Dec 29, 2023

BUNNY and TREE- Reflections on HOME

 This year's holiday gatherings have felt especially sweet. My recent move back to my home town (after MANY years away) find me taking part in big and small occasions with family and friends, most I  had rarely seen at this time of year. During the Fall, I enjoyed aa short visit to my longtime home to deal with multiple business matters. When my plane landed, a thought filled me- "I'm HOME!" Not many days later, as my return flight approached landing back in my hometown/new home, another thought overtook me, unsolicited: "You'll be HOME soon." Then, in a conscious, intentional thought, I compared those two reactions and I realized, to my deep joy, that I have TWO homes. Two places where I know my way around, where caring people who have been part of my life for a long time are near, and where I find joy and feel safe. We all require safe shelter and sustenance to survive, and will fail to thrive without relationships of love and trust.But HOME is immeasurably more than that.

Enchanted Lio0n Books, 2023

That's what brought me back to share this very special wordless picture book. BUNNY & TREE is a loving and moving debut endeavor by BALINT ZSAKO, A visual artist/photographer/filmaker, he was born into an artistic family in Budapest, Hungary but now is a resident of Canada.

This is an exceptionally impressive wordless book for many reasons, not the least of which is the quality of the art and the final product. Colorful, full-spread illustrations are expensive to produce for publishers, especially with the large page size, excellent paper, and surprising length of this offering.With a range of tones and colors, from glowing pastels to shadowed subtlety, each sprawling spread incorporates the gentleness or intensity needed to share a glorious field off flowers or a seethingly fierce wolf. The cover image here gives you a sense of the story, as does the title. The length of this book (184 pages) is beyond rare for such a publisher's financial commitment to storytelling and to art. This is a visual storytelling of escape, assistance, need, challenge, travel, hope, and the power of such emotional connections between friends. 

I receive picture books from authors and publishers (but with no promise of a review). I seek out most books I reveiw at my public library collaborative. (Cheers for those fabulous folks and facilities, at my prior home and now here!) I buy books as gifts and often reveiw those, since I curate actual purchases very cautiously. In this case, though, I learned about this July, 2023 release long before it became available, and I preordered. From my first "reading", through countless others since then, I have deferred writing a review because I felt inadequate to praise it. With SIX starred reviews (so far) and being named on "Best of Year" lists, I'll admit to a shift in my thinking. This is one of those phenomenal books that is getting outstanding support and will certainly be named among many medal and honor winners in the coming month. (All well-deserved.) I decided I would lend my small voice and limited blog posts to some other books that were still a step away from such glowing spotlights. Yet, these many months later, I have not shelved this book out of my line of sight. I keep it "at hand", because each time I examine it from front to back, retold its visual stories, I find more to love. New details or insights expand previous readings, and I continue to love it deeply. 

After my experiences reflecting on HOME and what it means, I picked this up again and found an even closer connection.

Throughout each reading, the short version of what happens is an epic journey, a nine-act story with prologue and epilogue. It seems both fanciful and familiar. RABBIT (with different-colored ears to foreshadow attention to color in images and impact) and its mates seek escape from a marauding wolf. Just as death is imminent, TREE reveals itself as having both empathy and unique abilities. Reshaping its trunks, branches, and limbs into the shape of a massive wolf head, TREE forces the predator to retreat. This is all in the the prologue. Each chapter reveals grateful RABBIT and caring TREE moving through helpful roles, balancing each other. All the while they discover places and experiences in a wider world that only bond them further in trust and awareness of the potential each offers. Their journey involves dangers and sacrifices, but this story provides the polar opposite of the Tree's sacrifice in THE GIVING TREE, a picture book both despised and cherished by readers of different opinions. 

I considered sharing an interior spread, or a short passage of my (latest) interpretation of the visual narrative in words, and choose not to do so. Whether you check it out of a library, gift it to someone you love, screen first by reading other reviews, or ask your local independent bookstore to show it to you, please "read" it. Many times, if you can. Over time. The meaning of HOME and FRIEND and COMMUNITY changes throughout each of our lives, as it does within the pages of this book. The magical accomplishment in this wordless marvel is the epilogue indicator that when we share journeys and emotions and understanding with others, nature itself may join the pro9cess in the most surprising ways.


