Oscar-Winning Animated Short

Here’s a link to watch the animated short film which won the Oscar this year – The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore. A wordless hymn to the romance of books, with a distinct nod to Buster Keaton.

The Wind Blew

GREENAWAY MEDAL WINNER -1974

The Wind Blew

by Pat Hutchins

Simon & Schuster, 1974

28 pp.

Age: 2+

Interests: wind, weather

Other books by this author: Rosie’s Walk, Don’t Forget the Bacon!, The Doorbell Rang, The Surprise Party, Clocks and More Clocks

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The Book of Dragons

The Book of Dragons

by E. Nesbit

North-South Books, originally published 1900

172 pp, 8 stories

Age: 6+                   independent reading age:  9+

Interests: dragons, fairy tales, adventure, princesses

Also by this author: The Enchanted Castle, Five Children and It, The Railway Children, The Story of the Treasure Seekers

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Composer Robert Sherman dies

The elder of the two Sherman brothers, famous composers of countless memorable Disney songs, has passed away in London at the age of 86. (Here is a full obituary from NPR.)

There’s a phrase in children’s animation production circles, “timeless and classic”, which simply means “make it look and sound generic enough that it won’t become dated and we can keep selling the thing for the next 100 years”. The songs of Robert and Richard Sherman, however, are bona fide examples of “timeless and classic” in the good sense. Consider Mary Poppins – “Chim Chim Cheree”, “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious”, “A Spoonful of Sugar”, “Feed the Birds”, “Let’s Go Fly a Kite”… or The Jungle Book – “The Bare Necessities”, “I Wan’na Be Like You”… or “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang”, or “Ev’rybody Wants to Be a Cat” from The Aristocats, or “Winnie the Pooh”, or even the theme park classic “It’s a Small World (After All)”. (Okay, that last one is a real ear-worm, guaranteed to drive you crazy if it gets into your brain, but that’s just further testament to the Shermans’ skill!)

I find the music in current kids’ movies to be sheer treacly pop – trendy and instantly-dated, but also amazingly forgettable. Not to mention seriously lacking in charm. The Sherman brothers’ songs were the opposite, featuring such warmth, sincerity, clarity, wit, and, yes, timelessness that they never seem to fade from the memory. It doesn’t matter how many times I’ve seen Mary Poppins, and we had it on heavy rotation for nearly a year, every time Julie Andrews sings “Feed the Birds” it still makes me cry. What a wonderful legacy.

Robert (right), with Richard, Julie Andrews and Dick van Dyke

100 Ways to be Kind to Your Kids

This is just a sweet, sweet list. The ones I want to work on myself are:

TRY
44. Keeping that sigh to yourself.  Just jump in and help clean up cheerfully.

LISTEN
57. One second longer than you think you have patience for.
58. For the feelings behind your child’s words.

The Land of Apps

It is with no small sense of shame that I bring up the newest Amazement in our home: the iPhone. Shame because even as I try desperately to limit our ‘screen time’, both my daughter and I are drawn to the iPhone like moths to a flame. And shame because I do not want to turn this blog into some kind of plug for Apple products.

I am NOT telling you to buy one of these!

However… I know there are a lot of people out there getting these thingy-gadgets and I found this useful: a list of highly rated and mostly educational apps for little ones, c/o Savvy Mom.

As long as I set time limits (for both of us!), I don’t think there’s anything wrong with a little fun time on the computer/tablet/phone. And I can see how a smart phone could really save the day in the case of delayed flights, long car rides, or endless waiting room waits.

If you’d rather not open the Pandora’s Box that is the App Store, remember that even the free basics you get with the phone can be highly entertaining for preschoolers. The Calculator is fun for kids intrigued and awed by numbers, and the Compass is perfect for treasure hunts! The Camera and Voice Memos are good for hours of giddy enjoyment! The Clock has a stopwatch feature, and Weather allows you to look up conditions anywhere in the world!

I can see the exclamation points sneaking in so it’s time to stop. Don’t worry, this blog is not about to turn into a tech geek blog – there are many, many, many others more knowledgeable than I about these matters, but I will pass along any useful lists or tips I come across.

Awards? Awards!

