Welcome!

Dear Book Lovers, Welcome! I am delighted that you have found The Through the Looking Glass blog. For over twenty years I reviewed children's literature titles for my online journal, which came out six times a year. Every book review written for that publication can be found on the Through the Looking Glass website (the link is below). I am now moving in a different direction, though the columns that I write are still book-centric. Instead of writing reviews, I'm offering you columns on topics that have been inspired by wonderful books that I have read. I tell you about the books in question, and describe how they have have impacted me. This may sound peculiar to some of you, but the books that I tend to choose are ones that resonate with me on some level. Therefore, when I read the last page and close the covers, I am not quite the same person that I was when first I started reading the book. The shift in my perspective might be miniscule, but it is still there. The books I am looking are both about adult and children's titles. Some of the children's titles will appeal to adults, while others will not. Some of the adult titles will appeal to younger readers, particularly those who are eager to expand their horizons.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and fifty-four

For many children, the beginning of September is back-to-school time, and school doings fill their lives. For some, getting used to being back in school is not easy, and there are anxious moments. For today's picture book I have a title that will help children to remember that school can be fun, even if they don't have a canine class mate.

Harry Bliss
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Scholastic, 2011, 978-0-545-23344-6
   Bailey is a dog, a special kind of dog who goes to Champlain Elementary School five days a week. Like the children in his class, Bailey packs his lunch and he has subjects that he is better at than others. He likes to tell everyone what his favorite things are (sticks, bones, slow-moving squirrels) and he is very good in math.
   There are times though when he is very much a dog. He tends to eat his homework (literally), and he cannot help rummaging through the garbage after lunch. He loves to dig holes and chase sticks. Sometimes these doggy activities are an asset, and at other times they are not, and you can never be quite sure when Bailey’s dogginess is going to take over.
   In this delightful book, Harry Bliss, who created Diary of a worm and Diary of a spider, lets us share a school day with a very unique elementary school student. Children are sure to enjoy reading about his adventures and misadventures, and by the time they get to the last page they will wish that Bailey was a student in their class. 

Saturday, September 10, 2011

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and fifty-three

When you try to do something that you have never done before, and if you don't know what you are doing, things can go wrong. Very wrong. A souffle can come out of the oven as flat as a pancake, a broken pipe can flood the house, and a home hair dyeing kit (blond) can turn your hair green. It is, generally speaking, a good idea to read a book about how to make a souffle, how to fix a pipe, and how to successfully dye your hair so that you do not end up with green hair. Of course, there are always those individuals who just can't be bothered, who don't read directions or the small print. Today's story is about just such an individual.

Emily Gravett
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Simon and Schuster, 2009, 978-1-4169-8270-8
   One day a little green frog finds a book of spells. He wishes that the book was about boats and that he is a pirate sailing the seven seas. But it isn’t. He wishes that the book was about castles and that he is “a handsome prince kissing a beautiful princess.” But it wasn’t. He is just a frog and the book is just a book of spells
   Then the frog finds a page with the words “Spell to become a Handsome Prince” at the top. Unfortunately, the pages in the book have been rather torn up and mixed up. There is no way of knowing which piece of page goes where. After many rather unfortunate mis-spells, the frog finally turns himself into a prince. At last he is going to be able to fulfill all his dreams. Or maybe not.
   Magic fans of all ages will find it hard to resist this clever picture book. Children will love the divided interior pages, and they will laugh out loud when they see what happens to the frog when he tries to fulfill one of his wishes. It would appear that it is VERY important to read the small print, especially when you are casting a spell. 

Friday, September 9, 2011

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and fifty-two

When you are big and strong it is very easy to underestimate those who are smaller and weaker than you. You imagine that just because you are bigger and tougher than everyone else, that they cannot possibly have the advantage over you in any way.

In today's picture book you will a big mean bear you learns that it really doesn't pay to underestimate anyone. 

Sean Taylor
Illustrated by Hannah Shaw
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Frances Lincoln, 2011, 978-1-84780-085-5
   The Grizzly Bear with the Frizzly Hair has nothing left to eat in the woods, and now he is hungry, bad-tempered, and “on the prowl.” When he come across a rabbit, the bear snatches up the little animal and starts to swallow it. Desperately, the rabbit tries to put the bear off, telling the hungry beast that his knees are too bony and that they will give the bear a “tummy ache.” He tells the bear that “Eating someone’s head is really not…polite.”
   Not surprisingly, the bear does not care what the rabbit has to say. He is hungry and he is going to eat the rabbit, bony knees and all. Then the rabbit tells the bear that there is something in the river that is much bigger than one little rabbit, something that will really satisfy his enormous appetite.
   Based on a folk tale that is many hundreds of years old, this is a story children will greatly enjoy. The tale is told using clever rhymes, and Hannah Shaw’s illustrations perfectly compliment the text.