Dec 23, 2023

A Christmas (Eve) Recap

 For those who celebrate a western tradition of Christmas on December 25 (ands also for those who celebrate other seasonal holidays or Eastern dates for Christmas or ignore holidays) this is recap of some of the picture books I've shared over the years, including the current publishing year.

If you are a fan of picture books at all, this bouquet of beauties will lift your spirits and please your eyes and ears. (For those who have yet to fall in love with picture books, this collection might win you over!)

Beaming Books, 2023



Starting with my "this season" favorite that has already landed on MANY best-of-year lists is a book that is certainly destined to be a classic, Take a look (HERE) at my glowing praise for LULLABY FOR THE KING, written by the incomparable Nikki Grimes with luminous illustrations by Michelle Carlos. 



Levine Quiredo, 2021


In recent years an equally compelling holiday picture book conveys a fictionalized version of true events, a story of anti-semitism and hate that is playing out across out country today. Of course, the ending is based on those real events and reveals the most uplifting of choices among the community surrounding the targets of such hate. RED AND GREEN AND BLUE AND WHITE (reviewed HERE), was created by the immense talents of Lee Wind and Paul O. Zelinsky. I gifted this book multiple times this season because the message is both necessary and inspiring, revealed for any age through effective storytelling and illustrations that are both luminous and emotionally powerful. Sadly, the origin story for this one goes back to 1993  and the hatred is rooted many centuries earlier.

Kids Can Press, 2012

Dipping back a decade, one of my favorite characters is a perfect fit for the youngest readers, guaranteed to generate laughs on each page turn (and repeat readings, guaranteed!). Adult readers will be chuckling right along and might be surprised by the astute observations and details noticed by those little lap friends sharing the book. SCAREDY SQUIRREL PREPARES FOR CHRISTMAS: A Safety Guide for Scaredies is both written and illustrated by Melanie Watt. Whether this book introduces you to Scaredy or  brings him to a new situation for you (among the countless situations that scare the tail off of him), you'll love this one season after season.


Kalliot Books, 2023


How often have you heard (or said), "If only the Christmas Spirit could last all year. *sigh*"? This next, also recent picture book, is not actually a holiday book despite wintery scenes. In fact, OUT AND ABOUT: A STORY OF GIVING, is a tale of sustaining that giving, caring attitude throughout the year. It is also about passing down values, the concern for and action to support others and their needs, which could not only continue the holiday spirit through the year but across generations. Just imagine what that world would be like. Written by Liza Wiemer and illustrated by Margeaux Lucas, this story/family reveal the ways in which we can move ourselves from a sense of caring and empathy into action, not requiring an occasion to do so. 

To this last offering, firmly set in contemporary families and situations, I'll add one last link that I've shared several times since the first post. My childhood memory and reflections on my own family include a short poem I wrote for my own family based on actual events as a child. May anyone reading this (and everyone else!) look around in the days, past, present, and coming, to recognize and celebrate the blessings you find in your lives- even when surrounded by struggles or concerns.  I wish you all many moments of peace, joy, generosity, and security.

Dec 19, 2023

Compare, Contrast, and Celebrate Imagination!

 I enjoy sharing more than one title in a post, even though that means providing a slightly less detailed examination of each. In the prior post, HERE, I offered a quick look at three picture books that came home with me from the NCTE 2023 Conference. Each offered distinct appeal and each would be shelved in different sections of a library or book store. 

Please note the following word of warning from this committed picture book reader/writer/cheerleader:

I enjoy taking a deeper dive into titles that provide valuable and appealing reads in their own standing, but might be elevated even further when read together. I'll repeat something I often advise when mentoring young teachers/parents or providing workshops or professional development:  ALWAYS share a picture book on its own merits before beginning any lesson or analysis or other  exploration. Some kinds of intentionally instructive books can be used in parts or sections, but a quality picture book offers that glorious opportunity that few other whole "books" can do. They provide COMPLETE, COMPACT, and COMPELLING art and literature in a single sitting. They are meant to be read through, to be experienced as a whole. That is the intention of  both the author and the illustrator. Honor that. Share it as a whole. Of course a single spread in isolation or a breathtakingly beautiful line of text can be isolated and shared, but it will mean so much if that happens after the entirety of the book has been experienced. 

