CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1974
text by Harve Zemach
illustrated by Margot Zemach
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1973
36 pp.
Age: 4+
Interests: folktales, Great Britain, country life, magic, fairy tales
Talking about children's books and films. Useful information for parents.
16 Jan 2012 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: country life, devil, England, Fairy Tale, folktales, Magic
CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1974
text by Harve Zemach
illustrated by Margot Zemach
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1973
36 pp.
Age: 4+
Interests: folktales, Great Britain, country life, magic, fairy tales
10 Jan 2012 6 Comments
in Books, books 4+ Tags: boats, Fairy Tale, folktales, Magic, Russia
CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1969
The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship
retold by Arthur Ransome
illustrated by Uri Shulevitz
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1968
44 pp.
Age: 4+
Interests: folktales, Russia, magic, ships, flying
Also by this author: Old Peter’s Russian Tales, Swallows and Amazons series
Also by this illustrator: The Treasure, Snow, How I Learned Geography, SoSleepyStory
26 Dec 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: animals, art, folktales, India, jungle, mice, philosophy
CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1962
subtitle: A Fable Cut in Wood
by Marcia Brown
Simon & Schuster, 1961
30 pp.
Age: 4 +
Interests: mice, animals, folktales, India, magic, art, philosophy
Also by this author: Stone Soup, Cinderella or the Little Glass Slipper
09 Dec 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: Christmas, helping others, history, music, religion, saints
Good King Wenceslas
traditional carol lyrics by John Mason Neale
illustrated by John Wallner
New York: Philomel Books, 1990
30 pp.
Age: 4+
Interests: Christmas, Christmas carols, music, history, saints, stories of charity
08 Dec 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: Christmas, city life, helping others
by Kate DiCamillo
illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline
Cambridge, MA: Candlewick Press, 2007
28 pp.
Age: 4+
Interests: Christmas, Christmas pageant
Also by this author: Because of Winn-Dixie, The Tale of Despereaux, Mercy Watson early chapter book series
07 Dec 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 3+, books 4+, books 5+, books 6+, Introduction to..., Poetry, Quick Lists Tags: poetry
Last week’s list was Poetry for the Very Young, the baby-to-2 crowd, and now we move up to 3 and beyond.
1. When We Were Very Young / Now We Are Six, by A.A. Milne – age: 3+
Published in 1924 and 1927, these two collections successfully walk the tightrope between sentimentality and humour. The danger in nostalgic poetry about childhood for children is that it ends up appealing more to grownups with their own fond memories of a simpler time. The Milne poems are charming for grownups, but the playful energy will still hook children, every very young ones. You can pick and choose as you go (some poems are very long); I was reading these with my daughter when she was three and she had favourites she’d ask for again and again. Now that she’s five I may pull these books out once more… (Available combined into one volume, at amazon.com)
2. Mustard, Custard, Grumble Belly and Gravy, by Michael Rosen, ill. by Quentin Blake – age: 4+
This is a combination of two earlier books, Don’t Put Mustard in the Custard, and You Can’t Catch Me, which came out in 1985 and 1981 respectively. Rosen’s work is less structured and more conversational, made up of tidbits of children’s speech and a smattering of nonsense. His introduction to this edition is written for children aged 7 or 8, and encourages them to perform the poems out loud and take a stab at writing poems themselves. Rosen has written many books of poetry for children and was appointed the British Children’s Laureate in 2007. (This title available at amazon.com)
3. Alligator Pie, by Dennis Lee – age: 4+
Even more raucous fun. This Canadian classic from 1974 sets the bar high for sheer audacity and infectious nonsense. The title poem must (yes, I say must) be taught to your child and memorized so that the both of you can recite it together at the top of your lungs.
4. Where the Sidewalk Ends, by Shel Silverstein – age: 5+
Another much-loved collection, this was also published in 1974 (a banner year for children’s poetry!). This one is perfect for slightly older children, with poems like “I’m being eaten by a boa constrictor” and others with less than cheery endings. Still, it retains a light touch and is pretty hilarious. (This one is my 5-yr-old’s current favourite.)
(This title available at amazon.com.)
5. The New Kid on the Block, by Jack Prelutsky – age: 6+
There are many collections by this prolific poet, this one came out in 1984. Slightly sharper-edged humour, more sarcasm, more complex jokes, and a more advanced vocabulary. Of the “Homework! Oh homework! I hate you! You stink!” school of playground humour, this collection is both tougher (“Suzanna Socked Me Sunday”) and grosser (“Jellyfish Stew”) than the others on this list. Still, quite funny and enjoyable.
(This title available at amazon.com)
I had originally intended to include in this list the classic A Child’s Garden of Verses, by Robert Louis Stevenson (1885), which is very important historically as a first serious attempt to write poetry from a child’s point of view and in a child’s voice, but it proved to be fairly unreadable cover-to-cover, child-wise. A little too sentimental and nostalgic. And it doesn’t have enough humour to really grab the imagination of a modern reader. It’s possible that a child with more literary tastes might enjoy it – or perhaps RLS’s poems are better encountered individually within anthologies.
29 Nov 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+, Canadian books Tags: Christmas, hockey, moving to a new home, siblings, sports, winter
BLUE SPRUCE nominee 2012
written by David Ward
illustrated by Brian Deines
Toronto: Scholastic Canada, 2010
30 pp.
Ages: 4 +
Interests: hockey, moving to a new home, siblings, Christmas, winter
20 Nov 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+, Canadian books Tags: animals, birds, friendship
BLUE SPRUCE nominee 2012
by Rebecca Bender
Toronto: Cormorant Books, 2010
30 pp.
Age: 4 +
Interests: animals, birds, friendship, disagreements with friends
14 Nov 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: Christmas, Mexico, parties
CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1960
text by Marie Hall Ets & Aurora Labastida
illustrated by Marie Hall Ets
44 pp.
Age: 4 +
Interests: Christmas customs in Mexico, pinatas
Why I Don’t Hate the Rainbow Fairies
14 Jan 2012 7 Comments
by Kim in Books, books 4+, Commentary Tags: fairies, Magic
The Rainbow Magic books are an addictive, seemingly endless series of early chapter books, written to a precise and repetitive formula, and certain to drive parents up the wall. Amazingly bland and devoid of character development – the two heroines are interchangeable – this franchise should incur my wrath and derision. And it did, at first.
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