Sunday, October 7, 2007

A Smile to Warm Your Heart!

They say that a picture is worth a thousand words. Here's one that's worth a thousand warm and happy thoughts!


Thanks go to Pennington (Penny) Geis, mother-in-law of artist Alissa Imre Geis, for this beautiful photograph of Grace Lin taken at the Robert's Snow Artist Open House at the Child at Heart Gallery yesterday. Penny entitled this photograph Warmed by Snowflakes.

I just couldn't wait to post this picture!


Don't forget to check out all the amazing snowflakes at the Robert's Snow website.

Halloween Book Lists

Last week was a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week. Really! The only bright light in the past seven days of darkness was Saturday. The Robert's Snow Artist Open House at The Child at Heart Gallery and the library in Newburyport, Massachusetts, was wonderful! I had planned to post an article about the open house with photos I had taken at the library and gallery either last night or early this morning--but when I turned on my digital camera yesterday, it was broken. Fortunately, someone from the gallery took pictures at the library. Grace met up with us later at the gallery. She brought her camera--and so did Penny Geis, the mother-in-law of artist Alissa Imre Geis. I hope to post an article in the next day or two.

In the meantime, I have some lists of suggested Halloween books for you.


Here’s a Halloween Round-Up from KidsReads.

Here’s another list of Halloween Books from KidsReads.

Fellow blogger Wendy E. Betts gives us Spooooooooky: Halloween Reading for Kids.

The folks at The Horn Book have recommended some books for Halloween Reading.

Here’s a list of Halloween Books for Kids from Apples 4 the Teacher.

Celebrate Halloween is a list of holiday books recommended by the staff of the New York Public Library.

Here are brief reviews of nine Halloween Books, including Los Gatos on Halloween and Omar’s Halloween, from Publishers Weekly (8/14/2006).

Friday, October 5, 2007

Great Halloween Read-Alouds for Little Listeners

I used to have a great time sharing Halloween tales in my library during the month of October. I’d turn off the overhead lights, switch on my electric jack-o-lanterns, let the children settle into the right mood, and start reading.

Here are the titles of some books in verse that are just right for reading to little listeners at this time of the year.

IN THE HAUNTED HOUSE
Written by Eve Bunting
Illustrated by Susan Meddaugh
Clarion, 1990

Here’s how Bunting’s book begins:

This is the house where scary ones hide.
Open this door and step softly inside.

And what do readers find inside the haunted house?
An organ playing music but no one is there fingering the keys. There are ghosts and witches and bats hanging from an old chandelier. There’s a mummy lying on a bed and a skeleton rattling his bones in a closet. To be sure, there are plenty of scary things in this haunted house which has been all decked out for Halloween with the capable hands of illustrator Susan Meddaugh.


SCARY, SCARY HALLOWEEN
Written by Eve Bunting
Illustrated by Jan Brett
Clarion, 1986

In this Halloween oldie that is still in print, Jan Brett used a dark, and sometimes stark black background, to set the “scary” tone for this rhyming book. In the first two-page spread, we see two large green and black cat’s eyes staring out at us from the darkness.

Here are the beginning lines of this book:

I peer outside, there’s something there
That makes me shiver, spikes my hair.
It must be Halloween.

A skeleton with bones so white
They gleam and glimmer in the night,
Has come for Halloween.

Then we come upon a ghost, a vampire, a werewolf, two witches, goblins and gremlins, a devil, and a mummy—all the creatures kids would expect to hear about in a Halloween story. Of course, they really aren’t witches and frightening creatures—they’re just trick-or-treaters enjoying a scary night out.


PUMPKIN EYE
Written & Illustrated by Denise Fleming
Henry Holt, 2001

Fleming has created a visually stunning book for Halloween. Everything In Pumpkin Eye is set against a dark background that fills up each two-page spread. There are no white borders or colored frames. Children really get drawn into the nighttime setting of this brief Halloween tale that I often read aloud two or three times to each preschool class. My students often left the library chanting some of the lines from the book:

Trick or treat—
pounding feet,
eerie shadows
fill the street.

Swooping bats,
hissing cats…
tattered rags,
toothless hags,
pointed tails,
blood-red nails.

Trick or treat—
pounding feet,
wretched witches
roam the street.


Pumpkin Eye is one great book to read aloud to young children. Kids love the rhyming verses and the illustrations!


JUNGLE HALLOWEEN
Written & Illustrated by Maryann Cocca-Leffler
Albert Whitman, 2000

This book is about jungle animals making preparations for and then enjoying themselves at a fun-filled Halloween party at which…

They sing and dance
in jungle beat
and eat and eat
and eat and EAT!

Jungle Candy
Jungle Cake
Jungle Ice Cream
Wooo!
Jungle Ache!


After their jungle celebration, the tired animals all head off to sleep. The palette of bright colors Cocca-Leffler used for this book is fitting for a festive occasion like this party. Jungle Halloween is one Halloween tale sure not to send shivers up a young child’s spine.


OH NO, NOT GHOSTS!
Written by Richard Michelson
Illustrated by Adam McCauley
Harcourt, 2006

In this adaptation of Michelson earlier book Did You Say Ghosts?, the setting is nighttime in the bedroom of a young brother and his sister. They’re trying to be quiet so they don’t wake up their father. They hear a sound. What could it be?

The brother reassures his sister that it’s not a ghost.

His little sister says:
Ghosts? Oh no, not ghosts!

The brother answers:
SHUSH!
There’s no such thing as ghosts.
I guarantee it…well, almost.