Poetry Friday: A review of There's a babirusa in my bathtub

For as long as I can remember I have been fascinated by animals. They come in such an amazing variety of colors, shapes, and sizes, and they have such interesting adaptations and behaviors. When I was sixteen I went and worked at the Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust for a summer. I worked in the garden that supplied food for the animals, I cleaned cages, I prepared food, and I ended up having quite a few adventures. On one occasion a babirusa decided that he did not want me in his paddock and he proceeded to chase me out of it at full speed. Thankfully I got out of the gate in time.

Today I have a poetry title that looks at thirteen unusual animal species, including the babirusa.


Maxine Rose Schur
Illustrated by Michael S. Maydak
Poetry and Nonfiction
For ages 7 to 9
Dawn Publications, 2009, 978-1-58469-118-1
   Most of us know about cats and dogs, horses and zebras. We have seen giraffes in a zoo, and elephants at the circus. We think we know a lot about animals, but what about the babirusa, civet, kinkajou, matamata, and tamandua. Do you know anything about these animals?
   In this fascinating and entertaining book, Maxine Rose Schur combines poems with nonfiction to give her readers portraits of thirteen unusual animals. She begins with the babirusa, a rather unfortunate looking pig-like animal that has two pairs of tusks. Babirusa’s love water, which is why the poem about this animal describes what it would be like to have a “babirusa in my bathtub.” In the nonfiction text that accompanies the poem we learn that babirusas are such good swimmers that they can swim from island to island in their Asian habitat.
   Later on in the book we meet the hagfish, a bizarre looking marine eel like creature that “ties herself into a bow / And squeezes clean from head to toe.” This rather novel way of cleaning itself is not the only strange thing the hagfish does. It also eats using a tongue that is covered with teeth, and it can produce enormous amounts of slime.
   Animal loving children are sure to enjoy this unique book with its poems, its sections of fact-filled text, and its illustrations. At the back of the book, the author provides her readers with additional information and activities that parents and teachers can use.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and fifty-one

Most of us have an inner voice that tells us when we have eaten enough of something, before we eat so much that we make ourselves sick. Some of us though have to learn the hard way that there are times when one can have too much of a good thing. The main character in today's picture book is just such an individual, and her story is wonderfully funny.

Jackie French
Illustrated by Bruce Whatley
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Star Bright Books, 2003, 978-1-932065-48-0
   Pamela the black and white cow loves pears, and she will eat them at every opportunity. In fact, she is not above stealing fresh pears, stewed pears, and pear pies whenever she can. Amy, the little girl, also likes pears, and she starts to get desperate. How can she make sure that Pamela does not eat every single pear on the farm?
   Grandpa puts a fence around the pear tree, but Pamela finds a way under it. Grandma ties Pamela to a tree, but Pamela is so strong and determined that she uproots the tree. Then Amy comes up with an idea that she thinks will bring Pamela’s pear-eating habits to end.
   Children and their grownups will find it hard not to laugh out loud when they read this deliciously funny picture book. Bruce Whatley’s illustrations are delightfully expressive, and the tale’s ending is sure to delight readers of all ages.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Unusual Heroes Blog Book Tour - Sally's Bones

Today is the second day that I am participating in the Unusual Heroes blog book tour. Today I am going to tell you about another new book that Sourcebooks is promoting. Just like The Warrior Sheep go West, this book has a hero who is rather usual. Actually, he is VERY unusual.

