Many of my friends laugh at me when I say that Radio 4 is too intellectual for me. And they laugh even more when I confess that I am a Radio 2 addict. I don't care. Even my picky teenagers admit they play some good music--and if I didn't listen to Radio 2 I wouldn't know about the really excellent children's book thing which is currently taking place on the Jeremy Vine show, (and I wouldn't be able to share it with you). There! You see? It is really a noble sacrifice I am making on behalf of the AABBA readers.
The bedtime story is in decline, according to Jean Gross, the Government's first 'speech chief' (whatever that is)--and it is affecting language and reading skills. "The next generation lack basic speaking skills because parents now spend less time talking to their children over family meals or reading them bedtime stories", she told The Times on her appointment as communications tzar last month. This is depressing, but probably true. Our lives as parents are busier and more pressured than ever. Some children will never be read to by their parents--ever. The ritual of a bedtime story--that precious time of sharing a world of imagination with your child--is more than likely to be replaced with watching tv or playing computer games or television or a cd--or nothing at all. It's easier for many pressured parents to let a machine take over the job--and what a loss that is for both child and parent. So, what is going on at Radio 2? How are they helping to address this problem? Listen carefully (so to speak) and I'll begin.....
The bedtime story is in decline, according to Jean Gross, the Government's first 'speech chief' (whatever that is)--and it is affecting language and reading skills. "The next generation lack basic speaking skills because parents now spend less time talking to their children over family meals or reading them bedtime stories", she told The Times on her appointment as communications tzar last month. This is depressing, but probably true. Our lives as parents are busier and more pressured than ever. Some children will never be read to by their parents--ever. The ritual of a bedtime story--that precious time of sharing a world of imagination with your child--is more than likely to be replaced with watching tv or playing computer games or television or a cd--or nothing at all. It's easier for many pressured parents to let a machine take over the job--and what a loss that is for both child and parent. So, what is going on at Radio 2? How are they helping to address this problem? Listen carefully (so to speak) and I'll begin.....
All this week on the Jeremy Vine Show, listeners are being asked to choose their favourite bedtime story from a shortlist of eight, in turn chosen from a longlist of 36 last month. Each day Jeremy will read two extracts and then someone from the media will champion their chosen book--yesterday the author and journalist Guy Walters talked about Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Bea Campbell supported Each Peach Pear Plum by Janet and Allan Ahlberg. The others on the shortlist are The Gruffalo, The Very Hungry Caterpillar, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, The Famous Five, Where the Wild Things Are and Winnie the Pooh. Jeremy gets a lot of listeners, and it will be fascinating to see which of these comes out on top--and how many votes are cast. Personally, I am throwing my hat into the ring for Each Peach Pear Plum--a book I have read probably hundreds of times without ever being bored. If asked to recommend a picture book for young children, it's the one I invariably pick. Well, I would, feeling as I do about the importance of nursery rhymes and poetry. Which one would you pick? If you feel as strongly as I do about the importance of banging the drum for bedtime stories, please do go and vote. And even if you are a dyed-in-the-wool Radio 4 listener, give Radio 2 a chance for the next few lunchtimes. Just this once. You never know--you might be converted.
By: Kim Wheedleton,
on 10/26/2008
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So they say,
A Jolly Postman came one day
From over the hills
And far away...
Overview:
If you've ever wondered what happened after "Happily ever after," then The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters is just what you've been looking for. The Jolly Postman spends his day delivering letters, postcards, and flyers to a variety of familiar fairy tale characters. Each letter is tucked inside an envelope cleverly addressed and illustrated, to be pulled out and read before the postman moves on to his next customer. Who do you suppose wrote to Mr. and Mrs. Bear, of Goldilocks and the Three Bears? What type of advertisement has the witch in the Gingerbread house so excited? What other characters has he visited, who has invited him in for tea, and how has his day gone? Find this much-loved book, pour some tea, and settle in for a very sweet and interactive story.
For Teachers and Librarians:
Definitely a book for the younger crowd - and it has many possibilities educationally speaking. You can seamlessly work The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters into a fairy tale unit, a letter-writing unit, a careers unit, and perhaps a unit on neighborliness and/or manners. Or, how about as part of a lesson on the post office and how letters get to people's homes, the types of mail delivered, and how this method of delivery compares/contrasts to the way your students receive their mail? Equally important, the kids will delight in reaching into each envelope and pulling out the mysteries hidden inside. Everyone loves receiving mail - but it's especially exciting for the short set, who may not get so much as we in the taller set. Fun to read aloud, this book is also one your charges will clamor over to be able to read on their own. With the fairly simple text and rhyming format, it is a delight to hear as well as a help for kiddos sounding out on their own.
