On June 22, 2022

10 attractions for kids at Bookstock this year

Many Bookstock 2022 events and activities will appeal to children and young adults. Here are ten attractions:

1. Meet an author. Our authors are as young as a ten-year-old illustrator to a renowned children’s’ author more than 80. Meet an author and get your book signed. Here are a few:

“Co-authoring Covid: Rethinking Children’s Literature Post Pandemic.” Friday, 10 a.m. at Norman Williams Public Library. Kimberly Burwick, a poet mother and her 10-year-old illustrator son Levi Goodan, describe how they created a book during the first wave of COVID.

“Historical Vermont…in Comics.” Friday, 12:30 p.m., Woodstock History Center. Cartoonist and illustrator Emily Zea shares how she brought the rich origins of two Vermont towns to life through comic drawings.

“Pig Years: Chronicles from an Itinerant Farmhand.” Friday, 12:30 p.m., Norman Williams Public Library. Memoirist Ellyn Gaydos describes in stark simplicity the lifeblood of the farm, where joy and tragedy are frequent bedfellows.

“Behind the Panels: Creating Graphic Novels for Younger Readers.” Friday, 1:45 p.m., Norman Williams Public Library. Two authors of graphic novels describe how they make comics step by step, from early sketches to final artwork.

“The Life of a Storyteller with Katherine Paterson.” Saturday, 10 a.m., Town Hall Theater. Meet the woman who wrote beloved children’s’ books such the “Bridge to Terabithia”, “Jacob Have I Loved” and “My Brigadista Year”.

2. Write! On Sunday, 11:45 a.m., the Norman Williams Public Library, Joni Cole, who selected the authors for this year’s festival, will lead a session in which she will provide “prompts,” such as a word or a sentence, for you to write about. This is a great way for people of all ages to awaken their writing genius. Bring a notebook or a laptop.

3. Meet Ben Franklin. Founder of the first U.S. library and publisher of The Poor Richard’s Almanac, will be on The Green, all day Friday and Saturday. Ben Franklin also leads a Ribbon Cutting Ceremony at 9 a.m. on Friday. Ben is available for conversation, wisdom and photo opportunities.

4. Experience Virtual Reality. For the third year, Woodstock Union High School computer science students demo virtual reality on The Green using the latest Oculus headsets. Example: The Open Brush experience lets you paint in 3D with brushes, stars, and light.

5. Buy a Book. Upward of 1,000 children and young adult books will be for sale in the used book sale tent on The Green. Rock bottom prices. Among the 30 authors in the exhibitor tent, a half dozen offer children or YA content. Open 9 a.m. – 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Sunday 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.

6. Hire a Poet. Commission a special poem! At their own tent on the Green. Donations optional but welcomed.

7. Spy Friday! Play the Spy Game at the Info Tent on Friday. At 6 p.m. on Friday, Town Hall Theater, attend the special event called “In from the Cold.” American writer, spy novelist, and former CIA officer Valerie Plame, author of the best-selling “Fair Game: My Life As A Spy” joins Robert Kerbeck, award-winning author of “Ruse: Lying the American Dream from Hollywood to Wall Street”, to talk leaks, sneaks, and other assorted spy stories.

8. See Books as Art. The grand opening of Unbound Volume X is Friday 4:30 p.m. with a reception, at Artistree Community Arts Center. This exhibit will be on for a month. An eye-opening show of all of the possibilities of what we may think or may not think a “book” is.

9. Entertainment. Enjoy live music. On the Green, from 10 a.m. on Friday and Sunday, 10:30 a.m. on Saturday.

10. Food and Beverages. Visit the food tent featuring a variety of choices from several vendors. Lemonade stands will also be on both ends of The Green, hosted by local groups including Woodstock Union High School hockey teams.

This year signed copies of author’s books will be available at the Yankee Book Shop tent on The Green. As always, all events are free. For more information visit: bookstockvt.org.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Donald “Don” Williams, 85

July 24, 2024
Donald “Don” Williams, 85, of Mendon passed away on July 10, 2024. Born on November 28, 1938, in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, Don was well known for his straightforward, honest demeanor, always telling it like it is, yet with a big hearted and kind spirit underneath. Don proudly served in the U.S. Army 1959 to 1962 and…

Dave Bienstock, 78

July 24, 2024
Dave Bienstock of Killington VT passed away from interstitial lung disease, peacefully on June 25, 2024, with his wife, Diane Benton, by his side. Bienstock, originally a music teacher from Brooklyn, New York, worked for many years at Willowbrook State School in Staten Island, New York. He was passionate about skiing and would travel to Killington to ski…

Vt turkey brood survey: report sightings July-August

July 24, 2024
The Vermont Fish & Wildlife Dept. (VTF&F) is asking for help with monitoring wild turkeys.  Since 2007, the department has run an annual online survey in August for reporting turkey broods. Beginning in 2021, the survey was expanded to include July. The use of citizen scientists in this way facilitates the department’s ability to collect important turkey…

‘Farmacy’ program notches 10 years

July 24, 2024
The Vermont Farmers Food Center (VFFC), Rutland Regional Medical Center (RRMC), and Community Health Clinics of the Rutland Region (Community Health) are celebrating the Farmacy Project’s 10th year this month. Farmacy, which began at VFFC as Health Care Shares, is a produce prescription program that provides fresh locally grown produce to people facing chronic diet-related…