After that side note, I'm eager to share with you two books that each deserve the tag, "quality picture book." 

NEAL PORTER BOOKS, 
Holiday House 2023

The first is SOMETIMES IT'S NICE TO BE ALONE, written by Amy Hest and illustrated by the Philip Stead. This spectacle-wearing girl presents a thesis: "Sometimes it is nice to be alone...."  repeated on multiple-spread sequences that reveal a pattern. Doing everyday things (eating a cookie, reading, tumbling, even trailing after-bath footprints), she restates the premise and then adds a "what if a friend..." consideration. After the initial comparison of solo versus shared activity, it is clear that the "sometimes" qualifier matters. Even the most independent and "loner" personalities will sometimes find great pleasure in sharing the activity with a friend. 

In this case, the remarkably talented, Caldecott Award winning illustrator depicts each set-up scene with visual clues that allow readers to soon anticipate who each surprise friend might be as the page turns. Light-hearted and heart-warming humor arrive in each revelation, allowing audiences to nod approval as familiar stuffed characters achieve "real life" size and traits as they join in a paired/shared activity. They are all animals, wild animals at that, but ones that convey the safe and sentimental personalities of the ZOO animals in A SICK DAY FOR AMOS McGEE, also illustrated by Philip Stead.

I noted the effect of the spectacles throughout, always reflecting so that we never see the actual eyes of this girl. Her gaze/glasses are always aimed at her own pursuits, not at the reader, underscoring her comfort in being on her own. I couldn't help but notice, though, that even as her stuffed animals joined in the engaging pastimes she chooses, none are actual friends or humans. In repeated readings I believe young audiences might note the poignancy of that, wondering if she is masking a longing for actual friendship and companionship, at least at times.

ENCHANTED LION BOOKS, 2023



The second picture book that extends this "What if..." line of thinking into a more conceptual level is WHAT IF ONE DAY... , written by Bruce Handy and illustrated by Ashleigh Corrin. This book uses a similar pattern of proposing a potential situation ("What if one day all the birds flew away?) followed by several double-page spreads that propose consequences.No labels or clear indicators of the relative merits or losses of those consequences is imposed, inviting discussion. So, the skies would be quieter, worms would worry less, etc. 

This picture book is oversized on sturdy paper stock with vibrant illustrations that splash across the pages and drip off the edges. The character posing this question appears to be similar in age to the prior main character, in this case a child of color without clear indicators if it is boy or girl. 

The minimal but thought-provoking text invites audiences to imagine other potential results if such a thing would happen one day. A celebratory double spread concludes each "what if" sequence, declaring, joyously, that "THERE ARE BIRDS!" and other such exuberances for each cycle. That format means this is picture book longer than the usual 32 of 40 pages, with color and font and considerations leading to the ultimate "What if...". What if things are missing from this world because someone has not yet dreamed it? What might the reader dream that could lead to filling the world with wonders as a result. 

Both books invite imagination, empathy, and connections to the natural world. Both, obviously, use repeating patterns to assure young readers that the stories offer secure and safe places to consider such remarkable "what if..." questions. The first asks the same WHAT if each time- regarding the potential of sharing with a friend. The latter looks around and sees what is taken for granted then erases it to explore potential consequences.

So, WHAT IF you get your hands on both of these books and compare them yourself, then find others to share them with. Invite yourself and others to ponder that final question: WHAT WOULD YOU DREAM OF? And what could that lead to? 

Dec 15, 2023

"Speed Round": a Few Picture Books Featured During NCTE 2023

 

HOLIDAY HOUSE, 2023

To make up for several missing weeks of posts, this time I will spotlight several picture books that followed me home from my recent NCTE Conference. To name any single title, author, session, or special event as the best would not do justice to the well-planned array of experiences offered. Even so, I'll admit that joining the Notable Children's Book Awards Luncheon was unforgettable. I was seated at a table hosted by Holiday House, showcasing their informational poetry picture book THE DIRT BOOK: Poems About Animals That Live Beneath Our Feet. Author David L. Harrison was a special guest of the publisher and I was delighted to take part in some lively conversation. Big bonus?  I received a signed copy of his book!