Still basking in the 1st birthday glow, I received a welcome blog encouragement from bundleofbooks (a booky blog with thoughtful reviews that I enjoy very much) – in the form of 3 peer blogger awards! (Thank you so much!) Even after a year I’m still a bit of a newbie, so it took me a while to figure out what goes on with these things, but here’s what I found out…

They’re a bit like those old chain letters, but in a good, non-intrusive, non-threatening, warm and fuzzy, pay-it-forward kind of way. I thank and link back to the person who gave them to me (here’s bundleofbooks again if you missed it). I put the award images on my blog. For the Kreativ blogger and the Versatile blogger I’m supposed to write a few things people may not know about me. Which is here:

1. When I was ten I wanted to be a musketeer. I kinda still do.

2. I’ve been to a lot of operas, and enjoyed many of them, but I still can’t warm up to Wagner.

3. The first movie I ever saw in a theatre was The Sound of Music, and when the nuns came in near the beginning I said very loudly, “What are those?”

4. My favourite colour is a deep, cranberry red.

5. My favourite comic strip is Pogo.

6. Everybody knows I’m a history geek, but few know that I went through a period when I was totally obsessed with Nixon and Watergate. I even read the transcripts of the White House tapes, even though of course all the expletives were deleted.

7. Seeing That’s Entertainment changed my life.

8. I do not care for beer. Yuck.

9. My number one party trick in the early 1980s was imitating Joan Crawford smoking a cigarette, a feat which masked the fact that I couldn’t inhale.

10. My favourite actor is Alan Arkin.

Finally these awards require me to share the love and pass them on to other deserving bloggers of blogs with less than 300 followers. This is a bit of a challenge for me, since I have so little time to follow blogs, and most of the ones I do check in on from time to time have quite a lot more than 300 followers. But I’ve come up with three that I quite enjoy, and now I bestow the above blog awards upon them:

We Too Were Children, Mr. Barrie is a beautifully written and researched site dedicated to out of print children’s books written by 20th century authors more well-known for their books for grownups.

Happily After All has terrific reviews of children’s books. I love her enthusiasm and obvious love for these books.

Vintage Books My Kid Loves is a fond look at older, classic children’s books.

Shortcut

Shortcut

by David Macaulay

Houghton Mifflin, 1995

64 pp.

Age: 6+

Interests: mystery, trains, animals, birds, pigs, horses, balloons, cars, boats

Also by this author: Black and White, Cathedral: The Story of its Construction, The Way Things Work

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The Lorax Wants You to Test Drive a Mazda

I had no high hopes for the movie version of Dr. Seuss’s Lorax, I had a feeling it would be a depressing dud and paid no real attention to the hoopla surrounding its release… Until I saw this on the internet: Stephen Colbert takes on the Lorax’s commercial tie-ins in this great rant from his show.

It’s just so bizarre I couldn’t believe it was true – I actually went online this morning to double-check that the Mazda/Lorax ad was real and not a spoof. Oh, I am so naïve to the bizarre ways of the world! Yes, of course the ad is real, not to mention surreal. The Lorax marketing team, spectacularly blind to the irony of it all, has indeed signed up 70 product tie-ins for the movie, most noteworthy among them an SUV. The little orange fellow who railed against Over-Consumption and Rampant Resource Extraction is suddenly blissed out over the fuel efficiency of the Mazda CX-5. The press releases trumpeted the fact that the commercial tie-ins were for eco-friendly products and green companies, though how far that goes I’m not sure.

Impostor! He doesn't even look like me!

This Mother Jones article by Kate Sheppard speaks to the concerns that many have with the Lorax marketing campaign.

And here’s a good Atlantic Monthly article by Jordan Weissmann about what the heck a ‘hybrid crossover SUV’ even is.  (Check out the embedded Mazda Lorax TV ad if you haven’t seen it.) The author also makes a good point about how testy we get when someone messes with our classic childhood heroes.

The whole situation, however, didn’t actually make me feel ill until I read this report from the Washington Post about Mazda taking its ad campaign right into schools. Using the desperation of underfunded schools as a crowbar to get their advertising message into the classroom is bad enough, but using Seuss-loving youngsters as shills for the automotive industry? We’ll give you money for books if you get your mommy and daddy to test drive a Mazda??

Oorg. Bad on so many levels.

Right at the end of the Mazda ad the Lorax prompts the narrator to plug his movie. Between the lines reading: “I flogged your car, now tell people to go to my movie!” I’ll scratch your back if you’ll scratch mine. Deee-pressing, not the least because an entire marketing team did not foresee any of this backfiring on them. Has the world gone mad?

