Thursday, July 28, 2016

Tuesday Storytime (& LAST SRP): Monster Foods

Our last summer reading program - I feel like I've missed so much of the program this year because I've been assigned to other tasks away from the circulation desk, and also had to miss several program days.  It seems to have gone smoothly and everyone in my programs enjoyed themselves (and reported good things about the others).  Now for the long awaited recovery period until next spring!

Book Lists for Storytime and Summer Reading were identical this time around, so titles are in the order I gave them, and simply listed the once.

Monster Chefs
Brian and Liam Anderson
ISBN: 9781596438088
Monster Chefs have to find something new for the king to eat, but keep coming up empty-clawed.

Very cute, and the twist at the end is very nice (I very much appreciate the character design of the twist.)  The king of monsters is tired of eating eyeballs in ketchup, and demands his four chefs venture into the world to find something new to eat, or become dinner themselves.  Each finds an animal, who is clever enough to talk themselves out of being dinner, to the sadness of the chefs, except the last chef, who goes in a completely different direction (no pun intended) to get themselves out of the stew. 

Betty Goes Bananas
Steve Antony
ISBN: 9780553507614
Betty the baby gorilla has a bit of a temper problem, exacerbated when she encounters a recalcitrant banana.

I love the way that temper tantrums are presented here, with a quick escalation, and a just-as-quick calming - just the way kids themselves at that age operate.  Betty really wants to eat that banana, but things just keep going wrong!  It won't open, then it is open, but SHE wanted to open it, then it BREAKS!  Whatever will Betty do?  Throw a tantrum, of course.

LMNO Peas
Keith Baker
ISBN: 9781416991410
Lively peas in costume frolic thematically around giant pastel capital letters.

I normally don't read straight alphabet books in storytimes, and even number/counting concept books are difficult, because they're soooo limited as far as actual story arch.  It's just a straight recitation of things, with a common theme or a silly catch, or perhaps both (looking at you, chicka chicka boom boom) but not much substance.  LMNO Peas is not the best storytime read, but it's at least cute and has enough interesting vocabulary to get through a recitation.  These peas are alphabet peas, and they have professions and interests that span from A-Z.  The drawings are quite detailed, but the pages are large and well-filled, so they're visually interesting even to the kids in the back rows.  It helps that Baker has a great ear, so the reading (despite the vocabulary lessons) is smooth and the rhymes and cadence just flows right out.  Makes it so much easier when it rolls nicely out like that.


Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Picture Book: Beauty and the Beast, Ursula Jones & Sarah Gibb

Beauty and the Beast
Ursula Jones, illustrated by Sarah Gibb
ISBN: 30018004473092
Read July 5, 2016

Sarah Gibb is a delightful artist, and I am really in love with her fairy-tale work right now.  Beauty and the Beast is no exception.  I am digging Ursula Jones' streamlined take on the fairy tale, and how the sisters are more more Cinderella-style evil.  I like the straightforward approach of the Beast.  It's lovely to have good bones to a story, and NOT having a good story to base off of is unforgivable.  But truly (no offense to Jones) the star here is the absolutely delightful illustration style.  It's about half-a-step away from too twee for words, and a whisker off from overworked and fiddly, but the balance is maintained, the characters and settings are lovingly created and technically fantastic, and the whole thing is just a delight.  I just can't get enough of the mix of silhouette art and rich color and gilt details.  It's striking, original, and deftly done.  I can't wait for the next one.

Monday, July 25, 2016

New Arrival: Picture Book: If You Plant a Seed, Kadir Nelson

If You Plant a Seed
Kadir Nelson
ISBN: 9780062298898
Read July 18, 2016

Sweet but a smidge preachy book using gardening as an extended parable about getting along and spreading peace, not hate.  I'm keeping this one back with me, and it's going to be in my first post-summer-reading storytime, because I've been saddled with a garden this year, and it's been really interesting, and I think placing this book with a set on gardening will make it seem a lot less moralistic.  It really is beautiful.  Nelson is an amazing artist.

New Arrival: Picture Book: A Hungry Lion or A Dwindling Assortment of Animals, Lucy Ruth Cummins

A Hungry Lion or A Dwindling Assortment of Animals
Lucy Ruth Cummins
ISBN: 9781481448895
Read July 18, 2016

Oh my heavens this is a delightfully subversive book.  We have a hungry lion, and a group of gentle woodland creatures, and they keep getting fewer and fewer as the pages turn.  There's an anti-twist (because everyone knows the lion is eating them) first, and then the actual events ARE a twist, and then an even BIGGER twist at the end.  Really, after all, if you have to choose an animal to be, turtle seems to be a safe bet.


