Shelf Space
Booksellers and Librarians talk about what's in their reading room and what's on the horizon.
 Friday, November 14, 2008
This is my third year as an organizer for the Children’s and Young Adult Bloggers’ Literary Awards (commonly known as the Cybils), and my first year as Literacy Evangelist. The Cybils are a series of book awards given in nine categories (Fiction Picture Books, Nonfiction Picture Books, Easy Readers, Middle Grade Fiction, Nonfiction: Middle Grade and Young Adult, Young Adult Fiction, Poetry, Graphic Novels, and Fantasy and Science Fiction). The Cybils were started by Anne Boles Levy and Kelly Herold, and now involve nearly 100 bloggers. The goal of the Cybils team is to highlight books that, in addition to being well-written, are kid-friendly and engaging.

The Cybils combine a democratic nomination process with a formal judging process. Anyone can nominate books, one title per person per category. Once the nominations are in, a teams of panelists reads all of the books, and comes up with short lists for each category. A second round of judging then takes place. The result is a winner for each category.

I believe that the Cybils have the potential to make a tremendous contribution to children’s literacy. Every year, thousands of new children’s books are published. While this variety is wonderful, the sheer magnitude of titles makes it difficult for parents and teachers, and even for librarians, to help kids choose books. And if we’re going to engage kids as readers, we have to offer them GREAT books. The books exist—but people don’t always have an easy way to find them. The Cybils, with their focus on literary quality and kid-appeal, give people a place to start. The long lists offer a smorgasbord of titles, handily grouped by age range and genre. They include everything from National Book Award nominees to self-published titles. This year, we have 841 eligible titles across the nine categories. Panelists are reading diligently to winnow this down to 50 or so short list titles by January 1st.

I believe that the Cybils short lists (5 to 7 titles per category) are an amazing resource. Great titles, vetted by people who, in many cases, read hundreds of children’s books each year. Books assessed with an eye to page-turner appeal, in addition to literary quality. I would like to see these short lists in the hands of parents, teachers, and librarians from around the world. My role in this year’s Cybils awards is to help spread the word about these awards beyond the circle of the bloggers and authors involved. That makes me a Literacy Evangelist. I’m a cheerleader for the Cybils, and for getting kids excited about reading. I’m the person jumping up and down (virtually, anyway) asking people to tell their friends and colleagues about the Cybils.

So far, this evangelism has been a success. Dozens and dozens of bloggers helped to spread the word about the Cybils nominations. People posted on discussion groups, and mentioned the Cybils in their newsletters, and asked their contacts outside of the immediate circle of children’s book blogs to do the same. People Twittered, made widgets, and started a Cybils group on Facebook. People offered to mention the Cybils at conferences, and passed out bookmarks. Far too many people helped for me to thank them all individually here, but I am grateful to everyone who has mentioned, and continues to mention, the Cybils. (We do have some media highlights on the Cybils blog, thanks to our Deputy Editor Sarah Stevenson.)

As a result of these efforts, despite the fact that the nominating period was shortened from six weeks to two weeks this year, we increased the number of nominations by nearly 50% (from 575 last year to 841 this year). And although I don’t have any formal statistics for this, I am certain that we received nominations from a more broad range of contributors. All of this is a testament to the power of grass root communication, by people who are passionate about children’s and young adult books. I’m planning a similar outreach campaign once the short lists are available, and I hope to get those lists into the hands of as many people as possible. Because that is what a Cybils Literacy Evangelist does—lets people know about pre-vetted, excellent children’s and young adult books, so that we together can help raise a new generation of readers. If you have suggestions, or you’d like to help, I would love to hear from you.

Posted by: Jen Robinson

posted on Friday, November 14, 2008 2:00:19 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [5]
 Friday, May 16, 2008
Last year I was a panelist on YA Fiction Cybil Awards. This year, I somehow ended up heading up the category. If you've managed to miss out on the Cybils both this year and last, it's an award that tries to find the irresistible balance of quality and appeal in children's and young adult literature from that year. It's run entirely by bloggers. Entirely. Both years were amazing experiences for me.

The winner was announced in February, but I'm still seeing traffic on my posts, and not too long ago someone asked if I saw any similarities between the books of 2007. Well, I can't say that all 123 of the YA Cybils nominated titles are represented here (let alone all the books published last year) - but I did have fun coming up with the list. If you know of any similarities I've forgotten - let me know in the comments! Full list of nominees here. Feel free to add on any YA titles in which you find weird, wacky or just plain coincidental events, themes or trends. They are always amusing!

