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.
Monday, April 22, 2013
Picture Book Monday - A review of Nibbles: A Green Tale
Happy Earth Day! I hope you have a wonderful day exploring and enjoying this beautiful planet we live on. I have a picture book for you today that explores a very important environmental issue.
We have two guinea pigs, Caramel and Fudge Ripple. I am sorry to say that they really don't have much to say other than "Wheeeeeee!" when they want their breakfast and dinner. The guinea pigs in today's picture book are much more interesting. In fact, they are intelligent animals who make a very important decision regarding their natural resources.
We have two guinea pigs, Caramel and Fudge Ripple. I am sorry to say that they really don't have much to say other than "Wheeeeeee!" when they want their breakfast and dinner. The guinea pigs in today's picture book are much more interesting. In fact, they are intelligent animals who make a very important decision regarding their natural resources.
Charlotte Middleton
Picture Book
Ages 5 to 7
Marshall Cavendish, 2010, 978-0-7614-5791-6
Nibbles, like all
the guinea pigs in Dandeville, loves to eat dandelion leaves. As far as Nibbles
and the other guinea pigs are concerned, dandelions are the crème de la crème
of guinea pigs foods. They eat dandelion leaves at every meal, and in-between
as well.
Then the most
terrible thing happens, the dandelions in Dandeville start to run out. The
guinea pigs are forced to buy dandelion leaves at exorbitant prices on the
Internet. They are even forced to eat cabbage leaves instead. What is to be
done?
When Nibbles finds
the last dandelion plant growing outside his bedroom window, he is tempted to
eat it, but instead he does a little research and he sets about doing what he
can to take care of and nurture the dandelion plant. Nibbles has a long term
plan that could make life better for all the guinea pigs in Dandeville.
In this
delightfully picture book, Charlotte Middleton shows her young readers how
important it is to think of the future. If we preserve our natural resources
now, then we will have natural resources in the future. Using an engaging story
and wonderful multimedia illustrations, the concept of sustainability is
beautifully presented from the point of view of guinea pigs.
Friday, April 19, 2013
Poetry Friday - A review of Something Fishy
When I was growing up we went camping at the seaside every summer. We pitched tents on the beach and for days I had a wonderful time building things out of rocks, swimming, exploring the beach, and snorkeling. I would snorkel for so long my skin got wrinkly and my face mask left a red line on my forehead. I loved to watch the little fish, eels, and other underwater creatures. I would have thoroughly enjoyed reading this book of poetry, which explores the lives of animals that live in water.
Barry Louis Polisar
Illustrations by David Clark
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 6 to 8
Rainbow Morning Music, 2013,
978-0-938663-53-9
Watching, photographing, and
learning about animals is something many people enjoy doing. Men, women, and
children watch nature shows, visit zoos, go on safaris and find other
opportunities to see animals in their natural environment. There are many
people who are particularly taken with animals who live in oceans, seas, and
lakes, and they put on masks, carry tanks of oxygen on their backs, and put up
with freezing cold water so that they can see fish, whales, and other animals
going about their business.
For those of us who are not really interested in getting
wet to see aquatic animals, there are movies and television shows to watch, and
books to read. Some books have made up stories about underwater explorations,
while others are nonfiction. Then there are authors who choose to describe
animals who live in water using poetry.
In this book Barry Louis Polisar’s clever poems are
paired with often amusing illustrations to give readers a little trip
underwater. We meet the oddly named sweetlips fish, and find out that horseshoe
crabs come on land to mate. Unfortunately, many of them “get stranded” when the
tide goes out because they are “followed nature’s calling.”
Some of the animals we meet on the pages are creatures we
would rather avoid in the real world. These include the jellyfish, “a
nettlesome bunch of bad luck,” and crocodiles and alligators. Others, such as
seahorses and barnacles are harmless, and if we were to encounter then we could
watch them without fear.
The last poem wraps up this collection perfectly. In it
the author celebrates all the creatures that live in water ending with the
words “Praise all that swims and floats.”
