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Monday, March 29, 2021
It's Monday - Celebrating - Preparing for Poetry Month - Almost April
It's Monday - New Wonderful Books!
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Thanks to Candlewick Press and Walker Books, US! |
It all begins with a young girl coming home after helping her doctor father with a challenging birth, mention of the Journal of Anomalous Objects, otherwise known as 'oddities', an ice hook, and sadly, a murder. Those are the early pages of the heart-rending adventure of Clover Elkin, taking her into magical worlds, meeting historical figures, including a talking rooster and a witch named The Seamstress. It's an alternate nineteenth-century history whose background shows the United States at war with France and a failed Louisiana Purchase. Eli Brown does not leave a frightening detail unexplained from tiny blue threads giving life to a true friend for Clover, another girl with courage named Nessa. If you are a fantasy lover, this book will thrill you, make you cringe, and bring admiration for the heroine who bravely steps forward every time to do what is right. The book includes lovely woodcut-style illustrations by Karin Rytter
Thursday, March 25, 2021
Poetry Friday - Found! That Bird in the Herd
Susan Bruck hosts our Poetry Friday today HERE at her blog, Soul Blossom Living. It's nearly April, nearly Poetry Month, time for celebrating through words you want to write. Today, Susan shares some of the plans by poets during April. Thanks for hosting and gathering, Susan!
I'm starting my poetry excitement for April early because I found a way to get Poetry Friday friend Kat Apel's new rhyming picture book, The Bird in the Herd! It has traveled all the way from Queensland, Australia, bringing Kat's fond and fun memories in this newest book.
I traveled to Costa Rica with students one year and we were fascinated when seeing cattle in the fields accompanied by some white bird, which we soon learned was a cattle egret. Now, years later, Kat Appel has written a book about that bird!
I've always thought that one of the bigger challenges in creating a picture book is not only to tell a good story for children but to do it while rhyming, too! Kat has managed to do that with expertise in this new book, finding marvelous rhymes for this funny and entertaining cumulative story. Yes, it is about "The Bird in the Herd" moving along with some cows, a dog, and a drover (in the US, we might call him a cowboy) until yikes! something happens on that road that mixes everything up! I won't tell what but it's a smash ending, but without a crash, thank goodness.
In the story, with double-page spreads full of colorful antics and expressions illustrated by Renée Treml, the animals amble and ramble along doing what they are supposed to be doing, pushed along by that drover, a sweet country scene until it isn't! It's such a rhythmic read-aloud that I continue to be inspired to try my own rhymes! If you notice that I color-coded them, it's because the rhymes are color-coded in the book, perfect for helping young readers see those rhyming words, another terrific part of the book. Each page brings a new look at the travelers, clever action in the art and in the poetic lines. I imagine everyone will want to say "What's next? Turn the page, turn the page!"
Here is one double-page example of the fun look of the book in about the middle of the story! If you want to know the back-story of Kat's book and her introduction to it, look here. Also, Kat shared an activity kit for it here, in case you missed it a couple of weeks ago. I hope that many of you are able to find Kat's book and enjoy it as I have. Thank you, Kat, for this new special book about your very own countryside. |
Monday, March 22, 2021
Monday Reading - It's All About Learning
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This is Helen Yoon's first picture book and it will fill you with chuckles as you watch this "wolf under cover" try so hard to have a good "sheepie" meal. His imagination is unlimited in the dishes he looks forward to. There is a crowd of sheep in the dining hall and this sneaky wolf manages to enter. He tries all sorts of tactics with a "master plan" like being helpful (washing dishes for the group) and being a team player (shuffleboard). Unfortunately, it doesn't exactly work out for the goal, but better than the sneaky wolf ever could imagine. Yoon's cartoon illustrations are so detailed and fun, you must take time to look at them all. The expressions and those "bubble dreams" are terrific. A different kind of wolf and sheep story that just might make readers think twice about what or who is considered a meal, an enemy.
Thursday, March 18, 2021
#PoetryFriday - Spring Dress Rehearsal
Welcome to the Spring Dress Rehearsal - Spring is Saturday!
Like Clockwork
Albeit time is but an abstract thought;
Seldom is the minute that can be bought.
We count it, and kill it, and watch it pass,
Then try to save it, and cannot, alas!
We turn it backward, and forward spring it,
Waste it, clock it, coordinate it.
Time heals, time marches, we yearn for more.
Though time lies heavy, there is a time for
everything. In the blink of an eye,
once in a blue moon, old rules do not apply.
