Long Neck and Thunder Foot
by Helen Piers
illustrated by Michael Foreman
Age: 2+
Interests: dinosaurs, fear, friendship
Talking about children's books and films. Useful information for parents.
04 Jun 2013 Leave a comment
in Books, books 2+ Tags: dinosaurs, fear, friendship
by Helen Piers
illustrated by Michael Foreman
Age: 2+
Interests: dinosaurs, fear, friendship
03 Jun 2013 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: adventure, animals, British history, cats, cities, history, London, pets
The Post Office Cat
by Gail E. Haley
Age: 4+
Interests: cats, history, London, post office
30 May 2013 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: babies, family, flight, helping others, superheroes
29 May 2013 Leave a comment
in Books, books 3+ Tags: crime, helping others, morality, orphans, robbers, treasure
by Tomi Ungerer
Age: 3+
Interests: crime, robbers, treasure, orphans, morality, helping others
28 May 2013 2 Comments
in Books, Parenting, Technology
Well this is encouraging. I’ve jumped into the virtual world of gadgets for an awful lot of things, but I still can’t let go of real books, especially not for reading with kids. And now there’s a study that finds a whole lot of other parents feel the same way I do.
(I particularly like the Dad who says he reads paper books so his kids will know that he’s reading and not just updating his facebook!)
A real big colourful picture book still delivers a bigger sensory punch than the same thing on a screen. Imagine a very young toddler gazing at the pictures, flipping pages, holding the book and turning it all around to admire it, even gnawing a little on the corner… All good exploratory fun and vital in forming a concept in their minds of what a book is.
At that age all those lovely board books are actually toys, sensory toys! Especially pop-up books. A screen can’t deliver that kind of excitement!
Not to mention the thrill of walking into a library, with shelves and shelves and shelves of books. Even the tiny library my home town had simply filled me with awe at the vastness of its reserves. I don’t think scrolling through an ebook catalogue will ever give you that feeling.
It’s just nice to go out in the world and encounter books there.
28 May 2013 Leave a comment
in books 11+ Tags: American history, biography, nonfiction, strong girls, war, writers
Invincible Louisa: The Story of the Author of “Little Women”
by Cornelia Meigs
Age: 11+
Interests: biography, writers, nonfiction, American history, strong girls, Little Women
27 May 2013 Leave a comment
in Books, books 2+ Tags: ghosts, gorillas, Hallowe'en, haunted house, monsters, pop-up books
By Jan Pienkowski
Age: 2+
Interests: pop-up books, Hallowe’en, spooky stuff, monsters
23 May 2013 Leave a comment
in Books, books 3+ Tags: animals, circus, elephants, music
22 May 2013 1 Comment
in Disney, Gender Differences, Issues Tags: strong girls
Well it looks like times are a-changing. I don’t know whether you follow things like this online, but Merida – the heroine from Pixar’s Brave – was recently added to the official Disney Princess lineup, only her design was ‘tweaked’ a little… Now it’s obvious that she wouldn’t look exactly the same as in the movie, since she’d have to be changed from a 3D CGI gal to a 2D drawing, but somehow in the process she also aged about 6 years, lost a few inches around the waist, and started using makeup.
(Some have also mentioned that her hair has been de-frizzed, but to be fair, I think that just has to happen when you go from CGI to two-dimensional drawing. I mean who wants to draw every single hair sproinging out of her head?)
Merida sexed up and slimmed down to join the princess throng. No surprise there. The real surprise is that there was an immediate furor about the changes, led by the writer and co-director of Brave, Brenda Chapman. God bless her for getting mad and raising a stink.
But wait, that’s not even the most surprising part. This is: it looks like Disney has backed down on the design. Here’s the latest on the story.
The design of those Disney Princesses has always driven me crazy but this news makes me feel like there is finally a wave of opinion cresting on the issue. Cresting and crashing down on the Disney marketers. What finally pushed it over the top was the fact that Merida herself spends the entire movie resisting glittery off-the-shoulder dresses and all attempts to make her more girlie. Which makes this makeover all the more repugnant.
So Disney… give us an uncinched, younger Merida with no makeup, please! And for goodness sake, give her back her bow and arrows!
22 May 2013 3 Comments
in Books, books 4+ Tags: adventure, birds, boats, chase, London, royalty, travel
by V.H. Drummond
Age: 4+
Interests: birds, travel, London, adventure, chase, royalty