A lot of people don't like pigeons, but I have to admit that I rather admire them. They thrive, even in places where the odds are against them and where so many people dislike them. Today's poetry picture book is a wonderful bouncy celebration of pigeons and their world.
City Beats: A Hip-Hoppy Pigeon Poem
S. Kelly Rammell
Illustrator: Jeanette Canyon
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Dawn Publications, 2006, 978-1584690771
If you have ever lived or stayed in a city you will know that there are often pigeons flying about in-between the tall buildings. You might see them roosting on a window sill or eating crumbs on a sidewalk. They are a part of city life and we are going to spend a day with them; we are going to explore their city world and see what the city looks, sounds, and smells like as they experience it.
Down on the ground pigeons see a forest of legs and all kinds of different shoes walk by as they nibble on stale doughnuts. Up above, from the air, they see trains rush past, trucks rumble across bridges, and great machines raise buildings from the ground in a cacophony of sound and steel.
They smell all the treats that street vendors sell: popcorn, ice cream, pizza and hot dogs. They find the parks and the gardens where flowers bloom and bees hum. They even hear the strains of music floating up from the streets, music halls, and clubs.
In this unique book, children will be able to experience the rhythms, sounds, sights, and smells that fill the streets of cities all over the world. A rhyming text flows from page to page, the words packed with noises and images that almost seem to dance with vitality.
With her extraordinary three dimensional polymer pictures Jeanette Canyon has created art which perfectly compliments the text. Vibrant colors and extraordinary details make this a book which readers will look at again and again
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.
Friday, February 13, 2015
Monday, February 9, 2015
Picture Book Monday with a review of The Dandelion's Tale
Personal stories are powerful things, and children in particular are drawn to them. When I was little I used to beg my aunt to tell me about what her life in India was like when she and my father were little, and the stories she told me help me to understand my father better. Today's picture book is about a dandelion who wants to share her story with others, and about a sparrow who wants to help her achieve this goal.
The Dandelion's Tale
Illustrated by Rob Dunlavey
Picture Book
For ages 5 and up
Random House, 2014, 978-0-375-87032-3
One beautiful summer’s day Sparrow is out flying when he
sees a dandelion growing in a meadow all by itself. He stops to rest on the
branch of a nearby tree, which is when he hears that the dandelion is crying.
Sparrow asks Dandelion what is wrong and she explains that she worries that one
day, quite soon, “no one will know I was ever here.” Dandelion no longer has
her yellow petals; instead, all she has are ten seed pods, and soon enough they
will blow away. She wants someone to hear her stories, and yet there are no
dandelions nearby to whom she can tell her tales.
Since Dandelion
cannot move, Sparrow offers to write down all her stories in a patch of earth
nearby and soon he is busily writing down all the things that Dandelion wants
to share with others. She talks about how much she likes “the smell of the
meadow after it rains,” and how much she enjoys “talking with the squirrels as
they look for food in the morning.” Sparrow hears about all the things that
Dandelion has “seen and loved.” Sparrow reads back what he has written down and
Dandelion is very happy.
As evening falls
Sparrow says goodbye, promising that he will come back the next day, but that
night there is a big storm and when Sparrow returns to the meadow Dandelion is
gone, blown away by the wind and rain. To make matters worse, Dandelion’s story,
which Sparrow wrote in the earth, has also vanished. Poor Sparrow is
heartbroken.
This beautifully
written picture book celebrates the power of stories, which, when they are
shared and told, keep the lives and experiences of others alive. Children will
be delighted when they see how the story unfolds and how, after all, Sparrow is
able to honor Dandelion just as she would have wished.
Friday, February 6, 2015
Poetry Friday with a review of Kids Pick the Funniest Poems
Finding poems that appeal to children is not easy. They have to be just the right length, have the right tone, and the right kind of rhyme. Thankfully, there are people out there who are willing to do what it takes to find out what works for children. One of these people is Bruce Lansky, and today I have a review of a book that he worked one, a book that is packed with poems that children chose.
