Friday, September 14, 2018

Tuesday Storytime: Stormy Days Ahead

With Florence looming dramatically offshore, and lots of locals either prepping their own properties for rain and floods, or dealing with friends and family evacuating from the shoreline, it's important to normalize weather events and how to deal with them.

It's also important to realize that when routines are shaken up and kids are unsettled from the chaos around them, they're going to act up and be less able to focus on anything: even storytime. It's always better to work with what the kids are capable of at the moment.

Because we had some unsettled kids and families, we only made it through two books today, one of which was very short. That's ok. It's better to have a short but good storytime experience than to make it a stressful or disciplinarian time.

Monsoon Afternoon
Kashmira Sheth, illustrated by Yoshiko Jaeggi
ISBN: 9781561454556
In India, a boy watches the first rains of monsoon season approach, but the rest of the household is busy with work, all except for his grandfather, his Dadaji. The boy and his dadaji play outside in the rain for the afternoon, talking about how the monsoon came when the grandfather was a child, and will continue to come when the boy is a grandfather himself.

Rain Fish
Lois Ehlert
ISBN: 9781481461528
Another of Ehlert's excellent collage books, this one is another short and sweet entry. The format is highly horizontal, so be aware when holding it that it's a little harder to keep balanced. There are some weird and wacky fish made of trash and gutter debris, with a fun rhyme to balance the weirdness out. I do wish there was some way to talk about cleaning UP the materials that make up the Rain Fish, but that's probably a bit of a high bar for a book as conceptual and visual as this is.

I was also planning to read
Thunder-Boomer!
Shutta Crum, illustrated by Carol Thompson
ISBN: 9780618618561
which features a farming family that is much more familiar to my local families here. A storm is blowing in, and the family retreats to the house while the storm and wind and hail and rain all blow past, then head back out into the muddy and windblown aftermath to see what's happened outside. A sub-plot with a chicken ends up being the tagline for the book - very cute. 

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