MacKenzie Cadenhead
Illustrated by T.S. Spookytooth
Fiction
For ages 9 to 11
Sourcebooks, 2011, 978-1-4022-5943-2
   After her mother dies, Sally Simplesmith’s life takes a very decided downward turn. Her father is withdrawn, and she is terribly lonely and quite angry as well. How could her mother leave Sally here all alone?
   When her old toddlerhood friend, Viola Vanderperfect, comes back to live in Merryland, Sally dares to hope that she will at last have a real friend, someone she can talk to about her problems. Sally soon finds out that Viola is a truly horrible stuck up little snob. Instead of refriending Sally, Viola does her best to make Sally’s life as miserable as possible.
   When her mother lay dying, Sally made a deal with her. Sally would “live every stupid day to the fullest,” and in turn Sally’s mother (dead or alive) would give Sally “whatever I want to make things right.” Sally has done her best keep her promise and it has all been a miserable failure. Now she feels her mother owes her since Sally has kept her side of the deal. Desperately unhappy, Sally goes to her mother’s grave in the cemetery and she tells her mother to “Give. Me. Death.”
   What Sally’s mother gives her is a dead dog. Literally. She gives her a little dog who is all bone and very little skin. At first, Sally is appalled, but she soon discovers that the little dog, even though it has no eyes, no flesh, and no fur, is an uncommonly clever and loving little thing. Soon the dog, Bones, is her best friend and steadfast companion.
   At last life is starting to look up for Sally, but, of course it does not stay that way for long. Something or someone is out to ruin what little happiness Sally has.
   In this decidedly odd and charmingly quirky book, readers will find out that love really can overcome death. In certain situations. It is hard not to feel pity for Sally, who so desperately wants a friend, and who finds one who is so unusual that he gets into trouble almost immediately.
   Readers who like tales that are strange, a little dark, but that have a happy ending will truly enjoy this title.

 Being a big dog fan, I decides to write to the Merryland Dog Pound to see if they have any dogs like Bones available for adoption. This is the letter that I got in response:

Dear Ms. Marya Jansen-Gruber,

Thank you for your interest in adopting a dog from the Merryland Dog Pound. We regret to inform you that, despite news reports to the contrary, we do not have any lovably lively but lifeless canines currently available. While the rumor is true – there is a living, breathing skeleton dog that goes by the name of Bones gallivanting all over town – he belongs to a girl named Sally Simplesmith and, as far as we know, he’s one of a kind. (And thank goodness for that! One petrified pooch is plenty.)
Might we interest you in a cocksure cocker or dashing dachshund? Perhaps a prancing poodle puppy? Or is a marvelous mutt more your style? No? Well, if you’ve got your heart set on a canine cadaver, I’ll tell you what I know. (Though if you ask me it’s your funeral.) As a breed I must warn you that the dearly departed doggie has a history of alleged criminal behavior. Though my colleague the Dog Catcher hasn’t been able to make anything stick, he assures me it won’t be long before he sends that spirited skeleton to Sing Sing! Still, there are some who consider the bloodless hound adventurous and clever, loyal and kind – like Sally. She never even had a friend before Bones showed up and now they’re practically Merryland royalty!
So, if it’s a life of dog treats and danger you want, go ahead; keep looking for a skeleton dog all your own. Just don’t say I didn’t warn you!

Sincerely,
Ida Tolljyah
Adoption Coordinator, Merryland Dog Pound

I guess I need to hang out in the local cemetery and maybe I will find the dog I am looking for there.

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and fifty

Many little children love to hear stories about what they were like when they were babies. "Did I cry a lot?" "Was I cute?" "Were you glad I was born?" are just a few of the questions they like to ask. They like to hear about how they rocked by one parent, or sung to by another. They laugh when they hear about how one of their parents drove around for hours with baby in the car seat just to get baby to stop crying.

In today's picture book, you will meet two new parents who discover that sometimes you need to be creative when you have an unhappy baby in the house.
Cinnamon Baby
Nicola Winstanley
Illustrated by Janice Nadeau
Picture Book
For ages 4 to 6
Kids Can Press, 2011, 978-1-55337-821-1
   Miriam is a fabulous baker who makes all kinds of breads in her little bakery. Every day she ends her baking by making cinnamon bread. While she kneads the raisins into the dough, Miriam sings so that “the smell of cinnamon and the sound of her beautiful voice rose together and curled through the air.”
   One day Sebastian is going past the bakery when he hears Miriam’s lovely voice. He immediately goes inside the shop and buys a loaf of cinnamon bread. After buying a loaf of the wonderful bread every day for a year, Sebastian asks Miriam to marry him.
   Soon the happy couple have their first child, a baby girl with “big brown eyes and dusky skin.” At first all goes well, but then the baby starts to cry, and though they try everything they can think of, Miriam and Sebastian cannot get their daughter to stop crying. The baby is not sick, so what is upsetting her so?
   In this delightful picture book, a lyrical text is paired with multimedia art to give readers a story that is unusual and a joy to read. The tale explores the special connection a baby has with her mother. Children and parents connect on many levels, and in this book we discover that babies are soothed when all their senses are engaged by things that that make them feel loved and safe.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and forty-nine

It is an important moment in a child's life when he or she learns that money does not grows on trees, nor does it magically appear in purses and wallets. If you want to spend money, you have earn it. In today's picture book you will meet a little girl who wants to buy something, and since she is broke, she has to figure out how to make some cash. 

