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By:
Phoebe,
on 11/3/2010
Blog:
The Children's Book Review
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By Phoebe Vreeland, The Children’s Book Review
Published: November 4, 2010
Thanksgiving is a celebration of abundance and there is a virtual cornucopia of children’s books about this holiday. You can find a Thanksgiving themed book featuring every child’s favorite character from Amelia Bedelia to Scooby Doo. Bookstore shelves are laden with picture books about the first Thanksgiving as well as ones about today’s holiday tradition. There even seems to be a whole genre of entertaining books about turkeys on the run.
So with the Thanksgiving spread overflowing, what will you look for in books for your children? What you choose to serve your children helps create the tradition we wish to carry on. If you want a book that teaches history, it can be tricky. That harvest feast of 1621 has inspired many an author to use it as a tableau and many an illustrator has romanticized and created beautifully idealized images. Take care to choose books that are accurate and respectful towards everyone at that table. Rather than choosing books for their familiar story and warm illustrations, take time to read a book through carefully by yourself before sharing it with your child. Guidance offered here may inform your choice: http://www.oyate.org.
Today, the Thanksgiving tradition encompasses many things. For some, it is a time to travel, a time to gather with family and friends and feast. It is a time to watch a football game, attend a school play or a parade. Above all, the holiday is about giving thanks. This makes it a wonderful opportunity to evoke gratitude in children. The list includes several books to encourage this. It also offers educational books that aim to be culturally sensitive and historically accurate. The other selections are simply unique or just plain silly—usually about a turkey in trouble.
Happy Thanksgiving! May your holiday be filled with gratitude, good will, and good books.
Hardscrabble Harvest
by Dahlov Ipcar
Reading level: Ages 4-8
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: Islandport Press (September 15, 2009)
Source: Library
What to expect: Hardscrabble Harvest uses rollicking verse and Ipcar’s distinctive illustrations to tell a charming story about the running battle between a farm family and the mischievous animals that plunder their fields. Crows peck at freshly sown seeds, ducks eat new strawberry plants, rabbits nibble on tender lettuces, and raccoons dine on ears of ripening corn. All summer long the young farmer and his wife are ha
When the weather is sunny, I must listen to happy, poppy music. It's just a must with me. So lately, with the sun coming out everyday for the whole week and the weather climbing into the 50s and 60s, I've been rocking out to my Scott McCaughey playlist of the Young Fresh Fellows and Minus 5. Mr. McCaughey is/was? a Seattle local and can sometimes be spotted rocking out with REM (he and
So driving back from Mt. Baker, we listened to the Footloose soundtrack. Apparently that's what my in-law's family would listen to whenever they drove back from a day on the mountain. I forgot how fun that soundtrack is: it's got "Let's Hear It For The Boy," "Almost Paradise," "Holding Out For A Hero," and "Hurts So Good" on it. And it's hard not to feel energized by good ol' Kenny. The
Is it Tuesday again already? Where does the week go?
I had started to feel a little hard pressed to come up with music for Tuesdays, as if I'd run out of good music to share (jeez, is that even possible?). But when I pulled up YouTube just now it suddenly hit me that I had not yet shared the earthy goodness that is The Jayhawks with you all. I'm only a recent fan of theirs, coming on board
Ella rocks. There's just no denying that she really is the First Lady of Song. We're widening the genre of Tuesday Rocks this week in celebration of Lady Susan's birthday this coming weekend, to feature one of my (and Lady S') favorite artists, Ella Fitzgerald. I suppose Lady S and I first became friends because of our mutual adoration of Ella. Her impeccable timing, her spot on tone, and her
So I was trying to figure out what song to post this week and decided it was about time to feature one of my favorite bands, The Posies. A search on YouTube pulls up 273 videos. I was a little shocked that they would pull up quite that many, and it shocked me even more that most of them were for the song Love Comes, which is a newer song, and really not one of their more standard fare that you
I just bought Liam Finn's new solo album, I'll Be Lightening, and I love it. I want everyone to go out and buy it right now (it's new this week in the US). It's a bit Neil, a bit Elliott Smith, a bit Beck. It's good.
