"Bringing the Boy Home": N.A. Nelson's Amazon Adventure

9780060886998 Bringing the Boy Home, an Amazon adventure story, arrives in bookstores on July 1st. Full of suspense—and surprises—the novel features two boys on the cusp of manhood. One has lived his entire life with his tribe in the remote Amazon jungle; the other, adopted by an American woman, is returning to his place of birth for the first time in years.

Debut author N.A. (Nina) Nelson is practically a neighbor, living one town over from me, and earlier this month we sat down at a library cafe on the banks of the Saugatuck River, not a caiman or jaguar in sight, and talked about her book for ten- to thirteen-year-old readers.

How did you come up with the idea for this story?

Well, originally, I wanted to write a story about five kids who each had a special “sense” talent. For example, one kid would be able to see what happened in a photo fifteen seconds before and after the picture was taken, and another kid would be able to smell what happened in the photo fifteen seconds before and after, and another kid could hear, and another could taste, and another could touch what happened, and then they would join forces and solve mysteries. But when I told my critique group about this “novel” idea, one of the members said, “There’s already a book out where a boy can see photos move,” and I thought, “Hmmm, I don’t want to write a book that’s already been written,” so I tried to incorporate the five senses into a story that didn’t involve magic, which led me to thinking about the Amazon jungle people and how they use their senses every day to survive and the book just formed from there.

You have visited the Amazon jungle, but was it hard for you to write from the viewpoint of two thirteen year-old tribal boys?

I’m so glad you asked that, because I’ve been wanting to share this story forever: while I was writing Bringing the Boy Home, I watched a lot of videos about jungle tribes, and during one particular video, the camera followed this ten year-old boy and his pet tapir around and it reminded me exactly of a relationship between a boy and his dog: they went swimming together, wrestled around and were completely inseparable. It was the Amazon version of "Old Yeller." Later, the boy’s father was teasing him and said something like, “Oh, he’ll never find a girl—he’ll have to kiss frogs for the rest of his life.” And I thought, “Isn’t that funny that the Amazon jungle people say the same thing we do about kissing frogs?” From what I’ve read and seen—and from all the traveling I’ve done myself—I believe that no matter where you live, we all experience the same things: jealousy, heartbreak, love, anger, power struggles and yes, even kissing frogs.

Bringing the Boy Home is a work of fiction, but are there aspects of the novel that are based on real life?

I gave myself a lot of freedom by making the Takunami a fictional tribe; this allowed my imagination to run wild without worrying about someone later questioning the authenticity of my research. The jungle people are also very spiritual, so I was able to use that aspect to take the story in a couple cool, different directions. BUT even with the flexibility those two things afforded me, I wanted to incorporate as much tradition, language, flora and fauna of the Amazon as possible, so I really tried to educate myself on tribal life, ethnobotany and wilderness survival.

One of the biggest compliments I’ve received is when readers tell me that they were surprised to find out the Takunami aren’t a real tribe. That’s nice to hear.

What's the Amazon Conservation Team? Are you on it?

The Amazon Conservation Team (ACT) is this amazing non-for-profit organization who “works in partnership with indigenous people in conserving biodiversity, health, and culture in tropical America.”

During my research; I kept returning to one book, Tales of a Shaman’s Apprentice, by Mark J. Plotkin, for information and inspiration and when I decided that I wanted to somehow give back, I automatically googled Dr. Plotkin and found ACT (he co-founded it). The group has supporters such as Al Gore, Sting, Julian Lennon, Susan Sarandon and (laugh)—me.

Two of its better known programs are helping tribes map out their land, so unsavory logging companies can’t come in and say, “Oh, this little plot is yours and the rest of the rainforest is ours,” and providing support to shamans so that they can continue practicing their medicine and also pass their knowledge on to the younger generation.

I’m “teaming” up with ACT by donating a portion of the profits from Bringing the Boy Home to its Shamans and Apprentices Program.

