Not the most original of themes, but when you have cute books, what are you gonna do?
Finding Spring
Carin Berger
ISBN: 9780062250193
It's time to hibernate and wait for Spring, but little bear is waaay too keyed up for that. As soon as Mother falls asleep, he's off and searching for Spring. He finds something amazing, decides THAT is Spring, tucks some into his coat and heads back to his den for his long nap. When he wakes up, the "spring" in his coat is all melted, but when he heads back to where he found it, he finds spring for real. Lots of fun interactions with busy forest animals, and really cute illustrations.
Our middle "book" is actually a two-fer, with two small boardbooks tucked between the longer reads:
Funny Bunnies (boardbook)
Piggy Toes Press, 2011
ISBN: 9781615245949
Cute little rhymes on succeeding spreads with colorful backgrounds (one of my littlest ones was DETERMINED to announce the colors of all the backgrounds, including - with great pride - "MaGENta." Adorable all the way around.
A Little Book about SPRING (Leo Lionni's Friends series, boardbook)
Leo Lionni and Julie Hamilton
ISBN: 9780525582274
Frederick the mouse and his friends pledge allegiance and undying love to the season in vogue, with colorful backgrounds and springtime activities cutely (and very briefly) described.
Silver Seeds
Paul Paolilli and Dan Brewer, illustrated by Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher
ISBN: 0670889415
Because April IS Poetry Month, y'all. This is a sweet little hard to find book that takes the first letters of various spring topics and uses them to create free-form poetry about that subject. So, for short:
Sliding through the window
Underneath the door
Nudging us out to play
makes SUN. Get it? That's pretty much all there is, but the paintings are luminous, and the choices for verse are moving and sweet and powerful. I am not really a poetry person, but I love all of these, and I love that I CAN love them and introduce them to kids with a clear and bright conscience so hopefully they learn to love poetry themselves too.
SC Librarian reviews mostly Fantasy, SciFi, and YA, random pop-sci and psychology, juvenile fiction, and children's picture books.
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Thursday, April 25, 2019
Thursday, April 4, 2019
Tuesday Storytime: Spring Birds
We did a bit of an experiment today with a VERY LONG but excellent book about how robins grow and develop, so we used that book as our first TWO book sessions, with a song at a good stopping place, and then read one final short book at the end. It worked ok, the kids are a bit young for this, and we had some talkers, but such is life.
Robins! How They Grow Up
Eileen Christelow
ISBN: 9780544442894
Really Really Really Really long and wordy. There was a lot of paraphrasing and eliding. However, there are ALSO two sections where an egg is stolen and eaten by a squirrel, and a fledgling is stooped on and carried off by a hawk, and I did NOT skip those sections. They were written matter-of-factly, and so I just carried on. I think one mommy was a bit scandalized, but kids don't care and they just want to know how things work. Very informational, good illustrations, SOOOOO wordy.
I'm a Duck
Eve Bunting
Will Hillenbrand
ISBN: 9780763680329
Really cute rhyming couplets show off this water-phobic duck, and how he used his friends and his smarts to develop skills and confidence to eventually go swimming with his family. Cute, sweet, and OH SO SHORT.
Robins! How They Grow Up
Eileen Christelow
ISBN: 9780544442894
Really Really Really Really long and wordy. There was a lot of paraphrasing and eliding. However, there are ALSO two sections where an egg is stolen and eaten by a squirrel, and a fledgling is stooped on and carried off by a hawk, and I did NOT skip those sections. They were written matter-of-factly, and so I just carried on. I think one mommy was a bit scandalized, but kids don't care and they just want to know how things work. Very informational, good illustrations, SOOOOO wordy.
I'm a Duck
Eve Bunting
Will Hillenbrand
ISBN: 9780763680329
Really cute rhyming couplets show off this water-phobic duck, and how he used his friends and his smarts to develop skills and confidence to eventually go swimming with his family. Cute, sweet, and OH SO SHORT.