This is such a neat video. The song is lovely, but the video is especially fun to watch. Rather than any special effects being involved, I prefer to picture him running behind
Feeling a little uninspired today -- read: I'm so freaking cold, I just can't wait to go jump into my warm bed and finish reading The Blue Sword. So I'm just posting what I've been listening to lately: I've had Nada Surf's "Let Go" album for years and I love it to death. I finally picked up their "The Weight is a Gift" in the used bin at Sonic Boom a few weeks ago, and now I love that too. And
I know, I know, it's the dead of winter and it's actually snowing once again in Seattle, but I guess this just makes this song even more appealing. I love The Sundays. Their Static & Silence album was a staple of my freshman year in college. I remember turning this puppy up really loud on the first day of spring quarter with the windows open, the sunlight creeping and a sweet breeze blowing
I just realized I've missed the last two weeks of Tuesday Rocks because of the holidays. Der. To make up for it, I give you two of my favorite bands to celebrate the new year!
Death Cab for Cutie are local boys gone big. Originally from Bellingham, Washington where I went to school (and apparently around the time I was at school there), I first saw them open for The Posies and Big Star at the
I'm sad about the Crocodile closing. I've seen a lot of good shows there, including the Posies, the Long Winters, Young Fresh Fellows, and Harvey Danger. It was pretty much THE place to hear live indie rock in Seattle. Boo-hoo.
So in honor of the greatness that was the Crocodile Cafe, Tuesday Rocks celebrates with fun local rockers, Harvey Danger. They're probably fairly recognizable for
In honor of my brother's birthday tomorrow, I give you some Hall and Oates. I remember when I was a kid, I'd walk into the living room and it would be all dark except for the light from the record player, and Hall and Oates spinning from the speakers. Little did my brother know how much influence that would have on me. You of course remember that my hamsters were named Daryl and John. They had
When I was a kid, a friend and I used to watch movies over and over and over and over again. Ferris Bueller, Annie, Grease 2, Back to the Future, Adventures in Babysitting, Can't Buy Me Love, Dirty Dancing... one of my favorites was La Bamba. Now, maybe it was because he's a fellow Pinoy and maybe because he was such a cutie, but we had mad hot crushes on Lou Diamond Phillips (who I think I saw
Mary Lou Lord's Got No Shadow is a regular play on roadtrips with my sister. I saw her at Bumbershoot a few year's ago at the Busker Stage, after which apparently she went out and played on a corner on Mercer.
My favorite is her Subway song. I also love her cover of Big Star's Thirteen (on Live City Sounds).
Also found a neat promo clip for Got No Shadow.
Oh the Fannies! I discovered Teenage Fanclub in one of the bins at Cellophane Square in Bellingham when I was in college. I was going through my first blush with the Posies and often saw references to this Scottish band alongside our Bellingham boys.
Songs from Northern Britain is definitely one of my favorite albums to listen to. I love practically every song on it. Were I to be dropped onto
In honor of the Split Enz reunion (yes, everyone's getting back together again), we're celebrating here on a jammed packed version of Tuesday Rocks. I couldn't decide on just one video for Split Enz because they are all fantastic songs and the videos are just priceless in their 1980s-eyebrow-wiggling-Neil-glory. So enjoy Split Enz!
I Got You (yes, that's Neil in pseudo-clown-face makeup, isn't
So last night (er, that is, a couple of hours ago) I went with some friends to see The Swell Season (Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova, stars of the movie Once--read my gushing review of this movie and its music here) at The Moore. Fantastic show, with quite a range of sound. Glen Hansard really is an amazing musician. And he tells fantastic entertaining stories and has great stage presence,
It's only fitting with Halloween tomorrow that we enjoy the fabulousness that is MJ's Thriller (I just learned this is the 25th anniversary! Happy quarter-century Thriller dance! May you live long and prosper!). I can't embed the full video here since it's been disabled, but I did find the Lego Version that uses the sound from the original. It's fairly accurate if you compare the two.
And
So apparently 10,000 Maniacs always reminds BunnyMaker of me. I only had the one Unplugged cd of theirs, but I do admit, I absolutely LOVED it. Actually I loved it so much I totally scratched that sucker up.
Their Unplugged session really is fantastic. It did incredibly well...unfortunately by then Natalie had already left the band. I'm only putting a link here though, because currently I'm
I recently read a review about a new biopic, called Control, about Ian Curtis and the band Joy Division. I had no idea that the surviving members of Joy Division became New Order, who my sister used to listen to all the time way back when. You learn something new everyday.
This is a fantastic song. Enjoy!
Okay, I've decided to dredge up fun songs on YouTube to post here weekly, which I shall call Tuesday Rocks, because well, it does. There are too many good songs out there that we must all know about and enjoy. So for today's viewing and listening pleasure: the B-52s!
Oh and then go see them perform this song back in 1978. It's fabulous!
I love that movie. Such cheezy goodness!