CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1996
by Peggy Rathmann
New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1995
30 pp.
Ages: 4+
Interests: dogs, safety, police officers
Also by this author: Goodnight Gorilla
Talking about children's books and films. Useful information for parents.
31 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: dogs, police officers, safety
CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1996
by Peggy Rathmann
New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1995
30 pp.
Ages: 4+
Interests: dogs, safety, police officers
Also by this author: Goodnight Gorilla
31 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 2+, Classics Tags: elves, fairies, Magic, Princess, snow, winter
The Story of the Snow Children
by Sibylle von Olfers
first published in 1905 in Germany
English translation by Polly Lawson – Edinburgh: Floris Books, 2005
20 pp.
Ages: 2 +
Interests: fairies, princesses, snow, winter, parties, magic
Also by this author: The Story of the Root Children (1906), Princess in the Forest (1909), and The Story of the Wind Children (1910)
You might also like: Peter in Blueberry Land (1901) – very similar in story, style and look
31 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 2+ Tags: birds, nature, night, owls, single parent
by Martin Waddell
illustrations by Patrick Benson
Cambridge, MA: Candlewick, 1992
26 pp.
Ages: 2 +
Interests: birds, owls, nature, nighttime, single parent
24 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books - infant+, Quick Lists Tags: insects
Whether they fear them or love them, what kid isn’t fascinated by insects?
1. The Very Hungry Caterpillar, by Eric Carle – Age: infants +
The classic book is available as a board book for the very young. Everyone knows this one (or should). The caterpillar eats his way through a ton of food before making his dramatic transformation.
2. Frog Went A-Courtin’, by John Langstaff – Age: 3 +
Old folk song wonderfully illustrated for children. Ostensibly about Froggie and Miss Mouse but there are an awful lot of insects invited to the shindig.
3. Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears, by Verna Aardema – Age: 4 +
A traditional African tale about events spiralling out of control as a result of a simple lie.
4. Grasshopper on the Road, by Arnold Lobel – Age: 5 +
Grasshopper hits the open road and meets many interesting insects along the way.
5. James and the Giant Peach, by Roald Dahl – Age: 5 +
James adventures across the ocean on a giant peach, accompanied by several larger-than-life insect friends. A chapter book, perhaps about 9-yr-old reading level, but eminently suitable to read aloud to a five-year-old. Very short chapters, lots of action and humour.
22 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 5+ Tags: biography, nature, photography, science, scientists, snow, winter
CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1999
By Jacqueline Briggs Martin
Illustrations by Mary Azarian
New York: Scholastic, 1998
30 pp.
Age: 5+
Interests: snowflakes, snow, biography, science, scientists, photography, nature
Also about W. A. Bentley: My Brother Loved Snowflakes by Mary Bahr
22 Aug 2011 1 Comment
in Books, books 4+ Tags: circus, Paris, strong girls
CALDECOTT MEDAL WINNER – 1993
by Emily Arnold McCully
New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1992
Age: 4+
Interests: Paris, circus performers, tightrope walkers, plucky heroines
Next: sequels Starring Mirette and Bellini, and Mirette and Bellini Cross Niagara Falls
22 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, books 3+ Tags: adventure, boats, ocean, pirates, soccer, treasure
by Melinda Long
illustrated by David Shannon
Orlando: Harcourt, 2003
34 pp.
Age: 3+
Interests: pirates!, ships, ocean, adventure, soccer
Also by this author and illustrator: Pirates Don’t Change Diapers
Also by this illustrator: No, David! (Diaper David series), A Bad Case of Stripes, Alice the Fairy
22 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
Here’s a Salon interview with fairy tale scholar Jack Zipes, promoting his book The Enchanted Screen: The Unknown History of Fairy-Tale Films. Jack Zipes has written voluminously about fairy tales and modern consumer culture, and can always be counted on for a really curmudgeonly viewpoint. (Which I always enjoy.)
Another aspect of the current spate of “dark” movie versions of fairy tales that they don’t talk about here is that these films are obviously not intended for children to see. In one sense, this is actually true to ancient fairy tale tradition, after all the stories were told orally to whomever was around to hear them. They were not created specifically for children. So modern movies may actually be liberating the old tales from the “ghetto” of children’s amusements where they have been languishing for over a hundred years.
The downside of very dark fairy tale movies (plus the very adult comic book hero movies), is that they reflect the growing childishness of “grownups”. No more putting aside of childish things when we grow up – today adulthood simply means we are finally able to buy all the expensive toys we want and play games all day. The entertainment industry caters to the new infantilized adult, serving up children’s movies that aren’t really made for children (Pixar and comic book movies) and endless childish tv shows and games on very mature topics.
Um, but this article isn’t really about that. That was just me venting again…
21 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books
Don’t stop reading to your kids just because they’ve learned to read… an interesting Q & A with Diane Frankenstein, author of Reading Together.
20 Aug 2011 Leave a comment
in Books, Gender Differences, Issues, Television
I just read an interesting article from the New York Times entitled “Boys and Reading: Is There Any Hope?” by novelist Robert Lipsyte.
Strangely enough, the same “mostly true” cliché he cites (that girls will read books about boys but boys won’t read books with female main characters) exists in children’s television as well: girls will watch ‘boy shows’ but boys will not watch ‘girl shows’. But whereas in publishing this theory has led to fewer and fewer ‘boys’ books’, in television the result has been fewer and fewer girl characters.
Why? I think it’s because book publishers are wary about aiming product directly at a gender that doesn’t read so much, so as a result they hedge their bets. They add female characters to the boys books (as the author states) to hopefully entice the legions of girl readers.
In television-land – Hunter S. Thompson’s “long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs” ¹ – there is no such thing as a “reluctant boy tv-watcher”, so the impulse is instead to reduce the number of girls on all sides, because you can conceivably capture both genders as an audience for your show as long as you don’t scare off the boys with too many alpha females onscreen. So, more often than not, when you have an ensemble cast of 5… 3 will be boys. If there are 3 characters, 2 will be boys. Girls are to be kept in the pert and pretty minority.
But I digress. Interesting article, like I said.
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¹ Sigh. I never get tired of using that quote! Hunter S. Thompson, Generation of Swine: Tales of Shame and Degradation in the ’80s (New York: Summit Books, 1988), p. 43.