Well-crafted poems and wonderful artwork make this book a
must for anyone who likes poetry or who has a fondness for seas, oceans, lakes,
and rivers.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Monday, April 15, 2013
Picture Book Monday - A review of Red Hat
As every parent and pet owner knows, young children and animals often get a great deal of pleasure playing with things that are not toys. For example, instead of playing with the toy barn they were given, children play with the box that the barn came in. Instead of playing with the catnip mouse that cost far too much, the cat plays with a cork that fell on the floor.
In today's book you will meet some young animals who play with a red hat and who have a wonderful time doing so.
In today's book you will meet some young animals who play with a red hat and who have a wonderful time doing so.
Lita Judge
Picture Book
For ages 4 to 6
Simon and Schuster, 2013,
978-1-4424-4232-0
It is a pleasant sunshiny day a
little girl sets up her washtub on the grass in front of her home and washes
her red knitted hat. When it is clean, she carefully pins it to the clothes line
by its white tassel, and the she goes back into her little house. Some rabbits
and a pair of bears see the hat on the line and they decide that it would make
a grand toy. As soon as the bear cub gets its paws on the hat, it runs off,
with the rabbits in hot pursuit. Then a raccoon snags the hat from its tasseled
end and gallops off with the hat on its head.
As the raccoon runs, the hat sprouts a long red piece of
yarn from its pointy top with the tassel hanging on the end. A little rabbit
manages to snag the yarn, and a tiny mouse is thrilled when it manages to grab
hold of the yarn near the tassel. How rewarding little triumphs of this kind
can be! The adventure is not over though. The hat and the young playful animals
have more to do.
Lita Judge, who brought us the picture book Red Sled, is a gifted storyteller who
manages to tell her tale without using any real words at all. The only sounds
this book offers readers are the noises that the young animals make as they
steal, play with, and then return the hat. Children are going to love the
surprise ending, which brings the tale to a wonderful close.
Friday, April 12, 2013
Poetry Friday - A review of Follow Follow
In 2010, in her book Mirror Mirror, Marilyn Singer presented the world with a new poetry form that she created. When I read the reverso poems in that first book I was gobsmacked. What an amazing idea she had come up with. The poems in the book can be read from top to bottom and then from bottom to top. They explore an idea or a story in two different ways. Today's poetry title is her new collection of reverso poems and I can promise you that they are quite extraordinary.
Marilyn Singer
Illustrated by Josee Masse
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 5 to 8
Penguin, 2013, 978-0-8037-3769-3
Most of us know that every story has got at least two
sides. At least two! We know that it is wise to make sure that we know both
sides to a story before we decide which side we will support. Do fairy tales
also have two sides that we should be aware of?
They most
certainly do, and in this delightful book Marilyn Singer looks at some very
popular fairy tales and she give us two points of view. She uses a very interesting
poetical device to do this. For each fairy tale she presents one side of the
story in a poem, and then she reverses the text in the poem to give another
point of view. Thus in the story of the
little mermaid we begin with the idea that she should “For love / give up your
voice. / Don’t / think twice.” In the reverso poem we end with “Think twice! /
Don’t / give up your voice / for love.”
The poem Follow Follow is about the Pied Piper of
Hamelin who led rats away from the town of Hamelin and who, when he was not
paid for his work, had his revenge. The author’s account begins when we hear
from a man who says “there will be / no pay,” for the piper who should “go
away.” In the reverso poem we hear from the piper who, having been betrayed, announces
that he will make sure that the children of Hamelin “shall never return.”
In some of the
pairs of poems the narrator is the same, while in others there are two
narrators. Reverso poems were invented by Marilyn Singer and they show to
perfection how a skilled poet can play with words to create something
interesting and unique. Each of the twelve pairs of fairy tale poems in this
book offers readers something to think about and enjoy.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Monday, April 8, 2013
Picture Book Monday - A review of Extra Yarn
Making things and then giving them to people I care about is something I enjoy doing. This winter I knitted hats and scarves for many of my friends and I love seeing them walking around town wearing their colorful gifts. In this award winning book you are going to meet a girl who also enjoys knitting and who also likes to give away what she makes, thus making her world a more colorful place.