I hear you're working on something new. What's the next book about?

It’s nothing like Bringing the Boy Home; it’s a humorous, contemporary YA, that takes place in Missouri, which is much closer to home since that’s where I was raised. I can’t divulge much else, because I’m a little superstitious when it comes to talking about my WIP, but I will say that I’m totally enjoying writing it: the characters crack me up everyday (in a good way) and I can’t wait to see how it ends.

2008 Boston Globe Horn Book Awards

Last week the 2008 Boston Globe Horn Book Awards were announced. Winners and honorees are as follows.

Nonfiction: The Wall, by Peter Sis.
Honor Books: Frogs, by Nic Bishop, and What to Do about Alice? by Barbara Kerley, illustrated by Edwin Fotheringham.

Fiction:The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie, illustrated by Ellen Forney.
Honor Books: Shooting the Moon, by Frances O'Roark Dowell, and Savvy, by Ingrid Law.

Picture Books: At Night, by Jonathan Bean
Honor Books: Fred Stays with Me! by Nancy Coffelt, illustrated by Tricia Tusa, and A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever, by Marla Frazee

Special Citation, for excellence in graphic storytelling: The Arrival, by Shaun Tan.

Betsy Bird, NYC children's librarian (and purveyor of the blog A Fuse #8 Production), commented that the Globe Horn Book list "often rights the wrongs of other awards (and sometimes gives a hint of future winners)." Eligible books for this year's awards were published between June 2007 and May 2008.

Eavesdropping on Markus Zusak and Susan Campbell Bartoletti

PEN American Center is currently featuring Part I of an email conversation between two authors who write for children and young adults: Markus Zusak, an Australian, and Susan Campbell Bartoletti, an American. Both have recent books about the Second World War and the Holocaust: Zusak's novel The Book Thief and Bartoletti's Hitler Youth (nonfiction) and The Boy Who Dared (fiction). In his first correspondence with Bartoletti, Zusak confesses he hasn't read Hitler Youth. Not exactly an auspicious beginning, but the discussion improves from there. Click here to read it.

As its web site indicates, PEN American Center "works to advance literature, to defend free expression, and to foster international literary fellowship."

Bears, Jo, Teen Boys, Old Age, Henry Moore

A few items of interest for some coffee-break clicking this afternoon:

Over at NPR, Daniel Pinkwater recommended A Visitor for Bear on Saturday's "Weekend Edition" program, and he and host Scott Simon read the picture book aloud. (I reviewed the book here.)

Also, NPR arts correspondent Lynn Neary considered "Jo March, Everyone's Favorite Little Woman," on "Morning Edition" today.

Say welcome to a new blog in town: Guys Lit Wire, book reviews and literary news for teenage boys.

My reading recommendation (for grown-ups) today: A Place Called Canterbury, by Dudley Clendinen. Lovely nonfiction about a retirement home in Tampa, where Clendinen's mother lived for nine years. A heartfelt, generous, and sometimes quite funny look at "the new old age" in our country.

"Moore in America," sculptures of Henry Moore in an outdoor setting, has landed at the New York Botanical Garden (through November 2nd). A New York Times slide show is here. It looks so cool; I can't wait to go! For children (aged 9 and up), the NYBG gift shop touts (and sells) the biography Henry Moore, by Sally O'Reilly (from the series Artists in Their Time, Franklin Watts/Scholastic, 2003). Plus, there's Hands On! Creative Projects. ("The 12 innovative projects within this book encourage people of all ages to create their own imaginative works using Henry Moore’s methods and a variety of tools and materials.)

Your Own Summer Reading List?

So, what's on your summer list? My mother tells me that schools are already out in my Southern hometown, and that got me to thinking about the subject.

When third-grade is done, Junior wants to start a collection of books by Patricia Polacco and hopes to read a new graphic novel in a favorite series, Sardine from Outer Space #5: My Cousin Manga and Other Stories. His school encourages everyone to read during vacation, but does not specify which books.