Selected by Bruce Lansky
Illustrated by Stephen Carpenter
Poetry
For ages 6 to 8
Meadowbrook, 1991, 978-0671747695
Most of the time the poems in poetry anthologies are
chosen by adults. For this collection the editor, Bruce Lansky, asked children
what their favorite poems were. He then read through all the poems that were
chosen, twenty thousand in number, and then chose five hundred that he thought
would best interest young readers. Bruce then presented these five hundred
poems to a panel of three hundred elementary school children and they told him
which of these they liked best. The interesting thing about this process is
that all the poems that were chosen are funny. Some were written by famous
poets such as Dr. Seuss and Ogden Nash, while others were written by wonderful poets
who are not as well known.
The collection
is divided into nine topic sections, each one of which focuses on one
particular subject. The topics chosen include parents, siblings, friends,
disasters and monsters, which are the kinds of subjects that children are
interested in.
We begin with
poems about “Me,” which are all written from the point of view of a child. In
the first one the narrator is “glad that I am me.” Even though people stare at him
when he behaves in ways that other people consider odd, he is determined that
he is “not going to change and be someone I’m not.” In another me poem another
child daydreams about all the things he would like to do and say to the
grownups who inflict things on him. He’d like to “give the nurse the shot” and “send
my mother to her room,” and best of all he dreams of being able to say “‘Cause
I said so!”
The next topic
in the book is one that all children will appreciate because it is about
parents. It explores the ways in which parents curtail children’s activities
and make them do things that they, naturally, think are very unreasonable;
things like eating liver and learning good manners. Some of the poems tell deliciously
funny stories about parents whose children somehow get the better of them.
The humor found
in these poems is sometimes subtle, and sometimes it is just all out funny.
Children will enjoy dipping into the book to find an amusing poem that lifts
their spirits and that helps them to remember that though life has its trials,
it is also full of good times, good books, and wonderful poetry.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Monday, February 2, 2015
Picture Book Monday with a review of Madame Martine
Every so often I come across a picture book that lifts my heart because of the quality of the book's story, and because of the message it conveys. Today's review title is just such a picture book.
Madame Martine
Sarah S. Brannen
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Albert Whitman, 2014, 978-0-8075-4905-6
Madame Martine lives in Paris, in an apartment not far from the Eiffel Tower. Every day she walks the same route, and she does her shopping in the same shops. Every week her schedule is the same and this is how she likes things to be. Madame Martine has never been to the top of the Eiffel Tower, because she thinks that doing so would be a waste of time.
Then one Saturday, when she is out, she finds a small miserable looking dog hiding under a bush. When she offers the dog her hand it licks her and Madame Martine begins to think that maybe the dog “might be nice.” Then Madame Martine does something that is quite out of character. She picks up the dog and takes it home where she bathes it, feeds it, and gives is a name. The next day Madame Martine buys Max a collar, a leash, dog food, and a bowl and she takes him shopping with her.
One Saturday Madame Martine and Max are out walking near the Eiffel Tower when Max sees a squirrel. He pulls the leash out of Madame Martine’s hands and takes off up the stairs of the Eiffel Tower. Desperate to retrieve her dog, Madame Martine buys a ticket and starts climbing the stairs.
Many of us fall into a routine because it is easy and comfortable. We don’t like to do new things that will disrupt our schedule, and yet when we restrict ourselves by doing this we lose something. We don’t have the kinds of adventures that make our lives richer.
In this wonderful picture book we see how Madame Martine’s new companion teaches her a valuable lesson about the importance of having adventures and trying new things. Throughout the book gorgeous illustrations are perfectly paired with a timeless story to give readers a tale that is powerful and heartwarming.
Madame Martine
Sarah S. Brannen
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Albert Whitman, 2014, 978-0-8075-4905-6
Madame Martine lives in Paris, in an apartment not far from the Eiffel Tower. Every day she walks the same route, and she does her shopping in the same shops. Every week her schedule is the same and this is how she likes things to be. Madame Martine has never been to the top of the Eiffel Tower, because she thinks that doing so would be a waste of time.
Then one Saturday, when she is out, she finds a small miserable looking dog hiding under a bush. When she offers the dog her hand it licks her and Madame Martine begins to think that maybe the dog “might be nice.” Then Madame Martine does something that is quite out of character. She picks up the dog and takes it home where she bathes it, feeds it, and gives is a name. The next day Madame Martine buys Max a collar, a leash, dog food, and a bowl and she takes him shopping with her.
One Saturday Madame Martine and Max are out walking near the Eiffel Tower when Max sees a squirrel. He pulls the leash out of Madame Martine’s hands and takes off up the stairs of the Eiffel Tower. Desperate to retrieve her dog, Madame Martine buys a ticket and starts climbing the stairs.