Tuesday, March 5, 2019
Tuesday Storytime: Spring is Coming
South Carolina is weird. There's a joke floating around the internet about all the different seasons "false spring" "second winter" "mud season" "ice week" and that's been true here - but despite it all, the flowers are starting to bloom and the temperatures are starting to consistently creep upward, even if the graph looks a bit bi-polar about it from day to day.
These books were picked out by my coworker.
Something to Crow About
Megan Halsey Lane
ISBN: 0803706987 (library binding)
Randall and Cassie are chicks together in the barnyard, and Cassie is just about perfect. She struts better, she scratches better, she can even find worms better. Poor Randall just wants to find SOMETHING he can be good at. When he finds it, both Cassie and Randall are surprised!
When Spring Comes
Kevin Henkes, illustrated by Laura Dronzek
ISBN: 9780062331397
Sweet vignettes of the colors and sounds and sights and activities (by people and by plants and animals and nature in general) of spring. Really sweet, very good for the center position, because there's no real plot to it, but it just flows gently along through sweet and colorful scenes.
If You're Hoppy
April Pulley Sayre, illustrated by Jackie Urbanovic
ISBN: 9780061566349
Along the rhythm and pattern of the original song, this jubilant book runs through all the various happy and exuberant animals that one could be if one were "hoppy" or "sloppy" or "flappy," from the standard storytime fare to some that are way more exotic or unexpected.
These books were picked out by my coworker.
Something to Crow About
Megan Halsey Lane
ISBN: 0803706987 (library binding)
Randall and Cassie are chicks together in the barnyard, and Cassie is just about perfect. She struts better, she scratches better, she can even find worms better. Poor Randall just wants to find SOMETHING he can be good at. When he finds it, both Cassie and Randall are surprised!
When Spring Comes
Kevin Henkes, illustrated by Laura Dronzek
ISBN: 9780062331397
Sweet vignettes of the colors and sounds and sights and activities (by people and by plants and animals and nature in general) of spring. Really sweet, very good for the center position, because there's no real plot to it, but it just flows gently along through sweet and colorful scenes.
If You're Hoppy
April Pulley Sayre, illustrated by Jackie Urbanovic
ISBN: 9780061566349
Along the rhythm and pattern of the original song, this jubilant book runs through all the various happy and exuberant animals that one could be if one were "hoppy" or "sloppy" or "flappy," from the standard storytime fare to some that are way more exotic or unexpected.
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
Tuesday Storytime: Rain and Mud
Fun set of books today again!
Waiting Out the Storm
Joann Early Macken, illustrated by Susan Gaber
ISBN: 9780763633783
Sleepy pastel landscapes make for a reassuring and refreshing background for a sweet sentimental storm story.
Mother and daughter are out working in the yard when they are interrupted by an approaching storm, and the book text is the dialogue between the two as the child is anxious or curious about the storm, and mother responds reassuringly and mostly factually. I appreciate that this book has the duo retreating inside to wait out the storm, as most rain books focus on children headed outside to play in the rain, and not all children (or parents) are comfortable with that scenario - it's very nice to have the other impulse (to nest up and wait out the storm in comfort) recognized and celebrated.
Mud
Mary Lyn Ray, illustrated by Lauren Stringer
ISBN: 19780152024611
Faux-naive blocky dark muddy artwork make the short narrative more stark and powerful.
This one isn't a perfect fit for a rainy-day narrative, because here we have the mud as a direct reaction to the spring thaw (which we really don't even get in South Carolina anyway) but it was so perfect and dirty and muddy and playful that I couldn't resist. A bit too much time is spent leading up to the mud (in my opinion) but once it shows up, it's a perfect medium for playful but powerful wordplay and dark evocative artwork that draws out the amazing browns and reds and greys in the dirt and mud. It ends on a sweet note, calling for the spring and the green to arrive.
Raindrop, Plop!