2007 Similarities:
Fathers Obsessed with Model Railroads: Twisted, The Nature of Jade
Girls hit in the face with sports balls: 10 Uses for an Unworn Prom Dress, Heaven Looks a Lot Like the Mall
Comas/Knocked Unconscious: Heaven Looks a Lot like the Mall, Rubber Houses, Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac
Ucky Mothers: Heaven Looks a Lot like the Mall, Poison Apples, Such a Pretty Girl
Bad Dads: Twisted, The Nature of Jade, Such a Pretty Girl, Touching Snow
Abuse: Touching Snow, Billie Standish Was Here, Such a Pretty Girl, Lessons from a Dead Girl, Twisted
Novels In Verse: Heaven Looks a Lot like the Mall, Song of the Sparrow, Glass, Shark Girl, Walking on Glass, Rubber Houses
9/11 mentions: Does My Head Look Big in This?, Heaven Looks a Lot like the Mall, Someday this Pain Will Be Useful to You
Death: Saving Zoe, Rubber Houses, Deadline, Before I Die, Lessons from a Dead Girl, Cures for Heartbreak, A Swift Pure Cry, 13 Reasons Why
Voices from Beyond the Grave: Saving Zoe, 13 Reasons Why, Something Rotten, High Spirits, Wonders of the World, White Darkness
GBLTQ Friendly: Parrotfish, Freak Show, Off Season, Someday this Pain..., Split Screen, Tips on Having a Gay (ex) Boyfriend, grl2grl, Cupcake, Evolution, Me and Other Freaks of Nature (mostly)
Historical: Tamar (1940s), Cassandra's Sister (1700s), Wednesday Wars (1960s), Song of the Sparrow (er...600s?), Red Moon at Sharpsburg (1860s), Enter Three Witches (1600s), Touching Snow (1980s), A Swift Pure Cry (1980s), Brothers, Boyfriends & Other Criminal Minds (1970s), Billie Standish Was Here (1960's), Tin Angel (1960s)
Sports: Zen and the Art of Faking It, Deadline, Slam, The Off Season, Boy Toy
Religion: In the Name of God, Converting Kate, Ethan Suspended, High Spirits, Evolution, Me & Other Freaks of Nature
Books inspired by Great (British) Literature: Something Rotten (Hamlet), Enter Three Witches (Macbeth), Song of the Sparrow (Arthurian Legend), Cassandra's Sister (Jane Austen), Red Glass (The Little Prince, ok, fine that's French Lit. Whatever.)
Traveling: Carpe Diem, Girl at Sea, Red Glass, In Search of Mockingbird
Social Networking: Saving Zoe, Angels on Sunset Boulevard
Adults who Fail to protect kids in a Spectacular manner: Touching Snow, Such a Pretty Girl, Boy Toy
Second/Multiple Marriages: Poison Apples, Something Rotten, Touching Snow, Someday This Pain Will Be Useful..., Lemonade Mouth
Buddhist Rules: Cupcake, Zen and the Art of Faking It, Lemonade Mouth
Aloe Used, straight from the plant: Red Glass, Billie Standish Was Here
Coin Tosses: Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac, Lemonade Mouth
Pizza Parlor as Meeting Place: Lemonade Mouth, How to Get Suspended and Influence People
Multicultural: Finch Goes Wild, Red Glass, Lemonade Mouth, Don't Get it Twisted, Prime Choice, Revolution is Not a Dinner Party, Ethan Suspended
Lust-worthy boyfriends: Memoirs of a..., Tips on having a gay (ex) Boyfriend, Bloom
Too Cold for Me: The White Darkness, Peak
The "responsible" adult doesn't tell mom where he's taking the kid: The White Darkness, Peak
Younger Twin Sisters: The Poison Apples, Peak

Read last year's similarities at this link.

In the vein of bloggers coming together to do great things, check out next week’s Summer Blast Blog Tour. It's organized by Colleen Mondor at Chasing Ray and features a healthy handful of kidlit bloggers interviewing authors and illustrators over a swath of kidlit. It's the third time we've done this, and it never ceases to amaze me that authors and publicists actually respond to my queries to interview. I'm not in for as many as I've done in the past, but there are lots of fun and informative interviews to appear next week all over the kidlitosphere.

