Blog: PS4K - Poems and Stories 4 Kids (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: kids, poetry, illustrated, poems, childhood, inventions, inspiring, think, blinkabugs, children, Add a tag
Kinda cool to think that nearly everything in the world started as a spark in someone's head. What will you create with your sparks?
Tell us about the fantastic-futuristic inventions you're planning to unleash on the world when you get older...
The Sparks Question Mark |
Blog: Book Love (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustrated, fantasy, giveaway, Add a tag
This is your lucky day, Book Lovers!
Thanks to the generous people at Big Honcho Media, TWO special readers will win a copy of Lost and Found by the brilliant Mr. Shaun Tan.
All you need to do is leave a comment below with...
- your name
- your email address (to be used in the event that you WIN!)
- something interesting that you have either lost or found
Then just cross your fingers for luck and wait until Wednesday, March 16 when the contest closes! Unfortunately, this giveaway is for US residents only.
Blog: Gob Wrote A Book (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustrated, bunnies, sarcasm, junk food, alien invasion, Add a tag
Blog: The Bookworm Reads (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: bully, The Great Snowball Escapade, Jan D Holiday, chapter book, bullying, illustrated, Add a tag
Bud’s parents are going through a divorce, and Wil’s Mum encourages her to be understanding and nice to Bud, but that’s not easy when he’s so mean.
“The Great Snowball Escapade” has a believable and likeable heroine and children will easily identify with her and the situations she finds herself in. The book is effectively illustrated throughout with simple line-drawings.
Do Bud and Wil finally sort out their differences? You’ll just have to read the book to find out.
Blog: Topsy Turvy Land - Donna J. Shepherd (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: poetry, illustrated, autumn, fall, poem, Kevin Scott Collier, Stories for Children Magazine, donna j. shepherd, trapeze artist, Add a tag
Click HERE to read "Autumn Trapeze" in the September edition of Stories for Children Magazine. Kevin Scott Collier did the fanciful illustration. Want to download the entire magazine? Click HERE!
Blog: Donna Shepherd's Topsy Tales (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Kevin Scott Collier, Donna Shepherd, Topsy Turvy Land, Topsy Tale, Chizzy's Topsy Tale, 9781935137108, Children, Picture Book, book, illustrated, Add a tag
Chizzy's Topsy TaleGuardian Angel PublishingISBN: 9781935137108 If you are interested in reviewing this book, contact me for a .pdf copy sent via email. I'm delighted to say that that Guardian Angel Publishing has released a new and expanded version of Chizzy's Topsy Tale in print and as an eBook. Kevin Scott Collier has completed the cutest illustrations for the book. Kevin and I gave away
Blog: AmoxCalli (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's books, illustrated, indigenous, water, Rudolfo Anaya, tortillas, drought, Add a tag
The First Tortilla: A Bilingual Story
Author: Rudolfo Anaya
Illustrator: Amy Cordova
Publisher: University of New Mexico Press
ISBN-10: 0826342140
Rudolfo Anaya, author of one of my all-time favorite books, Bless Me Ultima has written a magical and lovely folktale about the origins of that of us Mexicanos/Chicanos, the delicious tortilla. The First Tortilla is the story of Jade, an indigenous girl that lives in a small village near a volcano. Her village has been suffering through a drought and all their squash and bean plants are dying. Jade prays to the Mountain Spirit to bring rain so that the precious plants will live and her village won’t go hungry.
As Jade works in the garden, a blue hummingbird brings a message to go find the Mountain Spirit and ask for rain. Without a question for her safety Jade sets off, braving the volcano and follows the hummingbird to the very top where she meets the Mountain Spirit. She offers the spirit food made by her own hand and he is so pleased with it that he gives her the gift of corn which the ants have in a cave.
Jade tastes the corn and finds it to be sweet and delicious. She takes it back to the village and plants it. As the prayed for rain comes, the corn grows alongside beans, squash and chiles. Jade grinds the harvested dried corn, adds water and makes masa. She puts it on a comal or griddle and the smell soon permeates the village. Her parents taste it and find the corn tortilla to be wonderful. Soon Jade is teaching everyone how to make the tortillas and the people have a new staple.
I loved this story. It has elements of old Aztec legends like the ants in the cave with the corn. It gives a feel to how important water was and is to people. It tells how water was so important that people would move from a village if there was no rain. Children will get a sense of the importance of the tortilla as a staple.
Amy Cordova’s rich and colorful illustrations give a beautiful insight into the village life. Her depcitions of those beautiful indigenous faces are just amazing and give children a sense of how they lived and dressed.
I loved how the hummingbird, such an important figure in Aztec mythology was incorporate into the tale. This book is bilingual and the translation by Enrique R. Lamadrid is smooth and almost effortless. The book is recommended for ages 9-12 but I think children of pre-school age will love this book just as much. The bright colors and stunning illustrations are sure to capture their eyes and interest as much as the story read to them will capture their imagination and heart. Highly recommended.
Book Description from the publisher:
The First Tortilla is a moving, bilingual story of courage and discovery. A small Mexican village is near starvation. There is no rain, and the bean and squash plants are dying.
Jade, a young village girl, is told by a blue hummingbird to take a gift to the Mountain Spirit. Then it will send the needed rain.
