Friday, November 11, 2011
It's coming.....
Our best deals of the year are coming soon to a computer near you! Our Black Friday sale is almost here! You can count down the hours with us. Deals are available while supplies last, so set your alarm clocks! I know I have!!! Happy shopping!
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Back to School Sale
Hello book friends!
It's time for lunchboxes, backpacks and shiny new shoes! It's also time to get back to the books.
Some of our best books are on sale for the month of September only:
Additional titles are on sale online now. Are you raising an Usborne Reader? There are many ways to fill your bookshelves with our books:
It's time for lunchboxes, backpacks and shiny new shoes! It's also time to get back to the books.
Some of our best books are on sale for the month of September only:
Additional titles are on sale online now. Are you raising an Usborne Reader? There are many ways to fill your bookshelves with our books:
- host an online eShow
- host an Usborne book fair at your school, preschool, daycare center, community center, etc.
- become an Usborne consultant
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Have you seen????
Our amazing New Consultant deal? Get the BIG Consultant kit for just $149 - 25 titles, all the supplies you'll need, a website and so much more. Valued at $380 ~ for just $149 INCLUDING shipping! Offer expires soon, so act now! BEST PART: no minimums, no quotas, NOTHING, EVER. http://tinyurl.com/SummerSignupSpecial
PSSSST: If you're already a consultant, but haven't placed an order in over a year, YOU TOO can sign up again as a consultant!!!
PSSSST: If you're already a consultant, but haven't placed an order in over a year, YOU TOO can sign up again as a consultant!!!
| BOOKS YOU'LL RECEIVE |
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| BUSINESS SUPPLIES |
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Monday, January 17, 2011
"I have a dream"
Those four words, and the movement that they represent, have changed our world forever.
As we celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. and his legacy, share his story with your children or grandchildren too.
- Thoughtful introduction to the extraordinary life of Martin Luther King Jr. for young readers.
- Lively narrative text, colorful illustrations and photographs bring the subject alive.
- Includes essential facts and insightful details to help the reader understand the famous person and their times.
- Internet links to recommended websites to find out more about Martin Luther King's life and times.
- Part of Young Reading Series 3 for fully confident readers.
Buy it now!
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said, "Life's most persistent and urgent question is: 'What are you doing for others?'"
Each year, Americans across the country answer that question by coming together on the King Holiday to serve their neighbors and communities.
The MLK Day of Service is a part of United We Serve, the President's national call to service initiative. It calls for Americans from all walks of life to work together to provide solutions to our most pressing national problems. For more information, visit www.MLKday.gov and take the MLK 25 Challenge.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
BOGO for Books? YES!!!!
Join Usborne Books in January, and you can share your love for our books
with a friend, neighbor, or coworker for FREE. Yes, FREE.
Why not start the new year with a new home-based business that is completely flexible, family friendly, and now, FREE for your best bud. *You can split the cost of the first kit, making this a fabulous deal for you both, if you prefer. There are two kits to choose from:
- Business Kit - Retails for over $380 - now just $129 plus taxes, shipping & handling
- Mini Business Kit - Retails for over $150 - now just $49 plus taxes, shipping & handling
Bring a friend, the second kit is FREE!
Visit www.ExploreWithUsborne.com for more details!
Hurry! This offer ends January 28th, 2011
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Save up to 70% off some of our best sellers!
It's that time of year! Time for giving thanks, gathering with friends and family, eating turkey and pie, playing football.... and BLACK FRIDAY & CYBER MONDAY SALES!
The previews are up and this year's sale is fantastic! Some of my favorites are DEEPLY discounted!
This year, unlike any other year, we're offering TWO different opportunities to save. You will have two 24 hour sales to take advantage of:
The previews are up and this year's sale is fantastic! Some of my favorites are DEEPLY discounted!
This year, unlike any other year, we're offering TWO different opportunities to save. You will have two 24 hour sales to take advantage of:
- Black Friday Sale: starting at midnight central time on Friday
- Cyber Monday Sale: starting at midnight central time on Monday
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Anna Hibiscus - LOVE LOVE LOVE her!
I've adored the new Anna Hibiscus books since the moment I opened my Usborne/Kane Miller box. And now, the reviews are in and others love her too!
Anna Hibiscus / Hooray for Anna Hibiscus
By Atinuke
Illustrated by Lauren Tobia
Kane Miller (a division of EDC Publishing)
$5.99
ISBN: 978-1-935279-73-0 / ISBN 978-1-935279-74-7
Ages 4-9
On shelves September 1, 2010
The rare dual review! I hardly ever do them, but today is special.