Besides, if one sneaked up on you
And tried to scare you with a BOO,

I’d dress up like a werewolf,
Roooooooooooooar!
And scare that ghost right through the door.


At the mention of werewolves, the little sister’s thoughts turn to those monstrous creatures.

And so it goes…from werewolves to giants, from giants to demons—and then to witches, black cats, skeletons…and finally to a hairy, double-scary creature, which appears in the next to last illustration as a tall shadow in the doorway. Who…or what…is this being? Why, it’s none other than their father--whom they evidently woke up with all their talk about scary things that go bump in the night.

Adam McCauley’s mixed media illustrations provide the right amount of spookiness with touches of humor. He transforms the children’s bedroom into a scary land of their imaginings. This new version of Michelson’s Did You Say Ghosts? is likely to be a hit with children.


ONE WITCH
Written Laura Leuck
Illustrated by S. D. Schindler
Walker & Company, 2003

This is a fine counting book to read to preschoolers at Halloween time. In this book,

One witch
on a hill
had an empty pot
to fill.


The witch visits her friends—two cats, three scarecrows, four goblins, five vampires, six mummies, seven owls, eight ghosts, nine skeletons, and ten werewolves. They all provide her with such ghastly ingredients as slimy slugs, a musty moth, fresh blood juice, and a rattlesnake—just the right fixings for a gruesome brew, which she cooks up in her pot. The witch sends her trusty bats off with invitations to ten werewolves/in their caves/nine skeletons in their graves, etc. , to all her friends who contributed the gross ingredients of her party brew.

What did all
her good friends do?

They came and ate
that gruesome brew.

(Everybody
loved it too!)
They saved the last bowl
just for…

YOU!

Schindler’s watercolor illustrations are just ghoulish enough to entice young children to emit happy shrieks of fear and excitement while listening to a parent, teacher, or librarian read this winning counting book aloud.

The Poetry Friday Roundup is at Whimsy Books this week.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Not Exactly a Spudtacular Poem

At 7-Imp last Sunday, Eisha listed potato pancakes as one of her 7 Kicks of the week. When I commented that I make great potato pancakes (I learned how from my mother), Eisha asked for the recipe—and so did Jone of Check It Out. Well, ladies, I’m working on it because it’s one of those peel and grate four or five good-sized potatoes (or potatos--spelling a la Dan Quayle) and one medium/large onion, mix in one or two eggs, add some flour…add a little more if the batter is too watery…nothing too exact kind of recipes handed down from grandmother to mother to daughter.

Placki (platskees as we pronounced our Polish term for potato pancakes) are a really tasty comfort food. They make great eating on a chilly autumn or winter evening. The last time I made them for a Super Bowl party the whole platter was polished off in a matter of minutes.

I like to serve potato pancakes with sour cream…and sometimes with my homemade plum sauce. When my husband and I decide to splurge and indulge ourselves, I serve the pancakes with crème fraiche and Osetra caviar…and bottle of champagne.

Here’s a poem for Eisha and Jone until I think I can write up my recipe to be a bit more precise.


A Potato Pancake Poem
(For Eisha and Jone)
by Elaine Magliaro

Before me on my plate
six thin, savory circles
crisped in oil
edged with brown lace
sprinkled with salty crystals
served with mounds
of silky sour cream.

I crunch through
amber crust
sink my teeth into
a pancake’s soft center…
the essence of potato

flavored with memories
of childhood.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Robert's Snow: Artist Open House & Exhibit


The first exhibit of snowflakes created for Robert’s Snow 2007 will be held from October 3rd through October 22nd at The Child at Heart Gallery in Newburyport, Massachusetts. The gallery, located at 48 Inn Street, is just a few steps from the center of town. I invite everyone who lives in the area to come see the snowflakes in person! They are artistic treasures that are little wonders to behold.

I know many children’s literature bloggers will be in Chicago this coming weekend for the First Annual Kidlitosphere Conference. I really wish I could be in two places at the same time—but that’s a physical impossibility. I would love to meet and chat with many of my favorite bloggers…but I have other plans. I’m going to be staying here in Massachusetts for the Robert’s Snow Artist Open House on October 6th.

The Robert’s Snow Open House at The Child at Heart Gallery will be held from 12:00 to 1:30 and from 3:00 to 7:00. Twelve of the “snowflake artists” will be visiting the gallery that day: Anna Alter, Jeannie Brett, Diane deGroat, Mary Newell DePalma, Jane Dyer, Alissa Imre Geis, Laura Jacques, Daniel J. Mahoney, Denise Ortakales, Lizzy Rockwell, Matt Tavares, and Wade Zahares.

Robert’s Snow Artist Open House Schedule for October 6th

12:00 - 1:30 & 3:00 - 7:00 at the Gallery: See the Snowflakes and visit with guest illustrators.

1:30 - program and book signing at the Newburyport Library in the meeting room. (The library is located on State Street—not far from the gallery.)

Schedule of artists visiting at the Child at Heart Gallery
12:00--Jane Dyer, Diane deGroat, Wade Zahares, Margot Apple
3:00--Matt Tavares, Jeannie Brett, Mary Newell DePalma
4:00--Daniel Mahoney, Anna Alter, Alissa Imre Geis
5:00--Denise Ortakales, Ilene Richard
6:00--Laura Jacques, Lizzy Rockwell

Note: You can purchase books of visiting artists at the gallery. Profits made from selling the artists' books on October 6th will be donated to the Jimmy Fund.

Newburyport is a picturesque waterfront community. It’s a great place to shop and dine. Why not come to the Robert’s Snow Artist Open House on October 6th…and spend the day? Maybe I’ll see you there!