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The Featured Speakers are set for the
6th Annual Bond Children's Literature Conference in 2009!
Brian Selznick
Hello there. My name is Brian Selznick and I’m the author
and illustrator of The Invention of Hugo Cabret. I was born in 1966 in New
Jersey. I have a sister who is a teacher, a brother who is a brain surgeon, and
five nephews and one niece. I studied at The Rhode Island School of Design and
after I graduated from college I worked at Eeyore’s Books for Children in New
York City. I learned all about children’s books from my boss Steve Geck who is
now an editor of children’s books at Greenwillow. While I was at Eeyore’s I also
painted the windows for holidays and book events.
My first book, The Houdini Box, which I both wrote and illustrated, was
published in 1991 while I was still working at the bookstore. Since then, I have
illustrated many books for children, including Frindle by Andrew Clements, The
Doll People by Ann Martin and Laura Godwin, Amelia and Eleanor Go for a Ride by
Pam Munez-Ryan and The Dinosaurs of Waterhouse Hawkins by Barbara Kerley, which
received a 2001 Caldecott Honor.
I have also written a few other books myself, including The Boy of a Thousand
Faces, but The Invention of Hugo Cabret is by far the longest and most involved
book I’ve ever worked on.
I live in Brooklyn, New York, and San Diego, California.
source:
http://www.theinventionofhugocabret.com
Kadir Nelson
Kadir Nelson began drawing at the age of three, and
painting at age ten. I have always been an artist, Nelson explains. It’s part of
my DNA. At age ten, his uncle Michael Morris, an artist and art instructor,
apprenticed Nelson. My uncle gave me my foundation in art, says the artist.
Under the encouragement and tutelage of both his uncle and high school art
teacher, Nelson experimented with several different media and began painting in
oils at sixteen. He would later submit his paintings to art competitions and win
an art scholarship to study at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. Upon
graduating with honors, Nelson began his professional career as an artist,
publishing his work and receiving commissions from publishers and production
studios such as Dreamworks, where he served as a the lead conceptual artist for
Steven Spielberg’s Amistad and Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, Sports
Illustrated, Coca-Cola, The United States Postal Service and Major League
Baseball, among others.
In 1999, Nelson began to collaborate with several notable authors on a series of
picture books. Presently, almost twenty illustrated books are in print,
including Debbie Allen's DANCING IN THE WINGS, Ntozake Shange’s Coretta Scott
King Award-winning book, ELLINGTON WAS NOT A STREET, Deloris and Roslyn Jordan's
best-seller SALT IN HIS SHOES, Spike and Tonya Lee’s PLEASE, BABY, PLEASE, and
Carol Boston Weatherford’s MOSES: When Harriet Tubman Led her People to Freedom,
for which Nelson won a Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award, a Caldecott Honor
and an NAACP Image Award.
Most recently, Nelson released his authorial debut, WE ARE THE SHIP: The Story
of Negro League Baseball (Jump at the Sun/Disney), a New York Times best-selling
tribute to the Negro Baseball Leagues which Nelson crafted over a period of
almost eight years.
Many of his paintings are found in the collections of notable institutions and
museums, including the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, the National Baseball Hall
of Fame and the U.S. House of Representatives; as well as in the collections of
notable individuals, including Steven Spielberg, Denzel Washington, Will and
Jada Smith, Sharon Stone, Spike and Tonya Lee and Queen Latifah. His paintings
have also decorated the sets of television sitcoms "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air"
and "The Jamie Foxx Show," as well as feature films "Friday, "Set it Off" and
The Beauty Shop starring Queen Latifah.
Nelson also exhibits his work in galleries and museums throughout the country as
well as overseas. A selected list of exhibition venues includes the Akron Art
Museum in Akron Ohio, The Museum of African American History in Detroit, The
Smithsonian Anacostia Museum in Washington DC, the Studio Museum in Harlem, New
York, The Bristol Museum in England, The Citizen's Gallery of Yokohama, Japan
and the Center for Culture of Tijuana, Mexico.
Although Nelson works in a variety of styles, he always retains a sense of
identity and focus in his work. Nelson’s works are instantly recognizable by the
emotion and strength of his varied subject matter. My focus is to create images
of people who demonstrate a sense of hope and nobility. I want to show the
strength and integrity of the human being and the human spirit. That is exactly
the feeling one walks away with after viewing one of Nelson’s paintings a
feeling that runs all the way down to your DNA.
source:
http://www.kadirnelson.com
Joan Bauer
In her nine novels, Joan
Bauer explores difficult issues with humor and hope. Her books have won numerous
awards, among them the Newbery Honor Medal, the LA Times Book Prize, the
Christopher Award, and the Golden Kite Award of the Society of Children's Book
Writers and Illustrators. She has twice participated in the State Department's
professional speaker's program, going to both Kazakhstan and Croatia where she
talked with students, writers, educators, and children at risk about her life,
her novels, and the power of being an overcomer.
Joan has also been the recipient of the ASTAL Award for Outstanding
Contributions to Literature for Young People, the Michigan Thumbs-up! Award for
Children's Literature, the Delacorte Prize for a First Young Adult Novel, the
Pacific Northwest Library Association Award, the New Jersey Reading Association
M. Jerry Weiss Award, the New England Booksellers Award, and the Boston Public
Library's "Literary Light" Award. Her novels have been chosen for many best book
lists, among them, ALA Notable Books, ALA Best Books, ALA Quick Picks,
American Bookseller Pick of the List, School Library Journal Best Books,
Smithsonian Notable Children's Books, VOYA's Perfect 10s. Her novel Rules of the
Road was chosen as one of the top young adult books of the last 25 years by the
American Library Association.
She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband, computer scientist Evan
Bauer, and their intrepid wheaten terrier Max. Her daughter Jean is a PhD
candidate in early american history.
source:
http://www.joanbauer.com
Sara Pennypacker
Author of the Clementine series and Stuart's Cape, Stuart
Goes to School and Pierre in Love.
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