Rarer than quality board books. More elusive than good picture books for older readers. The goal, the gem, the one kind of book all children’s librarians seek but know are so difficult to find . . . . the really well written early chapter book. Now let’s say you’ve found one. It happens. Lots exist, to a certain extent (and if you know where to look). Please do me the favor of now asking yourself the following questions about said book: (A) Does it contain characters from another country? If you answered yes, then (B) Are those characters human? At this point, we aren’t even talking about rare early chapter books. We’re talking about near non-existent ones in the American book marketplace. Even if you answered yes to both (A) and (B), can you still guarantee me that the book is really well written with phenomenal illustrations? Cause aside from the occasional White Elephant or Rickshaw Girl there’s not a whole heckuva lot to choose from.
That’s probably part of the reason I’m so enormously fond of this new Anna Hibiscus series by Nigeria-born author Atinuke. Not only are the stories in both Anna Hibiscus and its sequel Hooray for Anna Hibiscus charming but they manage to walk the fine line that exists between truth and perception. There’s not a kid in this country that won’t identify with Anna right off the bat, even if her life is entirely different from their own.
“Anna Hibiscus lives in Africa. Amazing Africa.” Get used to those words. It won’t be the last time you hear them. Anna Hibiscus is a little girl who lives in a beautiful white compound surrounded by her extended family. Aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents all live together in a single home. Anna’s mother is originally from Canada, but she fits right in with everyone and the books Anna Hibiscus and Hooray for Anna Hibiscus follow Anna’s small adventures with her family. One minute she’s obsessed with the idea of snow, and the next she’s singing a song for a president of another country. Sometimes she has to watch her twin baby brothers Double and Trouble, and sometimes she’s watching the family goat butt heads with the family’s new generator. Whatever the case, Anna’s a sweet, thoroughly likable character and readers will find themselves longing for a life where there are always cousins to play with, and sweet mango trees in the backyard to climb for fun.
She has a way with words, that Atinuke. It will surprise no one reading these stories that she is a professional storyteller. For example, any kid who has ever had a younger sibling that was teething will instantly understand why Atinuke uses capital letters to describe the newly awakened Double and Trouble with the sentence, “They were Awake and Angry.” The tone of the books is always dead on. Though Anna learns a couple lessons in the course of these tales, you never feel as if the books are preachy or didactic. For example, when Anna refuses to get her hair done any more, all her grandmother has to say is “Leave her. She will learn,” and you know that grandma speaks the exact truth.
Atinuke’s other great strength is that she manages to balance the contemporary and the traditional with ease. I’m sure we may have an early chapter book or two set in Africa (though none immediately come to mind) but I CERTAINLY can’t think of any that take place in a modern setting. The only book that comes to mind was City Boy by Jan Michael, and that certainly was a title for older readers. In the Anna Hibiscus books, though, uncles are calling one another on cell phones and Anna’s texting her aunt across the sea. At the same time, the story “Auntie Comfort” defines the traditions of the family that are still in place. Says the book, “Anna’s mother and father and aunties and uncles drive to work in their cars. They send text messages and e-mails around the world, and call from the market on their mobile phones to see what shopping needs doing. But the clothes they wear are made from colorful African cloth, waxed and dyed and printed. The languages they speak are African as well as English.” So the duality of old and new are shown in a clever little tale. One that I suspect won’t age all that readily.
It’s interesting to me that the very first story in Anna Hibiscus is a tale of how Anna and her mom, dad, and brothers try to take a vacation without the extended relatives, only to realize that they need them more than they thought. At first I was puzzled as to why you’d just thrust the reader into the family situation so abruptly. Then I realized that Atinuke uses this story to introduce to kids the notion of having lots of cousins, aunts, uncles, and grandparents around at all times. It’s like the characters are being introduced on a stage to our applause. And once you understand the living situation (everyone lives in one big house) the rest of the book will make that much more sense. The story also reminded me more than a little of that classic folktale It Could Always Be Worse, which is fun.
Two of the stories in the books are rather similar to one another, but I appreciated their presence. Part of what makes the Anna Hibiscus tales so remarkable is that Anna learns continually about differences in class. So in the first book, the story “Anna Hibiscus sells oranges” tells the tale of Anna envying the girls outside her compound who must sell fruit to earn a living, only to learn what it really means to have to be a kid and work for a living. In the second book, “The other side of the city” shows Anna the poorer neighborhoods of her town. These are very careful little stories, but they really reinforce the message of being grateful for what you already have. That’s not the only topic Atinuke isn’t afraid to broach in an early chapter book, of course. I’ve almost never seen a book that talks about the amount of work that goes into styling African hair that is “thicker and shinier and curlier than any other hair in the whole world.” The tale of Anna’s refusal to engage in the traditional Saturday braiding and weaving of her hair and the horrific results of that choice is like no story I’ve ever read anywhere before.