Maybe I'll pick up T.H. White's Once and Future King, which I avoided the summer it appeared on the tenth-grade reading list. Should I write a book report and email it in late...very, very, very late? Right now I'm into Selected Stories by Alice Munro. When I finished Jhumpa Lahiri's latest collection, Unaccustomed Earth, I knew I had to read something just as good or better next, so I turned to a master short-story writer. I'm not disappointed at all. In her review of The Progress of Love for the New York Times, Joyce Carol Oates wrote, "Like her similarly gifted contemporaries Peter Taylor, William Trevor, Edna O'Brien and some few others, the Canadian short-story writer Alice Munro writes stories that have the density—moral, emotional, sometimes historical—of other writers' novels." Amen to that.

The Selected Stories will keep me busy for a while, but what after that? My blogging pal Tanita S. Davis's young-adult novel, A La Carte, coming from Knopf in June, is definitely a must-read for me. Other suggestions are welcome. And I'm curious to hear what's on your summer list.

YA Awards & Blog Tours

The following books are semifinalists for the Independent Publisher Book Award in the best juvenile/young adult fiction category. Take a look at the entire list; there are several other groups of children's books vying for prizes. Winners will be announced at the BookExpo trade show, in Los Angeles, on May 29th.

Songs for a Teenage  Nomad, by Kim Culbertson (Hip Pocket Press)
Tips on Having a Gay (ex)  Boyfriend, by Carrie Jones (Flux)
The Ghost in Allie's Pool, by Sari Bodi (Brown Barn Books)
The Nightmare Tree, by Richard Rene (Coteau Books for Kids)
The Night Wanderer, by Drew Hayden Taylor (Annick Press)
Perch, Mrs. Sackets, Crow's Nest, by Karen Pavlicin (Alma Little)

Also, fans of young adult literature should know about the Summer Blog Blast Tour, a series of interviews with authors Laurie Halse Anderson, Barry Lyga, and Robin Brande, among many others. You'll find several picture-book people on the full schedule, too, which is at Chasing Ray.

Children's Literature Programs, PEN World Voices Festival

Book lovers in New York right now have a chance to see and hear many authors from around the world at PEN's World Voices festival. Among the participants are Ian McEwan, Michael Ondaatje, Janet Malcolm, Bernhard Schlink, Umberto Eco, Salman Rushdie, and Mario Vargas Llosa. For a complete schedule, see the PEN web site; you'll find blog reports there as well. Also, the MetaxuCafé literary site is covering many of the events.

The following are programs that involve authors who write for children.

  • Sharon G. Flake, Jutta Richter, Pam Muñoz Ryan, and Peter Sís talk about "the public and private lives of children." Elizabeth Levy moderates. (Scholastic Auditorium, 556 Broadway. Thursday, May 1, at 6. Free. No reservations necessary.)
  • Pam Muñoz Ryan and Senegalese author Fatou Diome on the role of storytelling in "growing up a writer." (French Institute/Alliance Française, 22 E. 60th St. Saturday, May 3, at 5. For tickets, call 212/307-4100.)

One roundtable (for adults) I'd like to hear (but won't get a chance to) is "Books That Changed My Life," with Annie Proulx, Philippe Grimbert, Yousef Al-Mohaimeed, Antonio Muñoz Molina, and Catherine Millet. (New York Public Library, Fifth Ave. at 42nd St. Sunday, May 4, at 4. For tickets, call 212/868-4444.)

PEN American Center, the festival's sponsor, is "an association of writers working to advance literature, defend free expression, and foster international literary fellowship."

Australia's 2008 "Book of the Year" Contenders

9781876288792 The Children's Book Council of Australia presnts its short list for "book of the year" in various categories. The winners will be announced on August 15th.

I added links for the books available on U.S. Amazon. Some have American publication dates later this year.