Many of us fall into a routine because it is easy and comfortable. We don’t like to do new things that will disrupt our schedule, and yet when we restrict ourselves by doing this we lose something. We don’t have the kinds of adventures that make our lives richer.
In this wonderful picture book we see how Madame Martine’s new companion teaches her a valuable lesson about the importance of having adventures and trying new things. Throughout the book gorgeous illustrations are perfectly paired with a timeless story to give readers a tale that is powerful and heartwarming.
Friday, January 30, 2015
Poetry Friday with a review of The Alphabet from A to Y with Bonus Letter Z
One of the reasons why I love my work is because I love words and language. In today's picture book children will encounter a delicious collection of words and wonderful rhymes, which are presented in a clever alphabet book type format.
The Alphabet from A to Y with Bonus Letter Z
Steve Martin
Illustrated by Roz Chast
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 5 to 8
Flying Dolphin Press, 2007 ISBN: 978-0385516624
Alphabet books are more varied today than they have ever been. Some are straightforward ABC books that use pictures and single words to help children to learn their alphabet. Others are packed with information about a variety of subjects. In this unique title the author and illustrator have chosen to entertain their audience while they show them that there is a wonderful world of words out there.
For every letter of the alphabet Steve Martin has created a funny nonsense rhyming couplet in which he introduces some characters who are doing things that are amusing, downright outrageous, or deliciously naughty. In each line of verse Martin uses plenty of words beginning with the letter of the alphabet that is features on that page. On the H page for example we meet Henrietta the hare who "wore a habit in heaven" and who had a "hairdo" which "hid hunchbacks: one hundred and seven."
Readers will laugh at loud when they read the descriptive couplets, and they will also discover that the accompanying illustrations are packed with things whose names begin with the letter being featured. Thus, on the L page we not only read that Lovely Lorraine is discovering that long Louie has Larry's locket, but in the artwork we see, among other things, a lamppost, a boy licking a lollipop, a loudhailer, and a lawyer.
As they turn the pages, children will have a wonderful time reading the rhymes out loud and searching the illustrations for hidden objects and words.
The Alphabet from A to Y with Bonus Letter Z
Steve Martin
Illustrated by Roz Chast
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 5 to 8
Flying Dolphin Press, 2007 ISBN: 978-0385516624
Alphabet books are more varied today than they have ever been. Some are straightforward ABC books that use pictures and single words to help children to learn their alphabet. Others are packed with information about a variety of subjects. In this unique title the author and illustrator have chosen to entertain their audience while they show them that there is a wonderful world of words out there.
For every letter of the alphabet Steve Martin has created a funny nonsense rhyming couplet in which he introduces some characters who are doing things that are amusing, downright outrageous, or deliciously naughty. In each line of verse Martin uses plenty of words beginning with the letter of the alphabet that is features on that page. On the H page for example we meet Henrietta the hare who "wore a habit in heaven" and who had a "hairdo" which "hid hunchbacks: one hundred and seven."
Readers will laugh at loud when they read the descriptive couplets, and they will also discover that the accompanying illustrations are packed with things whose names begin with the letter being featured. Thus, on the L page we not only read that Lovely Lorraine is discovering that long Louie has Larry's locket, but in the artwork we see, among other things, a lamppost, a boy licking a lollipop, a loudhailer, and a lawyer.
As they turn the pages, children will have a wonderful time reading the rhymes out loud and searching the illustrations for hidden objects and words.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Multicultural Children's Book Day
These days the news is full of stories that seem to indicate that in some places the divide between people of different cultural backgrounds is getting wider and wider. Too many of us are getting less tolerant and accepting of people who not like us. I find this trend to be both disturbing and very discouraging. One way to counter this trend is to help our children to understand and appreciate people who are culturally different from them. Books that celebrate diversity can help parents, teachers, and librarians to explore how our lives are made richer when our communities are heterogeneous. Today is Multicultural Children's Book Day and below you will find out why this event was created by two women who want to open hearts and minds one book at a time. Visit the Multicultural Children's Book Day website to find out more.