Sunday, July 24, 2016

New Arrival: Juv Nonfiction: Deep Roots: How Trees Sustain Our Planet, by Nikki Tate

Deep Roots: How Trees Sustain Our Planet
Nikki Tate
ISBN: 9781459805828
Read July 18, 2016

A nice nonfiction addition for our library here.  This book covers trees from a variety of viewpoints: ecological, sociological, historical, and sustainable.  It has a worldwide focus, covering everything from baobabs to sequoias to Pando, the trembling aspen entity.  Lots of call-outs and sidebars and pop-boxes for fast factoids and interesting asides, and a light gloss over the various topics in the main text.  Capped off with an excellent Resources section (nearly 2 pages of websites and books) and a very detailed Index of topics and key terms.  Visually appealing, delightful subject, and lots of starting points to spark tangents and further interest-driven research into the topic.

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Fantasy: The Aeronaut's Windlass (Cinder Spires #1) Jim Butcher

The Aeronaut's Windlass (Cinder Spires #1)
Jim Butcher
ISBN: 9780451466808
Epic fantasy in a claustrophobic but sheltered high-rise "spire" housing a city above the dangerous misty surface world.

A bit odd to read, because I found people and scenes and characters from everywhere just casually dropped in.  Auri is there, Brienne of Tarth (at least physically), Horatio Hornblower, just re-skinned and in different circumstances.  It's not exactly a complaint - I like those characters, it's just odd to see them there.  Like having a very recognizable actor can sometimes make it hard for suspension of disbelief when I'm watching a movie, these characters sometimes made it hard for this particular world to seem quite real to me.

The story is fun and winds along well.  Much closer to Furies than to Dresden if you're curious.  I'm looking forward to the next installment, but I'm not aching for it or desperately waiting to learn what happens next.  The talking cats helped quite a lot.

Friday, July 22, 2016

Graphic Novel: The Nameless City

The Nameless City
Faith Erin Hicks
colors by Jordie Bellaire
ISBN: 9781626721579
Original fantasy graphic novel, first of hopefully a long-running series.
Read June 28, 2016

The Nameless City has been conquered serially by outsiders for as long as history remembers.  The invaders always pick a new name for it, but for people who live here, the city is nameless, and the need to name it is a sure mark of an outsider.  The Dao are the current masters here, and Kaidu has been sent over by his mother to be a part of the new empire.  He doesn't fit in with the war-mongering kids that he's training with, but he does find a friend - of sorts - in the city street smart Rat.

Love all the colors of people, and the close look at colonialism and oppression, and the limitations of people in power trying to keep power and perhaps do some good as well.

I'm really looking forward to the second book!

Thursday, July 21, 2016

Graphic Novel Book Club: The Surrogates, Robert Venditti & Brett Weldele

Our penultimate title for the year-long graphic novel book club experiment actually got turned into a movie with Bruce Willis!  (The movie wasn't very good, unfortunately.)

The Surrogates
Robert Venditti
art by Brett Weldele
ISBN: 9781891830877
Read July 10, 2016

Think Blade Runner, but everyone (well, pretty much everyone) WANTS to be artificial.  Shades of Ready Player One in there also.  Robotics and cosmetics industries have advanced to the point that "surrogates:" (remotely-controlled real-life robotic avatars of a particular person) are more commonly seen than actual flesh-and-blood people, who are all at home, connected to their computers to run the surrogate's actions in real-time.  Surrogates are faster, stronger, prettier, and allow people to be free from worries of actual physical damage to their real human bodies (except for getting fat as shit, getting deep-vein thrombosis, or getting bedsores from sitting in one place all day, none of which is referenced at all.)  Things are great until some mysterious freak starts frying surrogates, and suspicion falls on a modern-day prophet figure who is rabidly anti-surrogate, and has amassed a religious army in a recently-allocated reservation under his own local rule, where surrogates are not allowed.

Interesting questions of social consciousness, of abdicating personal responsibility, and of the line between helping people who need assistance (surrogates were initially medical devices intended for medically "locked-in" people) and making shitloads of money on luxuries that quickly become common or standard.

I would have liked to see a lot more depth in the world building - I think there were some ideas and concepts that weren't very well meshed up with human psychology and the reality of life in the world, but it was also an interesting, if slightly dark and depressing, mystery thriller.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

nonfiction photo collection: Sleeping Beauty II, Stanley B. Burns, MD

Sleeping Beauty II: Grief, Bereavement, and the Family in Memorial Photography - American and European Traditions.
Stanley B. Burns, M.D. and Elizabeth A. Burns
ISBN: 9780961295837 (ISBN not in book)
Post-mortem memorial photography from America and Europe, from the earliest photographs to the 1980s.
Read July 14, 2016

Morbid, creepy, unsettling, and really really interesting.  And sad.  A record of people desperately grasping (and paying a vast quantity of money) for a final memento of a loved one who is irrevocably and perhaps unexpectedly and quickly gone from them forever. I'm curious to see the first book.

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Tuesday Storytime (and SRP): Knights and Princesses

Knights and Princesses today, and a lovely line-up of books, with a list of alternates and second-stringers.