Wendy Cheyette Lewison, illustrated by Pam Paparone
ISBN: 0670059501
Super-cute drawings are bright and lively and colorful, with a cheerful count-up-and-down rhyme.
This was a surprise favorite book out of this set - I expected I would like Waiting Out the Storm more, but the relentless cheerfulness and sprightly rhyme (and the length - perfect for middle or end) makes me really happy to have discovered this one. This is my first time reading it for storytime, but it feels familiar and comfortable to read and to progress through. That's a real bonus for anyone reading aloud, and I was delighted at how comfortable and smooth the read was. Our story is simple; along with a count-up from one to ten, we follow a young girl playing outside in a sprinkle of approaching rain, then with "too many raindrops..." we head back inside the house to count back down through a bath and snack, before heading back outside into the newly revealed sunshine. Super cute, super easy to read, and super simple. Absolutely a great storytime read.
Waiting Out the Storm
Joann Early Macken, illustrated by Susan Gaber
ISBN: 9780763633783
Sleepy pastel landscapes make for a reassuring and refreshing background for a sweet sentimental storm story.
Mother and daughter are out working in the yard when they are interrupted by an approaching storm, and the book text is the dialogue between the two as the child is anxious or curious about the storm, and mother responds reassuringly and mostly factually. I appreciate that this book has the duo retreating inside to wait out the storm, as most rain books focus on children headed outside to play in the rain, and not all children (or parents) are comfortable with that scenario - it's very nice to have the other impulse (to nest up and wait out the storm in comfort) recognized and celebrated.
Mud
Mary Lyn Ray, illustrated by Lauren Stringer
ISBN: 19780152024611
Faux-naive blocky dark muddy artwork make the short narrative more stark and powerful.
This one isn't a perfect fit for a rainy-day narrative, because here we have the mud as a direct reaction to the spring thaw (which we really don't even get in South Carolina anyway) but it was so perfect and dirty and muddy and playful that I couldn't resist. A bit too much time is spent leading up to the mud (in my opinion) but once it shows up, it's a perfect medium for playful but powerful wordplay and dark evocative artwork that draws out the amazing browns and reds and greys in the dirt and mud. It ends on a sweet note, calling for the spring and the green to arrive.
Raindrop, Plop!
Wendy Cheyette Lewison, illustrated by Pam Paparone
ISBN: 0670059501
Super-cute drawings are bright and lively and colorful, with a cheerful count-up-and-down rhyme.
This was a surprise favorite book out of this set - I expected I would like Waiting Out the Storm more, but the relentless cheerfulness and sprightly rhyme (and the length - perfect for middle or end) makes me really happy to have discovered this one. This is my first time reading it for storytime, but it feels familiar and comfortable to read and to progress through. That's a real bonus for anyone reading aloud, and I was delighted at how comfortable and smooth the read was. Our story is simple; along with a count-up from one to ten, we follow a young girl playing outside in a sprinkle of approaching rain, then with "too many raindrops..." we head back inside the house to count back down through a bath and snack, before heading back outside into the newly revealed sunshine. Super cute, super easy to read, and super simple. Absolutely a great storytime read.
Labels:
Joan Early Macken,
Lauren Stringer,
Mary Lyn Ray,
Mud,
Pam Paparone,
Picture Book,
rain,
Raindrop Plop,
spring,
storm,
storytime,
Susan Gaber,
Waiting Out the Storm,
weather,
Wendy Cheyette Lewison
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Tuesday Storytime: Spring, Part 2
Second set of fun spring books: these are more loosely "springtime" than the first set, but this set were all rhyming in a subtle nod to April as Poetry Month.
Spring's Sprung
Lynn Plourde, illustrated by Greg Couch
ISBN: 0689842295
Anthropomorphized sister seasons and a Mother Earth are strangely haunting, despite light verse.