Children’s reading and play advocates Valarie Budayr from Jump Into a Book and Mia Wenjen from Pragmatic Mom have teamed up to create an ambitious (and much needed) national event. On January 27th, Jump into a Book and Pragmatic Mom will be presenting yet another Multicultural Children’s Book Day as a way of celebrating diversity in children’s books.
Despite census data that shows 37% of the US population consists of people of color, only 10% of children’s books published have diversity content. Using the Multicultural Children’s Book Day, Mia and Valarie are on a mission to change all of that. Their mission is to not only raise awareness for the kid’s books that celebrate diversity, but to get more of these types of books into classrooms and libraries. Another goal of this exciting event is create a compilation of books and favorite reads that will provide not only a new reading list for the winter, but also a way to expose brilliant books to families, teachers, and libraries.
Multicultural Children’s Book Day will include book reviews from noted bloggers all over the world, giveaways and book-related activities for young readers of all ages. The MCCBD team will also be partnering with First Book to create a Virtual Book Drive for the event, and with The Children’s Book Council to offer readers quality resources along with fun and informative author visits.
Together the MCCBD team hopes to spread the word and raise awareness about the importance of diversity in children’s literature. Our young readers need to see themselves within the pages of a book and experience other cultures, languages, traditions and religions within the pages of a book. We encourage readers, parents, teachers, caregivers and librarians to follow along the fun book reviews, author visits, event details, multicultural children’s book linky and via our hashtag (#ReadYourWorld) on Twitter and other social media.
Monday, January 26, 2015
Picture Book Monday with a review of Uh-Oh, Dodo!
Some people like to think that it is easy being a small child, but there are so many mistakes that one can make when one is very young and inexperienced. In today's picture book you will meet a young dodo bird who is constantly putting his rather large feet into it, and we cannot help laughing at the mistakes he makes.
Picture Book
For ages 4 to 6
Boyds Mills Press, 2013, 978-1-59078-9259-2
Dodo is a little dodo bird who has very large yellow
feet, a little feather dusterish white tail and a large beak. Today he and his
Mama are going for a walk. Dodo’s feet, like the feet of many little birds,
have a mind of their own. Dodo is so taken with how talented his toes are that
he forgets to pay attention to what he is doing and he walks straight into his
mother’s backside.
Dodo sings
loudly for everyone to enjoy, only not everyone is pleased by the noise he is
making. A mama bird who has chicks in her nest angrily shushes him. Next, Dodo
decides to start a “funny-shaped rock collection.” He collects all kinds of
rock like objects, including a knobbly green rock. Dodo soon discovers that the
rock is not a rock at all. It is a tortoise who is not really interested in
being part of any collection.
Just like so
many little children, poor Dodo goes from one uh-oh moment to another as he
follows his mother. Everything he does is well intentioned, but somehow things
go wrong and Dodo ends up in some kind of pickle.
Young children
are going to love the uh-ohs in this book, many of which are sweetly funny.
They will easily connect with the little bird who tries to play with the wrong
animal, hugs the wrong legs, and eventually wears himself out completely.Friday, January 23, 2015
Poetry Friday with a review of Read-Aloud Rhymes for the very young
Sharing stories with children is something many grownups do by reading aloud in libraries, classrooms, and at home. Doing this not only entertains children, but it also helps them to discover that the written word is a powerful thing. Today I have a review of a book packed full of poems that are perfect for reading aloud.
Selected by Jack Prelutsky
Illustrated by Marc Brown
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 3 to 6
Random House, 1986, 978-0394872186
Babies, even before they come into the world, are attuned
to rhythmic sounds. They hear the beat of their mother’s heart before they are
born, and can also hear the rising and falling sound of her voice. They
therefore come into the world with a natural inclination to listen to sounds.
Rhythmic sounds such as the purr of a car engine and the rumble of a dryer send
them to sleep, and bedtime lullabies make them feel loved and safe. Since songs
are “nothing more than poetry set to music,” children have an affinity for
poems and they enjoy having poems read to them, especially ones that have a
lilting rhyme.
In this
collection of two hundred short poems grownups will find verses that were
written especially for little children. The poets have taken the short
attention span of their audience into account, and they use language that will
resonate with their young listeners.
Some of the poems
tell little stories that will amuse children, others describe activities that
children enjoy doing, things such as jumping, playing hide and seek, blowing
bubbles, playing in that mud, and having a bath. There are also poems that
describe animals, places and things that children encounter as they go about
their day.