Reading Lists:

Storytime:
The Princess Knight (a bit long, but we managed)
King Jack and the Dragon
The Bravest Knight

Summer Reading:
The Princess Knight
Princess Grace
Walter the Baker


Pubdata and Reviews:

The Princess Knight
Cornelia Funke, illustrated by Kerstin Meyer, translated by Anthea Bell
ISBN: 0439536308
Line drawings of spunky characters.  Violetta is trained in knighthood, and the King is shocked when she acts on it.

Violetta is the youngest royal child and after raising three Princes to be virtuous and powerful knights, the King sees no reason to change tacks, and raises Violetta the same way.  By training at night in secret, she masters the challenges despite being small and frail, and fights under a pseudonym to win her own hand in marriage, handily beating all comers (including her big brothers).


King Jack and the Dragon
Peter Bently, illustrated by Helen Oxenbury
ISBN: 9780803736986
Oxenbury's signature drawings, and a trio of adorable and imaginative young knights and kings.

King Jack and his two loyal knights built the castle and the throne room, and had adventures all day, but Jack is left behind alone in the castle (a large packing box) when giants (parents) carry the knights off into the gathering darkness.  Jack holds up as best he can, but he's menaced by a giant four-footed creature - a dragon!  ... well, actually mom and dad with flashlights, fetching him off to bed himself.  So cute.


The Bravest Knight
Mercer Meyer
ISBN: 9780803732063
A pugnacious page serves in a vividly imagined fantasy world until things get a little too grim.


Princess Grace
Mary Hoffman, illustrated by Cornelius Van Wright & Ying-Hwa Hu
ISBN: 9780803732605
Grace of "Amazing Grace" fame appears once again, learning about real princesses.

Grace is back, and this time she's inspired to be a fairy-tale princess on her class float in the yearly parade - until she looks a little closer and realizes that wearing floaty non-specific dresses and waiting around to be rescued by a prince isn't very fun.  Teacher comes to the rescue with stories of actual princesses, and of princesses from specific cultures and countries, inspiring the whole class to take the princess (and prince) idea and make it their own.


Walter the Baker
Eric Carle
ISBN: 0689800789
Walter screws up the Duchess's scone, so he's got until morning to create an impossible bread that ends up becoming the first pretzel.

This one is only somewhat shoehorned into the Princes and Princesses and Knights theme, but it does have a Duke and Duchess, and I falsely remembered Walter becoming Knighted at the end (he doesn't, sadly).  But it's still a cute story, and a great "just so" origin for pretzels.


Second String:

Princess Me
Karma Wilson
ISBN: 9781416940982
A smidge too "pretty pretty princess" for a mixed-gender group, and also some of the qualities of princesshood are a little limiting and traditional.  It's sweet and cute and mostly harmless, but just not enough to make the cut against something like Princess Grace.

A Frog Prince
Alix Berenzy
ISBN: 0805004262
Waaaaaaaaaaay too long.  Illustrations are to die for, and the fairy tale is delightful, but there's no way I could get through that AND two other books, even for the older crowd.

The Princess and the Pig
Jonathan Emmett, illustrated by Poly Bernatene
ISBN: 9780802723345
A very close call, but I had read it recently in storytime, and wanted to read Walter the Baker for SRP.

The Princess and the Pea
Rachel Isadora
ISBN: 9780399246111
LOVED this African-inspired rendition of the Princess and the Pea, but decided to go with non-traditional fairy tales instead.






Thursday, July 14, 2016

Romance: The Fairest of Them All, Cathy Maxwell (Marrying the Duke series)

Part of a trilogy, but it didn't seem necessary to read the first one, and I'm not interested enough to read the follow-ups.  First was apparently Match of the Century (ISBN: 9780062388612), and the third is A Date at the Altar (out in October, ISBN: 9780062388650).

A few minor typos and word substitutions that made me a bit peevish, but that's an editorial problem.  I just hate that it's getting more common.

The Fairest of Them All
Cathy Maxwell
ISBN: 9780062388636
Char is beautiful and broke, the Duke needs a wife, but his twin is back - from America!
Read July 11, 2016

Penniless blueblood Charlene (Char - ugh) is raised by her actress half-aunt and sponsored by an eccentric Society godmother when word gets out that the eminently eligible Duke of Baynton needs a suitable wife as he advances in the ranks.  Unfortunately, Char is not exactly as genteel and sheltered as everyone presumes.  She's been dressing in drag and cutting purses on the street for months, to keep her family in rent money.  Her rough-and-tumble encounter with the Duke's long-lost and very estranged twin brother is the keystone for toppling the Duke's carefully-laid plans and Char's family's dreams of financial security.

Readable, no more than a couple of typos and word mistakes, lighthearted and generally sweet.  An interesting sub-plot of political machinations, and a grudge that manifested spontaneously out of thin air (a result of attempting to keep the fairly thin character of the Duke from being utterly ruined by the plot requiring him to act in grudges and piss-baby spite for the whole the end of the book.)

