Friday, December 3, 2010

Birds by Nicola Davies

Published as part of a series by Kingfisher Young Knowledge, Birds is a comprehensive resource for children on everything about birds from what exactly a bird is, to how they build thier homes and birds that are in danger.  Each spread includes a full-page photograph zoning in on the feature of the page's topic.  On the spread title "Hardworking feathers," Birds includes a magnificant picture of a macaw with its wings fully spread so children can see every feather that constitutes a bird's wings.  Every page includes bolded words across the footer defining possible new vocabulary for its reader making the text accessible for readers as young as eight-years-old. 

Davies' writing makes Birds a great nonfiction read.  She uses terms and examples that children can relate to.  On the page "Raising babies," Davies includes a section about teamwork writing that "Mom, dad, and a whole team of older others and sisters work teogether to feed teh bee eater babies."  When reading this I immediately imagained a family of my own with older brothers and sisters to help out with the arrival of a new sibling.

At the end of the book, Birds presents crafts projects such as making a bird book or a bird feeder.  These projects allow for further exploration of birds in their natural habitat and create an awareness of our interation with birds.  Overall, Birds is a great read for children as young as eight-years-old to learn the basics of these magnificent creatures!

Some other titles among the Kingfisher Young Knowledge series include:
Animal Homes
Robots
Rocks and Fossils


For science lesson ideas using the books, click here.

Journey into the Deep: Discovering New Ocean Creatures by Rebecca L. Johnson

In Rebecca Johnson's forward of Jounrey into the Deep, I ironically found a direct connection to the book of this blog's previous post, Mars and the Search for Life.  Sylvia A. Earle who wrote the forward of Journey into the Deep writes:

"If aliens came looking for life on Earth, they would probably first dive into the sea...Curiously, humans have only recently embakred on serous exploration fo the sea."

I found this to be a wonderful introduction to the book as it changed my reading from the beginning and how I thought about the sea.  I have spent many times wondering about the mystery of what lies beyond Earth's atmospthere, but rarely have I thought about what lies within the abyss of the ocean.

Using data from the 2010 Census of Marine Life, Johnson introduces the reader to just a fraction of the more than 250,000 species of life in the ocean.  Johnson lays out the book wonderfully, devoting between six and eight pages to each zone of the ocean: shallow edges, open water, deep slopes, the dark zone, abyssal plains. sea moutains, ridges and vents, and the "unfathomable deep."  Each section includes the most recent coloful, full-page photographs taken of marine life.  The photographs are so clearly defined I found myself hesitating to turn the page by touching the corner where a picture of the squidworm laid.  Johnson not only introduces the reader to the sea life of each ocean zone, but the research methods scientiest used to plunge into the depths of the ocean.  In the "unfathomable deep" section, Johnson includes a photograph of the lander, a titanium metal box with a camera in the middle, which is used to take picures of the ocean's deepest ponints where the pressure "is so great it would be like having fifty jumbo jets piled on top of you."  The lander brought, for the first time, video footage of life living almost seven miles beneath the surface!  Journey into the Deep never ceased to amaze me!

Rebecca L. Johnson has written numerous nonfiction science books for children and young adults.  For a complete listing of her works, click here.

Mars and the Search for Life by Elaine Scott

"Life on Mars -- science fiction, right?  Maybe...or maybe not."

After reading the above first lines of the summary on the inside flap of Mars and the Search for Life, I found myself flipping through the book trying to find photographic evidence of that "maybe not."

I was not dissapointed as I imagine no other reader would be.  The 2009 publication has no lack of updated pictures of space or references to pop culture.  Elaine Scott bridges science across time by tracing the development of scientific discovery and the public's interpretations and dreams of it.  The first chapter begins with a picture of a scene from Steven Speilberg's 2005 verson of War of the Worlds contrasted against and illustration of the 1906 edition of the book and a poster from the 1953 film version.  Children reading Mars and the Search for Life will immediately realize the depth to which the question of life on Mars has infiltrated our thoughts -- real and fantasy alike.

Scott breaks down Mars and the Search for Life into eight chapters beginning with the earliest myths of the planets to the latest scientific discoverites of outer space.  The chapters include an abundance of information through page text and picture captions.  The illustrations and photographs can be used in any science classroom to show the development of space engineering while the more advanced text level would be appropriate for readers beginning in fifth or sixth grade.