In addition there
are poems that explore the ways in which children can use their imaginations to
make their world magical and full of adventures. For example in Wild Beasts a child talks about how “I
will be a lion / And you shall be a bear.”
So often things
seen through the eyes of a wondering child gain a depth and a significance that
adults no longer know how to find. Many of these poems capture that wonder, and
celebrate the marvelous in everyday things and situations. For example in Home, a child describes how he or she
collects shells and then goes home. There are only four lines in the poem and
yet the scene and the child’s pleasure comes through loud and clear.
Throughout this
splendid book, Marc Brown’s storytelling illustrations and sweet artwork
vignettes are paired with the poems.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Monday, January 19, 2015
Picture Book Monday with a review of Alone Together
I really like my alone time. In fact, I need some alone time every day, otherwise I start to feel squirrely. In today's picture book you will meet a bear who is trying to have a little time alone, a little time when he can be quiet and calm. The problem is that his friend Goose does not really understand why Bear needs this.
Suzanne Bloom
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Boys Mill Press, 2014, 978-1-62091-736-7
One day Fox and Goose are sitting together when Fox asks
his friend where Bear is. Goose says that Bear is not far away sitting alone.
Fox is surprised when he hears this and Goose has to explain that sometimes
Bear like to be alone. Fox, who is a friendly little fellow, goes over to Bear
and asks him if he is “sad” or “mad” or “lonely.” Bear is none of these things.
He is just having “some quiet time.”
Fox says that he
likes quiet time too, but it turns out that Fox’s quiet time is nothing like
Bear’s quiet time. Fox hums, twirls, and whooses “like the wind,” and poor Bear
is not at all happy. He just wants some quiet. Some real quiet.
Some people need
quiet time on their own. They are not upset about anything, they just need some
space to enjoy being with themselves. The problem is that other people don’t
always understand why they need this time, and they don’t understand what quiet
time means. In this sweet picture book Suzanne Bloom’s expressive and minimal
illustrations are paired with a spare text to give young readers a story that
explores how three very different characters find a way to be alone, and quiet,
together.
Friday, January 16, 2015
Poetry Friday with a review of Book Of Animal Poetry
Many children like to watch animals in zoos and on television. They like to read about real animals in books, and many picture book authors and illustrators use animals as their main characters because they know that their young readers are will be drawn to their creations. Poets too like to write about animals, and today's title is literally packed with animal poems of all kinds.
Book Of Animal Poetry
Book Of Animal Poetry
Poetry
For ages 5 to 8
National Geographic, 2012, 978-1-4263-1009-6
Many poets love to describe nature and animals in the
poems that they write. Some like to go a step further and they “try to imagine
the secret lives of animals.” What is it like to be an animal, and to see its
world through the eyes of that creature?
In this
remarkable collection of two hundred poems we encounter animals that have just
come into the world, those that are big, those that are small, the winged ones,
the ones that live in water, the strange ones, the noisy ones and the quiet
ones. Some of the poems were written many decades ago and capture the feeling
of a different time. Others are more modern and reflect a more contemporary
approach to poetry writing. There are poems that rhyme and those that are
written in blank verse. Some are funny and others are more completive.
What makes this
collection so special is that the poets don’t only write about animals that are
commonplace. They embrace the whole animal kingdom from big whales “always
spouting fountains,” to little ladybugs, “Smaller/ than a button, / bigger than
a spot.” We drift on the wings of “six geese / rowing across a full moon” and plunge
deep into oceans with a seal who “swims / With a swerve and a twist, / a flip
of the flipper, / a flick of the wrist.”
Some of the
animals are strangely creepy, like the piranha who will consider “you’re meat”
should you ever encounter it. Others are weird but funny, like the baby
porcupine who, though it cannot yet climb trees can still raise its quills “and
pirouette.” Then there is the armadillo which “From head to tail / It wears a
scratchy coat of mail.” Meerkats, anteaters, frilled lizards, sting rays and
other oddities also appear on the pages.
Throughout the book the poems are paired with
stunning full-color photographs to give readers an extraordinary journey into
the world of animals. The photos provide a wonderful backdrop for poems written
by Jane Yolen, Robert Louis Stevenson, Robert Frost, Hilaire Belloc, Michael J.
Rosen, Ogden Nash and others.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
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