For Parents, Grandparents and Caregivers:
Your little guys will absolutely love The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters. It is a fun twist on traditional fairy tales - based on stories they already know and love, but with this new and interesting addition of real letters tucked inside real envelopes that add curious new things to the tales. They will have a great time snuggling with you in a chair while you read it to them - just be sure to keep out of the way once it's time to extract each letter. It's doubtful they'll let you do that most fun part yourself!
For the Kids:
Don't you love getting mail? Letters are so fun to open up and read, and here is this book, The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters, full of letters to people like the Three Bears, and Goldilocks, and the Giant from Jack and the Beanstalk. Cool, huh? I wonder who is writing to them? What kind of letters to fairy tale characters get, anyway? Hmmm. The only way to find out is to ask your parents for a trip to the library or bookstore to find this book. Then find a squishy, comfy chair, and get reading (or, have someone read it to you).
Wrapping Up:
The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters is a sweet twist on classic fairy tales, taking the reader for a peek just beyond the stories she already knows. Little guys will adore this book and ask to read it again and again, teachers and librarians will have a wealth of teaching ideas to use it with, and parents and caregivers can rest easy knowing they've provided their little ones with a book that is both fun, interesting, and destined to be a beloved favorite.
Title: The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters
Author: Allan Ahlberg
Illustrator: Janet Ahlberg
Pages: 29
Reading Level: Ages 4-8
Publisher and Date: Little, Brown and Company, September 1986
Edition: 1st U.S. Edition
Language: English
Published In: United States
Price: $17.99
ISBN-10: 0316020362
ISBN-13: 978-0316020367
0 Comments on Book Review: The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters, by Janet and Allan Ahlberg as of 10/26/2008 11:37:00 PM
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By: Kim Wheedleton,
on 10/26/2008
Blog: Bugs and Bunnies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Janet and Allan Ahlberg, children's books, writing, Author Spotlight, children's author, Add a tag
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JacketFlap tags: Janet and Allan Ahlberg, children's books, writing, Author Spotlight, children's author, Add a tag
Janet and Allan Ahlberg - husband and wife, and one of Britain's most successful author/illustrator teams - worked together for over 20 years, writing and illustrating well over 100 award-winning children's books together.
They met in the early 1960's in Sunderland, England - when both studied to be teachers. Allan worked in a range of employment situations (postman, grave digger, soldier, and plumber's mate among them) before becoming a primary teacher for 10 years.
Janet studied teaching, then went on to study graphic design at Leicester Polytechnic and became an illustrator. She married Allan in 1969. Several years later, she asked Allan to write a children's book for her to illustrate. This began their writing and illustrating career for children in the form of stories, verse, picture books and novels.
Their first three books were The Old Joke Book, The Vanishment of Thomas Tull, and Burglar Bill. By the 1980's, their books were "big news" both in Britain and around the world, and translated into 21 different languages. But The Jolly Postman was their greatest success, sellling over 6 million copies. It took five years to make, and was finally published in 1986, winning numerous awards.
Janet and Allan Ahlberg created together until, sadly, Janet died of cancer in 1994 at the age of 50. Allan moved to London in 1998, and has continued to write, even collaborating with illustrator daughter Jessica - born to the couple in 1980, and a great inspiration to his and his wife's work.
0 Comments on Author Spotlight: Janet and Allan Ahlberg as of 10/26/2008 9:34:00 PM
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I'll go and vote straight away, Lucy! And I'm completely with you on Each Peach Pear Plum. Even though Where The Wild Things Are is my personal favourite, EPPP was the one that always got my kids shouting out the answer they knew was coming. 'I Spy TOM THUMB!' Loved it. And what a great idea for a poll.
I do love WTWTA too and can't wait to see the film--but you are entirely right about the shouting bit for EPPP. It's what made bedtime fun for years. That and Hairy McLary from Donaldson's Dairy. I can still repeat both rhymes verbatim--and Girl (then aged 14) was to be found in Waterstones about six months ago, sitting on the floor (while I browsed/rearranged my titles face out) and chanting EPPP to herself in a wonderful moment of rediscovery.