As would be expected, Mars and the Search for Life does not present any previously hidden evidence about lifeforms living on Mars' surface.  However, in concluding the book, Scott draws a wonderful comparison between our quest for a way to live on Mars and the first humans' quest to find out how to survive on Earth:

"Traveling to Mars, living in an alien world in a cramped habitat, wearing a spacesuit any time you leave the habitat, harvesting water or ice where you find it, growing food in a greenhouse, learning to walk without the pull of Earth's gravity -- none of it will be easy.  But it wasn't easy for the first humans to leave Africa and move out across the plains of Asia and Europe.  It wasn't easy for Ferdinand Magellan to circumnavigate the Earth.  And it wasn't easy for Neil Armstrong to become the first person to step on the surface of the moon.  However, human beings are adventurous creatures, and exploring space is one of the most exciting -- and most challenging -- adventures of all."


Among her nonfiction books for children, Elaine Scott has also authored When is a Planet Not a Planet?  The Story of Pluto

Thursday, November 18, 2010

The Castle in the Attic by Elizabeth Winthrop

When I went home for Fall Break, I scoured my bookshelf for a fantasy book.  I came across Elizabeth Winthrop's The Castle in the Attic, which I read for the first and only time many years ago.  I remembered how the world of The Castle in the Attic came to life for me as a then ten-year-old, and could not wait to reread the book to see if the magical world still existed in my mind.

Upon beginning The Castle in the Attic, I found myself to my delight just as absorbed in the chivalry of knights, amazed fire of fire-breathing dragons, and scared by the evil wizard as I had been as a ten-year-old.  In The Castle in the Attic, Winthrop introduces a boy named William who for the past ten years has been looked after and cared for my Mrs. Phillips, the family nanny.  Now that William has grown, Mrs. Phillips is retiring from her position to return to her home country and give William the chance to become more independent.  William will not even permit the idea of Mrs. Phillips leaving.  When Mrs. Phillips gives William her old childhood toy castle and toy knight as a going away present, William gets an idea that will make Mrs. Phillips stay with him forever.

Against Mrs. Phillips' will, and with the help of Sir Simon (the toy knight that came to life upon William's touch), William takes Mrs. Phillips into a the medieval world of the toy castle where he thinks he can keep Mrs. Phillips forever.  However, when William finds out that he has trapped Mrs. Phillips in a situation that can never be reversed, William must take it upon himself to enter the medieval world of the toy castle and save them all.

Winthrop writes a wonderful story of coming of age.  The reader grapples alongside William as he faces becoming an independent boy.  But the reader also celebrates William's triumphs and feels proud of WIlliam's accomplishments as he grows to learn that his ability to learn, love, and live resides within himself.  While Winthrop creates a fantastical world within the toy castle including fire-breathing dragons, an evil wizard, and trips back in time, the story is very much relatable to any child.  As Dr. Johnson said in class, at the root of the success of any fantasy book is believability.  The Castle in the Attic provides just that.

Elizabeth Winthrop has written numerous books for all ages - children and adults alike.  In an interview featured on Winthrop's website, Winthrop said "I'm a restless writer.  I can't seem to stick to one genre or subject. "  In fact, The Castle in the Attic is only one of two fantasy children's chapter books Winthrop has written.  Other than fantasy, Winthrop has explored the genres of realistic fiction and historical fiction through her books.

The Castle in the Attic is accompanied by a sequel, The Battle for the Castle.

Monday, November 8, 2010

The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Spear

The Newberry Medal wining historical fiction novel, The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Spear, visits seventeenth century colonial Connecticut in a time of redefining identities and questioning virtues.  Kit Tyler, a sixteen-year old-orphan who grew up in Barbados under care of her grandfather, has nowhere to go when her grandfather passes away.  The only living relative Kit knows is her mother's sister whom she has never met, but knows lives in the Connecticut Colony.  When Kit arrives in Connecticut she enters a Puritan community whose culture differs greatly than that of her upbringing.  The one person Kit can confide in is an old Quaker woman who lives near Blackbird Pond.  Everyone in the Puritan community believes the old woman is a witch.  When the community discovers that Kit has befriended her, Kit finds herself being accused of being a witch as well.  The only thing that can save Kit from a full witch trial is the honesty of the community and the loyalty of her friends and family.

In The Witch of Blackbird Pond, Spears gives readers an inside look into the culture of a Puritan community of colonial New England.  Readers as young as fifth or sixth grade can relate to Kit as she grapples with conforming to a new culture while trying to maintain her own identity.  Children can understand the themes of holding true to one's beliefs, of accepting other people's differences, and the importance of community and teamwork.  Spears envelops the reader in Kit's troubles and joys with a language that brings Kit's surrounding and thoughts to life.  Any student would enjoy exploring colonial New England through this novel which bring a very real, believable person to life to whom children can relate.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Olivia Kidney By Ellen Potter

What's the big deal with Olivia Kidney?

