There is a "supplier of library promotional materials and reading incentives" called Upstart that sponsors a contest called "Vote for Books" (thanks, Christine, for writing to tell me about this contest). It is loosely timed to follow the presidential election cycle, with the votes tallied on November 4th and winners announced November 5th.
As I understand it, this is how it works:
January 1 to April 31st: Visitors to the site nominated books in these categories: Picture Books, Chapter Books, Series for Young Readers, and Series for Older Readers.
May 1st: Most-nominated books were announced.
Sept 1: Voting begins on top eight finalists in each category.
Sept. 22: Round 2 begins with top 4 in each category.
Oct 13: Two top finalists will "face off" in the final round of voting.
Nov 4: Votes will be tallied
Nov 5: Winners will be announced
This "voteforbooks" campaign is relevant to American Indians in Children's Literature because two of the books in the current round (round 2) in the "Series for Older Readers" category are Meyer's Twilight and Wilder's Little House on the Prairie. Both books have Native characters, but as I and others have noted on this blog, both writers do a poor job at depicting Native culture.
But! Both are top sellers. Erroneous presentation of American Indians, apparently, doesn't matter.
Odd, too, that LHOP is in the same category as Twilight. LHOP for older readers?!
That category, Series for Older Readers, has two other books still in the running. They are Harry Potter and The Spiderwick Chronicles. I don't know how the sponsors decided what books to put up against each other in the brackets, but it does seem (to me) that it was arranged so that the "face off" would be between Harry Potter and Twilight. We'll see.
No comments:
Post a Comment
----UNSIGNED COMMENTS WILL NOT BE APPROVED.----
In our efforts to have meaningful conversations with people who read AICL and to reduce trolling, we are no longer accepting unsigned comments.
Please include your name (not a pseudonym) and the nature of your interest (like parent, teacher, professor, reviewer, librarian, etc.). If you prefer to withhold identifying information because it may result in backlash to you in your workplace or elsewhere, please write to us directly.