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Pat Mora

Writer, Poet, Reader

 
 
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Happy International Children’s Book Day!

Pat Mora

International Children’s Book Day (ICBD), April 2nd is Hans Christian Andersen’s Birthday and is celebrated around the world to inspire a love of reading and promote children’s books. IBBY Mexico has chosen the theme for the 2012 International Children’s Book Day, “Once Upon a Time There Was a Story the Whole World Told” to remind us that the wonder and delight of books for children begins with great storytelling. Andersen, master storyteller, would no doubt agree. Share a story and read a book with the children in your life today. You can download the beautiful poster and find wonderful ideas for celebrating International Children’s Book Day on the United States Board on Books for Young People ICBD webpage.

Thank you to Doris Gebel, President USBBY, and today’s guest blogger.

2012 poster created by Juan Gedovius
Posted in Díapalooza 2012, IBBY, international children's books, USBBY | Leave a reply

Díapalooza!

Pat Mora

Welcome to our month-long celebration of Día’s 16th Anniversary and to our third annual Díapalooza! Día advocates are readers who believe that children matter and that books matter. We want every child to experience bookjoy, the pleasure and power of reading. We want all families to be reading families in all languages and cultures.

April is a month with many literary and literacy observances, reminders. Of course, our real literacy work is done all year long, day by day, día por día. This year during Díapalooza we’re featuring the first Día Author & Illustrator Ambassadors  and an alphabet for Día advocates, A-Zing.

I’m looking forward to participating in Día book fiestas in Houston April 21 at Discovery Green and in my home city of El Paso, Texas, April 30th at Burnet and Kohlberg Schools. Thanks to all the committed and energetic literacy advocates who plan and support annual, culminating April Día celebrations across the country. Special thanks to REFORMA members, my first partners in Día , and to ALSC where Día is now housed.

Spring: hope, children, the hope of our world. “Everyone is the age of their heart,” says a Guatemalan proverb. Let’s all be young at heart as we champion the young, let’s creatively share bookjoy.

Enjoy this video of past Día celebrations!

Posted in ALSC, Bookjoy, Día, Día Author and Illustrator Ambassadors, Díapalooza 2012, Pat's travels | Leave a reply

Día Author & Illustrator Ambassadors

Pat Mora

Next month we’ll be celebrating Día’s 16th Anniversary. Friends ask me what it’s like to have a teenager again (I’m the mother of three grown children), and I laugh and say, “My teenager belongs to a huge national family of Día advocates. Like any teenager, she still needs her family to grow into her full potential.”

Today we’re saluting our first Día Author & Illustrator Ambassadors, talented and busy artists and literacy supporters who have generously agreed to promote Día, to promote linking all children to books, languages and cultures. I’m grateful to each of them for sharing bookjoy, and I encourage you to savor their books.

Our third Díapalooza, a Día Month on this blog, begins April 1. We hope you’ll visit us often during April and bring friends! Throughout the month we’ll feature:

News about Día events throughout the country by guest posters
Día Reflections by Pat
Videos made by some of our Día Author & Illustrator Ambassadors
A New Alphabet — Día Advocates A-Zing!
Book Giveaways
          … and Surprises!

So stop by during Díapalooza–or simply subscribe to Bookjoy and receive new posts automatically. Celebremos!

Posted in Día, Día Author and Illustrator Ambassadors, Díapalooza 2012 | Leave a reply

Gracias to Con Tinta and UNLV

Pat Mora

Thanks to poet and Pilgrimage editor and publisher Maria Melendez and her Con Tinta colleagues, I enjoyed a wonderful day in Chicago, March 1. The Association of Writers & Writing Programs (AWP) was having its annual conference, and Maria et. al. had organized a 2012 AWP Tribute for me that they’d titled: “Eloquence & Bookjoy.” I read from published and new writings, and Diana Garcia, Beatriz Terrazas, John Drury & Xánath Caraza generously spoke about my work. A special memory.

Photo by Xanath Caraza

 

Photo by Xanath Caraza

That evening Con Tinta, hosted a Pachanga at which I saw writing friends and met new writers. Paloma Martinez-Cruz provided guitar music, and poets Irasema Gonzalez and Diana Pando read some of my poems to the audience. I received the Con Tinta Achievement Award for Literary Activism and a wonderful statue of Our Lady of Guadalupe from Oaxaca. Maria and her colleagues are all busy people, and I wish to express my deep thanks to her and all who created two special memories and who deepened my commitment as a writer and literacy/literary advocate.

Con Tinta is a coalition of Chicano/Latino cultural activist poets and writers who believe in affirming a positive and pro-active presence in American literature. Con Tinta’s mission is to create awareness through the cultivation of emerging talent, through the promotion and presentation of artistic expression, and through the collective voice of support to its members, communities, and allies.

Photo by Xanath Caraza

On March 17, I had the good fortune to be part of the University of Nevada Las Vegas’ first Gayle A. Zeiter Children’s Literature Conference. My friend, Dr. Cyndi Giorgis chaired the friendly group of UNLV colleagues and students who created a day with lots of helpful strategies for promoting books for children. I again enjoyed listening to talented illustrator and writer James Ransome and was glad to also meet and listen to his wife, the writer Lesa Cline-Ransome. Each is mighty talented and as a duo presenting their work and ideas, they are mighty funny.

Children’s Literature Conferences are an effective strategy for gathering librarians, teachers, professors, etc. who want to share their commitment to children and literacy and for motivating attendees and presenters to re-commit to this challenging goal. I enjoyed speaking about my writing, Día, sharing bookjoy, creativity, and the art of teaching and writing. As always, I enjoyed chatting with attendees and was inspired by their commitment to students and young people. Congratulations to Cyndi and her colleagues on initiating an important tradition and for including me in their inaugural event.

 

Posted in children's literature conferences, Pat's travels, poetry | Leave a reply

Women’s History Month

Pat Mora

People sometimes ask: do we really need annual observances such as African American History Month, Hispanic Heritage Month, El día de los niños/El día de los libros, Children’s Day/Book Day, International Women’s Day and Women’s History Month? YES.

Do we see our national diversity when we look at our computer, TV and movie screens? Newspaper and magazine editors and reporters? Publishers’ lists, book reviews and reviewers? Politicians and national leaders? Also, our complex national diversity is not yet appropriately recognized and celebrated in the sciences or the arts.

The theme for this year’s National Women’s  History Month Project is Women’s Education: Women’s Empowerment. This past week I was asked questions about the role of education in my life. I am a first-generation college graduate, and in answering the questions, I was remnded how grateful I feel and how important it is to motivate girls and young women to invest in themselves. I wrote, ” My college education was an important factor in whatever success I’ve had as a parent, teacher, administrator, writer and speaker. For a student interested in new opportunities, a college education can be transformative. It dramatically enriches a life.”

 

Posted in Día, diversity, Hispanic Heritage Month | Leave a reply

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