Seasons of Light

Leo's second-grade class saw a performance of Seasons of Light at the Smithsonian's Discovery Theater this morning (I saw it with them).  The program is about the history and customs of winter holidays (mostly religious holidays) celebrated around the world, and emphasizes how all of the holidays have to do with light: light from the sun, the stars, candles and oil lamps.  The learning guide for Seasons of Light contains information on the winter solstice and on all of the holidays presented in the program.

shortest%20day.jpgAt home, we read The Shortest Day:  Celebrating the Winter Solstice by Wendy Pfeffer (illustrated by Jesse Reisch; Dutton, 2003).  This book explains, in language even Milly can understand, how and why the days grow shorter as winter approaches, what the winter solstice is, and how that day (and night) has been marked and celebrated by different cultures (Egyptian, Chinese, Incan, and European) throughout history.  The emphasis here is on the scientific, not the religious.  The activity suggestions for the shortest day sometimes span the days and weeks surrounding it, such as making a winter sunrise/sunset chart (we did this last year, looking in the newspaper for the times) and measuring shadows.  My favorite suggestion:  have a winter solstice party!  Or two:  one for you, with yellow-frosted sun cupcakes and candles, and one for the birds.

Look for these collections of stories to read around the time of winter solstice (I'm still looking for them myself, actually!):

Hans Brinker

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It was snowing when we went upstairs last night.  I tucked both kids (and myself) into Leo's big bed with a new picture book:  Hans Brinker, retold by Bruce Coville and illustrated by Laurel Long (Dial, 2007).  Right away there was a lot of ooh-ing and aah-ing over Long's lush, luminous paintings of snow-covered Dutch towns and landscapes.  The snow seems to sparkle (and inside, the candles glow).  Then we discovered that the story really begins on the eve of St. Nicholas...and of course, last night was the eve of St. Nicholas.  It was the perfect book for us to be reading together.

Coville does a wonderful job with this adaptation of the novel by Mary Mapes Dodge, first published in 1865 (see the Holiday High Notes from the November/December 2007 issue of The Horn Book for a review).  The story is somewhat complicated:  there is the race for the silver skates on one hand, and the situation surrounding Hans's father, who lost his memory after an accident ten years before, on the other.  Leo was intrigued by the mystery of the missing thousand guilders (and the origin of the silver watch; see, I told you it was complicated), and he was excited to learn the outcome of the race (spoiler alert: Hans does not win).  Milly might have fallen asleep, but she's only three and it was past her bedtime.  As for me, I especially liked the character of Hans, who is "strong of heart and true of purpose" (Coville, in an adaptor's note):  a good role model for my own sturdy boy (and girl).

[Happy St. Nicholas Day!  To learn more about St. Nicholas and how his day is celebrated in Holland around the world, go to the website of the St. Nicholas Center:  Discovering the Truth about Santa Claus.]

Bella Dia's Christmas Book Advent

Cassi Griffin is celebrating Christmas Book Advent on her craft blog, Bella Dia.  She'll post a book (or two) and a corresponding project to do with your kids on each day leading up to Christmas.  The first book is Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin (illustrated by Mary Azarian; Houghton Mifflin, 1998); the project:  cutting snowflakes, of course.

winter's%20tale.jpgToday's post features my favorite Robert Sabuda book, Winter's Tale (do I have to note that it's a pop-up book? It's Robert Sabuda!).  This one was inspired by the artist's walks in snowy Michigan woods.  I love the woodland birds and animals he recreates in these intricate white paper pop-ups:  owls and foxes, reindeer and squirrels.  Learn how to make some simple pop-up cards at Sabuda's website:  my favorites are the Christmas Tree and Bird House (the bird flies away when you open the card).  Paper magic!

Fall Book Basket

The fall books are back on the shelf today.  I pulled them from here and there around the house in September and put them all together in a new basket just for seasonal books.  I'm not sure if we read them a lot more than we would have anyway, but at least they were easier to find when we did want to read books about back-to-school, Halloween, autumn leaves, and Thanksgiving.  Some new books found their way into our fall book basket this year, too:

We Gather Together: Celebrating the Harvest Season by Wendy Pfeffer; illustrated by Linda Bleck (Dutton Children's Books, 2006).  Non-fiction picture book about harvest celebrations from the past that are still carried on all over the world today.  We also added two of Bleck's retro-inspired Pepper the Dog books ("Pepper plays, pulls, and pops!") to our collection (Milly insisted).

How Many Seeds in a Pumpkin? by Margaret McNamara; illustrated by G. Brian Karas (Schwartz & Wade Books, 2007).  This one inspired an afternoon of seed counting (by twos, fives, and tens) at our house.  I really like Karas's illustrations, from the autumnal palette to the many multicultural faces of the children in Mr. Tiffin's class.  Perfect all season.

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Boo and Baa Have Company by Lena and Olof Landstrom (R&S Books, 2006).  I like Swedish children's books in general, but we all adore Boo and Baa.  The droll, deadpan text and the remarkably expressive illustrations of these two googly-eyed and clueless sheep work together perfectly: the result is hilarious.  Apparently there is a whole series of Boo and Baa board books which are not readily available in the States (believe me, I've looked).  Good thing I can read this one over and over again and still think it's great.

Most of our seasonal books come from the library:  we go at least once at week, and we have lots of books out at a time.  These we get to live with all year round, even when it's not their turn in the seasonal book basket.

[Thank you for your patience with the last of this year's fall books.  Now it's time for winter...and Christmas!]