User:P64/FSF/Children's

< User:P64‎ | FSF

subpages

/Carnegie ; /Greenaway ; /Guardian ; /Newbery ; /Caldecott
/VIAF ; /VIAF/Joint 2014
/work --2012-12-23 redirect
/Dickinson ; /Jones ; /Nimmo
/Narnia
Alexander/Prydain is one FSF neighbor with subpage
Konigsburg is one FSF neighbor
McCaffrey/Pern is several FSF neighbors (20121216 inclg the Sandbox neighbor)


Attention. There are two "Awards" sections. (among other things).

Edward Ardizzone
ISFDB
Rachel Field 2016-03-04
Rachel Lyman Field; Mrs. Arthur Siegfried Pederson
ISFDB
  • 24-29331 six plays
  • 27-17819 The magic pawnshop; a New Year's eve fantasy, by Rachel Field, decorated by Elizabeth MacKinstry (E.P. Dutton, c1927)
  • 31-28324 The yellow shop, by Rachel Field, illustrated by the author (Doubleday Doran, 1931)
  • 29-2702 (HathiTrust) The white cat, and other old French fairy tales, by Mme. la comtesse d'Aulnoy, arranged by Rachel Field and drawn by E. MacKinstry (Macmillan, 1928) --per intro by EM, transl 1860s, abridged/arranged by Field
  • 29-25017 American folk and fairy tales, selected by Rachel Field, with drawings by Margaret Freeman (Scribner's, 1929)


and Arthur Pederson, 1937 37-33909

Neil Randall
P64/FSF/Children's at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database

https://lccn.loc.gov/n88030889 (20, all except PC Magazine wireless) https://uwaterloo.ca/english/people-profiles/neil-randall

VIAF=264175391 35175325 305000722 (lc undiff) same person, distinguished as two by the two Polish libraries and undifferentiated at LC


Categories and redirects edit

1

Template talk:R from fictional character#Two auto-populated categories

By the way, the latter is one of the 72 subcats in the former. They are siblings, too, and two of only three! subcats in Category:Fiction-based redirects to list entries.

Do we really have only 10 redirects from fictional places? (Template {{R from fictional place}} has been transcluded only 10 times, so that the auto-populated cat Redirects from fictional places contains only 10 pages.) Anyway, that cat should be another subcat in Category:Fiction-based redirects to list entries, I believe, as the latter is not really about lists.

Middle-earth stand apart from unique in our coverage of fiction? Perhaps not uniquely, as "Anime and manga" and "Comics" may have similar status; see eg Redirects by topic. --P64 (talk) 17:08, 16 March 2015 (UTC)

Category:Redirects by topic


Redirects to list entries 5 subcats, 5434 pages inclg eg Lone Islands

in turn, Fiction-based redirects to list entries

Template:R from fictional character
also Template:Character redirect entry
catRedirects from fictional elements
Template:R from fictional element
cat All fictional location redirects
Template:R from fictional place


2

Wikipedia talk:Categorization#Clarification needed

The software doesn't provide any special tools for informing readers that some incoming redirects are substantial, or displaying categories in which those redirects have been placed. Nor have we developed any equivalent practices using the general tools that are available --effective handmade links to those redirects. So the substantial categorization of redirects does not function for upward navigation.
For instance, the redirect Janet Ahlberg is in cats British children's book illustrators and Kate Greenaway Medal winners. Our article about her, Janet and Allan Ahlberg, is not in those categories, nor does it provide any related notice, much less provide wikilinks. Editors as well as readers inevitably stumble; such articles are likely to be placed in categories that duplicate their incoming redirects, and deleted from those categories, by successive editors. (At the moment Janet and Allan Ahlberg is in her 1944 births and 1994 deaths categories. It is in the writers category, correctly by all accounts because she and he wrote separately, and also jointly.)
--P64 (talk) 17:08, 16 March 2015 (UTC)
3

Archives

Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Eponymous categories (April 2012)

Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Portal rho, Template tau (5 May 2012), etc

Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Category prefaces (4 June 2012)

Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Set category (8 June 2012)

Wikipedia talk:Redirect/Archive 2013#Redirects to category space ((4 August 2013), etc

Wikipedia talk:Redirect/Archive 2013#Redirects for singles/songs to album article (5 December 2013)

Wikipedia talk:Categorizing redirects#"Most redirects should not ..." (18 December 2012)

4

Wikipedia talk:Authority control

Clinic Stanislaw Burzynski, 2014-01-05; 4 wd [1]