Gina Gagliano at First Second has been having bloggers, as I said on my own blog, "rebel with them against the sweet flower-filled month of May and post about a vampire books." She's posting links to the participants on the First Second blog, and it's been fun to find new blogs and new books. They are calling it Vampire Month, and if you haven't stumbled across it yet, now's your chance. There are also some great free graphics if you want to create an impromptu display on the theme. Or you could just save them until that one vamp book comes out this summer. Whatever it’s called. ;)

Last week we talked about why people read blogs. These little coordinated events? They create a society amidst the random wilds of the untamed internet. The kidlitosphere is not only a virtual civilization, but a community that I love being apart of. I've found genuine friends out here through participating in the efforts above. Friends that are just as real as the ones I know outside of my computer. Friends that when I finally meet them greet me with hugs and laughter. And that is what keeps me blogging.

If you wanted to know.

Posted by: Jackie Parker

posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 9:54:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Comments [6]
 Friday, November 09, 2007
I don’t actually help run the only literary awards by bloggers – as we’re billing ourselves – so much as steer it away from black holes, asteroids and other cosmic obstacles. Let me explain.

There seems to be a whole mess of bad, awful, terrifying mishaps that can go wrong in cyberspace when all you’re trying to do is pick a favorite book. Sure, it sounds easy. You set up a blog, ask a couple acquaintances to do reviews, chat about likes and dislikes, and ta-dah ... We have a winner! Just like that.

Only it’s not at all like that. We—the other organizers and myself—ventured into unknown territory when we founded the Children’s and Young Adult Bloggers’ Literary Awards (our friends call us Cybils) that recently opened its second season at Cybils.com. But our success was hardly assured, and there are, I think, lessons for anyone believing that the Internet’s newness means that old rules don’t apply.

To start with, if human nature is a constant, as so many philosophers and writing coaches tell us, what to make of all the introverts, dreamers and unrepentant bookworms who make up the core kidlit bloggers? Could we all rouse from our armchairs long enough to hold a contest?

Would we all play fair—ignoring marketing hype to offer a level playing field for independent publishers?

And would it, in the end, have any impact at all, or just dissipate in a wave of self-congratulatory linkfests? Would our tiny craft ever take off?

It all started with a smart-alecky comment I left on someone else’s blog last year, after complaints that the Newbery's were too snooty and the Quills, well, not snooty enough. I said us blogging upstarts should up and start our own contest. Kelly Herold, whose blog it was, turned out to be one of these organized types and took me up on it.

We didn’t need a mission statement; our sense of purpose grew as we hashed out matters in comments and emails. Quality and popularity would both count; literary merit and kid appeal would be weighed equally. We would be democratic and elitist both. Everybody would nominate books, but only bloggers would judge. And the bloggers would be, well, just about anybody.

Our first cosmic obstacle was our name. I couldn’t stand any of the suggestions, like “mad hatters” or the “blogburys.” Hitting this head-on cost us precious momentum – hours, maybe even days, after the idea germinated, when time is measured in nanoseconds in the forget-it-yesterday blogosphere. I decided on Cybils when it seemed to appease both the cutesy and serious types.

I mentioned asteroids and black holes. The asteroids would be the organizational nightmares you don’t know are headed your way. They veered into our path over seemingly small things, like counting six genres until the poetry and graphic novels fans griped. All those genres needed their own chiefs and two sets of judges. Where would we find so many people? With blogs? About kids’ books?

Kelly had a blogroll like nobody’s business, sort of like an electronic rolodex, and she leaned hard on folks to join up instead of crabbing in the comments sections. Once we had a full slate of 80+ volunteers, we needed little things like a domain name and a hub to gather and do all the contest-related stuff, whatever that would mean. And then there were listservs and databases and all kinds of mind-numbing particulars that have gotten all the mention they need.

Even so, we headed straight for a black hole. Setting the contest up on a blog sounded cheap and easy, and it kept us in the blogging spirit. We listed each genre as a separate post and waited for nominations to roll in from the public. And ... then what? I was staring at three months of a dead blog – utterly empty space – until the short lists were announced.

How to fill the void? I wasn’t ready to write yet another blog, and Cybils wasn’t about me. And what was there to say, really?