Loved a delightful scene towards the end where Charlene takes down a snotty elder matron who is digging on her love.

Only one "scene" and it lasted barely a page, with very general descriptions - a very gentle romance, this one.




Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Tuesday Storytime and Summer Reading: Dragons!

The very best Fantastic creatures are dragons.  No question about it.  And there are getting to be some really good dragon books in the picture book world.

Storytime Lineup:
Me and My Dragon
The Crocodile Who Didn't Like Water
Dragons Love Tacos

Summer Reading Lineup:
Not Your Typical Dragon
When A Dragon Moves In
Dragons Love Tacos

Info and (short) Reviews:

Me and My Dragon
David Biedrzycki
ISBN: 9781580892780
A boy walks through the process of adopting a dragon like any other pet.

The Crocodile Who Didn't Like Water
Gemma Merino
ISBN: 9780735841635
Our croc isn't like his siblings, but he really wants to be around them - just not in the water.

Dragons Love Tacos
Adam Rubin, illustrated by Daniel Salmieri
ISBN: 9780803736801
Dragons love tacos, but watch out for that spicy salsa - it'll get you every time!

Not Your Typical Dragon
Dan Bar-el, illustrated by Tim Bowers
ISBN: 9780670014026
Crispin (best dragon name ever) doesn't breathe fire - he's just a bit different, but it'll all turn out ok.

When A Dragon Moves In
Jodi Moore, illustrated by Howard McWilliam
ISBN: 9780979974670
A boy at the beach gets into a little bit of trouble with his "dragon's" crazy antics.




 

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Storytelling Resource: Nonfiction: Victorian Fairy Tales, the Revolt of the Fairies and Elves, collected and edited by Jack Zipes

Victorian Fairy Tales: The Revolt of the Fairies and Elves
collected and edited: Jack Zipes
ISBN: 0415901405
Read June 18-22, 2016

An interesting collection of mostly lesser or unknown fairy tales by prominent Victorian authors (here meaning authors who were prominent in Victorian times, although most are unknown now).  There are a few "known" tales sprinkled into the mix, and a few author names which are recognizable, even if the particular story is unknown.  A few notable stories that I knew from before reading this collection: Oscar Wilde's The Happy Prince, Kenneth Grahame's The Reluctant Dragon, and Jean Ingelow's The Prince's Dream.  Notable authors that people might recognize are: Lewis Carroll, Charles Dickens, George MacDonald, Andrew Lang (of color fairy book fame) and Edith Nesbit, and Rudyard Kipling.  I was thrilled to discover that so many of these favorite authors had written interesting (if not particularly always GOOD) fairy tales.

So what do we have here?  A collection, with preface notes for each story (!)  As a side note, I love a good preface note so very much - it adds so much to understanding and to context, and to placing the author and story into a framework to see why and how they did what they did.  22 fairy tales in all, from writers who were popular or well-regarded or at least prolific during the Victorian times, writing for children instead of adults, and MOSTLY not writing solely with a particular moral or societal axe to grind, but instead creating stories to entertain rather than to educate. Many of the stories also include the original artworks for covers or interior drawings, and those are less interesting to me, but nice to see included and replicated for art-lovers or scholars.

This was really fun, dense reading, and I deeply enjoyed it.  More of most of these author's works can be found on Project Gutenberg or on Google Books, having been many years out of print and out of copyright.  

Story summaries and thoughts;

1) Uncle David's Nonsensical Story about Giants and Fairies, by Catherine Sinclair.
Moralistic story of a lazy boy in the vein of Pilgrim's Progress, with a set of good and bad fairies and a boy-eating giant who just loves fat lazy boy for dinner.  A happy ending that reinforces the value (and joy) in good clean fun and effort.

Very much like a Uncle Arthur's Bedtime Tale: treacly and mealy-mouthed and insufferably perfectly good boys and terribly bad lazy boys.  The fairies and giant are an interesting touch, but could be easiily substituted with any sort of plot device without any changes necessary.


2) King of the Golden River/The Black Brothers, by John Ruskin
A hidden magical valley has beautiful weather until the landowning two brothers mistreat and abuse the visiting god of the winds one night.  The youngest brother tries to intervene, but is beaten for his troubles.  The winds then change and the valley withers, so the brothers head to the big city to swindle people there, taking work as cheating goldsmiths. When they are facing starvation, the youngest brother is forced to melt down his only prized possession: a gold cup bearing the face of a dwarf, but instead of gold, an actual dwarf emerges, and claims to be the king of the river in their original valley, and that anyone who reaches the spring at the top of the mountain with "holy water" will have unending riches and the valley will prosper again, but anyone who fails will be turned to a black rock.  Obvs the older nasty brothers steal the birthright but they each fail in turn, and the younger thinks he fails because he squanders the holy water on the weak and suffering beings beside the river on the way up.  But all is good, because charity is great or something, and everything ends beautifully (but they left the brothers to rot as stones - yay!)

