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1. Way Back Wednesday Essential Classic

Paul Bunyan : A Tall Tale

retold and illustrated by Stephen Kellogg

 

 

As fall descends with its leaves and longer nights, perhaps there might just be more family time for young ones that includes a lap and a book.

Sometimes, in the flurry of picture books out there, the folk, fairy and fables might get slighted a tad.

So… enter Stephen Kellogg with a collection of folk tales to whet the appetite for larger than life heroes.

Seems our culture today could do with a bit of hero modeling for our young ones as today’s heroes tend to be rock stars and  sports figures, with its inference that mere celebrity is good enough to pass for true achievement.

I’m always interested in seeing how folk tales or “tall tales” sort of explain to young readers, in a most charming way, the natural world and how it evolved.

Was there truly a Paul Bunyan, or are his exploits stretching the truth from Maine to Alaska?

Even if folk tales stretch and spin the truth to tell a story, Stephen Kellogg has rendered young readers a “huge” service in retelling this tall tale of Paul Bunyan, that very large folk hero, and a woven together series of yarns of a giant, yet gentle man, putting down his pretty big footprint in the wilderness!

Everything about Paul is BIG, from his birth as the “largest, smartest, and strongest baby ever born in the state of Maine” and his early interest in the family logging business. Kids will be goggle eyed at this “diapered dynamo” literally hauling whole trees out of the ground, single-handedly!

And Paul’s parents are literally forced to anchor his ginormous cradle in the harbor as the complaints mount of his exploits. But, as Paul rocks, so too, do waves that mount perilously in the harbor. And the Bunyan family quickly decamps to the wilderness!

Kellogg has illustrated to perfection the simple text of “All was well until Paul started rocking the cradle and stirring up waves.”  Boats and houses awash from Paul’s wave making is illustrated to hilarious effect.

As they head west, kids will particularly love his adoption of Babe, the “blue ox”, that Paul rescues from a snowdrift. Why, you may ask, is Babe a true blue ox?

 

   “Both Paul and Babe began growing

   at an astonishing rate, but the ox never

   lost the color of the snow from which

   he’d been rescued.”

 

 

As Paul heads west, young readers will meet in turn, Ole, a celebrated blacksmith, the two famous cooks Sourdough Slim and Creampuff Fatty, lumbermen Big Tim Burr and Hardjaw Murphy, plus the seven Hackett brothers.

And, in those Appalachian Mountains, beware a pack of underground ogres called the Gumberoos that attack Paul’s logging camp. All I can say is….feel sorry for those pesky Gumberoos!!! There is quite a rollicking rumpus of a rowdy dow; in plain English – a whale of a fisticuffs fight.

Kids will marvel at Paul’s clearing of the “heavily forested” midwest and the huge flapjack griddle constructed to feed his busy crew. Kitchen helpers skating on slabs of bacon “laced to their feet” like ice skates is imagined by Kellogg as broom hockey on a griddle with an orange as the puck. That scene is wild and wonderfully imagined by the author.

I could go on, but that would deprive you of Kellogg’s compilation of the “tale tales” involved in Paul’s  reaching California and then on to his new adventures in Alaska.

Bet you wonder just how the Grand Canyon was formed. Maybe, as this Reading Rainbow selected picture book intimates, it was something like:

 

    “Paul’s great ax fell from his shoulder,

gouging a trench, which today is known

as the Grand Canyon.”

 

Glory be and fiddle dee dee! Paul Bunyan and his tale tales are a grand read, and Stephen Kellogg’s take is just the book to introduce your young reader to this “mountain of a man.”

 

 

 

 

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2. Way Back Wednesday Essential Classic

Pinkerton, Behave!

By Stephen Kellogg

 

It’s the 35th anniversary of the Great Dane, Pinkerton, that arrived at the Kellogg household in 1976 as a pup, and ultimately grew into a favorite of young readers in droves. And Kellogg’s anniversary edition reacquaints both parents and young readers with the reason why they fell in love with this positively peerless pooch.

So,what is the first rule of thumb for all newly minted pups? Why, to follow the commands of its master and family members, of course! And failing successful training by their owners, pups are usually relegated to Puppy Training Classes. They are sometimes, but not always, headed by dog trainers that look with a very jaundiced eye of disapproval at owners unable to hold sway over their dogs.

And woe betide the dog that does not fall in line immediately with other pupils in accepting the trainer’s commands. He, or she, is at once banished to doggie Bogey land. Reason: They are setting a very bad example for the rest of the class.

Enter Pinkerton. He is a Great Dane that is, well, great in size and temperament, but sadly not in his ability to obey the slightest command correctly. For instance, if he is asked to COME, he jumps out the window, fetching slippers quickly turns into a munch fest of the fetchables, and, if bad guys approach and a loud bark is called for, Pinkerton will deluge the perpetrator with slobbery kisses. This puppy appears to have a problem in distinguishing commands!

One solution appears to present itself in the form of the The School of Perfect Behavior for dogs with Director, Dr. Aleasha Kibble the helm and Dr. Kibble runs a tight ship. Ms. Kibble obviously does not suffer fools gladly, nor dogs, that will not knuckle under.

The beloved Pinkerton is such a dog who is quickly dismissed by the sniffy Ms. Kibble when she learns that dogs follow the alpha dog’s example and that, of course, is the lovable Pinkerton!

Pinkerton put me in mind of our own episode with our bichon, BJ, who had his own issues with following commands. We ended up at the local middle school-held obedience class with a whole group of similarly frustrated puppy owners. The trainer was in complete command of her charges UNTIL she tried to demonstrate the technique of a CORRECTION to a dog named Duncan. Duncan was a black Scottish Terrier and was having none of that quick tug of the collar on his neck, so he promptly took the leash between his teeth at the exact proper point, making the snap IMPOSSIBLE! No amount of “Now Duncan, let go!” could convince this terrier to topple to that corrective measure. As I vaguely recall, our class was convulsed in silent laughter as Duncan and his owner were unceremoniously dismissed from class!

After his own dismissal by Ms. Kibble, Pinkerton and his owners get a first hand look at seeing if any of Pinkerton’s mixed up methods of obeying can serve as a deterrent for an unexpected house intruder. Will Pinkerton’s defense mode peter out when it comes to crunch time? OR will Pinkerton’s owners realize that THEY are the ones that have to adapt and adopt Pinkerton’s confused responses to commands, and use them to their advantage in a pinch!

Stephen Kellogg’s 35 year-old Pinkerton is as fresh a picture book pup as the day he arrived on the publishing scene.

And unlike the dour Duncan, he cannot be dismissed ever from the pantheon of lovable picture book pets!

 

 

 

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