Stanisław Burzyński -- fully protected with no content except the redirect definition and template {{R protected}}

father Fanny Holcroft, BDD 2014-09-26; 0 wd [2] no ID (Oxford Biography Index Number)

joint Sergio Blanco (singer), Vycl;

eu:Sergio Blanco Rivas 1 wd [3] several ID
wife Estíbaliz Uranga 2 wd [4] no ID (not even MusicBrainz)
duo Sergio y Estíbaliz 5 wd [5] several ID

joint Kevin Kopelow, Vycl; not at wd; broken model at WD Kevin Kopelow and Heath Seifert

joint Heath Seifert, Vycl; 1 wd [6] no ID (IMDb)

Kevin Kopelow and Heath Seifert

joint David Maysles, Vycl; 1 wd [7] several ID

joint Albert Maysles, Vycl; 1 wd [8] several ID

Albert and David Maysles

joint Magda Trocmé, Vycl, Mirokado; 0 wd [9]; no ID

joint André Trocmé, Mirokado interlanguage diff (and Next diff); 6 wd [10]; several ID

André and Magda Trocmé

add DEFAULTSORT, 3 cats Living, DoB PoB missing (no further action yet; see Wikipedia talk:Authority control#Coverage of Wikipedia redirects

messed up at WikiData fr:Kevin Kopelow
not at WD - Kopelow
no links at WD - Holcroft


CatScan V3.0

2015-03-22, Wikipedia talk:Authority control#Coverage of Wikipedia redirects

Category:Redirects from people (~1500); Category:Redirects from pseudonyms (~500)

Category:VIAF not on Wikidata (6414);
Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers (276K) do not intersect that giant for this purpose

2015-03-23 intersection = 10 (from people); 0 (from pseudonyms)
Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers (109K) = 9 (all but Sergio Blanco)

VIAF not on Wikidata is now equivalent here: the tracking category covers all these EN.wiki redirects because WD pages for these people do not link them

Historic newspapers edit

Marguerite Henry

  • 1997-11-27 Green tickY [11] Mooar, Brian. " 'Misty' Author Marguerite Henry Dies at Age 95". The Washington Post. November 27, 1997. Page C7. Quote: "died Nov. 26 at her home in Rancho Santa Fe".
      Lead paragraphs at HighBeam Research (highbeam.com); full text available by subscription.
  • 1997-11-29 NYT Green tickY "Marguerite Henry, 95, Author Of the 'Chincoteague' Series". Wolfgang Saxon. The New York Times. November 29, 1997. Page A13.
  • 1997-12-01 Green tickY Washington Post [12] "Marguerite Henry's Legacy". p. A24
(editorial)
children's classics "the bread and butter of the communities where they are set" --for Assateague/Chincoteague as for Prince Edward Island and De Smet SD
  • 1997-12-05 Philadelphia Tribune [weekly?] Dana Caivo, AP [13]
AP obituary quotes Susan Foster Ambrose, family friend who cared for her "complications from several strokes". "When she wrote 'Chincoteague' she would go to the island and sit in the wildgrass and really get a feel for it."
the latter quotation is unique to this source but Mooar quotes Ambrose otherwise
  • "Marguerite Henry 1902–1997". Publisher's Weekly. December 15, 1997. p. 27.
listed in the article by another editor

2015-02-13 the article cites all except the Caivo/AP obituary

Both Mooar and Saxon need much heavier use.


One vote cast on behalf of online poll edit

National Baseball Hall of Fame

The sports website Deadspin announced in November that "We'd Like to Buy Your Vote"—that is, to arrange for eligible writers to cast their ballots on behalf of a poll it would conduct online.[1] Such an arrangement was completed with one voter, Miami Herald columnist and ESPN radio and TV host Dan Le Batard, who remained anonymous until the official results of the election were announced in January. In exchange for a cash donation to charity, he completed his ballot according to the collective "vote" of those who participated in the December poll at Deadspin.[2] One day after the website revealed "our voter" and published his statement, on January 9 the BBWAA announced that it had suspended Le Batard for one year and had permanently revoked his eligibility to vote for the Hall of Fame.[3] ESPN ombudsman Robert Lipsyte reviewed the "caper" one week later.[4]

  1. ^ "Are You a Hall of Fame Voter? We'd Like to Buy Your Vote". Tim Marcham. November 13, 2013. Deadspin. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
  2. ^ "Revealed: The Hall Of Fame Voter Who Turned His Ballot Over To Deadspin". Tim Marchman. January 8, 2014. Deadspin. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
    Includes statement by Le Batard.
  3. ^ "BBWAA permanently strips Dan Le Batard of Hall-of-Fame vote". Nate Scott. USA Today. January 9, 2014. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
    Includes statement by the BBWAA.
  4. ^ Lipsyte, Robert (17 January 2014). "Lessons learned from Dan Le Batard caper". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on 17 January 2014. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)

http://grantland.com/features/mlb-hall-fame-voting-steroid-era/ "The Steroid Hunt". Bryan Curtis. January 8, 2014. Grantland.


