I am lucky to have to some wonderful friends who are there for me in good times and bad, who make me laugh, and who understand where I am coming from. I miss them when I don't see them, and feel rich after I have spent time with them. Today's picture book is about a friendship that is similarly enriching and wonderful. As the pages turn, two little pigs who are very different, but who are also best friends, come to learn something about the relationship that they share.
Toot and Puddle
Holly Hobbie
Picture Book Series
For ages 4 to 6
Little Brown, 2007, 978-0316365529
Toot and Puddle are a pair of pigs who live together, and they are the best of friends. One would think that they would have to be alike to be able to share a home, and yet they are actually very different. Toot loves to go off on adventures to all sorts of exotic places, while his friend prefers to stay home in comfy and homey Woodcock Pocket.
One day Toot decides to go on a trip around the world. While he is gone, Puddle has a wonderful time at home doing all his favorite things. At the same time he gets to share in Toot's adventures by reading the postcards that Toot sends him from Egypt, Africa, the Solomon Islands, India, and many other places.
However, even though he is having a good time at home, Puddle begins to miss his friend. He thinks about Toot as he goes about his daily activities. What he doesn't know is that Toot is having similar feelings.
In this book the author has created a tale with unforgettable characters, illustrations to pore over, and a simple yet powerful text that is a tribute to friendships of all kinds.
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, May 23, 2016
Monday, May 16, 2016
Picture Book Monday with a review of Bear in love
Sometimes we think that the perfect expressions of love or affection are the ones that are grand and extravagant. It turns out that often the best way to show someone that you care for them is by doing something for them that is simple, and yet powerful. In this picture book you will meet a bear who finds out that someone cares for him very much, someone who is shy, and kind, and thoughtful; someone who does little things for the bear that say an awful lot.
Bear in love
Bear in love
Illustrated by Will Hillenbrand
Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Candlewick Press, 2012, 978-0-7636-4569-4
One morning, as per usual, a bear crawls out of his cave,
he rubs his eyes, stretches, feels the morning sun touch his fur, and then
looks around for his breakfast. On this particular
morning he discovers that someone has left an orange “long and pointy” thing on
a rock. The bear has never encountered such a thing before, and when he sniffs
it he decides that is smells “nice,” and so he nibbles it. The thing turns out
to taste very good indeed.
The next morning
someone has left two of the orange, nice tasting things on the rock. The bear
cannot help wondering who left them there. The morning after that three orange
tasty things appear, and the morning after that there is a whole bunch of them
sitting on the rock. The bear decides that someone must like him very much to
leave him so many “good things.”
That day the
bear discovers a bee nest in a tree, which he then proceeds to raid. The bear
happily feasts off the honey comb and the honey. He could eat the whole lot,
but he decides that he will save some for “the nice friend” who gave him all
the orange treats.
The bear leaves
the honeycomb on the flat rock and he tries to stay awake to see who his new
friend is, watching from his cave. Unfortunately, the bear is not very good at
staying up, and he falls asleep. In the morning his friend has left him a
little gift. A pretty flower is lying on the rock where the honeycomb was. Once
again the bear wonders and wonders who the mystery person could be.
This sweet story
explores how a special friendship is built. With each gift, each act of
kindness, the connection between the bear and his secret friend gets closer.
Children will be delighted when they see how the story turns out, and when they
discover what the bear, and his new friend, feel for each other.Friday, May 13, 2016
Poetry Friday with a review of Heartbeat
I didn't really know anything about this book before I read it, though I knew from past experience than anything Sharon Creech writes is going to be marvelous. This book is indeed marvelous, on so many levels. It explores the discoveries that a young girl makes as the world around her shifts and changes and I, at least, grew very fond of her very quickly. Her voice is true and strong and it is delightful to see how she matures as the story unfolds.
Heartbeat
Sharon Creech
For ages 9 to 12
HarperCollins, 2012, 978-0060540241
Change is a-coming in Annie’s life. Grandpa is now living
with her family because he is becoming forgetful and frail and he needs to be
cared for. Annie’s mother is pregnant, and Annie is both a little scared and
excited at the prospect of having a sibling. There is something so awesome, and
yet a little “creepy,” about the whole baby-growing-inside-her-mother thing.