Mac Barnett
Illustrated by Jon Klassen
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
HarperCollins, 2012, 978-0-06-195338-5
It is a cold day in winter and the ground is covered with
snow. Everything around Annabelle is snowy white or is black with soot. Then
the little girl finds a box that is filled with colorful yarn. Annabelle knits
a sweater for herself, and she knits a sweater for her dog Mars. Even after she
has knitted these two garments there is some yarn left over.
Annabelle takes Mars for a walk and meets Nate, who is sitting
on a wood pile. Nate makes fun of the sweaters Annabelle and Mars are wearing,
and Annabelle tells him that he is “just jealous.” Though Nate insists that he
is not jealous, it turns out that he is, and when Annabelle knits him and his
dog sweaters, Nate is surprisingly happy.
Annabelle’s box of yarn still isn’t empty. When she goes to
school wearing her new sweater her teacher, Mr. Norman, says that her sweater
is distracting the students in class. Annabelle announces that she will make a
sweater for everyone so that they will not have to “turn around” to look at the
one colorful sweater in the room. Mr. Norman says that such a thing is
“Impossible,” but it turns out that he is wrong. Annabelle is able to knit
sweaters for all the children in the class and for Mr. Norman. The strange
thing is that the box is still isn’t empty.
In this enchanting award winning book children will
encounter a box of yarn that is clearly magical. They will marvel, and laugh,
at all the things Annabelle knits, and they will also appreciate that part of
the box’s magic is within Annabelle herself.
Children will enjoy seeing how Annabelle’s knitted creations
bring color to a world that is mostly white, black, and shades of brown. What
would it be like to live in a world where there was no color, a world where there
was no one around to create beautiful, colorful things.
Friday, April 5, 2013
Poetry Friday - A review of A Stick is an Excellent Thing
When I was a kid my parents had a hard time getting me to come indoors. As long as it wasn't blistering hot or pouring with rain, I preferred to be outside. These days many kids have to be pushed to go outside. Too many of them prefer to be entertained than to entertain themselves. Today's book celebrates the many ways in which children can and do spend their time when they are outdoors. The author shows to great effect that outdoor play is magical and wonderful.
Marilyn Singer
Illustrated by LeUyen Pham
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 7 to 10
Clarion Books, 2012, 978-0-547-12493-3
Many children associate the word “playing” with TV
screens, computer monitors, and hand held gaming devices. They no longer equate
playing with being outdoors. Thankfully, many people, including parents and
teachers, are eager to get children outside again so that they can have a more
active lifestyle that encourages them to interact with other children.
In this splendid collection of poems Marilyn
Singer celebrates a wide variety of outdoor activities. Some of the poems
describe are games such as hopscotch and monkey in the middl;e. In the poem Hide-And-Seek we hear from the hider,
who stands “here oh so still” pretending that he is in Brazil “where lots of
birds fly free.” Then we hear from the little girl seeker who is convinced that
the hider hasn’t “got a prayer” because she’s “just too good at seeking.”
Other poems look
at doings that are less ordered and more free-flowing. Playing in the sprinkler
is just such an activity. We see how children use their imaginations so that a
stick can be a scepter or a magic wand. Even a bucket can be the center of
interest when becomes a pot for making soup. Children toss grass, stones, mud,
cheese, a celery stalk, an old cigar, and a piece of chalk into the pot, give
it a stir, and “then throw it out and start again.”
With wonderful
poems that are paired with vibrant illustrations, this book perfectly captures
the joy that children experience when they spend time outdoors playing in the
sun or under the stars.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Monday, April 1, 2013
Picture Book Monday - A review of Red Kite, Blue Kite
Telling the story of a terrible time or experience is not easy, especially when you want to tell the story to young children. In today's picture book the author gives children a sense of what it was like to be a little child during China's Cultural Revolution. Often moments in the account are sad, but hope is always there and that hope makes this a powerful, memorable, and beautiful book.
