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Judy Gelman - The Kids Book Club Book: Reading Ideas, Recipes, Activities, and Smart Tips for Organizing Terrific Kids Book Clubs

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The first complete guide-for use by adults and children-to creating fun and educational book clubs for kids.
As authors of The Book Club Cookbook, the classic guide to integrating great food and food-related discussion into book club gatherings, Judy Gelman and Vicki Levy Krupp hear a common refrain from parents, librarians, teachers, community leaders and kids themselves: How about writing a book for kids book clubs? Indeed, in recent years youth organizations, parents, libraries, schools, and our local, state, and federal governments have launched thousands of book clubs for children as a way to counter falling literacy rates and foster a love of reading. Based on surveys representing five hundred youth book clubs across the country and interviews with parents, kids, educators, and librarians, The Kids Book Club Book features:
_- the top fifty favorite book club reads for children ages eight to eighteen;
_- ideas and advice on forming great kids book clubs-and tips for kids who want to start their own book clubs;
_- recipes, activities, and insights from such bestselling childrens book authors as Christopher Paolini, Lois Lowry, Jerry Spinelli, Nancy Farmer, Christopher Paul Curtis, Andrew Clements, Laurie Halse Anderson, Norton Juster, and many others.
From recipes for the Dump Punch and egg salad sandwiches included in Kate DiCamillos Because of Winn-Dixie to instructionson how to make soap carvings like the ones left in the knot-hole of a tree in Harper Lees To Kill a Mockingbird, this book provides a bounty of ideas for making every kids book club a success.

Judy Gelman: author's other books


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Table of Contents PRAISE FOR THE BOOK CLUB COOKBOOK If your - photo 1
Table of Contents

PRAISE FOR THE BOOK CLUB COOKBOOK If youre in a book club youll savor the - photo 2
PRAISE FORTHE BOOK CLUB COOKBOOK
If youre in a book club youll savor the stories of the many culturally and - photo 3
If youre in a book club, youll savor the stories of the many culturally and ethnically diverse book groups the authors interviewed as much as the recipes.
USA Today

Part cookbook, part celebration of the written word, the volume illustrates how books and ideas can bring people together. And considering that [there are] an estimated seven million people in America involved in book clubs these days, this should prove to be a popular volume.
Publishers Weekly

The Book Club Cookbook excels at offering book groups new title ideas and a culinary way to spice up their discussions.
Library Journal

Judy Gelman and Vicki Levy Krupp... do an outstanding job of organizing their material so the plot of each book is summarized, the relevant origins and workings of each book group are outlined, and the recipes are clear.
The Philadelphia Inquirer

If you are searching for the literary equivalent of the power bar to energize your book group discussions, look no further.
Womens Lifestyle

This book equally inspires you to read, cook, and chew over books and food.
The Improper Bostonian

This yummy edition features recipes and discussion ideas for book club selections, with intriguing contributions from some of the authors of these favorite reads and fascinating profiles of a wide range of book clubs across the country.
Santa Rosa Press Democrat
Jeremy P. Tarcher / Penguin a member ofPENGUIN GROUP (USA) INC.New York
For Danny and Noah For Aaron Ben and Joanna Introduction The Kids Book - photo 4
For Danny and Noah

For Aaron, Ben, and Joanna
Introduction
The Kids Book Club Book was born of popular demand. While touring in 2004 to promote our first book, The Book Club Cookbook: Recipes and Food for Thought from Your Book Clubs Favorite Books and Authors (Tarcher, 2004), a compendium of recipes and discussion ideas for adult book clubs, we met countless adults and children who shared book clubs that met in libraries, schools, and community centers. These book clubs seemed to face many of the same challenges as all-adult book clubs. When will you write a similar book for kids book clubs? was a common refrain. We each have children ages eleven to fifteen and knew that book clubs for children were becoming popular in the Boston suburb where we both reside, so we decided to investigate the popularity of kids reading groups across the United States. We were excited by what we found. The large and growing number of children and adults participating in book discussion groups in living rooms, libraries, churches, schools, cafs, and bookstores throughout the country persuaded us to make kids book clubs the focus of our next project, a guide for adult book club facilitators and young adults interested in forming book clubs.
The proliferation of kids book clubs has been spurred, in part, by a grim reality: Reading rates in the United States drop precipitously after the early elementary school years. Finding a child curled up with a good book has become increasingly rare as high-tech temptations such as video games, wide-screen televisions, and the Internet compete for kids attention. According to a 2006 report sponsored by Scholastic, Inc., 44 percent of children ages five to eight read a book every day, while by ages fifteen to seventeen, the number drops to 16 percent. The reading habits of young adults between ages eighteen and twenty-four also are in sharp decline, according to a 2004 National Endowment for the Arts study, which found reading in this age group dropped by 28 percent since 1982. The survey also documented a steep decline in the number of adult readers over the past ten years.
The American Library Association, various government agencies, and organizations devoted to improving literacy all have responded to these trends with a number of initiatives, most notably by launching book discussion groups for youth in libraries, community centers, and schools. In addition, the number of private book clubs formed by parents and children continues to grow. Although no one has yet documented with exact figures the growth of kids book clubs, we noted a marked increase in the number of new clubs reported in our daily searches of media and on the Internet during our eighteen months of research. Children are responding to the surge in the number and variety of childrens titles published in recent decades, including multicultural literature, fantasy and science fiction. In addition, an explosion of new titlesbooks that are not generally assigned as part of school readingfeature topics relevant to the contemporary lives of young adults and teens, and have great appeal to older youth readers.
We heard about many other benefits to these groups as well. A librarian told us her group members are more likely to frequent the library and approach librarians with questions as a result of their library book club experiences. A parent reported that her mother-daughter book club affords the adults an opportunity to talk with their children about difficult issues in a safe setting. A teacher told us that the parents in her family book club feel more involved in the school community, and enjoy becoming familiar with quality childrens literature. A high school student said shes reading books she would never read on her own, and enjoys discussing them with friends and peers in a relaxed setting. A coordinator of a community-wide reading program reported that the intergenerational discussion of a book on autism helped enhance understanding of the topic and served as a catalyst for positive interactions among community members of all ages. And a leader of a book club for youthful offenders told us the boys in his book discussion group see a dramatic improvement in reading ability, comprehension, and self-esteem.
We set out to create a guide that would help youth and adult facilitators enhance and enliven their book club experiences, and give any adult who reads with a child information that will help both adult and child get the most out of that experience. Because the core of the book club experience is to read good books, we began by asking facilitators of youth book clubs across the country to suggest titles that provoked the most interesting discussions within their groups. One year and five hundred surveys later, our spreadsheet was filled with hundreds of recommended titles. We chose the top fifty titles to feature in The Kids Book Club Book.
From our surveys and telephone interviews, we learned that many book club members enjoy activities and foods related to the theme of the book during their meetings. We also learned that young readers gain a deeper understanding of the book when they connect with a books author. We decided to ask the living authors of the fifty featured books to contribute activity ideas, recipes, biographical information, or comments related to their work. To our delight, almost all of the authors were excited to participate. Kate DiCamillo suggested an activity for decorating candy wrappers and talking about sadness after reading her book
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