Now right from the start folks might worry that the men in this book all seem to go to work while the women stay home and remain traditional keepers of the home. That is not really the case, though. One of the first stories in the book is about Auntie Comfort who lives and has a job in America and whom Grandfather worries may have forgotten her African roots (no reason to fear). In the course of that tale we learn that everyone in the home has a job. And in the second book we hear a lot about the various jobs the aunts hold in the family. It seems that only Anna’s grandfather and grandmother are always home without jobs. Not a problem as I see it.
All this would be enough but it’s illustrator Lauren Tobia who knows how to really bring these stories to life. Every character in these books looks exactly right. Anna herself is charming. Half the time (if you’re watching) her flip-flops go flying hither and thither without her notice. I love the different kinds of braided hair you notice throughout the text and the clothes. With just a few swipes of the pen, Ms. Tobia can conjure up a situation fraught with stress or the nicest, homiest family scene. If kids start yearning to belong to a gigantic fun family like the one Anna Hibiscus belongs to, at least some of the credit is going to have to go to Lauren Tobia for capturing this idyllic community.
Admittedly, I would have liked Atinuke to give her books a country and not just a vague “Africa” for where they take place. It’s great for kids to know what life is like overseas, but there’s always the danger that they’ll just assume that all of Africa is one and the same. That said, it’s hard to find much fault with such a lovely series. From the pictures to the stories to the writing to the tone, everything about these books makes you feel happy and content. Here’s hoping there are more Anna Hibiscus books somewhere in the works. A finer crop of overseas fare I have yet to find for the early chapter book set. Memorable and enchanting.
On shelves September 1st.
Anna Hibiscus books are available NOW at www.UsborneBookstoreforKids.com or ExploreWithUsborne.com for just $5.99!
Related Links:
Review of the Day: Anna Hibiscus by Atinuke and Hooray for Anna Hibiscus! by Atinuke
August 11th, 2010
Anna Hibiscus / Hooray for Anna HibiscusBy Atinuke
Illustrated by Lauren Tobia
Kane Miller (a division of EDC Publishing)
$5.99
ISBN: 978-1-935279-73-0 / ISBN 978-1-935279-74-7
Ages 4-9
On shelves September 1, 2010
The rare dual review! I hardly ever do them, but today is special.
Rarer than quality board books. More elusive than good picture books for older readers. The goal, the gem, the one kind of book all children’s librarians seek but know are so difficult to find . . . . the really well written early chapter book. Now let’s say you’ve found one. It happens. Lots exist, to a certain extent (and if you know where to look). Please do me the favor of now asking yourself the following questions about said book: (A) Does it contain characters from another country? If you answered yes, then (B) Are those characters human? At this point, we aren’t even talking about rare early chapter books. We’re talking about near non-existent ones in the American book marketplace. Even if you answered yes to both (A) and (B), can you still guarantee me that the book is really well written with phenomenal illustrations? Cause aside from the occasional White Elephant or Rickshaw Girl there’s not a whole heckuva lot to choose from.That’s probably part of the reason I’m so enormously fond of this new Anna Hibiscus series by Nigeria-born author Atinuke. Not only are the stories in both Anna Hibiscus and its sequel Hooray for Anna Hibiscus charming but they manage to walk the fine line that exists between truth and perception. There’s not a kid in this country that won’t identify with Anna right off the bat, even if her life is entirely different from their own.
“Anna Hibiscus lives in Africa. Amazing Africa.” Get used to those words. It won’t be the last time you hear them. Anna Hibiscus is a little girl who lives in a beautiful white compound surrounded by her extended family. Aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents all live together in a single home. Anna’s mother is originally from Canada, but she fits right in with everyone and the books Anna Hibiscus and Hooray for Anna Hibiscus follow Anna’s small adventures with her family. One minute she’s obsessed with the idea of snow, and the next she’s singing a song for a president of another country. Sometimes she has to watch her twin baby brothers Double and Trouble, and sometimes she’s watching the family goat butt heads with the family’s new generator. Whatever the case, Anna’s a sweet, thoroughly likable character and readers will find themselves longing for a life where there are always cousins to play with, and sweet mango trees in the backyard to climb for fun.
She has a way with words, that Atinuke. It will surprise no one reading these stories that she is a professional storyteller. For example, any kid who has ever had a younger sibling that was teething will instantly understand why Atinuke uses capital letters to describe the newly awakened Double and Trouble with the sentence, “They were Awake and Angry.” The tone of the books is always dead on. Though Anna learns a couple lessons in the course of these tales, you never feel as if the books are preachy or didactic. For example, when Anna refuses to get her hair done any more, all her grandmother has to say is “Leave her. She will learn,” and you know that grandma speaks the exact truth.