The illustrations here are peculiar. I suppose it's difficult to make anthropomorphized seasons into a set of sisters while still keeping them individual and differentiated, but they and their Mother Earth occasionally look haunting or straight-up creepy. Despite this intermittent odd tonal shift, the illustrations are mostly beautiful and remind me of the Pastoral section of the original Disney Fantasia. Mother Earth is waking her three daughters: March, April, and May, and setting them to begin the new day (the new year). But like siblings often do, these three are competing among themselves to be Mother's favorite at everything. By the end, they're in tears, and Mother has to reassure them that she doesn't have a favorite; they're all equally loved and equally a favorite. Less focus on spring, and more on sibling rivalry, but it's sweet and fun.
A Leaf Can Be...
Laura Purdie Salas, illustrated by Violeta Dabija
ISBN: 9780761362036
Previously reviewed here
This one covers all the seasons, but enough of it is spent on green-leaf illustrations that I felt it fit well enough. All the beautiful and interesting things leaves do or can become or provide for various creatures. Delightful and so pretty.
Flowers are Calling
Rita Gray, illustrated by Kenaro Pak
ISBN: 9780544340121
Digital/watercolor art is FANTASTIC, and the book is naturalistic and accurate.
This was a bit long for our age-group, but the pictures are just amazing, and the information is accurate and presented in a cute way. I just can't get over how beautiful and delicate and intricate and busy (in a good way) the illustrations are in this book. The spreads are beautiful and detailed, the flowers are vibrant and natural, and the whole is rendered in a way that almost makes me think of pop-ups or wood-cuts because of the heavily-layered feel of the scenes. Just incredibly beautiful, We read through spreads of flowers and a local animal and the flower's pollinator, and the hook for the narration is that the flower is calling to the small unobtrusive pollinator, not to the big or notable local animal. After three of these, we see a spread with all the flowers together with a nonfiction blurb (which I truncated enormously) about how each flower needs or relates to a specific pollinator. I really loved seeing the spreads on the night-time flowers. Not only were they beautiful, but it's nice to see moths and bats getting a bit of attention as pollinators. Absolutely stunning.
Spring's Sprung
Lynn Plourde, illustrated by Greg Couch
ISBN: 0689842295
Anthropomorphized sister seasons and a Mother Earth are strangely haunting, despite light verse.
The illustrations here are peculiar. I suppose it's difficult to make anthropomorphized seasons into a set of sisters while still keeping them individual and differentiated, but they and their Mother Earth occasionally look haunting or straight-up creepy. Despite this intermittent odd tonal shift, the illustrations are mostly beautiful and remind me of the Pastoral section of the original Disney Fantasia. Mother Earth is waking her three daughters: March, April, and May, and setting them to begin the new day (the new year). But like siblings often do, these three are competing among themselves to be Mother's favorite at everything. By the end, they're in tears, and Mother has to reassure them that she doesn't have a favorite; they're all equally loved and equally a favorite. Less focus on spring, and more on sibling rivalry, but it's sweet and fun.
A Leaf Can Be...
Laura Purdie Salas, illustrated by Violeta Dabija
ISBN: 9780761362036
Previously reviewed here
This one covers all the seasons, but enough of it is spent on green-leaf illustrations that I felt it fit well enough. All the beautiful and interesting things leaves do or can become or provide for various creatures. Delightful and so pretty.
Flowers are Calling
Rita Gray, illustrated by Kenaro Pak
ISBN: 9780544340121
Digital/watercolor art is FANTASTIC, and the book is naturalistic and accurate.
This was a bit long for our age-group, but the pictures are just amazing, and the information is accurate and presented in a cute way. I just can't get over how beautiful and delicate and intricate and busy (in a good way) the illustrations are in this book. The spreads are beautiful and detailed, the flowers are vibrant and natural, and the whole is rendered in a way that almost makes me think of pop-ups or wood-cuts because of the heavily-layered feel of the scenes. Just incredibly beautiful, We read through spreads of flowers and a local animal and the flower's pollinator, and the hook for the narration is that the flower is calling to the small unobtrusive pollinator, not to the big or notable local animal. After three of these, we see a spread with all the flowers together with a nonfiction blurb (which I truncated enormously) about how each flower needs or relates to a specific pollinator. I really loved seeing the spreads on the night-time flowers. Not only were they beautiful, but it's nice to see moths and bats getting a bit of attention as pollinators. Absolutely stunning.