I listen to Jeremy Vine at lunchtime! It's a varied and interesting show. I'm enjoying the bedtime stories because I don't have children, so those for younger readers are new to me.
My favourite has to be "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe", because I can remember reading that one aged about 10... I cried when Aslan died. But it seems more of a read alone book than a bedtime story, so not sure I'd vote for it - I'd probably go for "Where the Wild Things Are".
I think it was Radio 2 at the doctor's this morning, Lucy. In fact I think it was your beloved Terry Wogan. It was on a radio and I was the only person in the tiny waiting room. I so wanted to turn it off!
Can't you run the poll here? Or start our own ABBA one? I can't listen to Radio 2 even for you.
I loved reading Hairy McLary, too. My husband used to read really long things to our daughters, books that would take days and weeks - they loved it and he carried on for years after they could read perfectly well themselves. (In case you're wondering what I was doing - I'd been with them all day, and the bedtime story was his time! And I was cooking and quite possibly having a much-deserved glass of wine.)
Radio 4 too intellectual? Surely not! Too SERIOUS – yes, for me, sometimes.
Thanks for sharing this, Lucy. I had a look at the shortlist; I think I'll go for Wild Things, though very tempted by Caterpillar and Pooh. Great that Vine is promoting storytelling – though very sad to see that it's needed. My grandad was an old-school storyteller; it was all in his head. If I could vote for it, it would be the one he told about the boy with the hunchback. We read to our kids long after they were reading by themselves, and I hope their memories of this will prompt them to do the same with their own kids. Great that we now have a storytelling Laureate as well.
Margaret Meek said something that really made total sense to me, though sadly & lazily I do not have the exact quote to hand. It was something along the lines of "when grown-ups read stories to children, especially books that the children cannot yet read themselves, they are introducing the children to the language that they will need to know about for their own future reading." So,in other words, children have a deep need to hear more than just the school reading book.
Valuable post, Lucy!
I was lucky as a child that my mother read to us almost every night - and if she couldn't, she asked my grandmother to do so. The pleasure she got from literature was contagious Sometimes it was a story, sometimes it was poetry. Eventually, she would read several chapters of novels - Dickens, Melville, etc. That's why I could read and had memorized many poems before entering school at age 5 and spent 4-6 hours reading most days - 1 or 2 books per day by my teen years.
Children today are not only denied the introduction to literature, the are denied the closeness that sharing it engenders. I feel sorry for them. I always read to my grandchildren when I got the chance and have lately gotten involved in a 'mentoring' program - much of which involves introducing kids to cultural things they might otherwise miss out on, including literature.
Lion+ can be a bed-time reading book if you read to your children long after the picture book phase. It is a hugely enjoyable sharing time besides its other benefits. I last read to my oldest daughter the night before her first day at Oxford Uni - and we read Duncan and the Bird and Mrs Goose's Baby because it was nostalgic, but by then we'd covered Tolstoy, Waugh, Boccaccio... it doesn't need to stop. Like Mary, I don't think I can make myself listen to R2, but of those I'm torn between WWTWA and EPPP, like everyone else. I think the monsters get it.
Thank you for flagging this up, Lucy. It has made me swallow my dislike of JV in one hasty gulp. I will vote right away! Having recently realised that bedtime stories had fallen off the agenda at home because of a mountain of homework, I have introduced bathtime stories instead and we are reading Judith Kerr's When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, as my kids would not choose to read it themselves. They have both admitted that it is a fabulous story and are amazed that it is based on Real Life, but my son (8) told me last night that he would not have chosen it because "the cover is about one hundred years old". Thirty, actually, dear, but never mind . . . Next on the list is Minnow on the Say by Philippa Pearce. A fab "boy" book which you don't see around these days, which is a shame.
So glad this has sparked some very interesting comments. Thank you all. Mary--I absolve you from R2! You can vote at http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio2/shows/jeremy-vine/bedtime-stories/..and Anne too. But the idea of an ABBA poll of the same sort is an interesting one which I will follow up with the other bloggers here. As for the Intellectual comment, Fiona--I did have my tongue in my cheek a little bit. But only a little bit.