This was a very interesting multi-part story, with complex fairy-tale underpinnings and a real sense of adventure and far-away-lands, and despite a bit of heavy-handed christlike suffering imagery at the end, it was a fun romp and a really great story.  I would be shocked if no one had made it into a longer fantasy story - I'd like to do it myself.

3) Cinderella and the Glass Slipper, by George Cruikshank
Moralizing story where the stepmother is a gambler, and Cinderella's fairy godmother is a little person (referred to as a dwarf in the text) who is an anti-drink campaigner, who lectures the King himself about the refreshments to be served at the wedding reception.

Oh. My. God.  Would have been funnier if it hadn't been so deadly earnest.  What's funny is that the story troupes along with only the odd little side-light or comment to show the author is a dead bore and a kill-joy, UNTIL we get to the end, and fall straight into the rabbit hole where this dead-serious little person basically lays into the poor unsuspecting King, going on for almost a WHOLE page out of a roughly 12-page story, and entirely killing the pace and fun of the ending.

4) Heinrich/The Love of Gold, by Alfred Crowquill (best pseudonym ever for Alfred Henry Forrester)
Our main dude is a super-talented stonemason, but he doesn't love his work, he's just a work-a-holic with technical genius. He's hard at work late one evening and his just-finished gargoyle starts talking to him, and tells him the secret to gaining nearly limitless gold.  Heinrich is all for it, and spends forver mining and digging and piling up gold - never thinking about the time he spends.  He finally comes up for air and drops in on the gargoyle, who tells him he's a dumbshit and his whole life has gone by, and he goes and lives like a hermit in the mountains for a few weeks before he kicks it.

Interesting variant on the "don't waste your life" theme like the one seen in Golden Threads (the boy who gets the magic ball of his life's thread that he can pull out to make time pass quickly), but I was amused that the guy gets a few weeks of life to be a crazy holy hermit before he dies, so he can leave his greedy gold to the church as is only proper.


5) Bruno's Revenge, Lewis Carroll (from an earlier drafted version)
The author goes for a walk at a friend's manor fields, and interacts with a young fairy boy who is dissuaded from pulling a mean prank on his older sister for revenge.

Very quirky (as appropriate for Carroll, I suppose) and lighthearted and grounded - very much in the feel of Doctor Dolittle.


6) The Magic Fishbone, Charles Dickens
A king is given a magic fishbone to give to his daughter, who "will know when to use it" but keeps holding out despite many exaggerated difficulties.  This is a short and very childlike and almost stream-of-consciousness or dream-like story, where the logic of adults is subverted and the child is the clever and conquering hero.

I really like this story, and the odd unsettling childish nature of the telling and the plot development.  Very peculiar and quite individual. Extremely unlike his long work.


7) Cinderella, Anne Isabella Ritchie
Cinderella as a Regency romance, complete with foppish but sweet Prince Charming, and a delightfully vicious stepmother, and a neighboring Lady who acts the Godmother role with relish and an all-seeing eye.

Not particularly memorable, but a sweet homage to Cinderella in the vein of a classic Victorian romance, with all the mores and social climbing and details of dress and fashion that entail.


8) The Ogre Courting, Juliana Horatia Ewing
A nasty ogre lives as a local landowner, with a particularly nasty penchant for marrying beautiful young women and then having them mysteriously die within months or weeks.  He sets his cap for Managing Molly, but she's more than a match for him, and manages him within an inch of his life.

LOVE this story.  The only way it would be better is if it were called Managing Molly, and I'd like it a lot better. This one is really begging to be made into a picture book.


9) The Prince's Dream, Jean Ingelow
A young sheltered prince lives in a high tower room in the center of a great desert - all he knows are Bedouin and the herds they keep, until a stranger arrives for a brief stay and confirms for the Prince all the stories he's heard from the servants about Labour and Liberty and Gold.

A bit too allegorical for my tastes, but well-drawn, a fantasical Aladdin setting and with a light touch overall.


10) Charlie Among the Elves, Edward H. Knatchbull-Hugessen (what a name)
A slight story about a boy who takes a tumble down hill and is "captured" by the fair folk and spends an afternoon with them observing their amusements.

This one was unsettling, because all of the fair folk are in their more adult aspect, and the child has no agency or really character at all - he just sits and listens and watches, not allowed to participate or to comment by the adults.  A very peculiar and slightly offputting story, with overtones of child-snatching and grooming behaviors.


11) A Toy Princess, Mary de Morgan
A solid fairy tale about a country where manners dictated no opinions or emotions to be shown, where the lovely sweet princess baby was replaced with an automaton by a kind fairy, who offers to reverse the switch when the girl reaches her majority, but the court and kingdom are stunned and disgusted with this open-hearted emotional and opinionated actual girl, and prefer to crown the automaton (with only a few mealy-mouthed stock phrases) as their ruler instead.