Labels:
A Leaf Can Be...,
Flowers Are Calling,
Greg Couch,
Kenaro Pak,
Laura Purdie Salas,
Lynn Plourde,
Picture Book,
Rita Gray,
seasons,
spring,
Spring's Sprung,
storytime,
Violeta Dabija
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Tuesday Storytime: Spring!
Now that we're solidly into warm weather, I wanted to do some traditional "season" books, and I found a nice set of them: two weeks of spring books, and then a week about rain and mud!
It's Spring!
Linda Glaser, illustrated by Susan Swan
ISBN: 0761313451
Cut-paper dioramas in bright but naturalistic colors. Amazingly intricate illustrations.
The rhyme scheme in this book is a little clunky at times, or perhaps I just wasn't feeling the rhythm properly, because it made me stutter a few times in storytime despite pre-reading and practicing beforehand. Glaser has put together a perfect intro to how spring progresses, with straightforward but lyrical descriptions of natural processes and how the season progresses. Swan's intricate and colorful dioramas and scenes enhance the immediacy of what is being narrated, and helps to ground the info in the real world. It's not even that long! Very good season book - probably one of the best I've read, despite the bad fit of the rhymes to my speaking cadence.
When Spring Comes
Kevin Henkes,illustrated by Laura Dronzek
ISBN: 9780062331397
Pastels and fluffy indistinct borders make everything seem fuzzy and soft and new.
This is a much more fanciful approach to spring, but still in the realm of the naturalistic. The drawings are a lot more loose, and take a few liberties, but overall remain true to life and focused on nature. This book's theme is waiting: if you wait, spring will do this, and that, and that other thing. It also directly addresses the reader "I hope you like umbrellas" & etc, which I always like when that happens. Makes the storytime seem more directly interactive and attentive to the focus of the children listening/watching. Sweet and short. A good length here: long enough to be a final book on it's own, and short enough that it can fit in the middle with a set of other shorter books.
And then it's spring
Julie Fogliano, illustrated by Erin E. Stead
ISBN: 9781596436244
Colored pencils and scraggly people and environments focus on the wait for spring to green up the landscape.
I don't like this one quite as much as the others, because the illustrations, while interesting, aren't as visually stimulating for little ones (there's a lot of detailed info and cute little grace notes for older or individual readers to pick up). The narrative is entirely about the long wait for spring to come through and change the brown of the landscape to green. The only thing I don't like about this one is that the focus through the book is on seeds that were planted (presumably a garden plot from the illustrations) and the very end has the green flooding over the landscape, but doesn't show the garden plot we've been concerned about throughout the book. It's a bit jarring to end without seeing whether the seeds have come up or not!
It's Spring!
Linda Glaser, illustrated by Susan Swan
ISBN: 0761313451
Cut-paper dioramas in bright but naturalistic colors. Amazingly intricate illustrations.
The rhyme scheme in this book is a little clunky at times, or perhaps I just wasn't feeling the rhythm properly, because it made me stutter a few times in storytime despite pre-reading and practicing beforehand. Glaser has put together a perfect intro to how spring progresses, with straightforward but lyrical descriptions of natural processes and how the season progresses. Swan's intricate and colorful dioramas and scenes enhance the immediacy of what is being narrated, and helps to ground the info in the real world. It's not even that long! Very good season book - probably one of the best I've read, despite the bad fit of the rhymes to my speaking cadence.