Ji-li
Jiang
Illustrated
by Greg Ruth
Picture
Book
For
ages 7 to 9
Hyperion,
2013, 978-142312753-6
One
of Tai Shan’s favorite things to do is to go to the “tippy-top” of the roof of
his house with his Baba to fly kites. Tai Shan’s kite is a small red one, and
his father’s is a big blue one. As they fly their kites together Baba tells his
son stories, stories that make their time together on the roof particularly
special. Up there flying his kite Tai Shan feels as free as the kite that is
flying above his head.
Then “a bad time” comes and Tai Shan’s life
is turned upside down. Schools are closed and Baba is sent to work at a labor
camp. Since Tai Shan’s mother died when Tai Shan was born, the little boy is
sent to stay in a village with a farmer called Granny Wang. Though Granny Wang
is kind to Tai Shan, the little boy misses his father whom he sees only one day
a week, on Sunday. Every Sunday Baba walks for miles from his camp to the village
where Tai Shan is living, and on this one day the father and son fly their kites
as they used to do.
Then one day Tai Shan’s father tells his son
that he will not be able to visit for a while. To stay connected to his son Tai
Shan’s father comes up with a plan. Tai Shan should fly his red kite every
morning, and his father will fly his blue kite every sunset. Their kites will
be their own private “secret signal.”
Day after day the two kites send their
messages of love to Tai Shan and his Baba even though they are miles apart. Then
one day Baba’s blue kite does not appear.
Based on a true story about a boy and his
father during China’s Cultural Revolution, this evocative picture book
beautifully captures the power that hope can have on people during hard times.
At such times, small things, like red and blue kites, come to represent
something precious.
With a memorable story and lovely
illustrations, this picture book gives readers an experience that they will
remember long after the last page is read.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Friday, March 29, 2013
Poetry Friday - A review of Vherses: A celebration of outstanding women
Women's History Month, which is celebrated in the United States every March, is wrapping up in just a few days, so I thought that I would offer you a poetry book today that commemorates the lives and achievements of fourteen extraordinary women. Any reader over the age of eight will gain something from reading this title.
J. Patrick Lewis
Illustrated by Mark Summers
Poetry Picture Bok
For ages 8 and up
Creative Editions, 2005, 1-56846-185-2
For hundreds of years women lived restricted lives. A
male dominated society dictated what women could or could not do, and the could
nots greatly outweighed the coulds. Of course, some women chose to challenge
the system, and in the eighteen hundreds more and more women dared to do things
that were considered unsuitable for the gentler sex.
In this splendid
collection of poems J. Patrick Lewis celebrates the lives of fourteen women who
chose to do something meaningful and sometimes controversial with their lives.
The first poem is about Emily Dickinson, a woman who wrote poetry that was
unusual and unconventional, who had the courage to be true to herself. Emily
had her own voice and style, choosing “to weave a word,” and living a quiet
life that was full of solitude and reflection.
Georgia O’Keefe and
Martha Graham also chose to find their own ways to express the creativity that
lay in their souls. Georgia created paintings whose unique colors and themes startled
people. Martha Graham dared to dance in a different way, focusing on
“excitement and surge,” rather than beauty and elegance.
Then there are
the women who had a different sort of courage. Eleanor Roosevelt “the great
first lady” who “Looked fear in the face,” championed the poor, the
disenfranchised, and the downtrodden. Fannie Lou Hamer also chose to speak out.
In her case she fought for the rights of America’s African American citizens,
defending their right to vote and their right to freedom.
In a similar way,
Rachel Carson chose to speak for Nature, whose voice was being ignored. Her
“little book,” which was called Silent
Spring, helped people to understand that humans cannot take nature for
granted, and that they need to care for and conserve our beautiful and wild
places and our natural resources.
J. Patrick Lewis
also celebrates the lives of women who pushed their courage and bodies to new
heights. Amelia Earhart dared to be the first women to fly solo across the
Atlantic and pushed on even when her altimeter failed and when her plane’s
wings “were icing over.” Gertrude Ederle also had to overcome appalling conditions
when she swam the English Channel and made the fastest crossing made “By woman
or by man.”
Throughout this
book, beautiful poetry and lovely art is paired with short descriptions of the lives
of the fourteen women mentioned. The collection will touch, inspire, and appeal
to readers of all ages.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
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