While it seemed that practically every elementary school student loved Olivia Kidney, I had never even heard of the Olivia Kidney series by Ellen Potter before our reading class this semester. With the assignment to read a realistic fiction book for our blog (and our later opportunity to Skype with Ellen Potter), I had to take this chance to see for myself what all this ruckus about Olivia Kidney is about.

Once I started reading, it didn't take long for me to become completely absorbed in the crazy apartment building of Olivia Kidney.  One day stranded out of her apartment because she forgot her key,  Olivia is shooed out of the hallway by the old woman down the hallway.  The old woman invites Olivia inside where Olivia meets just the first of her peculiar neighbors.  As the afternoon goes on, Olivia meets a tarot card reader, adventures into a tropical rainforest, escapes from a lady covered in lizards, and makes her first friend with a boy who doesn't even know he is...well, you'll have to read to find out!  Potter's illustrative language and totally outrageous but completely possible plot makes this book wonderful for readers ages eight and up.

About every thirty pages, a full-page illustration by Peter H. Reynolds accompanied the current chapter. The scarcity of illustrations contrasts sharply to the frequency of illustrations in the picture books and collections of poetry and fairy tales we have read. When I read picture books, I first glanced at the illustration before reading the text. Any images I form from reading the text thereafter are based upon the illustration. In Olivia Kidney, however, because no picture was present at the introduction of a character, I formed a mental illustration in my head based on the text I was reading. When the illustration came later showing a picture of the character I had already formed a picture of in my head, I found myself blending my image and Reynold's illustration. Reynold's illustration added depth, reality, and concreteness to my mental picture. I would find myself stopping extra long at the pages with illustrations thinking about all the text that preceded it.  Reynolds uses "pencil and pen - and sometimes a little paint" in his sketches.  For more information on his illustrations, click here.

I am glad I finally know what all the fuss is about with Olivia Kidney.  I can't wait to get my hands on other books from the series and find out Ellen Potter's inspiration behind the lovable, quizzical character of Olivia Kidney.

Monday, October 11, 2010

A Visit to William Blake's Inn: Poems for Innocent and Experienced Travellers by Nancy Willard

Nancy Willard's Newberry Medal winning and Caldecott Honor poetry collection, A Visit to William Blake's Inn, is full of rhythm and rhyme, clever lines and intricate illustrations.  Willard was only seven years old when she fell in love with William Blake (1757-1827), an English poet, painter, and printmaker of the Romanic Age.  Willard's babysitter quoted "The Tyger" by Blake as a bedtime story for Willard:

Tyger, Tyger, burning bright
In the forests of the night
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame they fearful symmetry?

Blake's poetry inspired Willard as a young poet and she pays tribute to him by writing fifteen poems about William Blake himself running an inn.  The fifteen poems present an inn full of fantasy complete with a staff of mighty dragons and patient angels.  Throughout the collection, various visitors arrive including the King of Cats and the Wise Cow.  A little boy who arrives find his pillow to be nothing but a shaggy old bear.  In my favorite poem of the collection, "Blake's Wonderful Car Delivers Us so Wonderfully Well," a guest's luggage shrinks "small and pale as envelopes" because "All luggage must be carried flat and worn discreetly on your hat" to fit on the Wonderful Car.  The rhythm of the poems lends to easy and expressive reading while the different rhyme forms present children with a variety of ways to rhyme.

A two-page illustration spread accompanies each poem.  The illustrators, Alice and Martin Provensen, use a gouache technique in their paintings.  Gouache is similar to watercolor but varies in that the pigment is suspended in water rather than mixed.  The illustrations depict William Blake's London of the late eighteenth, early nineteenth century.  Children can have an inside look into another time while listening to the beautiful language of Willard.  The illustrations also provide children with a concrete base to interpret the poem, as Willard's language is often complicated and abstract.

I would recommend this collection of poetry for reading aloud at home or in the classroom.  Children ages nine or older would most love this collection as they can begin to interpret the hidden meanings of poetry.  Children at these ages as well can begin to form poetry of their own using the various rhyming forms of Willard's poetry.

This collection of fifteen poems includes:

William Blake's Inn for Innocent and Experienced Travelers
Blake's Wonderful Car Delivers Us Wonderfully Well
A Rabbit Reveals My Room
The Sun and Moon Circus Soothes the Wakeful Guests
The Man in the Marmalade Hat Arrives
The Kind of Cats Orders an Early Breakfast
The Wise Cow Enjoys a Clous
Two Sunflowers Move into the Yellow Room
The Wise Cow Makes Way, Room, and Believe
Blake Leads a Walk on the Milky Way
When We Come Home, Blake Calls for Fire
The Marmalade Man Makes a dance to Mend Us
The Kind of Cats Sends a Postcard to His Wife
The Tiger Asks Blake for a Bedtime Story
Blake Tells the Tiger the Tale of the Tailor