Atinuke’s other great strength is that she manages to balance the contemporary and the traditional with ease. I’m sure we may have an early chapter book or two set in Africa (though none immediately come to mind) but I CERTAINLY can’t think of any that take place in a modern setting. The only book that comes to mind was City Boy by Jan Michael, and that certainly was a title for older readers. In the Anna Hibiscus books, though, uncles are calling one another on cell phones and Anna’s texting her aunt across the sea. At the same time, the story “Auntie Comfort” defines the traditions of the family that are still in place. Says the book, “Anna’s mother and father and aunties and uncles drive to work in their cars. They send text messages and e-mails around the world, and call from the market on their mobile phones to see what shopping needs doing. But the clothes they wear are made from colorful African cloth, waxed and dyed and printed. The languages they speak are African as well as English.” So the duality of old and new are shown in a clever little tale. One that I suspect won’t age all that readily.
It’s interesting to me that the very first story in Anna Hibiscus is a tale of how Anna and her mom, dad, and brothers try to take a vacation without the extended relatives, only to realize that they need them more than they thought. At first I was puzzled as to why you’d just thrust the reader into the family situation so abruptly. Then I realized that Atinuke uses this story to introduce to kids the notion of having lots of cousins, aunts, uncles, and grandparents around at all times. It’s like the characters are being introduced on a stage to our applause. And once you understand the living situation (everyone lives in one big house) the rest of the book will make that much more sense. The story also reminded me more than a little of that classic folktale It Could Always Be Worse, which is fun.
Two of the stories in the books are rather similar to one another, but I appreciated their presence. Part of what makes the Anna Hibiscus tales so remarkable is that Anna learns continually about differences in class. So in the first book, the story “Anna Hibiscus sells oranges” tells the tale of Anna envying the girls outside her compound who must sell fruit to earn a living, only to learn what it really means to have to be a kid and work for a living. In the second book, “The other side of the city” shows Anna the poorer neighborhoods of her town. These are very careful little stories, but they really reinforce the message of being grateful for what you already have. That’s not the only topic Atinuke isn’t afraid to broach in an early chapter book, of course. I’ve almost never seen a book that talks about the amount of work that goes into styling African hair that is “thicker and shinier and curlier than any other hair in the whole world.” The tale of Anna’s refusal to engage in the traditional Saturday braiding and weaving of her hair and the horrific results of that choice is like no story I’ve ever read anywhere before.
Now right from the start folks might worry that the men in this book all seem to go to work while the women stay home and remain traditional keepers of the home. That is not really the case, though. One of the first stories in the book is about Auntie Comfort who lives and has a job in America and whom Grandfather worries may have forgotten her African roots (no reason to fear). In the course of that tale we learn that everyone in the home has a job. And in the second book we hear a lot about the various jobs the aunts hold in the family. It seems that only Anna’s grandfather and grandmother are always home without jobs. Not a problem as I see it.
All this would be enough but it’s illustrator Lauren Tobia who knows how to really bring these stories to life. Every character in these books looks exactly right. Anna herself is charming. Half the time (if you’re watching) her flip-flops go flying hither and thither without her notice. I love the different kinds of braided hair you notice throughout the text and the clothes. With just a few swipes of the pen, Ms. Tobia can conjure up a situation fraught with stress or the nicest, homiest family scene. If kids start yearning to belong to a gigantic fun family like the one Anna Hibiscus belongs to, at least some of the credit is going to have to go to Lauren Tobia for capturing this idyllic community.
Admittedly, I would have liked Atinuke to give her books a country and not just a vague “Africa” for where they take place. It’s great for kids to know what life is like overseas, but there’s always the danger that they’ll just assume that all of Africa is one and the same. That said, it’s hard to find much fault with such a lovely series. From the pictures to the stories to the writing to the tone, everything about these books makes you feel happy and content. Here’s hoping there are more Anna Hibiscus books somewhere in the works. A finer crop of overseas fare I have yet to find for the early chapter book set. Memorable and enchanting.
On shelves September 1st.
Anna Hibiscus books are available NOW at www.UsborneBookstoreforKids.com or ExploreWithUsborne.com for just $5.99!
Related Links:
- Aaaaaaah! Welsh!
- Learn more about Atinuke’s life at Walker Books.
- Or hear about her storytelling workshop at the BBC.
- In 2008, Anna Hibiscus was shortlisted for the Branford Boase Award and the United Kingdom Literacy Association shortlist.
- And I dare say, I could spend hours just looking at the images on Lauren Tobia’s blog. Or sketchbook, for that matter.
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