Thursday, November 8, 2012

Guest blogger - View from the school library


Janet Hutchinson is a colleague and kindred spirit when it comes to children's literature.  She also works a day and half in the library in the school which her children have or are attending here in Calgary.  Her experiences there provide her (and me by extension) the opportunity to see what teachers and kids do with the books we promote.

Today's posting highlights three fictional pieces that take us back to Europe during World War II.  All three are new to me though Janet had already sold me on Code Name Verity which I've since ordered for the Doucette Library.  What are your thoughts?  Any recommendations that you'd recommend for Remembrance Day?

Lest we forget….a different take


So maybe it is just me – but do you know how occasionally you read a book – and then the next book you pick up is somewhat related? And then you find a third book that ties into the second? And so on? Well, that happened to me this fall. It started with a book I read for my book club, - a mystery, set in Sweden and moving back and forth between present day Sweden and Sweden during the Second World War. Then I picked up the next book on my pile – and it linked to the first.  So this fall, I have read four different books about events in the Second World War that I was less knowledgeable about. Three of the books are intended for children or young adults, making them perfect fodder for both my jobs.

The first book is Shadow on the Mountain by Margi Preus. This is historical fiction, written about Nazi-occupied Norway during the early years of the war. I did not know that Norway had been occupied and so this book piqued my interest. The story’s main character is a teenage boy, Kjell, drafted into the Resistance movement in Norway – initially, by delivering letters, but eventually moving on to spy on the Nazis.  The story details his increasing involvement, but also offers the stories of three other characters – his sister, a local bully and his former best friend. Ultimately, Kjell commits an error, which uncovers his role as a spy and he is forced to flee Norway for Sweden on skis. The book has been well-researched and includes maps, quotes, a pronunciation guide and a brief history and timeline of the occupation. Based on a true story, the authenticity rings through and it will be an excellent read for Grade 6 and up.

The second book I read is My Family For the War by Anne C. Voorhoeve. This book begins in Germany during the initial period of Nazi persecution of Jews, but before the war officially started. Franziska is a young girl with Jewish roots, but a practicing Protestant. Nevertheless, she is sent to England on a “kinder transport” - a system that smuggled close to 10,000 Jewish children out of Germany to safety. When Franziska leaves, it is with the idea that her family will join her in England. But travel of Jewish people is prohibited before her family can join her and Franziska is placed with a Jewish family in England for the duration of the war. I found myself quite entranced with this book. As a parent, I could (barely) imagine sending my children away to safety – but from a child’s perspective, this must have been a very confusing and upsetting time, with conflicting loyalties to family, religion and countries.  The author does an excellent job of portraying that confusion and sense of loss – and reading the story of Frances as she grows and matures during wartime England kept me interested right to the end.

 Finally, the third book I read is Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Weins. This was, quite simply, a fabulous read. I don’t want to get into too much detail, as it might ruin the story. But take two young women – one with a talent for languages and the other with an interest in, and ability to, fly planes. Put them into the Second World War and what evolves is a story of friendship, of fears and fears faced, of intelligence, true courage, faith and hope. It is not an easy read, and for that reason, I would only recommend it for older students – Grade 10 and up, as the plot is complex and the narrative is third person diary (sort of). But I want this book (I borrowed it from the library) and have put it on my Christmas list. The book gave me goose bumps and made me ask myself “Would I have the courage to do what they did?”

War and war time is a subject of great interest for many of the students at my school, helped no doubt, by the fact that the school resides on one of the army bases “decommissioned” during the 1980s and 1990s. I also have a strong interest in these wars, helped along by a daughter who is studying military history in university and stories told by my father, a navigator in the Second World War. But these three books gave me different lenses on the Second World War, ones that I won’t forget when November 11 rolls around.






Monday, November 5, 2012


Respite

My instruction load the last couple of weeks has prevented me from keeping up with my regular blog postings. Sorry about that.  But, the student teachers are out in schools doing their practicum so, life in the library  is a little calmer  -- for the moment.

You know a book is going to be good when the cataloguer in the office hands it to you and says, “This is good.”  And, I would have to agree.


Tomorrow’s Alphabet by George Shannon (411 ShT 1996 PIC BK) may be an ‘oldie’ but it’s one that I’ll be promoting in my future workshops.  I think I picked up this title from one of the blogs participating in this year’s Top 10 on the 10th event so it's a favourite of another children literature aficionado, too. 

Here’ s why we like it.

This is an alphabet book with an interesting premise. 

“A is for seed-- tomorrow’s APPLE”  or  
“B is for eggs—tomorrow’s BIRDS” and
“C is for milk—tomorrow’s CHEESE.”