The one thing
that stays the same for Annie is her running. Whenever she can, Annie runs
barefoot, just for the sake of running. For her, running is a joyous thing that
she loves to do alone. Or mostly alone. Often Annie’s friend Max runs with her.
They barely speak, and that is the way they like it. Lately though Max has
become more withdrawn and angry. His father left the family and then his
grandfather died. For Max, running is now more than just a hobby. It has become
what he hopes will be a means to an end. He hopes to escape his hometown and
his life through his running, and so now, during every run, there is the goal
of going faster and being better. There is a drive that Annie appreciates and
understands but that she wants nothing to do with. Max tries to get Annie to
join the school track team but she refuses. She refuses even when the coach at
school puts pressure on her.
Annie’s
grandfather used to be a runner, and he has trophies in his room that show how
he good he was. For some reason one day he stopped running and now here he is,
a little old man, and parts of his memories are “vanishing every day.” At the
same time his newest grandchild is growing, getting bigger and preparing for
his or her arrival into the world. How strange it is to be losing something and
gaining something at the same time. The world is sometimes a very confusing
place.
As the days go
by, Max gets more and more aggressive about his running. He needs to get a pair
of proper running shoes because he is not allowed to compete running barefoot.
Coming from a family where money is tight means that he cannot just go out and
buy a pair of shoes whenever he wants to, and Annie worries about this. She
wants Max to be able to race because he wants to do it so badly. She wants this
for him even though his compulsion is creating a rift between them, and their
friendship is suffering.
As the day of
the birth approaches, Annie gets more nervous. She and her father are going to
be present at the birth and they are going to need to help Annie’s mother
through the process. Annie is not sure she is up for the challenge, but she
does her best. She watches the birth movie (which makes her feel queasy) and
studies the coaching manuals so that she will know what to do when the time
comes.
As all these
changes swirl around her, Annie dives into an art assignment that she has been
given. She needs to draw an apple for one hundred days. She needs to create one
hundred drawings of an apple, and at first she cannot imagine how she will
manage it. Over time though she begins to see the apple in a deeper way, to
appreciate the nuances of its shape and colors and she begins to understand why
she was given the assignment in the first place. Learning how to see things,
really see them, is an important skill to have if you are an artist. It also a
valuable skill to have when you are a person who needs to find their place in
the world.
This
extraordinary book explores the way a twelve-year-old girl learns about the
people in her world, and we see her trying to negotiate the trials that life
throws her way. In the process, she starts to figure out what she wants and who
she is, and she discovers that most people, and most challenges, are a lot more
complicated than they at first seem.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Monday, May 9, 2016
Picture Book Monday with a review of Flora and the peacocks
In 2014, a wonderful wordless picture book called Flora and the Flamingo won a Caldecott Honor. It is a delightful book that has charmed people all over the world with its wonderful artwork and its clever story. Since then Flora has gone on to meet a penguin, and now she is back strutting her stuff with a pair of peacocks. Flora has faced challenges before when she befriended the flamingo and the penguin, but these two peacocks present her with problems that are both new and difficult.
Flora and the Peacocks
Flora and the Peacocks
Molly Idle
Wordless Picture Book
For ages 5 and up
Chronicle Books, 2016, 978-1-4521-3816-9
Flora loves to dance, and somehow she tends to attract very
lovely, very gifted characters who end up dancing with her, all of whom are
birds. So far she has danced with an elegant flamingo and a charming penguin.
This time Flora comes across a pair of peacocks.
Wearing a pretty
teal, blue, and green outfit, and with a yellow fan in her hand, she bows to
the two peacocks. One immediately starts to approach her, and it is clearly rather
interested in sharing a dance with the little girl. The other peacock, with its
beak in the air, and later with its face completely hidden, makes it clear that
it is not interested in joining in at all.
Flora tries to
reach out to the uppity, aloof peacock and she even starts to make friends with
it, but then the first peacock takes umbrage and the next thing you know a very
unfortunate situation is created.
Three can be an
uncomfortable number when it comes to making friends. Flora and the peacocks
certainly discover that there is no knowing what might happen when jealousy and
an unwillingness to share surfaces. Children will appreciate why things go awry,
and they will be delighted when they see how Flora and the peacocks resolve
their problem.
This wordless book,
with its flaps that open and lift ,and its pages that unfold, is a delight to
the eye and the heart.Sunday, May 8, 2016
Monday, May 2, 2016
Picture Book Monday with a review of Why?
