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There's a new board book out by Cree Metis artist, Julie Flett, and like her other ones, it is a winner!
Like her previous works, We All Count: A Book of Cree Numbers is a bilingual board book. In this one, the numbers 1-10 are presented in English and Cree.
Flett's collage work is gorgeous. I love the quiet and bold colors she uses in her compositions. Here's the page for number 1. The text reads "One prairie dog perching."
And here's the page for number 10, where the text reads "Ten elk crossing."
Flett's book is excellent for parents, teachers, or librarians to read to young children. Obviously, this is a counting book, so counting will happen, but the words!
Prairie dogs perching! Can you imagine showing the child you're reading to, how to perch like a prairie dog? On the page for number three, aunties are laughing. The joy on their faces is, well, joyful! Laugh along with them! Those owls on the cover? They're six owls spotting. It'd be great fun to pause on that page, and peer about, spotting things nearby.
I really like this book. I'm as joyful as those aunties! The pages in Flett's book provide a chance to do something that extends the reading itself, enriching what a young child knows about words and actions.
Though I'm sure Flett didn't have diversity in mind when she came up with the title, We All Count, the title and her book do a beautiful job of saying We--people who are Indigenous or who speak Cree--we count, too.
Your book is brilliant, Julie Flett! Kų́'daa! (That is 'thank you' in Tewa, my language.)
We All Count: A Book of Numbers is highly recommended. Written and illustrated by Julie Flett, it was published in 2014 by Native Northwest.
0 Comments on Julie Flett's WE ALL COUNT: A BOOK OF CREE NUMBERS as of 10/22/2014 7:40:00 PM
I've just come across what looks to be an absolutely stunning video series called Wapos Bay. Set in the present day, the stop-motion animation format features a Cree family. I've watched several clips on YouTube. Some are in English, and some are in Cree. (By the way, from what I've seen so far, the episodes in Cree far surpass the Lakota versions of the Berenstein Bears that are getting a lot of press right now.)
With the upcoming release of Breaking Dawn, here's one timely clip from the episode "Brotherhood of Vampire Killers":
Check out the Wapos Bay website. Enter the site by clicking on the television set and you'll be taken to an interactive page for kids to click around on.
1 Comments on Video: WAPOS BAY, last added: 10/26/2011
Thanks for the link to this nifty series. The intro and the main "page" are humorous and engaging -- can't wait to find out if our nieces and nephews (well... the great-nieces and -nephews) are watching Wapos Bay.
Over the last few days, I've seen a few references to a new series of graphic novels by a Swampy Cree (First Nations, Manitoba) writer, David Robertson. I read an article about him in the Winnipeg Free Press (posted April 8, 2010, by Trevor Suffield, titled "Graphic novelist feels power of responsibility in latest offering"). In it, Robertson talks about his first graphic novel, titled The Life of Helen Betty Osborne, and that it is being used in some schools in Winnipeg. Below is a book trailer for the novel (link to youtube, if you can't see the video below: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqkT3BCXL54&feature=related):
Here's another video about the novel (link from youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5-X2hUTI9s):
I've orderedThe Life of Helen Betty Osborne and look forward to reading it. I'll also get a copy of Stone, the first book in the "7 Generations" series Robertson is working on. Here's the book trailer for Stone (here's the link if the video won't play: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0m3EFYude0):
Robertson's books are published by Portage & Main Press, who also published In Search of April Raintree.
2 Comments on Book trailer: THE LIFE OF HELEN BETTY OSBORNE: A GRAPHIC NOVEL, last added: 4/15/2010
The reviewer has some concerns with the novel. She says there's not enough information about aboriginal culture and history for a reader who lacks that knowledge.
I understand her concern, but don't see it as a concern with the book. Moreso, it points to the LACK of history that is being taught in schools, history about (in this case) the aboriginal peoples of Canada.
Beverly Slapin said, on 4/15/2010 2:19:00 PM
There was a movie about Helen Betty Osborne's life and death, called "Conspiracy of Silence," done in the early 1990s, I think. Michele St. John played the part of Helen Betty. I saw it a number of times on TV and it moved me to tears. A young woman with so much promise, raped and murdered by young white men because they saw her as "other" and therefore expendable. And the whole town conspired to keep her killers safe. Thank you for posting this, Debbie. I just ordered a copy of the book.