Linda Baie ©
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
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It's Monday - More Fun Reading
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Thursday, March 11, 2021
Poetry Friday - Time for A Debut
Heidi Mordhorst hosts our Poetry Friday today HERE at her blog, My Juicy Little Universe. She is celebrating her birthday with spectacular poems, candles, and a few lightbulbs - Huh? Thank you, Heidi! I hope the day has been absolutely grand!
It was near seventy earlier this week, now we have a big snowstorm on its way, all weekend. Time for me to enjoy all the PF posts and some reading of some poetry and prose, too!
Trees are sprouting, too. I am really looking forward to that beginning green haze, then the leafing, every spring like a miracle! Are you preparing for April, Poetry Month? Here's a peek at the poster.
Here's a challenge for you if you're staying in and writing:
Rhopalic Verse: (from Greek "rhopalon"--a club which is thicker at one end)
Lines in which each successive word has more syllables than the one before it.
Trees
To define,
so many ideas-
branched complexity
each species demonstrates
surprising variety.
Bark displays
rough edges,
smooth symmetry,
and nature’s coloring.
Leaves’ ID
as palmate, parallel, trifoliate
and pinnate.
Leaf colors illustrate
lime, chartreuse, emerald, asparagus.
Trees offer
shade, cover, oxygen,
but mostly
eye candy.
Linda Baie ©
Monday, March 8, 2021
Monday Reading - All Kinds of Stories
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1st published in the UK by Walker Books Ltd |
I don't read too many early readers but when I do, I always like them. They often teach from a younger point of view and show new ideas. This time Atinuke (Anna Hibiscus, B is for Baby, and Catch That Chicken are only a few of her books) introduces Too Small Tola, a young girl who lives in a one-room apartment with older siblings Moji, a very clever sister, and Dapo, a brother who is very fast. Also, there is Grandmommy who doesn't take any "no" for an answer, but slyly shows her own kind of sweetness. They live in the mega-city of Lagos, Nigeria. Life is okay for them although sometimes they have no electricity or no water. Children reading these three stories will learn another way of living, one where kindness and friendly ways seem to make all the difference. The first story has Tola, although the smallest, going to market with Grandmommy, and the challenges they face carrying all that they get on their heads. The older ones seem to have too much to do, so Too Small Tola goes to help. It is a lot, but along the way, Grandmommy decides it's time to rest. The first time it happens to be by the soft drink stand; the second time near a doughnut seller. I imagine you know that another rest stop also happens and when they arrive home, those older siblings know they've missed out!
Thursday, March 4, 2021
Poetry Friday - Coming Warmth
Kat Apel, way down under, hosts our Poetry Friday today HERE at her blog. She's been doing a few cartwheels and high jumps because she has a new book out, The Bird in the Herd! You can read her "release day post" HERE! Thank you, Kat!
I am so excited that spring is, at least officially, just a couple of weeks away. It's been in the fifties and sixties this week, after our big snow last week! I know, I know that in Colorado, March, then April, are traditionally our snowiest months, thus it may be spring, but winter weather will return. In fact, yesterday was 60 and this afternoon it started to rain and will fall into snow overnight. Back warm again tomorrow. Flip-flop it does! However, warm-weather seasons are coming!
hoya blooming, sure sign of spring! |
I wrote my final poem in February with the group celebrating Laura Shovan's birthday to Michelle Kogan's prompt, to write about the back. Remember the theme for each day connected to the "body". This time, Michelle gave us the freedom to use "back" in the various ways it is used in our language, like "backdrop" or "throwback", not exclusively to our bodies. I chose to connect to a memory of the "backdoor" at a grandparents' home.
Backdoor in My Mind
Out the back door lies
Grandma’s garden
giving us all those growing things
you imagine. They sleep together
among the strange snarls of kohlrabi
she calls her fruit of the loom.
(Because of those tangles, you know.)
Out the back door lies
Grandpa’s shed, all those tools
leaning together like men at the
downtown bar: diggers, cutters, rakers,
saws, each one with a story to tell
(which Grandpa relates).
Out the back door lies
my maple tree, the one grown enough
to hold me while I read,
(like Mother did when I was tiny),
the one offering helicopters that really fly
and crimson leaves that predict ‘goodbye’.
Out the back door lies
the porch where warm rainy days
mean slow stories,
and clear evenings are perfumed
with sundown and starlight
and being together.
Linda Baie ©
Monday, March 1, 2021
Monday Reading - Love These Picture Books
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