>The Tom and Daphne Show

>I think these were their names; years ago my colleague Anne Quirk came back from observing a Best Books for Young Adults committee meeting and said, "It's become the Tom and Daphne Show." Tom and Daphne were young people known to one of the librarians on the committee, who was having them read nominated titles and report back to her; she would then bring their comments to the committee as a whole: "Tom loved it.'" "Daphne was bored."

I was reminded of Tom and Daphne while reading Ty Burr's review of the new Curious George movie in the Boston Globe:

A fellow movie reviewer of my acquaintance recently spent some time railing against the habit some of us have of canvassing our own spawn for opinions when reviewing a kids' movie. Sentences like "the little critic sitting next to me thought 'Madagascar' was a brilliant addition to world cinema" drive her nuts, reeking as they do of both exploitation and smarmy parental indulgence.

And not just that--as Anne said of Tom and Daphne,"Do these kids have any idea of the power they wield?" This has been my experience as well--the opinion of a single child being allowed to trump the collective experience of a committee or the considered judgment of a reviewer. Why can't we have faith in what we are supposed to be good at?
Roger Sutton
Roger Sutton

Editor Emeritus Roger Sutton was editor in chief of The Horn Book, Inc., from 1996-2021. He was previously editor of The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books and a children's and young adult librarian. He received his MA in library science from the University of Chicago in 1982 and a BA from Pitzer College in 1978.

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Roger Sutton

>It's not just the kids you *don't* serve (yet) that you need to think about; it's also the kids who aren't comfortable, or wouldn't be caught dead, talking to the librarian or joining a club. I was a kid like that. Library collections of all kinds need to speak for themselves.

Posted : Feb 21, 2006 02:04


Anonymous

>Because I'd like to be able to serve as many kids as possible. And I'm thinking that by relying on critics to review books on their own merits I can find something new to attract readers i haven't seen before.

Posted : Feb 21, 2006 01:21


Anonymous

>If they're not coming to your library, what do you care about buying books for them?

Posted : Feb 19, 2006 11:51


Betty Carter

>Another serious problem with putting too much stock in kids' comments is that the comments are always tied to those kids we see in our libraries. Perhaps there are books out there that would reach others, but we don't know about them or publicize them or buy them because those kids are neither coming to our libraries nor talking to the librarians.

Posted : Feb 19, 2006 04:57


shewhousuallydoesn'tdothistypeofthing

>Here's what I think about the whole critic thing. Writing criticism is a form of being seen. I suspect all critics of wanting to be seen. That their opinions are much more the thing for them than the books. I feel the same way about interviewers. The interview is really, finally, about the interviewer. Writers want to be seen too. The book is how they have chosen to do so. So when it comes to the reader filtered through the critic's need to be seen, there is necessarily a kind of unnecessary baggage tacked onto the direct writer/reader connection. (Roger, this isn't to say your job is superfluous. You know I think you're a terrific critic. And I know the business is what the business is. And that critics and librarians exist in a strange parallel universe. I am simply musing on why there is something so off about ranting about expert readers. As far as the writer is concerned, all readers are expert.)

Posted : Feb 14, 2006 11:17


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