Saucy and sharp and beautifully crafted and neatly plotted and paced.  A really excellent story, and I went onto Gutenberg to find some of her other works, and found them nearly as fine and enjoyable.  Another good candidate for a good juvenile fantasy adaptation or a picture book.


12) The Day Boy and the Night Girl, George MacDonald
A witch finds and lures two pregnant ladies to her castle, and treats one to a sunny life and another to a shadowy night existence, then steals their infants after birth and sends one lady packing (the other one dies).  The witch continues this regimen of night and day existence for the two children - the boy Photogen only knows of the day, and the girl Nycteris only knows of the night, until she grows ill and the children get old enough to start figuring things out on their own.  They discover the opposite time, and are made frightened or weak because of it, but despite that, they work together to conquer the witch.

This is a freaking seriously amazing fairy tale, and I loved it unabashedly and wholeheartedly.  I want to write something like this myself someday.  It is beautiful and classic and delightful and perfect.  The best out story out of the collection, by miles, and also one of the longer ones - 31 pages.


13)  All My Doing - or Red Riding Hood All Over Again, Harriet Louisa Childe-Pemberton
Moralistic re-telling of Red Riding Hood set as a Victorian-era thriller/psychological horror story of a con man taking advantage of a naive child to sneak into and rob a rich manor house, nearly killing the grandmother and the girl's suitor.

Hoooooy boy does this lay the Victorian girl guilt on thick.  This is some serious Uncle Arthur victim blaming bullshit here, and despite the fun trappings of a carefree girl being stalked and conned by a ruthless villain, the fun of the story is sucked right out by the militaristic insistence on feeling guilt and internalizing a sense of "female self-deprecation."  Even with all of that leading up to the ending, the hand-wringing 'everything is ruined forever and it's all my fault' melodrama of the framing story and the narrator's coda left a nasty taste in my mouth.


14) Princess Nobody, Andrew Lang
A version of the classic "fetch the princess" quest tale, with the Prince a devoted but ugly person who is changed to become beautiful himself by fairy magic, and the princess basically a plot-point to allow the Prince to wander and suffer and encounter magical lands.

Eh.  Very similar to many other stories where the hero has to find the macguffin. The pacing was also veeeeery draggy. I felt a little left down by my beloved Color Fairy Book collector.


15) The Story of a King's Daughter, Mary Louisa Molesworth
A beautiful and kind-hearted princess cannot bear cruelty or unkindness, even to animals, and she spurns her betrothed husband when he injures a castle dog.  He is untouched by her strength of character until he is abducted into the enchanted forest, and turned into a ravening beast until an even dozen forest animals are willing to rest on his back while he carries them from the woods.  Obvs the princess and her forest friends are the ones to do this, and he sufficiently repents and is redeemed by her character and her forgiveness.

A VERY unfortunately named princess: Aureole.  Eeek.  Also a nasty bit of commentary about how she's not willing to be the queen because she's a woman and that's obvs not a woman's place.  Sigh.  Other than that, I'm willing to believe the change of heart of the suitor because it's given time and foreshadowed, and it's nice to have the princess doing the saving every once in a while.


16) The Happy Prince, Oscar Wilde
A gilded and be-jeweled statue of a prince sits in the middle of town, broken-hearted because he can see the needs of the poor and suffering, but can't do anything to help them.  A sparrow stops by on his migration, and at the Prince's request, begins despoiling the statue to provide gems and gold to the needy people. The prince is rendered leaden and and bird freezes to death, and they get tossed in the rubbish by the city leadership.

Wilde and Hans Christian Andersen are horrid people who make me cry all the time, and I deeply resent the heavy-handed symbolism and heart-tugging.  It makes the stories seem cheap and artificial and trying too hard, and I'm not inclined to give the benefit of the doubt to a story that purposefully and pedantically sets out to make me sad.


17) Wooden Tony, Lucy Lane Clifford
A couple in the Alps has a strange son who wanders about and makes odd whistles and music, but can't be bothered to work, or even to study or to learn anything. His father is a wood-carver, and hates him for being worthless and different, but his mother loves him and defends him as best she can. A traveling peddler stops by and offers to take the boy to the city and see if he can make a sensation of him with his odd music, but the man magically steals the song, and slowly turns the boy to wood and shrinks him down, and puts him into a cuckoo clock with one of his father's carvings.  the story ends with his parents looking at him inside the clock, and knowing it is their son, but being unable to prove it or to save him.

This is like Victorian R. L. Stine craziness here.  This is amazing horror, and a great creeping pace to it as you try and figure out where the story is going and what's going to happen to poor unfortunate Tony.  I don't like the casual ableism - it's very easy to read Tony as being mentally handicapped, or having a processing disorder, and no one is willing to work with him, and people are very willing to take advantage of him or get rid of him, but it works for the story and is a very modern mindset to apply here.  Still - a really great tale, and excellent atmosphere.