Older Readers [young adults]

  • Pharoah: The Boy Who Conquered the Nile, by Jackie French
  • Marty's Shadow, by John Heffernan
  • Black Water, by David Metzenthen
  • Leaving Barrumbi, by Leonie Norrington

Younger Readers [9-12 year olds]

  • Sixth Grade Style Queen (Not!), by Sherryl Clark; Elissa Christian, illustrator
  • The Shaggy Gully Times, by Jackie French; Bruce Whatley, illustrator
  • Amelia Dee and the Peacock Lamp, by Odo Hirsch
  • Winning the World Cup, by David Metzenthen; Stephen Axelsen, illustrator

Early Childhood

  • Shhh! Little Mouse, by Pamela Allen
  • Cat, by Mike Dumbleton; Craig Smith, illustrator
  • The Night Garden, by Elise Hurst

Picture Book of the Year [some are for mature readers]

  • The Peasant Prince, illustrated by Anne Spudvilas; Li Cunxin, author
  • You and Me: Our Place, illustrated by Dee Huxley; Leonie Norrington, author
  • Requiem for a Beast, by Matt Ottley
  • Dust, by Colin Thompson, et al.

Eve Pownall Award for Information Books

  • Australia's Deadly and Dangerous Animals, by Michael Cermak
  • Girl Stuff: Your Full-on Guide to the Teen Years, by Kaz Cooke
  • Kokoda Track: 101 Days, by Peter Macinnis
  • The Antarctica Book: Living in the Freezer, by Mark Norman
  • Parsley Rabbit's Book about Books, by Frances Watts; David Legge, illustrator
  • Ned Kelly's Jerilderie Letter, by Carole Wilkinson; Dean Jones, illustrator

The CBCA cites many other notable books in each category.

Hat tip to Oz's Judith Ridge for reporting the news of the awards on the Child_lit listserv.

Image from Working Title Press.

O, Canada! A Celebration of Canadian Books: "Rink of Dreams"

Blogger Around the children's book corner of the blogosphere, you'll find many posts on books from Canada. Organized by Colleen Mondor, the "One Shot World Tour" roster of participating blogs can be found later today at her blog, Chasing Ray.

Canada's national sport figures prominently in Rink of Dreams, a novel by Nancy L.M. Russell (Key Porter Books, 2005). It's the first year on an elite hockey team for Gary MacDonald, an eighth grader who must contend with not only a bullying teammate but also his parents' separation.  Luckily for Gary, a minor league hockey team moves to his town on Prince Edward Island, and his family befriends a rising superstar from Russia. Wallace touches on a lot of subjects—unnecessary violence in sports, steroid use, the loss of Canadian hockey teams to the U.S., the Russian mob—to keep her readers' attention, but the primary action lies in the evolving relationships between the main characters. As Gary contends with the many events of a pivotal year, he grows up emotionally. 11- to 14-year-old sports enthusiasts who favor books with plenty of plot constitute ideal audience for Rink of Dreams.

"Things Fall Apart" at 50; Achebe Honored

Chinua Achebe's classic novel about Africa, Things Fall Apart, turns fifty this year. Last night Achebe appeared at NYC's Town Hall, in a tribute sponsored by the writers' organization PEN American Center, among others. He was interviewed recently by the Village Voice. Until I read the Voice article, I didn't realize that the Nigerian-born author lives in the U.S. and teaches at Bard College. And I'm glad to hear kids are reading Things Fall Apart; I'd been thinking that it would be a good fit for teenagers. Achebe told journalist Carol Cooper,

 The number of children who are reading Things Fall Apart in high school has increased enormously, especially among the students who take my classes. For me, that's a very good sign. Because this generation has a lot of responsibility waiting for it. And how they link up with others their age in distant places may well determine how our civilization survives in this century.

In the Chronicle of Higher Education, you'll find another good piece, by Peter Monaghan, which situates Things Fall Apart, and other work by Achebe, in a literary context. If you're not familiar with the novel or the author, this article is a good place to start.