POSTSCRIPT: The movie is in theatres today and I have no idea about its worth. Here’s a scathing review.

Here’s the Commonsense Media review – they rate this film suitable for age 5 and up.

POSTPOSTSCRIPT:

Happy Birthday, Dr. Seuss, and my Deepest Sympathy.

My Favourite Lesser-Known Caldecott Winners

Following up with my finalized Caldecott Medal reviews, here is a short list of my favourites among them that are not so well known. (ie. Where the Wild Things Are and the like aren’t listed because everyone knows them!)

Listed by age:

infant

Kitten’s First Full Moon – Kevin Henkes

Little Kitten sees her very first full moon in the sky and thinks it’s a bowl of milk. After many unsuccessful attempts to reach it, tired, wet and hungry, Kitten returns to her porch to find a bowl of milk waiting for her. Lucky Kitten!

                 2 year olds

The Little House – Virginia Lee Burton

A happy little country house is slowly engulfed by the expanding city limits and she does not like it one bit. After many years she is moved back to the countryside, and lived in and cared for again.

Drummer Hoff – Barbara Emberley; Ed Emberley, ill.

A brief, repetitive poem in which various military personnel bring and assemble a cannon, though the most lowly, Drummer Hoff, gets to “fire it off”. When he does so the final page shows that the gun blew itself up, and now birds and bugs make their home in it, as the grass and flowers grow over top.

The Hello, Goodbye Window – Norton Juster; Chris Raschka, ill.

A child’s retelling of what happens when she stays with her grandparents while her parents are at work. She talks lovingly about her Nanna and Poppy, their house, their activities, their jokes and games.

                    3 year olds

Mei Li – Thomas Handforth

A day in the life of a small Chinese girl who tags along with her big brother to the New Year’s Fair in the big city and attempts at every turn to prove that she is brave and useful.

Many Moons – James Thurber; Louis Slobodkin, ill.

The princess is ill and claims she will only get well again if someone can give her the moon. The king and his wise men ponder the problem to no avail. Only the jester knows how to solve the problem: by consulting with the princess herself, who turns out to have all the answers.

Tuesday – David Wiesner

One Tuesday evening, at precisely 7:58 pm a group of bullfrogs suddenly find themselves able to fly, and proceed to have a grand old time. When the sun rises their flight ends and, extremely disgruntled, they must hop home again.

          4 year olds

The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship – Arthur Ransome; Uri Shulevitz, ill.

A foolish youngest son sets out to win the hand of a princess. Through his kindness he makes a few very useful friends, builds a flying ship, and successfully fulfills the Tsar’s impossible tasks to win his bride.

Arrow to the Sun – Gerald McDermott

A boy raised by a single mother sets out in search of his father, who turns out to be the lord of the sun. A wise man turns the boy into an arrow and shoots him to the sun. After several trials the boy is accepted by his father and given great powers.

Ox-Cart Man – Donald Hall; Barbara Cooney, ill.

The story of a family in the pioneer past who work all year in order to sell their wares in the Portsmouth market.

          5 year olds

Abraham Lincoln – Ingri & Edgar Parin d’Aulaire

A very approachable biography of Abraham Lincoln, focussing on his childhood and youth. The details of pioneer life, farm work, and hard times are simply stated and fascinating.

Sam, Bangs & Moonshine – Evaline Ness

A little girl’s wild imagination and tendency to tell tall tales cause a little friend to be caught out in a wild storm. Her father and talking cat urge her to learn the difference between the truth and ‘moonshine’.

The Glorious Flight: Across the Channel with Louis Bleriot – Alice & Martin Provensen

The true story of Louis Blériot (1872-1936), who invented and built flying machines in the early days of aviation, and was the first man to fly across the English Channel.

Snowflake Bentley – Jacqueline Briggs Martin; Mary Azarian, ill.

A biography of W. A. Bentley, born in 1865, who invented a way to take photographs of snowflakes. Considered an eccentric for much of his life, Bentley’s photographs eventually came into great demand and his book Snow Crystals is still considered a seminal work on the subject.

6 years and older

Fables – Arnold Lobel

A series of original fables, written in the style of the old Aesop stories, each only one page long and followed by a simple moral. Updated tales are accessible, touching, and brilliantly illustrated.

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All writings posted here are © Kim Thompson, unless otherwise indicated. For all artwork on this site, copyright is retained by the artist.