November 1st is All Saints Day. I like to introduce one new saint book into our collection on that day as a gift to my children. This usually means finding a used copy of a saint book throughout the year at some point and hiding and saving it for that day. Occasionally, in mid October, I do an online hunt for a particular book I've had my eye on and buy it used. Rarely, is there a new, worthy saint book published that gets bought right away. This year, however, there was! I took a gamble on The Saint and his Bees because I didn't know anything about it. All I knew was that I absolutely loved illustrator Claire Brandenburg's other book The Monk Who Grew Prayer. I have been reluctant to purchase other titles of hers simply because she writes not explicitly Catholic books... but Orthodox. Without going into history details, there is a fine distinction between the two faiths and while I respect Orthodox believers very much, I don't make a point of venerating their saints specifically (pre-schism: the Catholic and Orthodox churches share the same saints... so I always double check to make sure the book being written by an Orthdodox author is about a saint who lived prior to the 11th century or so. There are exceptions: I did buy the book The Wonderful Life of Saint Sergius of Radonezh after researching that St. Sergius was indeed also recognized by the Roman Catholic Church...)
Anyway, onto this year's gift to my children: a story about St. Modomnoc (aka: St. Dominic), an Irish monk and student of St. David of Wales in the 6th century. It tells of his bond with the monastery's bees and the legend of how bees were introduced into Ireland because the swarm didn't want to let their dear monk go when he had to return to the island... so they followed him! Illustrated in Brandenburg's classic, rough, quirky style, the story is sweet and fun and a great addition to our collection. I'll have to do some updating to my listmania lists in this category. I only wish it (and The Monk Who Grew Prayer) was available in hardback! Such a pity to have lovely stories vulnerable to my ravishing, rowdy-handed children! I just have to be extra careful... :-)
And What About Halloween?
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Another alternative to traditional Halloween stories are to explore picture books that really embody mystery and suspense... not necessarily fear. Chris Van Allsburg comes to mind with books like The Stranger or the fun and macabre (a great combo) alphabet book The Z Was Zapped.
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Please note that not all fairy tales were written for children and some can be quite gruesome and morbid. Use your best discretion in previewing these tales... but know that this is what they looked like before Disney came to popularize and trivialize them.
“If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales.”-Albert Einstein
Pick of the Week: Somewhere In The World Right Now
Somewhere in the World Right Now by Stacey Schuett is a beautiful book that introduces the concept of time zones and geography and what's happening at any given moment around the world. The art is superb. In fact, it's one of those excellent books where it is almost obvious that the author had to be the illustrator as well... because the marriage between word and picture is so complete and so congruent. The book would be an excellent study for any child studying the world-at-large or time zones in particular. I also think it pairs nicely with the excellent On the Same Day in March: A Tour of the World's Weather as they both give an instant glance at the larger cultural/sociological picture of life. I sigh a happy sigh when these types of educational books are executed in a way that the educational attempts of it are not so orchestrated and obvious... but flow seamlessly and beautifully within the book. Well done indeed!
To a Publisher's Shame
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Here's my beef. Why—if you have such a lauded duo of picture book makers— would publishers let their other titles go out of print?! Forget for a moment, the worthiness of other titles, isn't there something to be said for celebrity power in the children's literature world? But let it be known that Autumn Harvest is worthy! The story is simple, and slow. It's a cycle of nature and lifestyle beginning with the earliest harvest season:
After the threshing, timid filed mice scurried through the stubble to find what the machines had left. And chattering birds gathered in the hedgerows to feast on the fallen grain. Each night at sundown the katydids sang louder. Katydid...katydidn't...katydid...katydidn't. Till the first frost tipped the maples with scarlet, and turned the elms to gold.
... and continuing on through the season until the farmer's family gathers around the table for Thanksgiving. All the while accompanied by Duvoisin's excellent, vintage drawings. I'm just not sure where the book goes wrong enough to get left in the publishing dust pile? Is it too dated or nostalgic? Is it because the farmer is not PC and he smokes a pipe? What?! Why suffocate our children with other filth in print and avoid the riches of yesteryear? I suppose it's the vicious cycle with all consumerism: if people buy it, they produce it. If they produce it, people buy it, if for nothing else than for lack of better options. So who really is to blame them? Us? Them?
Whatever the case may be, don't get all glittery eyed at the Barnes and Noble shelf of books when there are treasures waiting to be purchased second hand all over the place. Do some research. Don't settle for pig slop. Buy books with wrinkles.
Upcycling Books
And my wallet loves the fact that the main three that interest me all happen to be at my library! I wonder what new ideas they can offer me. Most of MY books remain intact and I'm not sure if any of these projects are appropriate for children's picture books... but it's worth a look!
Appreciating Arnosky
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Crinkleroot |
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Tom Bombadil |
Anyway, Jim Arnosky provides good stuff all around! Go get some books!
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