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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: richard holland, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Happy Harry's Cafe

by Michael Rosen illustrated by Richard Holland Candlewick 2013 Harry makes great soup, or so we are told. Harry is a Bear. He work's at a cafe that bears his name. Harry's friends are birds and cats and other animals. Harry's friends love his soup so much they come running before it runs out. But on this day Matt the cat does not like the soup. Because he hasn't tried it. Because he has no

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2. Nonfiction Monday: The Time Book

The Time Book: A Brief History from Lunar Calendars to Atomic ClocksThe Time Book: A Brief History from Lunar Calendars to Atomic Clocks Martin Jenkins, illus. Richard Holland

Well, there are just a few more days left to nominate your favorite titles for a Cybil award! And, just in time, I found a few of the files with my reviews of last year's Cybil's nominees!

The Time Book offers a very short introduction to time, both as a concept and the history of how humans have measured it. It talks about how plants and animals deal in seasons and days, and how humans invented various calendars (and why)-- there's even a brief history of European adoption of the Gregorian calendar. It then gets into clocks-- starting with early sundials and moving to the atomic clock, with a brief diversion for time zones.

It takes some big concepts and makes them understandable and fun for young readers, all without reading like a "report" book. What really sets this apart though is the illustration and design. Holland's quirky collage illustrations often incorporate Jenkins's text, so next to a picture of Egyptian pyramids, the text is also pyramid shaped. It has a similar feel to Lauren Child or Terry Gilliams animations for Monty Python.

Nonfiction Monday roundup is over at Picture Book of the Day!


Book Provided by... the publisher, for Cybils consideration

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3. Books at bedtime: two bilingual books from Mantra Lingua…

Following our library’s recent refurbishment, I was excited to find several bilingual picture-books in the newly-revamped children’s section… I borrowed two and we will definitely be going back for more!

Yeh-Hsien: A Chinese Cinderella, retold by Dawn Casey, illustrated by Richard Holland (Mantra Lingua, 2006)Yeh-Hsien: A Chinese Cinderella, retold by Dawn Casey and illustrated by Richard Holland, with a French translation by Annie Arnold (Mantra Lingua, 2006) is familiar but different – there’s no fairy godmother, instead Yeh-Hsien befriends a fish: “she nourished her fish with food and with love, and soon he grew to enormous size.” However, the wicked stepmother kills the fish, cooks it and eats it (this detail gives the story the frisson of horror that is sometimes missing from modern fairy-tale retellings…). The magic fish bones that are left allow Yeh-Hsien to make wishes come true – soon she has enough to eat; and then she is able to conjure up beautiful clothes to go to the Spring Festival… It’s great to have a feisty Cinderella, who has to think and do for herself – and who runs away from the party because her nightmarish step-mother frightens her, not because she forgot the time…

Grandma's Saturday Soup by Sally Fraser, illustrated by Derek Brazell (Mantra Lingua, 2005)Grandma’s Saturday Soup by Sally Fraser and illustrated by Derek Brazell with a Cantonese translation by Sylvia Denham (Mantra Lingua, 2005) is a delightful book – Mimi takes young readers/listeners through her week during a British winter. Everything reminds her of some ingredient in the soup she will be having at Grandma’s house on Saturday (clouds like dumplings, shoots of new growth through the snow like spring onions); and everything also contrasts with the stories Grandma tells of life in Jamaica –

“The sun shines every day. The sun is warm on your skin and you only need to wear your shorts and a T-shirt.”
Warm every day? Shorts and a T-shirt? I can’t believe that!

And the illustrations bring it alive too, alternating chilly winter scenes with glorious, tropical weather; playing in the snow with playing in the sand. This is a lovely book about a child learning about her cultural heritage from a beloved grandmother.

Mantra Lingua offer a wide range of bilingual picture-books in over 40 languages. I love the cultural mix they can create – and I would suggest that bilingual books aren’t just for those who are growing up with both the featured languages. It doesn’t matter in our family, for example, that we are only really reading the English – the stories somehow have an added dimension just by there being the parallel text there – minds are opened, even if it’s simply via the recognition of different codes of punctuation!

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