You can easily see the pattern.  The objects focussed on are pretty typical, nothing too out there.  I particularly liked “U is for stranger—tomorrow’s US.” And, problematic X and Z are “X is for bones—tomorrow’s X-RAY” and “Z is for countdown—tomorrow’s ZERO” with a rocket blasting off into space.

The illustrations are fine but pretty basic.

But it is the premise that really sold this book for me.  I love the potential for getting students to predict both ways, getting them to guess what ‘A’ word comes from seed or what do you need to have before you get your ‘B’ word, birds.  This can easily be extended into a class exercise coming up with your tomorrow alphabet.  Because this has been around for a while already some of you will know it and perhaps used it in your classrooms.  Please drop me a comment  telling us about your experiences

Mine would have to be: “B is for time—tomorrow’s BLOG.”

Today's Nonfiction Monday event is being held at Booktalking#kidlit.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Stellar poetry


Out of This World : Poems and Facts About Space by Amy E. Sklansky (811 SkO 2012 PIC BK) is a good book to connect science and language arts for early elementary grades.

The combination of poems written in various styles, interesting facts and darkly coloured illustrations provides an appealing opportunity to learn more about astral bodies and phenomena.



One of my favourite poems for its imagery is After Blastoff.

The Earth
fills
their window

and then
drops away,
like a

basketball
baseball
golfball
marble. 

How far from home
they’ve traveled today.

Facts that struck me as particularly interesting include:

*Each space suit costs more than 10 million dollars.
*Footprints left from any of the twelve astronauts to have walked on the moon remain unchanged for billions of years.
*Uranus spins on its side.

Who knew?

Check out today's Nonfiction Monday event at Capstone Connect .  Looks like an interesting round up of nonfiction children's literature.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

International Day of the Girl Child


In 2011, the United Nations issued a proclamation that October 11th would be declared the International Day of the Girl Child.  It's prime directives are raising awareness about issues that imperil  girls around the world and promoting equal access to opportunities and fair treatment.  A strong supporter for the initiative is the Canadian government through the office of Status of Women.  Visit their website for more information.

Children's books that focus on some of the issues that face girls in third world countries are plentiful.  A few I would recommend include:

Wanting Mor by Rakhsana Khan (823 K527W FIC)
A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park (823 P218L FIC)
Homeless Bird by Gloria Whelan (823 W571H6 FIC)

Sold by Patricia McCormick (823 M137S FIC)
An Equal Chance for Girls and Women by Judith Anderson (323.352 AnE 2010)

Girls from first world nations also face inequities and discrimination.  I would recommend the following books: 

Tyranny by Lesley Fairfield (823 F161T FIC)
There's a Girl in My Hammerlock by Jerry Spinelli (823 Sp46T FIC)
Sticks and stones by Beth Goobie (823 G59S FIC)
Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson (823 An243S FIC)

I would love to hear of other recommendations.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving, Everyone.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Strong sequel


I often don’t follow up with sequels, mostly due to lack of time.  But I’m really happy that I picked up White Sands, Red Menace by Ellen Klages (823 K661W FIC) the sequel to The Green Glass Sea (823 K661G FIC).

We pick up with Dewey Kerrigan and the Gordon family after they’ve move from Los Alamos to Alamogordo, New Mexico after the end of World War II.  Dewey is feeling very comfortable with the family who has taken her in after her father was accidentally killed by a car.  Dewey and Suze have grown closer and it’s a delight to read about their relationship, especially as they work together building a very inventive, mechanical wall, with each girl doing her own thing.  Dewey is the inventor who loves all things mechanical and Suze is a budding artist who looks to understand her world through her art work.

There are many secondary storylines that engage and preoccupy our two main characters: Suze’s growing friendship with a Hispanic girl and awareness of racial inequality, Suze’s jealousy over Dewey’s closeness with her mother, Dewey’s concern over her own birth mother’s reappearance in her life after abandoning her when she was two, Mrs Gordon’s concern and activism to raise awareness about the horrors of the nuclear bomb, Mr. Gordon’s increasing excitement as he works further with nuclear technology building rockets to protect the United States from Communist USSR, a growing distance between Mr. and Mrs. Gordon based on their positions about nuclear technology, and an ethical dilemma involving Nazis now living in the US and helping the Americans build rockets.

Whew! This sounds like a lot but it all works seamlessly, just the stuff of everyday living for two pre-teen girls with the usual parental background noise layered with a bit of current events of the time.

I love the science and art connections of this book.  The family relationships seem real and caring.  The resolutions to some of the storylines also ring true with no pat answers and concessions being made.  The writing is strong and draws us into this time period with ease.

I highly recommend this novel for the middle grades.


I also recommend Countdown by Deborah Wiles (823 W648C FIC) that deals more directly with the cold war of the 1960s.

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