DU SOIS in Bologna: The Bologna Children’s Book Fair and Beyond

Are you a student in the Dominican University School of Information Studies? Interested in international literature for young people? Love to travel? You may have missed the 2024 trip, but there’s always next year. Check out some of what you missed and help inspire your Spring 2025 course selections (hint: registering for LIS 796!).

Exploring Bologna: Gorgeous Bologna is capital of the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy and home to the oldest university in the world (University of Bologna was founded in 1088!). Known as the Fat City (for the mouthwatering food), the Red City (for the red-tiled roofs and leftist politics), and the Learned City (for the university), Bologna has something for everyone’s tastes. Explore the endless list of restaurants and markets, but be sure to try the tortellini or Bolognese the region is known for. Wander the very-walkable city for amazing architectural sites spanning from the Etruscans to modern times. The stunning Biblioteca Salborsa (main library) and associated city government buildings are a personal favorite spot to explore. Or spend your first day in one or many of the free museums that dot the city—occupying your mind and belly is a great way to fight the first day jet lag!

Excursion to Ravenna: Bologna is a great jumping off point to explore the region. DU students have ventured to Modena, Verona, Florence, Ravenna, and more. This year, a 70 minute train ride took us to Ravenna to admire the stunning mosaic work for which the city is known. A complex of Roman and Byzantine religious buildings have been designated a UNECSO World Heritage site and provide a great deep dive into the history and art of the city. There are even locations to watch modern mosaic artists at work.

BCBF Day 1: Then to the main event—book fair day. The class joins thousands of book industry professionals in a celebration and exploration of kid lit from around the world (over 31,000 attendees this year!). The scope and scale of the event are massive, spanning five halls of the sprawling Bologna Fiere conference center complex. Day one highlights include: The lovely (and well-catered) opening ceremony, Stories Across Media: a celebration of the winners of the BolognaRagazzi CrossMedia award, Reading for a Healthy Planet: Inspiring Children’s Books to Help Achieve a Sustainable Future, and a delightful and delicious class dinner.   

BCBF Day 2: More to see and do with the global community of book lovers! The fair includes awards, programming, author and illustrator presentations, visual showcases, and publisher booths (for showing off and the buying/selling of international book rights). Today was our day for book-celebrity sightings: Mac Barnett (Spy Kid series), Oliver Jeffers (The Incredible Book Eating Boy), Lincoln Pierce (Big Nate books), and book publisher Neal Porter (Neal Porter Books). And, of course, a stop at one of the conference floor gelato stands!

Individual travel: SOIS students branched out on their own this year too, exploring in Rome, Florence and Venice on their free day and before/after the official class travel. If you’re already headed to Italy, you should definitely check some things off the bucket list.

Sneak Peek at 2025: Keep an eye out for an official Information Session in Fall 2024 to discuss the Spring 2025 course, including coursework, itinerary, associated costs, and more. And save the date for travel—BCBF 2025 will take place March 31-April 3, 2025. Slovenia will serve as next year’s guest of honor country and Brazilian illustrator Bruno DeAlmeida provides the bicycle-themed visual identity.

Not an SOIS student? Contact the Butler Center at butler@dom.edu for ways you can participate in 2025.

Arrivederci!

CaldeNott Results!

Yesterday evening twelve dutiful children’s book discussers met to consider a selection of picture books of international provenance, applying the Caldecott Medal terms and criteria to picture books ineligible for the actual award, in hopes of learning about some wonderful books, and the Caldecott Medal itself, in the process. We began with 18 very different books (you can find our complete discussion list here) and ended up with one winner and three honor books.

Our honor books are:

tiny creaturesTiny Creatures: The World of Microbes

illustrated by Emily Sutton (England)

written by Nicola Davies (Wales),

Candlewick Press, 2014

A scientific exploration of microbes explains their natural existence and celebrates the intricacies of their ecological function. Our committee appreciated Sutton’s use of scale, visually explaining the size and amount of the microbes around us; the friendly, approachable tone of her watercolor paintings, reinforcing the book’s even, almost enthusiastic approach to its subject; and the repeated presence of two children, not mentioned in the text, who, in their constant dress and curious attitude, serve as a ready point of access for the young reader.

at the same moment around the worldAt the Same Moment Around the World

illustrated and written by Clotilde Perrin (France)

Chronicle, 2014

This magical book circles the globe, exploring different children’s experiences at a single moment in time. We begin at 6:00am in Senegal, and travel east across time zones, to France, to Bulgaria, to Iraq, as kids of all stripes work, play, eat and dream. Each spread moves from one country to the next, connecting otherwise disparate locales and delivering a powerful message of human continuity. We appreciated the tall trim size, reflecting the longitudinal time zones; the attention to detail, with watery endpapers suggesting the surrounding oceans; and the indelible warmth of the culturally specific depictions. The final, fold-out map, that names the children and fixes them on the globe, adds concrete understanding to the sensitive expression of community.

rules of summerRules of Summer

illustrated and written by Shaun Tan (Australia)

Scholastic, 2014.

Two brothers offer fantastical, superstitious interpretations of a collection of seemingly pedestrian rules, brought to bigger-than-life through Tan’s edgy, immersive, dreamlike paintings. While each of the rules comes to individual life in its own spread, Tan links them together in an emotional arc that traces a bumpy, competitive, and ultimately tender relationship between two brothers who appear together, at the story’s end, surrounded by drawings of their imaginative adventures. We appreciated the painterly precision of the drama; the powerfully depicted relationship; the curious, sometimes impenetrable symbolism of birds and crowns; and the way the sinister undercurrent of the imaginings resolves into dependable comfort.

And our CaldeNott Medal goes to:

foxs gardenFox’s Garden

illustrated by Princess Camcam (Germany)

Enchanted Lion, 2014

A fox seeks shelter for herself and her babies and, when chased from a house on a wintry night, takes refuge in the nearby greenhouse. The house’s boy delivers a basket of sustenance, and the fox repays the kindness, decorating his bedroom with flowers as he sleeps. Princess Camcam creates her illustrations in three dimensions, photographing dioramas of intricately cut and painted paper, carefully arranged and lit. The effect is intimate and tranquil, with hushed colors, soft shadows, and an immediate sense of place. The artist’s careful use of sharp and cloudy focus pulls the viewer into the images, and her supreme command of light conveys the chill of the air, the stillness of the snow, and the arrival of the morning. Simply breathtaking.

It was noted that ours is not a “mock” endeavor but is instead, as the only one of its kind, the CaldeNott. Boom. It was also noted that we have chosen a book about a fox two years in a row. Make of that what you will.

This fall we’ll (re)turn our attention to international picture books, to do this all over again in 2016. Feel free to send any candidate titles my way. In the meantime, I’ll be off to the Bologna International Children’s Book Fair with a group of students in March, in search of our own. We’ll keep you posted.

USBBY’s 2014 Outstanding International Books List

Here at the Butler Center we’re proud to host the USBBY Outstanding International Books Committee for their year-end deliberations. And, given our recent trip to the Bologna Children’s Book Fair, we’re especially interested in their choices.

Here’s the 2014 list. I see some favorites. How about you? What international books for children and teens are on your radar for next year’s list?

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