Burning lava threatens her, but Jade reaches the top of the volcano. The Mountain Spirit is pleased. It allows the ants in a nearby cave to share their corn with Jade. The corn was sweet and delicious and Jade took some back to save the village.
Jade grinds the dry corn, adds water, and makes dough. She pats the masa and places it on hot stones near the fire. She has made the first tortilla. Soon the making of corn tortillas spreads throughout Mexico and beyond.
Reading level: grade 3 and up
The story of a young Mexican girl who saves her village by making the first tortilla with the help of the Mountain Spirit.
About the Author
Rudolfo Anaya, widely acclaimed as one of the founders of modern Chicano literature, is professor emeritus of English at the University of New Mexico. Anaya was presented with the National Medal of Arts for literature in 2001 and his novel Alburquerque (the city's original Spanish spelling) won the PEN Center West Award for Fiction. He is best known for the classic Bless Me Ultima. Amy Córdova is an instructor for the Taos Institute of Arts, Taos, New Mexico. She wrote and illustrated Abuelita’s Heart. Enrique R. Lamadrid is professor of Spanish folklore and literature at the University of New Mexico. In 2005, he was awarded the Americo Paredes Prize by the American Folklore Society in recognition of his work as a cultural activist.
Blog: AmoxCalli (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustrated, picture books, art, Dianna Hutts Aston, syliva long, nature writing, children's books, Add a tag
A Seed is Sleepy
Author: Dianna Hutts Aston
Illustrator: Sylvia Long
Publisher: Chronicle Books
ISBN-10: 0811855201
ISBN-13: 978-0811855204
The author and illustrator of the gorgeous An Egg is Quiet join together once again to create an astounding illustrated introduction to the life of a seed. Long’s amazingly detailed watercolors showcase many different types of seeds. The pages are slightly reminiscent of Victorian botanical drawings but these are so much richer in color, depth and scope. Each painting is something special, a treasure to be enjoyed for many years. The succinct and poetic text is just enough information for a very small child and enough of a nip to send an older one (or adult) running to the library to find out more. I love books like that, ones that get you fired up about something you’d otherwise not have an interest in. Now I’m excited about seeds!
The text is poetic too.
“A Seed is Inventive
To find a spot to grow,
A seed might leap from its pod,
[violet]
or cling to a
child's shoestring,
[cocklebur]
or tumble through
a bear's belly.
[Red huckleberry]
A seed hopes to land where
there is plenty of
sunlight, soil, and water.”
How about this wonderful phrase?
“Some have lain dormant, or slept undisturbed, for more than a thousand years”
Makes me just say oooooh.
I can’t say enough about this wonderful book except to say that I dearly hope this fantastic duo does another book. A Seed is Sleepy is a perfect gift for anyone of any age. Even non-book lovers will love this book for its glorious color and appreciation of nature.
If you visit Chronicle Books website, there are posters to print out!
Blog: AmoxCalli (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: books, childrens book, illustrated, picture books, Oliver Jeffers, funny, Add a tag
The Incredible Book Eating Boy
Author/Illustrator: Oliver Jeffers
Publisher: Penguin Philomel
ISBN-10: 9780399247491
I loved it! The story was so funny. I just laughed and laughed and laughed all through it. I loved Henry and how he loved books. He loved them even more than I do. The illustrations were so clever and funny as well. I just couldn’t stop smiling through it. I loved the little bite taken out of the corner of the cover too. Very clever touch!
I loved it so much I couldn’t wait to share it with my grandchildren, Aiden and Jasmine. I had to have them over a day earlier than I usually do. I handed Jasmine, the four-year old the book solemnly and waited. I didn’t wait long. She looked at the cover and smiled. Then she turned it over and saw the bite and her eyebrows crinkled. “Grammy”, she said in her ooh you’re in trouble tone “who was bad and bit the book?”
Then I read it to them. Aiden kept laughing and pointing to different sections of the pages (he’s 18 months) and Jasmine laughed and laughed at the story and the drawings. At the end of the book she laughed and said, “Grammy, Henry was silly. Everyone knows you get smart by reading books, not eating them.” Smart girl. I asked if she liked it and she said, “I loved this book! May I take it home?” It lives at her house now and I’ll have to get another.
Bottom line? It’s quite wonderful.
Blog: Just One More Book Children's Book Podcast (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: review, children, kidlit, Podcast, Ages 0-3, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Listener Reviews, book, literacy, literature, Giveaways, illustrated, listener, litcast, Add a tag
In this episode, we introduce some snazzy new features for our webpage and play two listener submitted reviews:
- Paddle-to-the-Sea by Holling C. Holling, reviewed by Bruce Murray of the Zedcast Podcast; and
- Mo Willems’ Pigeon books, reviewed by Esmaya (5) and her father, Chris Wilson from the Answers for Freelancers Podcast
We’re hoping you’ll tell us about one of your favourite books too…
Send your review (five-minutes or less) as an MP3 or text file to [email protected], phone it in to our listener feedback line (206-350-6487) or leave it as a two-minute MyChingo message.
Thanks, again, to Nico for a stellar job on our website!!!
Tags:book, children, illustrated, kidlit, listener, litcast, literacy, literature, podcast, reviewbook, children, illustrated, kidlit, listener, litcast, literacy, literature, podcast, review
My first book I read by Shannon Hale and still my absolute favourite is Goose Girl. You MUST read it!!