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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Berta and Elmer Hader, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Way Back Wednesday Essential Classic

The Big Snow

By Berta and Elmer Hader

 

By all accounts, we have dodged “The Big Snow” of this 1949 Caldecott Award winning title, as spring descended on us March 21, 2016.

But, it’s a classic picture book read that is as fresh as newly fallen snow, either in 1949 or 2016. And for that reason, it’s worth sharing with your young readers, snuggled up in a cozy nook, just as the avians and animals are in this winter picture book classic.

Urbanization can sometimes lead us further from a view of nature and the life lessons it imparts, as the seasons cycle through their sequences.

But, thank goodness, young readers have Berta and Elmer Hader’s book written and illustrated to allow young readers a front row seat, urban or rural, at the prep done by animals for the advent of winter, and with it…the first big snow.

Guided by instinct and intuition, geese fly south, thickened coats grace white-tail deer and Mrs. Cottontail and her rabbit brood, along with raccoons and chipmunks are laying in supplies for the “long winter nap.” Even the skunk family takes refuge in its den before the flakes fall thick and fast, covering their habitats, that mere months ago were green with leaves. The “fat groundhog” too, has grown his new furry covering that he wears in his burrow, napping till spring that avoids the inconvenience of foraging for food. Smart!

What about the birds like the red breasted and brown male and female cardinals? Do they go south? You’d have to listen in and learn whether they do.

For it’s the chatty back and forth companionable conversations that fly among the woodland folk, that seems so natural to a reader’s ear, as the blue jay queries a cardinal couple as to their winter plans to become “Snowbirds,” as it were?

 

          “No, indeed,” replied the cardinals.

          We can find plenty to eat here. We

          like winter”

 

Song sparrows and robins are like minded with the former feasting on meadow grass seed as well as birches and ash trees.

Robins, too, plan to stick it out.

Lots of woodsy types, like the ring-necked pheasants, crows, not to mention squirrels gathering acorns on the fly, begin to naturally hunker down as winter waits in the wings.

Leave it to the wise old owl to be the harbinger of The Big Snow.

 

 

            …Then the night after Christmas

            there was a rainbow around the

            moon…The wise owls knew what

            that meant. A rainbow around the

            moon meant more snow. MUCH

            MORE.

 

Soon the countryside is blanketed with thick, white flakes falling fast.

Kids will love the “little old man” shoveling a path out of his stonehouse.

 

                He was followed by a little

                old woman dressed all in

                green. She scattered seeds,

                and nuts, and breadcrumbs,

                to right and to left.

                The cry of the blue jays echoed

                over the hillside. “Food, food,

                food,” they cried again and

                again.”

 

 

Not over quite yet, as a 1949 version of Punxsutawney Phil declares The Big Snow is not quite at an end, as he sees his shadow on February 2nd, and opines:

 

                  “Oh-Oh, I know what that

                  means,” he said. There will

                  be six more weeks of winter.”

                  And he hurries back to his den

                  sleep until spring.”

 

Spring does come at last, but the ‘little old man and the little old woman put out food for them until the warm spring came.”

What a wonderful classic picture book to introduce that genre to young  readers.

The alternating gray pencil sketches of animals in their winter habitats, alternating with other denizens fairly popping out of the Haders’ occasional color suffused pages, are a treat.

Match this with the plus of informational facts interwoven with a wonderful narrative, and young readers receive an animal shared sense of getting through the daily hardships of a prolonged winter season. No wonder it won the Caldecott in 1949!

And it’s as fresh today as it was then.

The Big Snow is a great classic picture book, beautifully done with both realistic animal wintry scenes, coupled with a gentle modeling to young readers that both man and mammal are in this world – together.

Don’t save this one for a snowy day!

It’s a great read fair weather or fowl…er foul!

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

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2. Tim Tingle, ALA 2011

On Sunday at ALA 2011, I went by the Cinco Puntos booth, hoping Tim Tingle might be there. He was scheduled for a session at 4:00 to talk about the graphic novel, Trickster, edited by Matt Dembecki. He was there and we visited for awhile. It was terrific to hear him extoll American Indians in Children's Literature (AICL) and the work I do. When he works with teachers, he tells them to spend a few days at AICL. I'm glad he recommends it.  Well---glad is not the right word... The right word is thrilled.

I'm working on a post about the session itself. The panel included Matt Dembicki, Tim, and another author with a story in Trickster, Michael Thompson. All three delivered remarks I want to share with readers of AICL.

As I write, I'm in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, watching the sun rise. I'm here for a couple of days to do some research in the de Grummond Collection. I read the galleys for a couple of books by Berta and Elmer Hader. There wasn't any correspondence in the Hader files or any notes at all that might give me insight to their thinking as they prepared these two books:







Prior to this trip, I had not read either book. Published in 1955 and 1962, both are told from the perspective of a boy who lives in a city and imagines the life of an Indian boy is better than his own.  In both, the white boy gets to be Indian for a day...

3 Comments on Tim Tingle, ALA 2011, last added: 6/28/2011
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3. Mark Goldstein was knocking down walls of an old stone house

when he discovered a secret vault filled with drawings. The original owners had been the late children’s book authors Berta and Elmer Hader…so Mark went in search of relatives and eventually found their niece, Joy Rich.

LISTEN NOW


Thank you to Jon Kalish

0 Comments on Mark Goldstein was knocking down walls of an old stone house as of 1/21/2011 10:12:00 AM
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4. The Big Snow

0 Comments on The Big Snow as of 1/1/1900
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