When Spring Comes
Kevin Henkes,illustrated by Laura Dronzek
ISBN: 9780062331397
Pastels and fluffy indistinct borders make everything seem fuzzy and soft and new.
This is a much more fanciful approach to spring, but still in the realm of the naturalistic. The drawings are a lot more loose, and take a few liberties, but overall remain true to life and focused on nature. This book's theme is waiting: if you wait, spring will do this, and that, and that other thing. It also directly addresses the reader "I hope you like umbrellas" & etc, which I always like when that happens. Makes the storytime seem more directly interactive and attentive to the focus of the children listening/watching. Sweet and short. A good length here: long enough to be a final book on it's own, and short enough that it can fit in the middle with a set of other shorter books.
And then it's spring
Julie Fogliano, illustrated by Erin E. Stead
ISBN: 9781596436244
Colored pencils and scraggly people and environments focus on the wait for spring to green up the landscape.
I don't like this one quite as much as the others, because the illustrations, while interesting, aren't as visually stimulating for little ones (there's a lot of detailed info and cute little grace notes for older or individual readers to pick up). The narrative is entirely about the long wait for spring to come through and change the brown of the landscape to green. The only thing I don't like about this one is that the focus through the book is on seeds that were planted (presumably a garden plot from the illustrations) and the very end has the green flooding over the landscape, but doesn't show the garden plot we've been concerned about throughout the book. It's a bit jarring to end without seeing whether the seeds have come up or not!
Labels:
And Then It's Spring,
Erin E. Stead,
It's Spring,
Julie Fogliano,
Kevin Henkes,
Laura Dronzek,
Linda Glaser,
Picture Book,
seasons,
spring,
storytime,
Susan Swan,
When Spring Comes
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Tuesday Storytime; Spring through the Seasons
A trio of very nice books that hit on all the seasons changing, but all with some level of focus on springtime.
Outside Your Window: A First Book of Nature
Nicola Davies, illustrated by Mark Hearld
ISBN: 9780763655495
Book of short meditations on natural occurances through the seasons.
This is a LONG book - it's a large-format picture-book, mostly in spreads (lovely lovely spreads) with about 10 or so rhymes or short lyrical descriptions of events or sights to see in that particular season. I read one each from Summer, Fall, and Winter, and then read most of Spring (skipping the first set, the sea-gulls, which are more of a summer thing for us, and the lamb's tails, mostly because it was my least favorite, and I had to cut so many for time). The little short poems or stories are sweet and nature-based, and each is tangible and specific, and grounded in the beautiful large painterly spreads. Excellent for this age-group in small doses, and would be perfect to use repeatedly through the year as the different seasons come and go.
Listen, Listen
Phillis Gershator, illustrated by Alison Jay
ISBN: 9781846860843
Rounded cameo paintings fill the centers of the pages, with the poem unfolding around the edges.
I like this one, but I had to tape off the last few pages, because it pretty seamlessly merges into a more interactive "seek and find" section at the very end, encouraging readers to search the pages "Where's Waldo"-style to find various animals or items. The conceit here is using the sounds of each season to make a throughline - which works fairly well for some seasons; summer is all bugs, fall is leaves and nuts, and spring is birds chirping away, but winter was a bit of a reach, and some of the inclusions to make the rhyme scheme work seem a bit forced. Overall, it's sweet and an interesting approach to sensing the seasons instead of looking at them.
Old Bear
Kevin Henkes
ISBN: 9780061552052
Bear falls asleep and dreams of technicolor fever-dream seasons, before waking into a delightful real spring.
The ONLY objection I have to this adorable book is that the bear comes out of hibernation in the full bloom of riotous spring (for the narrative to work well) and that's not in the least accurate. Despite that one niggle, this is a beautiful book that showcases dreams and imagination, and reads quickly and clearly. The colors and stylization of the dream spreads are simply gorgeous, and the bear is roly-poly and fuzzy and adorable. Excellent length to be either an ending book or a middle book between two not-as-long offerings.
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