EBMA authors edit

/EBMA authors; de:Benutzer:p64de/EBMA authors

Misc. needs edit

Category:Redirects from writers

Jennifer A. Nielsen might be another The False Prince

Jennifer A. Nielsen at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database


needs

Generally: search this user page, among others, for the word "needs"

Robin Preiss Glasser VIAF needs merge

Diana Cain Bluthenthal

VIAF=102678911 needs merge


Spouses, etc (spice?)

Theo Black, Theodor Black, husband of Holly Black; 8 illustrator credits in ISFDB


Phoenix books notes edit

0. Talk:Sean O'Hagan (journalist)#Phoenix Books

1. Talk: The End of Time#Publication data

draft reply 2014-04-14

Regarding the English-language eds, I agree except that we should give both subtitles even if we learn that one was not first.
Phoenix generally publishes paperback editions Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd books, where WN was independent to 1991 and constituted the core of The Orion Publishing Group --or core of its backlist, books in progress, ed. staff, established writers-- from its establishment (presumably under some legal name that begins 'Orion') in 1991 --subsequently under Hachette and Lagardère SCA.
I don't yet see that we need a page for the Phoenix (British imprint), except one or more redirects to Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Orion Publishing Group, maybe elsewhere too.
For what's worth, template {{Lagardère}} now displays pagenmames that include four steps down -- Lagardère Group / Hachette (publisher) / Orion Publishing Group / Weidenfeld & Nicolson -- not now down to Phoenix. --and the word 'Phoenix' now appears only three and four steps down, in the two pages that the preceding paragraph links directly.
The expansion of our one-line Orion-Phoenix stub (version Oct 2010) two years ago ([http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Phoenix_Books&diff=497552443&oldid=389326038 Jun 2010 diffs) was unfortunate. As that Phoenix Books is not related, the Stub should have been overwritten. Also as one of the four listed books was a paperback reissue by Orion-Phoenix rather than a Phoenix Books publication.
some pages whose interrelation, and whose use in piped links, is troubling: Little, Brown and Company; Little, Brown Book Group; Hachette (publisher)

2. Talk:Phoenix Books#Phoenix this and that

import verbatim
Phoenix (Audio) (Books) --from google 'phoenix audio books'

This list may soon be revised and/or integrated partly with Phoenix Press or Phoenix. -P64 2014-04-13

  • [14] [2009?]-09-16 "Phoenix Books, Inc. Announces New Leadership and Editorial"
  • [15] 2010-04-26 "Phoenix Books Closes" --evidently it did not close (permanently)
acq. Offerman late 2007; Viner deceased mid-2009 and company repositioned late 2009
  • [16] (c) 2011 Phoenix Books (and Audio) (Inc); imprints Dove Books, Pickwick Press
./about About Phoenix Books, Inc: "One of the most formidable companies in audiobook history, Phoenix ..."

above this line certainly related to the Viner enterprise(s)


--P64 (talk) 18:10, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
end import

2010-04 includes "Phoenix Books Inc. ... was abruptly closed Friday" Apr 2010

two more

2005-06. The new company planned to release 100 audiobooks and 20 print books during 2005 and 2006. http://variety.com/2005/scene/news/viner-rises-again-with-phoenix-books-1117924779
2007-11 The company was called "Phoenix New Millenium" at the time of its 2007 sale by Viner to Dwight D. Opperman, who would reportedly rename it Phoenix Books. http://variety.com/2007/scene/news/opperman-acquires-phoenix-1117976343

http://www.orionbooks.co.uk/Information/About-Orion.page

3. Faye Resnick

  • Faye D. Resnick with Mike Walker (1994, October 1). Nicole Brown Simpson: The Private Diary of a Life Interrupted (2nd ed.). Beverly Hills, CA: Dove Books. ISBN 0-7871-0339-X 244pp
ISBN 155144061X (December 1994); ISBNsearch.org attributes the other to Newstar Press, Oct 1994, hc, first
ISBNsearch Dove Entertainment Inc, Dec 1994, audio
  • Faye D. Resnick with Jeanne V. Bell (1996, February). Shattered: In the Eye of the Storm. Dove Books. ISBN 0-7871-0730-1
ISBNsearch: Newstar Press, Feb 1996, hc
ISBNsearch Signet, Dec 1994, ppb