Devon Kinch
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Random House, 2010, 978-0-375-86735-4
   Penny is a little girl who has “big ideas.” Among other things, she has written a novel and held a dog fashion show. Now she needs another big idea because she has no money and she wants to give Bunny, her grandmother, a birthday party.
   Thankfully, a big idea finally comes along. Bunny has an attic full of stuff and Penny asks if she can “turn the attic into a shopping mall.” Bunny loves the idea because she will be glad to get rid of all her miscellaneous and unwanted bits and pieces. Penny then gets to work, because hosting a sale takes some organization.
   In this cleverly written picture book, children will meet a character who will show them some financial basics. They will see how Penny prices items, how she sells them, how she saves the money she earns, and how she spends it. Best of all, they will see how a child can use her wits to give something to someone she loves.

Monday, September 5, 2011

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and forty-eight

For today's picture book I have a graphic novel that is outrageously funny and enormously entertaining. Best of all, there are more titles in this series to enjoy. I won't tell you anything more about this book because I don't want to give too much away.

Jarrett J. Krosoczka
Graphic Novel
For ages 7 to 10
Random House, 2009, 978-0-375-84683-0
   One day, during breakfast at school, Hector, Terrence, and Dee wonder what their school lunch lady does when she is not working in the school kitchen. Then Milmoe, the school bully, comes over and starts trying the shake the children down for their lunch money. Milmoe’s threats and intimidation are brought to an abrupt end when Mr. Pasteur, the new substitute teacher, turns up.
   After Mr. Pasteur leaves the lunch room, Lunch Lady and her friend Betty (who is another lunch lady) have a little chat. Lunch Lady has a feeling that something is not quite right about Mr. Pasteur and his presence in the school. Mr. O’Connell, the math teacher Mr. Pasteur is replacing, hasn’t been sick in twenty years. Why is he sick today? Also, Lunch Lady cannot help feeling that Mr. Pasteur’s name is somehow familiar.
   Soon Lunch Lady and Betty are in their secret laboratory in the Boiler Room. What no one knows is that Lunch Lady and Betty not only serve lunch at the school, they also do their best to keep the peace in their town by foiling the dastardly plans of villains.
   Betty the gadget making wiz and Lunch Lady use their spy cameras around the school to see what the teachers are up to. When Mr. Pasteur goes to the teacher’s lounge, Lunch Lady does a little snooping in his classroom, and what she finds is rather odd.
   When Mr. Pasteur leaves school that day, Lunch Lady follows him, and in her wake are Hector, Terrence and Dee, who still want to know what Lunch Lady does when she isn’t working at the school. The children have no idea that what lies ahead of them will rock their world.
   This is the first in what promises to be a hugely entertaining series of graphic novels. Readers will be amused to discover that this particular lunch lady has a very exciting secret life, and they will love the names of the secret gadgets that her sidekick Betty creates for her.
   Readers who enjoy graphic novels are sure to enjoy reading and collecting the Lunch Lady titles. 

Sunday, September 4, 2011

The TTLG 2011 Picture Book Celebration: Book two hundred and forty-seven

Being an only child, I could always count on receiving my parent's love and attention. I never had to share them with anyone else. I cannot imagine what I would have done if my parents had announced that they were going to have another child. I probably would have thrown a fit. Today you will see how Little Pip the young penguin copes when his mother lays an egg. Only children dealing with the impending arrival of a new sibling are sure to find this story comforting. 

What's in the Egg, Little Pip?Karma Wilson
Illustrated by Jane Chapman
Picture Book
For ages 4 to 6
Simon and Schuster, 2010, 978-1-4169-4204-7
   Little Pip’s mother has a large egg resting on her feet, which means that Little Pip can no longer sleep under her mother’s “soft, warm belly.” Since the arrival of the Egg, Pip’s parents have been making a huge fuss over it. They talk about how a little brother or sister for “sweet Little Pip” will make their family “just right.” Pip cannot see how the egg can make her family any more right than it is already.
   When Mama goes to sea to fish, Papa takes on the job of taking care of the Egg. This means that he cannot slide on the ice with Pip, and his poor daughter feels very ignored. Why did the Egg have to come along to spoil everything? Then a storm blows in and Pip does what she can to help her Papa take care of the Egg. After all, her Mama said that Pip is big enough to help take care of the Egg.
   Getting used to the idea that there is going to be a new person in the family is never easy for an only child. They cannot help feeling a little rejected and lonely. Reading about Little Pip’s struggles will surely help just such a child to understand that having a sibling will only add to the love in the family.
   This third Little Pip title will delight little children who have become fond of the little penguin, and who have enjoyed her adventures thus far.
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