From the Author:
"Lucy Dove" is aimed at ages 8-11 years old.
"Lucy Dove" is not aimed at the 4-8 year old audience, but at the 8-11 year old audience. Conceptually, it's a little scary for preschoolers, and I wouldn't tell it to children younger than 7 or 8 years old. It works well as a readaloud, and I have successfully "storytold" it to family and adult audiences.
About the Author:
Janice M. Del Negro is the editor of The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, a monthly review journal of books for youth published through the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois. Ms. Del Negro came to the University of Illinois from the State Library of North Carolina, where she was a consultant for children's and public libraries throughout the state. Prior to this she worked for fourteen years as a children's librarian for the Chicago Public Library, including five years as Assistant Director of Systemwide Children's Services. Del Negro has reviewed for Booklist Magazine, School Library Journal, and Kirkus Reviews, and has served on both the Newbery and Caldecott committees. An experienced storyteller, librarian, book reviewer, publishing consultant and educator, Ms. Del Negro has been a featured speaker, storyteller and workshop leader, appearing at the 1997 Allerton Conference, Stories: From Fireplace to Cyberspace, the Illinois Library Association, the Bluestem Storytelling Festival, The Illinois Storytelling Festival, The Fox Valley Music and Storytelling Festival, the Champaign Public Library Children's Literature Festival, and many other celebratory events. She has spoken and conducted workshops on various aspects of children's literature and publishing, storytelling, and reading motivation for librarians, teachers, parents, and other educators in a variety of settings, including The University of Illinois, The University of Chicago, Dominican University, and DePaul University. Ms. Del Negro has performed and lectured extensively in libraries, schools, and community centers in the Midwest and Southern United States. Her specialties include transformation stories with a gentle emphasis on women and ghosts, retelling traditional folktales, and reading motivation through literature and storytelling. Her first audiocassette, Journeywomen and Ghostly Passages, was released in July, 1991. Two new audiocassettes, Romantic Wonder: Tales of Love and Magic, and Shadow's Sisters: Shapeshifters, Wraiths, and Spirited Women, will be released in November, 1998. Lucy Dove is her version of a traditional Celtic tale she has been telling for years, one that evolved from her search for stories with active heroines to offset the passive female protagonists of many popular fairy tales. This is her first picture book. Leonid Gore is a native of the former Soviet Union, where he illustrated many books before coming to the United States in 1990. He has illustrated several picture books since, including Jacob and the Stranger by Salley Derby, A Pointer review in Kirkus praised his art as "stunning... evanescent, suggestive... with a dreamlike aura, subtly dramatic characterizations, and a sly touch of whimsical humor." Leonid Gore lives in Brooklyn, New York.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.