18) The Potted Princess, Rudyard Kipling
A clever Jack tale of a task set to rescue the princess from a pot, and all the emirs and sultans and rajas and princes learn arcane and powerful magics from the far ends of the earth in vain, and a potter's son walks up and just opens the pot.  No magic - she was just in a pot.

This was funny and cute and slight, and the framing story was almost as funny.


19) The Rooted Lover, Laurence Housman
A gardener sees the princess and falls in love, and asks a local witch for help.  She turns him into a fiery poppy and plants him in the princess's garden - if she picks him and wears him next to her heart, she'll fall in love with him and he'll be re-born as a man, but if not, he'll die when the flower dies at the end of the season.  After many trials and an opposing suitor, the long-suffering poppy boy is rewarded at last when the princess sacrifices wealth and position to find and be with her dark-eyed red-haired dream lover.

An interesting twist where the boy becomes the flower, and a nice happy ending after lots of trials and suffering on each side, but I still don't like the "love spell" nature of the relationship.  Would be interesting to try and adapt for a non mind-controlled version.

20) The Reluctant Dragon, Kenneth Grahame
A posh dragon, a very educated (but fight-loving) young boy, and Sir George all converge on the English countryside for a battle that ends up being entirely pro-forma, but none the less enjoyable.

I like this story more for the wry tones and asides and snarky commentary, but the basic story is cute and fun.

21) The Last of the Dragons, Edith Nesbit
A very emancipated princess and a reluctant knight make their way to the cave of the last dragon to entice it out with biscuits instead of her being forced to be captured and freed.  Very much in the vein of Wrede's Dealing with Dragons concept, meshed with the Serendipity book The Muffin Dragon.

Cute and light.

22) The Spell of the Magician's Daughter, Evelyn Sharp
A fiesty magician's child daughter doesn't want to be a magician - she doesn't even study her spells, but she DOES want to be a princess. When she sees the young prince out in the woods, he's searching for the perfect princess, and she sets him up with a quest - creating a magic spell of course.  Naturally because it's her first spell, she's got to go ahead of him and make sure everything's properly set up for him, so she travels the world with her wits and her cleverness, all the time he is following after the trail she's setting up.  They finally meet at the end of the world, and they're all grown up, and quite fond of each other after their quasi-shared questing experience.

A really interesting story, and my second favorite after the MacDonald masterpiece.  This one is more straightforward, but I really liked her fond telling of the characters, and the reveal of how they're all grown up now.





Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Juvenile Classic: Ballet Shoes, Noel Streatfeild and Diane Goode

Ballet Shoes
Noel Streatfeild, illustrated by Diane Goode
ISBN: 0679901051 (library binding)
Re-read while off at a conference.

I don't remember the first time I read this book, but I know it wasn't during childhood.  Which is a crying shame, because I would have loved this sweet little classic domestic about three adopted siblings finding their passions and their purpose in the worlds of dance and performance and machinery.

The plot is simple: an old man is an inveterate traveler and fossil hunter, and he picks up three "fossils" along the way that are a bit different.  They're left at his big home in the care of "nanny" and his grand-niece, and while he's away, they grow up in difficult financial circumstances, necessitating them hosting boarders and the girls performing (dance and acting) professionally to earn money as soon as possible.

It's like Alcott, but less twee, and not really any moralizing at all.

There's a movie also, with a very peculiarly aged (and blonde!) Emma Watson, which I haven't seen yet, but seems watchable in that sort of "Shirley Temple" adorable saccharine way.

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Tuesday Storytimes (and Summer Reading)

I've been away at a conference the last few weeks, but life (and storytime, and the summer reading program) goes on, so we had surrogate storytellers the last two Tuesdays. Nonetheless, I set up the books and programs as I always do, and I'll give the titles and a quick overview of what we did the last two Tuesdays (There's no storytime this Tuesday: we're on a short break. The whole system takes a week to breathe in the middle of the summer over 4th of July holidays.)

As a note, our state theme this year is "get up and go" with focuses on sports, exercise, health, and nutrition. We here decided to mix it up and go with our own county-wide theme of "Fantastic Reads and Where to Find Them" to link up with our upcoming comicon on August 6th. I personally got bitten by the programming/RA bug too hard as a child, so I decided that I was going to link the Fantastic Reads weekly themes back into nutrition, and go with a personal branch theme of "Fantastic Foods and Where to Find Them" - thus at least one title, sometimes more, once or twice ALL of the titles each week not only are about fantastical or fantasy creatures/situations, but also have to do with food or eating. Because it was fun to find them all. Because I'm weird.