3b. OJ Simpson jurors

ISBNsearch Newstar Press, Jan 1996, hc, first
  • [sound recording, abridged] Dove Audio, 1996 ISBN 0-7871-0917-7 3hr --read by Cooley, Bess, Rubin-Jackson; ed Mike Walker
ISBNsearch Dove Entertainment Inc, Dec 1995, audio cassette
do MOUSEOVER CHECK for many ISBN

4. Bill Maher, New Millenium Entertainment

ISBNsearch Phoenix Audio, Sep 2003, "1st Pbk"

book article gives New Millenium, Oct 2002, ISBN 1-59777-513-4 --and NEEDs basic work

ISBNsearch Phoenix Books, Aug 2005, ppb

5. Phoenix Books (and Audio) --current? http://phoenixbooksandaudio.com/books/detail/bodytransformation/?format=hardcover

(c) 2011; Featured Titles have 2009/2010 dates elsewhere

latest Tweet: 22 Mar 2013 https://twitter.com/phoenixbooksinc


recent/forthcoming publications at 2010-04 maybe-closing

Shari Arison, Birth (November, 2009)[19] 100,000 copies --her second book Activate your goodness : transforming the world through doing good (Carlsbad, CA: Hay House, 2013)

Linda Gray Sexton, Half in Love: Surviving the Legacy of Suicide (Berkeley: Counterpoint, 2011) [memoir] [20]

James Brown (author), This River (Berkeley: Counterpoint, 2011)

Baseball writers edit

SABR#Membership links 13, 10 blue, 3 red

  1. ^ Barbara Elleman. "The John Newbery Medal: The First Decade". The Newbery and Caldecott Awards: A Guide to the Medal and Honor Books. ALSC. ALA. 17th annual edition, 2007, pp. 9-16. This is one "distinctive essay" from past editions reprinted by ALA at "Web Extra: Newbery and Caldecott Awards". Retrieved 2013-05-17.
  2. ^ "2002". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). Press release with other contemporary material. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  3. ^ "2004". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). Press release with other contemporary material. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  4. ^ "2006". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). With contemporary material including the 27 March 2006 press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  5. ^ "2008". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). With contemporary material including the 31 March 2008 press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  6. ^ "2010". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). With contemporary material including the 2010 shortlist press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  7. ^ "2012 Awards". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. IBBY. With contemporary material including the 6 March 2012 shortlist press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  8. ^ "2014 Awards". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. IBBY. With contemporary material including the 17 March 2014 shortlist press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
  9. ^ "Hans Christian Andersen Award". 2007(?). Curriculum Lab. Elihu Burritt Library. Central Connecticut State University (CCSU). Retrieved ...
  10. ^ "Kurt Maschler Awards". Book Awards. bizland.com. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
  11. ^ Nestlé Children's Book Prize 2007. Booktrust. Updated 2012-10-19.
  12. ^ "Michael L. Printz Winners and Honor Books". Young Adult Library Services Association. ALA. Retrieved 2012-09-05.
  13. ^ {{isfdb ... (ISFDB). Retrieved 2012-08-01. Select a title to see its linked publication history and general information. Select a particular edition (title) for more data at that level, such as a front cover image or linked contents.
  14. ^ "The new policeman" (first U.S. edition). Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 2012-08-01.
  15. ^ (directory, 2007 CILIP Awards press releases). CILIP. Retrieved 2012-07-20.
    • Two press releases 21 June 2007 pertain to Grey and The Adventures. Two earlier releases 20 April 2007 may be valuable, "Shortlist ... announced" and "... Judges Comments on the Shortlist".
  16. ^ "Boston Globe–Horn Book Awards Winners and Honor Books 1967 to present". The Horn Book. Retrieved 16 April 2012.
  17. ^ "2003: Maurice Sendak". (ALMA presentation English). The Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award. Page 1. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  18. ^ ALSC (2007). The Newbery and Caldecott Awards: A Guide to the Medal and Honor Books. ALA.
    See also the 2012 edition [Web Extra at ALA Editions: evidently an archive of "distinctive essays" from previous editions. }}
  19. ^ a b "The Caldecott Medal 75th Anniversary". ALSC, ALA. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  20. ^ "Aurianne Award (HISTORICAL): Winner List – All Years". ALA. Retrieved 6 May 2013.