I reviewed this delightful picture book earlier this year, a library copy, and this is what I had to say at that time:

"What's better than a collection of poems in a variety of forms that informs and explores the various lives (from roots to earthworms to mice) that abide mostly underground. Easy, right, to conclude "out of sight out of mind"? Not so in this case. Sharing the common habitat of "dirt", each exploration entertains and amazes in ways both familiar and unexpected. The " What's better?" part is in the trim size and art design that requires readers to turn the book 90 degrees and view the spreads from very long top-to-bottom expanses. The dark-toned illustrations also remind and invite readers to consider things that don't sparkle or flash, but may well, often do, prove to be treasures of nature."

That's all true, and now I happily add that this is a 2023 Notable Picture Book of Poetry!

Random House Studio, 2023 


During those whirlwind four days I also attended a fantastic panel session that included the noted, multi-award-winning, and always inspiring Melissa Stewart. Her presentation did not disappoint, and I later lined up to meet her and receive a signed copy of her latest non-fiction picture book, WHALE FALL: Exploring an Ocean-Floor Ecosystem.

This is both luminous and enlightening in its informative text, the fluid and movement-infused illustrations, and the remarkable facts of this after-life contribution of whales. Their biodegrading processes have served the ocean ecology since whales first existed and yet evidence of a whale fall was  only discovered and study begun in recent decades. This is one astonishingly powerful picture book I urge you to read and share.Everyone should know this powerful portrait of life.

GROUNDWOOD BOOKS, 2023


In a light and lively twist, author Nadia L. Hohn shared her latest release, MALAIKA, CARNIVAL QUEEN. In this title, Malaika continues to splash her warm-hearted and colorful joy of life in CARNIVAL season. As in earlier titles featuring Malaika, a contemporary story is woven with local language, culture, family history, and an innovative, engaging personality that sparkles on the page and leaps into young readers' lives. 

These three varied  titles range across library categories, target ages, and purposes.These are only a first sampling of the exciting books and authors I encountered in a few short days. I promise to return soon with some more special offerings and background stories. Meanwhile, this trio of beauties are available in libraries and for holiday gifting. With such a variety of topics and treatments, there must be someone in your life who would love to find one or more of these in their lives, right?


Dec 11, 2023

Mini-Report from NCTE Annual Convention in Columbus (Whew!)

 The 2023 Annual NCTE Conference was held in Columbus, Ohio in the middle of November. When I noticed that location, WA-A-Y-Y last spring, I planned to attend. Doing so has been a long-time dream, since this is the largest literary conference in the country each year. I've never had the opportunity/circumstances to make it happen until now. Their gatherings offer remarkable contacts, resources, and connections for teachers of preschool through university level (National Council of Teachers of English). Why wouldn't I want to go?

Planning ahead, I scheduled review posts for this  blog throughout the days and weeks leading up to that exciting weekend. I was certain I'd return home with fodder for countless posts, including books obtained in long lines, waiting to speak with and obtain signatures from their creators. Those things did happen, as well as meeting and visiting with several authors, poets, illustrators, educators, and literacy leaders with whom I've connected online or through work on my blog. I'll just say, ZOOM, webinars, YouTube, and other virtual experiences pale in comparison to even brief encounters with these talented folks in real life. I was a four-day-fan-girl, and that feeling continues.

To snap back into a regular posting schedule (delayed until now due to some personal/family issues)  I'm sharing this annotated collection of images taken during a whirlwind of four exhausting days. Next up, in only a few days, I'll begin reviewing some of the remarkable books I was able to bring home with me. Topping all this off? Saturday morning the keynote speaker was TOM HANKS, who was not stingy with his praise for teachers in his life who had shaped the man he is today. For now, just know that picture books continue to fill my thoughts each day, and I look forward to sharing many of them with you.



Here's hoping this is only the first of MANY times I manage to attend NCTE conferences. Fingers crossed for next year in BOSTON! This year clearly measured up to its theme: CONNEXIONS. Next year the theme is HEART, HOPE, and HUMANITY!


Picture books are as versatile and diverse as the readers who enjoy them. Join me to explore the wacky, wonderful, challenging and changing world of picture books.