Meanwhile, we’d gathered all these smart, witty, similarly obsessed people, and they all had opinions. On everything – not just books. People battled about ethics, about whether to keep blogging about the books they were judging, about whether we should solicit review copies from publishers; all big, potentially contest-wrecking issues. More asteroids.

Like many introverts, I like to think I have very little ego, which actually makes leadership tough when you’re determined that everything go all friendly-like. No hurt feelings, no tough talk ... and nothing gets done. And I’m new to awards. I never won any, unless you count a good citizenship certificate for being pretty much the only kid in my high school to never get busted. A dull life suits my bookish self just fine.

So I joked that Kelly and I were benevolent dictators, but the term gave us cover to step in when things veered off course. Sure, you all can blog about these books, just don’t tip your hand, voting-wise. Send me links and I’ll post excerpts at Cybils. Voila! The black hole gets filled and an asteroid avoided. Hey, y’think the publishers will send review copies? Yes! More disaster averted.

Complaints rolled in as often as compliments, but if you’re going to insist you have no ego then you listen and you nod and you keep updating your FAQs and revising the rules and go from there.

On Feb. 14, we announced nine winners and 5,000 people leaped onto our blog to end the suspense. Five of the winning titles came from independent publishers, including a graphic novel from a publisher who never got back to us about review copies. Both rounds of judges had to hunt the book down in comics shops or online.

An organized “buy Cybils” push saw dramatic drops in the Amazon sales ranks (a good thing) for many winning titles. We were written up in the online or newsletter versions of Publisher’s Weekly, School Library Journal and of course ForeWord. Even GalleyCat, a big publishing industry blog, threw us a shout out.

Some lessons learned: our fancy-schmancy press releases were never picked up by the press. They did better posted at blogs and in online forums. The “viral” marketing that so many business gurus talk about really does work in non-traditional markets like ours, but only when the people spreading your message have something more than hype or buzz or vague promises or stock options to blather about. Keep it real, and people will come.

I keep seeing Cybils mentioned in Amazon or GoodReads reviews – usually footprints left by a supporter. There’s even a Cybils mention on Wikipedia, under Melanie Watt’s page (her picture book, Scaredy Squirrel, from Kids Can Press, was a winner).

Kelly and I learned to keep it simple, stupid: neither of us is judging this year while we’re busily zapping those asteroids. Kelly’s most arduous task is nabbing review copies: after publishers rightfully bellyached about being hit up for free books at every turn, we’re submitting one master list via one person. Nobody assaults authors or pesters publicists; all contacts are via Kelly or her henchwoman in charge of smoothing our relations with the independents, the mercilessly well-organized Sheila Ruth of Wands and Worlds (http://www.wandsandworlds.com/blog1/), herself an independent publisher.

And while chatting with your co-workers seems a fairly basic Management 101 thing to do, it’s tough when it’s all online. So Kelly and I grabbed a chance to meet some of our virtual co-conspirators at a kidlit blogging conference in October; we had no agenda and opened the floor to questions. That could’ve been a disaster!

Instead, we walked away amazed at both the great sense and intense passion of our volunteers, who get paid in nothing but links, a few free books and ample gratitude. Their feedback is gradually being incorporated into every stage of the contest, from the website’s readability to the judging criteria and much, much else.

Yes, we’re back; nominations opened Oct. 1 and close the day before Thanksgiving. We let everybody who can click their way to the Cybils blog nominate a single, solitary, lonely book in each of eight genres, from picture books up to young adult, and of course graphic novels and poetry. We’ve gotten better about enforcing our few rules, and are still coasting on readers’ goodwill and generally honest nature.

We expanded our roster of volunteers up to 90 bloggers, and have made good on promises to include a large percentage of newcomers so we don’t become cliquish.

Once again, New Year’s and Valentine’s Days will be the dates to circle for short lists and winners, respectively.

We’ve added BookSense links to the Amazon ones, with people still using last year’s short lists for early holiday shopping. With those tiny commissions plus a few droplets of ad revenue, we hope to make enough to buy actual awards for this year’s winning authors and illustrators. Right now, our humble thanks are all we have to offer.

Back by popular demand are book reviews of the nominees from our bloggers, with links back to their sites – some of the most impassioned and active voices in the kidlitosphere. And, of course, we’re featuring some of the best books of 2007. We hope yours are among them.

See you at Cybils!

Posted by: Anne Boles Levy

posted on Friday, November 09, 2007 11:05:58 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Comments [2]