When I was five years old, a civil war broke out in the country that I was living in. Suddenly, and for reasons that I did not understand, people who had lived side-by-side were now killing each other. It was village against village, and neighborhood against neighborhood. To say that my experiences had a profound effect on me is an understatement. To this day I loath violence and hate-filled words.
Today's picture book shows, to great effect, how conflicts can grow out of petty disagreements. It is a book that children and adults alike can connect with.
Why
Today's picture book shows, to great effect, how conflicts can grow out of petty disagreements. It is a book that children and adults alike can connect with.
Why
Nikolai Popov
Picture Book
For ages 5 and up
Minedition, 2016, 978-988-8341-05-4
One day a frog is sitting in a meadow and it picks a
beautiful flower. Having the flower makes the frog very happy, but someone else
is not happy at all. Mouse wants the flower that Frog has picked, and so Mouse
forcibly takes the flower from Frog.
Mouse does not
get to enjoy ownership of the flower for long because soon Frog’s friends
arrive on the scene and they chase off Mouse. The frogs celebrate their
“victory” by gathering up all the flowers in the meadow and they dance around
with joy. Their conquest is short-lived because soon Mouse returns with his
friends. They roll up in an armed boot and chase the Frogs across a bridge,
firing on them.
The mice think
that they have won and that the frogs have been routed, but their victory is
also short-lived because the frogs have a plan in place to give the mice a
taste of their own medicine.
Children often
ask grownups why wars start, and all too often the answer they get is long-winded
and complicated. In this picture book the author shows readers of all ages that
often the reason why people go to war is very simple, and very foolish. One act
of violence begets a violent response, and the conflict escalates. Eventually
both sides look across a scene of desolation and unspeakable loss and they
cannot, for the life of them, understand how things got so bad.
There is a
message in this tale, a powerful message, that readers of all ages will
appreciate and hopefully carry with them. They will see that responding to a
problem with violence is never the answer.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Poetry Friday with a review of Snuggle up with Mother Goose
I wonder how many people have read or sung the Mother Goose rhymes to their children. Many thousands I am sure. The interesting thing is that though the world has changed so much since they were written, there is something timeless about the wonderful little rhymes. Today's poetry title is a board book which contains sixteen nursery rhymes that have been lovingly illustrated by Rosemary Wells.
Snuggle up with Mother Goose
Snuggle up with Mother Goose
Edited By Iona Opie
Illustrated by Rosemary Wells
Poetry Board Book
For ages 1 to 4
Candlewick
Press, 2015, 978-0-7636-7867-8
The
sun is up and it is time to wake up and get going for there are “Peas in the
pot and a hoe-cake baking,” and soon we will start our day.
We need to brush our hair and warm our hands
by the fire. Some of the men “are gone to plow” while others have gone to sea
in a boat and maybe, in the evening, children will have “a fish / In a little
dishy / When the boat comes in.” For those who stay at home there are dishes to
wash and wipe, and tea that has to be made.
In this wonderful board book, Iona Opie has
brought together sixteen nursery rhymes that carry us through a day from sun up
to sunset. Some of them gentle and soothing, others are funny and sweet. The
lines of verse celebrate the beauty of the written word, and introduce babies
and little children to some of the gems in the English language that were
written just for them.Poetry Friday with a review of Jumping off the library shelves: A book of Poems
I love libraries! When I was a child I would go to the local British Council library to spend an hour or so browsing the shelves. I would leave weighted down with a huge stack of books. I read about everything and anything. Except subjects that required me to do any kind of maths!
Today's picture book celebrates libraries and the joy of reading, and it is a delight.
Jumping off the library shelves: A book of Poems
Selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins
Illustrated by Jane Manning
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 5 to 7
Boyds Mills Press, 2015, 978-1-59078-924-7
A library is a special place. Some people think it is ‘just’ a repository for books, a storage place perhaps, but they are wrong. Thanks to the books in a library, people can find information, they can travel to distant lands, and have grand adventures. They can take a break from the world, and spend some quiet time immersed in wonderful words.
For this marvelous salute to libraries, Lee Bennet Hopkins has brought together poems written by a wonderful selection of poets. On the pages of this book we will meet children for whom their library is a special place. With their library cards in hand - the card that is “more powerful” than a cell phone, a TV remote, or a hundred apps - children find treasures that invite them “to explore” and “to dream.”