Among my favorite books is George Littlechild'sThis Land Is My Land, published in 1993 by Children's Book Press. Written and illustrated by Littlechild, the book won the Jane Addams Peace Award.
The title, of course, is familiar. Across the United States, in schools and gatherings, people sing "This land is my land, this land is your land..." with a certain patriotic warmth and fervor. But when a Native person utters those words, it is quite different. Those five words have a different meaning...
Littlechild is a member of the Plains Cree Nation. Opening the book, I pause at the dedication, which is a set of black and white photographs of Littlechild, his mother, his grandfather, grandmother, great-grandfathers, great-grandmothers, and his great-great-grandfathers and great-great-grandmothers.
The title page shows a Native man and a white man, facing each other. I look at that illustration and the words above it ("This Land Is My Land"), and I'm reminded of a film I watched recently. (The title of that film is You Are on Indian Land and I highly recommend it.) That illustration appears later in the book. Its title is "Mountie and Indian Chief." The accompanying text reads:
This picture brings you face to face with two different cultures. The Mountie is a Royal Canadian Mounted Policeman sent by the Queen of England and the Government of Canada to enforce the law of the Europeans. The Chief is a leader of the Plains Cree. He is protecting our people and our way of life.
That last line "...protecting our people and our way of life" is beautifully said. With those words, Littlechild provides readers with a different view of Native people who fought Europeans in the 1600s, 1700s, 1800s. Throughout, Littlechild's words carry a great deal of information. What he says, and what he does not say, too... For example, on the first page of the book, titled "I love the moon, the stars, and the ancestors," he writes
In those days our Nation, the Plains Cree people, followed the buffalo in the spring and summer.
My response to his "our Nation" is a joyful "AWESOME!!!" Immediately, he provides teachers with the opportunity to teach children that Native peoples in the US and Canada were and are members of nations. Note, too, that he uses the word "followed" instead of "roamed." Far too many times, in too many children's books, Plains Indians (and others, too) are described as "roaming" over the land. It's a good word for obscuring Nationhood and intellect. He doesn't use it, and neither should any teacher.
Littlechild's art (in words and illustration) is about Columbus, significance of the number four, boarding school, and racism. Each page, each illustration, is worth an extended study. I highly recommend This Land Is My Land.
3 Comments on George Littlechild's THIS LAND IS MY LAND, last added: 10/31/2009
I read awhile back that Woody Guthrie wrote the lyrics to This Land is Your Land in reaction to the somewhat jingoistic subtext (and uncritical popular affection for) the tune God Bless America. Some performances of This Land Is Your Land include politically charged (progressive) verses. Ironically, there is no mention of indigenous people in the song. That's one thing that makes George Littlechild's use of it so apropos; as if he's speaking back to some otherwise progressive voices (Guthrie, Pete Seeger and others who have recorded the song), saying "Remember. We won't be left out of this."
I REALLY like George Littlechild's work in this book, too.
Anonymous said, on 10/30/2009 5:25:00 PM
Bravo Debbie, for posting the link to the TAWL list. George Littlechild's text "This is my land" is the perfect way to introduce American Indian perspectives into the classroom in meaningful way. So much of what is done in the name of education is a denial of actual history. Thank you Debbie for bringing this blessing to my attention today, and reminding about the power of picture books and authentic voices. Besides I now have another great author’s books to add to my library at our Literacy Center here in Connecticut. Sincerely, Jesse
Great news! For those who act fast, that is! Lakehead University bookstore has copies of Tomson Highway's three picture books. According to their website, they've got seven or eight copies of each one. To get to the books, start here. Enter "Highway" in the search box on the top right.
Back in 2002, Highway was interviewed (click here to listen) and spoke about his writing, language and the Cree language specifically, and the influence of television.
Thanks for the link to this nifty series. The intro and the main "page" are humorous and engaging -- can't wait to find out if our nieces and nephews (well... the great-nieces and -nephews) are watching Wapos Bay.