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#Barnes and noble the little house on the prairie complete set update
Today's update addresses her concern that the error was "not acknowledged in context as scholarship demands." I first came across Corsaro in 2015, when, Edi Campbell organized a group of us to work on what we call the We're the People summer reading booklists. As a result, this error has been replicated by others not understanding that it is incorrect nor taking the time to understand the structure of the association. " I’m glad to see that the error was corrected regarding the ALSC Board of Directors as the primary decision maker regrettably, the change was not acknowledged in context as scholarship demands. In a second comment about it, Corsaro wrote If she was talking about my post, she could have written to me directly. Today, I was over at Roger Sutton's post on the name change, and saw that Julie Corsaro had submitted a comment about the use of executive board. Whenever you see errors in my posts, please let me know! I'm happy to change them.
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Jamie Naidoo wrote to me about that error I subsequently corrected it but didn't note the initial error. Update on Jre board of directors: when I uploaded this post on June 26 I used "executive board" by mistake. It is now the Children's Literature Legacy Award. On Saturday afternoon, June 23, 2018, the board of directors of the Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC) voted to change the name of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award. I welcome your thoughts and if you can point to writings about any of this, please do! And if you use these for your own writing, please cite me (Debbie Reese) and AICL. Why did Sewell make decisions she did? Or Williams? How much autonomy did they have? How much was determined by Wilder? Or by the book editor? Or by the art department? I'll add others as time permits.Īs you'll see when you scroll down, I'm trying to match text on page whenever either book has an illustration. Today you'll see photos of the cover thru end of the first chapter. Apologies for the rough quality of the photos! I don't have lighting or equipment to do a professional-looking presentation of the books. If you want to, submit comments below and refer to the photo number when you refer to a specific one. So-here you go! I'll number the side-by-side photos as I place them here. Most of the books that have illustrations by Williams have the cover shown below (a notable exception was one that showed a photo of a little girl meant to be Laura). I don't have the book jacket, but for your reference, it looked like this: I'm using a hardcover copy of the Sewell book. I've pulled a lot of my materials on Wilder out, and thought some AICL readers might be interested in seeing the original illustrations done by Helen Sewell, compared to what Garth Williams did. I think they've got many problems that are not seen as such by most readers. I've done a lot of writing about the books and Wilder. On social media and in some newspapers, people are talking about a documentary about Laura Ingalls Wilder that is in development.