country can be found than its juvenile literature.” (pg xxvii)

I think about this quote each time I read a kidlit book.

Since this is Children’s Book Week at the Children’s Book Council, I thought it would be interesting to look at some of the posters that were created for it during World War II.








If you are ever in the Philadelphia ares, be sure to visit the kid friendly Rosenbach Museum and Library or visit online at http://www.rosenbach.org/

3 comments:

  1. I so love the posters. There were a lot of years that I read children's books pretty much exclusively and how I loved them. I try to read a couple every year now, but I do miss those days of reading, reading, reading those wonderful books.

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    1. I love these posters, too. They make me want to read and read but I have discovered some wonderful books writing this blog and reading other people's blogs. If only the days were a little longer...

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  2. Great post, and I love the posters. In those years before TV and when movies were a rare treat, books were everything. Saving up pennies until you had two and six to buy an E.Nesbit, great times, it now seems, and these posters show it.

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