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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Eva Montanari, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Review of the Day: The Fabulous Flying Machines of Alberto Santos-Dumont by Victoria Griffith

The Fabulous Flying Machines of Alberto Santos-Dumont
By Victoria Griffith
Illustrated by Eva Montanari
Abrams Books for Young Readers
$16.95
ISBN: 978-1-4197-0011-8
Ages 6-10
On shelves now

The American publishing industry is good at a lot of things. They produce some pretty delightful fare for children on a variety of different topics. If you want vampires or stories of cute puppies or twists on fairy tales then you are in luck. If, however, you’re looking for something about people who are famous in countries other than America, I have bad news. We’re not that great at highlighting other nations’ heroes. Oh, you’ll see such a biography once in a rare while but unless they’re a world figure (Gandhi, Leonardo da Vinci, etc.) we’re not usually going to hear much about them. Maybe that’s part of the reason I get so excited when I see books that buck the trend. Books like Victoria Griffith’s The Fabulous Flying Machines of Alberto Santos-Dumont. The other reason is that in a greedy way I get to learn about new historical figures along with the child readers. Alberto Santos-Dumont, for all his charms, is not exactly a household name here in the States. Credit where credit is due, then since author Victoria Griffith is doing what she can to remedy that problem.

If you were a resident of Paris, France in the early 20th century you might have glanced up into the sky to see one Alberto Santos-Dumont in his handy dandy dirigible. A transplanted Brazilian and fan of the power of flight, Alberto was friends with Louis Cartier who bestowed upon him a wrist-based alternative to the pocket watch. Now he could time himself in the sky! Determined to create an official flying machine, Alberto announces the date and location that he intends to use one to take to the sky. But when sneaky Louis Bleriot arrives with the intention of stealing Alberto’s thunder, the question of who will go down in the history books is (ha ha) up in the air.

I’m having a bit of difficulty believing that this is Victoria Griffith’s first book for children. To my mind, writing nonfiction picture books for young readers is enormously difficult. You sit in front of a plate of facts with the goal of working them into something simultaneously honest and compelling for kids. Taken one way, the book’s a dud. Taken another, it does its subject justice. Griffith, for her part, takes to the form like a duck to water. The first sentence is “Alberto Santos-Dumont loved floating over Paris in his own personal flying machine.” After the first few pages don’t be too surprised if the kids you’re reading this book with start wondering why exactly it is that we don’t have our own personal dirigibles (this question is promptly answered when we learn that Alberto’s preferred mode of transportation had a tendency to .. um… catch on fire). Deftly weaving together the invention of the Cartier watch with Alberto’s moment in history, Griffith manages to create compelling characters and a situation that lets kids understand what was at stake in this story.

She also places Alberto squarely within his context in history. In the book we learn that while the Wright Brothers did fly at Kitty Hawn before Santos-Dumont, because their flight needed assistance then it wasn’t really flying. Griffith prefers to explain this not in the text but in the Author’s Note, but I think that’s fair. As long as you make clear to kids that there can be two different opinions on a

4 Comments on Review of the Day: The Fabulous Flying Machines of Alberto Santos-Dumont by Victoria Griffith, last added: 9/24/2011
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2. Witches, fairies and being good and naughty…

**To be in with a chance of winning this book or any other I’ve reviewed click here!**

The extremes my children contain within themselves continually amaze me. If M sees someone upset she’ll immediately offer a soft toy or a hug by way of comfort. But then incidents happen like last week when I had to leave the table briefly during supper time. M stuffed the entire contents of her plate down the back of the sofa and then assured me she had been so hungry she had finished her food in double quick time. As you can imagine I was rather cross – and since then the topic of behaviour, both good and bad has featured in quite a few of our conversations.

By chance we had a perfectly timed library find this week – Witches and Fairies written and illustrated by Eva Montanari.

On starry nights, there are
fairies in the woods.
And there are witches….
Needless to say,
fairies and witches
are different.

This is all very well but then one day along comes Clotilda “who hasn’t any stars to be a fairy. And her hat is too pointed to be a witch.” Not accepted by either camp Clotilda is sidelined and left watching the fairies and witches play. One day the fairies and witches end up fighting over Clotilda, but her actions have the marvellous effect of mixing everything up so that it is no longer possible to tell who is a witch and who is a fairy. In fact, the wood become home to a new game, a game of –

“… being Clotilda,
and being, like most of us,
a little bit
fairy
and a little
bit
witch!”

This humorous story has been a great starting point for discussions about what makes us the same and what makes us different. Given what happened last week it’s also led to a conversation about the possible differences between fairy-like and witch-like behaviour.

When I asked M about what she’d done with her food in this context she gave me her “I know what you’re getting at but I’m not going to give you what you want” look and said, “Mu-um…I’m a little bit bee. A little bit bee and a little bit wasp.” I had to smile.

Eva Montanari’s illustrations are just as much fun as her story. The witches and fairies are a far cry from any Disney version. They are impish and energetic, not classically beautiful but nevertheless adorable.

We’ve all enjoyed this book – it’s not too pink and sparkly for Dad to enjoy reading it with the girls, it’s just the right length and ratio of text to illustrations for J to enjoy, M has certainly understood the message and it’s brought a smile to my face – all in all it comes highly recommended by the whole family!

Taking this post at Nature Kids, written by Beth from Acorn Pies, and also by these adorable storytelling dolls made by Farida who writes at Saints and Spinners as our starting point we set about making our own fairies with stars on their clothes and pointy hats.

We

3 Comments on Witches, fairies and being good and naughty…, last added: 4/7/2010
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