I overthink things sometimes.
Three lovely Christmas books.
Christmas in the Country
Cynthia Rylant, illustrated by Diane Goode
ISBN: 0439073340
Narrator remembers a long-ago Christmas with her grandparents. Less country and more old-fashioned.
Likes: narrator lives with grandparents, Christmas is shown as secular (trees and Santa and presents) and religious (two different church services), and it deals with the END of Christmas and the associated rituals that make the post-event process go smoothly (taking out the tree, putting away ornaments, a special snack).
Dislikes: no PoC, slightly too long for my wiggle-worms today, and the illustrations aren't my favorites - very cartoony and loose.
Christmas Wombat
Jackie French, illustrated by Bruce Whatley
ISBN: 9780547868721
Australians celebrate Christmas too, and so does this very greedy wombat.
Very few words here, and sequential illustrations. I narrated a bit more than the actual text, and asked leading questions as the book progressed, and the caregivers got a kick out of the humor, and the kids were impressed at the sheer number of carrots eaten by this roly-poly furball. Short and funny - a perfect fit.
A Short History of Christmas
Sally Lee, with Gail Saunders-Smith (consulting editor)
ISBN: 9781491460955
A bit scattershot, but very basic and clearly laid out description of Christmas themes and traditions.
This is my second Christmas reading this book (I discovered it a bit over a year ago and was delighted with it) and while I'm still very pleased with it, I will say that the ending is a BIT sharp. I would have liked to see more time spent on modern traditions and approaches to Christmas (we only get a single spread before it turns abruptly to the glossary). The only other quibble I have is that the language presents the existence of Mary and Joseph and the timing of Jesus' birth as historical facts, when it could very easily have been phrased to indicate that this is considered truth for Christians, and not necessarily by others with different belief systems. The scattershot approach isn't actually a negative for me, considering the attention spans of my little ones, and the one-topic-per-spread approach means that they constantly have something new and interesting to re-engage with. (And engage they did - lots of audience participating on this book as they showed off all that they knew about Christmas and Saint Nicholas and traditions.
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