To help young readers in their search for a good read, there is the librarian who, by some magical ability, is always able to help a child find “the perfect book.” Somehow the librarian is able to read a child, like words on a page, and know what he or she needs.
The library is also a place where you will find storytellers who are able to make “words / leap from pages,” as they read out loud. With the storyteller for company, children make friends with frog and toad and they “walk / down a / yellow brick road.” During their storytimes they are able to believe in “once-upon-a-time” and “happily ever after.”
There is something for everyone in a library. On the shelves there are dictionaries, books of poetry, fairy tales and so much more. And when night falls and all the people have left the library, other little beings come out to partake of the library’s treasures.
This wonderful collection of poems take us into the world of libraries. We enter the library as “Morning pours spoons of sun” onto the shelves, and then leave when “night falls / outside / a / window.” As we close the book we are left with a comfortable feeling, and a yearning to visit our local library where book wonders await us.
Labels:
Children's book reviews,
Poetry books,
Poetry Friday
Monday, April 25, 2016
Picture Book Monday with a review of Beekle The Unimaginary Friend
Many children have imaginary friends, and sometimes we encounter such children in stories or films. We smile as they communicate with their invisible companions, who are often blamed when something untoward happens. In today's picture book story the focus, for a change, is on the imaginary friend instead of the child. On the pages meet an imaginary friend who needs one thing to make his life complete.
Beekle: The Unimaginary Friend
Picture Book
For ages 4 to 6
Little Brown, 2014, 978-0-316-19998-8
Beekle was born on an island where all the world’s
imaginary friends come into being. The imaginary friends wait and look forward
to the day when a child somewhere will imagine them, and then pick them to be
their own. Beekle waits and waits, but no one imagines him and “his turn” never
comes.
Eventually, Beekle feels that he has waited long enough,
and so he decides to seek out his friend rather than waiting to be imagined.
The journey is a
long one and it is full of “many scary things,” but the hope of finding his
friend gives Beekle courage and finally he comes to the real world, which is a
very strange place. Then, while he is standing on a sidewalk in a big city,
surrounded by the legs of big people, Beekle sees an imaginary friend go by
whom he follows. Soon he is a playground full of children and their imaginary
friends, a wonderful place where surely he will find his friend. Or maybe not.
It is hard not
to fall in love with the main character in this story. His persistence and
courage is inspiring, and one cannot help feeling a deep connection with the
little, white imaginary friend who dares to do “the unimaginable.”Friday, April 22, 2016
Poetry Friday with a review of Mother Goose’s Pajama Party
For many parents the Mother Goose nursery rhymes are the first poems that they explore with their children. Over time Little Miss Muffet, the cow that jumped over the moon, and Wee Willie Winkie all become members of the family. In today's poetry title these characters and others from the Mother Goose rhymes come together to attend a special event hosted by none other than Mother Goose herself!
Mother Goose’s Pajama Party
Mother Goose’s Pajama Party
Danna Smith
Illustrated by Virginia Allyn
Poetry Picture Book
For ages 4 to 6
Random House, 2015, 978-0-553-49756-4
One night Mother Goose flies out into the night sky on
the back of her goose companion. In sparkles she leaves a message in the
starlit sky inviting her friends to come to her house at half past eight for a
story time.
The moon is the
first to see the message and she shows it to the cow, who then goes on to tell
Dish who passes on what she has been told to Spoon. Spoon then tells Cats about
the invitation and Cat, being the musician that he is, “fiddled a tune.”
Mother Goose’s
invitation is passed on from character to character, from Jack-a-Dandy to Wee
Willie Winkie, and from Georgie Porgie to Little Bo-Peep. Finally Nimble Jack,
with his candlestick, leads the way to Mother Goose’s house with all the other
nursery rhyme characters following him. Along the way they collect the crooked
man and the cooked mouse and they walk along “the final crooked mile,” until
they come to Mother Goose’s door promptly at eight o’clock.
What follows is
a wonderful evening that is full of treats that the guests and the hostess
alike enjoy.
Written in
wonderful rhyming verse, this picture book brings together some of the most
well-known nursery rhyme characters, who take little children on a memorable
bookish adventure that is full of joy, warmth, and finally comfort.
At the back of
the book children will find the fifteen nursery rhymes that feature the
characters that they met in the book.
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