So, for Tuesday the 21st, our theme was Extra-Ordinary Animals
For storytime I set up these three:

1) The Gruffalo
2) Gobble it Up
3) Bear Wants More

and for the Summer Reading Program with the older kids, I set aside these three:

1) The Gruffalo
2) Gobble it Up
3) I YAM a Donkey


For Tuesday the 28th, our theme was Magical Moves
For storytime I set up these three:

1) Runaway Wok
2) Potato Joe
3) Unicorn Thinks He's Pretty Great 

and for the Summer Reading Program, these three:

1) Runaway Wok
2) Strega Nona's Harvest
3) Unicorn Thinks He's Pretty Great

As you can see, there's a bit of overlap each week. That's on purpose. I don't like that the little storytime kids miss out on a lot of the fun of the summer reading program because they're not quite old enough for the big kid programs. That's why the "special programs" at Pendleton are always "all ages" and why I also try to overlap the reading themes for them during the summer, to the point of even choosing the same books to read as often as I can. I don't know if they'll be talking or thinking about the program when they're not here, but I feel like it's important not to leave them out or have them be doing something totally different and unrelated.

Now for the pubdata and some short reviews:

The Gruffalo
Julia Donaldson, illustrated by Axel Scheffler
ISBN: 0803723865
A mouse talks a big game, making up an imaginary predator, and has to bluff it out when it actually appears.

I really love the smack-talking mouse, and how well and cleverly it thinks on it's feet, and the fact that the author made up the monster because she couldn't get "tiger" to scan in the original rhymes.



Gobble It Up! A fun song about eating!
Jim Arnosky
ISBN: 9780439903622
No we did not sing it.  Yes there's a CD with this book.  Various wild animals (heavy on the sea-life) celebrate eating.

It's a great silly story with a great silly refrain that aims to be catchy and also revolting at the same time - perfect for kids in a group setting to yell "ewwwww nooooo grooooosssss" when each new preferred food (from baby ducklings to giant squid) come down the pike. Delicious fun.



Bear Wants More
Karma Wilson, illustrated by Jane Chapman
ISBN: 9780689845093
Bear and Friends are back as Bear wakes up in spring with a post-hibernation hunger.

Chapman's illustrations remain perfect, and the pastel Disneyfied multi-species friendship between all these animals makes it a perfect fit for the fantastical realm - there is no hard-hitting journalistic realism about animal behavior here. But that's ok, because what we do have is a lovely sweet tale of friends helping friends find good things to eat.



I YAM a Donkey!
Cece Bell
ISBN: 9780544087200
No real connection to fantasy or food other than the ongoing pun/wordplay/confusion, but fun regardless.

Cece Bell has a really fun naughty streak that she shows off to perfection in this story, where a talking yam and a donkey have a decidedly silly battle over verbiage. This gets into slang, into accents, into changing social registers and what's appropriate to say (or imply) and is overall funny and preposterous.



The Runaway Wok
Ying Chang Compestine, illustrated by Sebastia Serra
ISBN: 9780525420682
"A Chinese New Year Tale" celebrates generosity and plenty with a magical wok that steals from the rich and gives to the poor.

Delightful twist on the general "magic cooking pot" theme, where the magical wok finds its way to a poor but generous family and brings about the ruin of a snobby and greedy rich family into the bargain.


Unicorn Thinks He's Pretty Great
Bob Shea
ISBN: 9781423159520
An Eeyore-like goat (blue and everything) mopes about the Unicorn who just moved in.

This isn't really my style of book, but it's fun and clever, easy to read, and the illustrations are cute enough.  It's not as painful as Skippyjon Jones, I'll say that.  I think we were supposed to read it last year, but I didn't pick it out - unfortunately the craft for this program relied on there being a unicorn book, and I wasn't able to find a good substitute (seriously you picture book people? this is a glaring flaw!).  The set-up comes as the unicorn goes on about how awesome the goat is at various things, leading (of course) to the goat grudgingly complimenting the unicorn to make it feel better.


Potato Joe
Keith Baker
ISBN: 9780152062309
I flipping love Keith Baker.  A counting book with potatoes.  Talking ones.  Exactly.

You know the old "one potato" rhyme? Well, now it's actually got real potatoes, and it goes on and on and on, with various named potatoes, (and a tomato AND a really big special guest) and counts all the way up to 10 and back down again, putting the potatoes to rest in the soil once more.  It's the cutest ever.


Strega Nona's Harvest
Tomie dePaola
ISBN: 9780399252914
Compare and contrast Big Anthony's and Strega Nona's gardens and harvests as the season goes on.

Strega Nona has a nice lovely organized garden, where she lines the patches up and makes the rows straight, and asks for juuuuuust enough garden magic to get a good crop.  Big Anthony isn't quite that careful, and to be safe, asks for twice as much garden magic.  As the season goes on, Big Anthony has a bit of a jungle on his hands, and Strega Nona's garden is as perfect as ever - but where are all these bunches of mysterious vegetables coming from every night?