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Books As Windows to the World

Whenever I leave on a trip, taking a good book with me is of utmost importance. I need to read on a plane, in an airport, in a hotel room.
But which book to take? I still like ‘real’ books better than e-books. I do read e-books because having them on my iPad is so easy. They don’t take up any space. But I find it harder to select e-books so only if I know that I want to read a certain title do I download it. It is fabulous that I can borrow ebooks from my local library, wherever I am in the world.
But a paper back doesn’t need a battery or wifi.
So I select books to take carefully. They need to be good stories that I want to finish. But I can’t love them so much that I want to keep the book. I do discard, trade or give away books I finish reading during my trip.

I’m always excited when a hotel or hostel turns out to have a small trading library. And the books I discover this way, are often amazing eye-openers to local reads that I would not otherwise have found.

Is it serendipity when a book falls into my lap that tells a story about the very place I am visiting? These books often expand my understanding and tell me the history of the place I visit. Here are some of my favorite titles that found me rather than the other way around.

While spending a few months traveling around Australia, I found these books on a trading shelf in camping ground offices:

Who Am I?, Robert Taylor – I was unaware of the mindblowing events of British children being send to Australia for labour and to populate the continent. Robert Taylor was one of these children who was promised an education but building a monastery. He wasn’t even orphaned. He became a park ranger and tried to trace his roots. A fascinating nonfiction read.

My Place by Sally Morgan is the account of how she discovered her aboriginal roots after her mother decided to raise her as ‘white’. It’s now a classic and shares the difficulties of accepting race and culture in a climate that was not conducive to anything aboriginal.

When I took the Alaska State Ferry once, from Skagway down to Bellingham, the ships stopped in places like Wrangell, Ketchikan and Petersburg. Along the way I read James Michener’s Alaska. The entire history of the huge state unfolded as I watched icebergs, eagles, Russian churches, canneries and frontier towns. Later, on another Alaska trip, I found Pilgrim’s Wilderness by Tom Kizzia, the bizarre but true account about a family cult.

I moved from Oregon to Salt Spring Island and, before packing all of our books, I grabbed one of the shelf that I had not yet read. To my utter amazement the book turned out to be the story of the history of Salt Spring Island. Based on a real family, The Freedom of Jenny by Julie Burtinshaw tells the story of the first permanent settlers coming to the very place I was moving to.

While traveling in Greece, I picked traded a book for a copy on the shelf in the hotel’s reception area. The Island by Victoria Hislop turned out to be based on the true history of a small island near Crete. The story of a leper colony is fictionalized but largely based on real characters. The book was made into a 20 episode mini series and is incredibly popular in Greece and England.

I took second hand books to Mexico to donate to a local school that had no books. Along the way, I read one of the small, children’s novels and loved the story it told of a Mayan village and the way life used to be here. The Corn Grows Ripe by Dorothy Rhoads is well worth a read if you are going to Mexico.

I hadn’t heard of the book before traveling to Israel, but now I wonder how I could have missed it. The Lemon Tree by Sandy Tolan is a powerful, beautiful tale that shows rather than tells of the deep rooted conflict in Israel/Palestine. It gave me reference and understanding as I traveled through Israel.

Just before going to Egypt, I came across a book in my local library called Down The Nile, Alone in a Fisherman’s Skiff, by Rosemary Mahoney. Even though the nonfiction account on deals with only about three days on the river, it still gave me a better understanding of the people, the culture and the environment before traveling there.

I learn about Persian history and culture through the life and adventures of a British woman who lived early in the 20th century. She rode camels all over Afghanistan and Persia. She befriended men across the Middle East, advise Churchill of where to draw borders for Syria and lived a life full of adventures no woman had ever had before. She was Gertrude Bell, Queen of the Desert, the book written by Georgina Howell and portrayed in the movie by Nicole Kidman.

Stay tuned for more books that share unique corners of the world in my next blog.

Picture book Biographies

They can be boring, text book-like books. But, if done well, a biography can also be a fascinating, stimulating read for kids.
Not only does it depend on the person whose life is being described, but much of it depends on how well it has been written and illustrated.
Here are two of my favourite ones.

Me, Jane by Patrick McDonnell
is very sparse on words. And in that sparseness lies its power.
It shows us a little girl with her stuffed chimpanzee. She loves observing animals and spending time in nature.
She does a great job of patiently watching the chickens in the chicken coop. Jane dreams of, one day, working to help animals.
The book shows how she sticks to her goals and how her dream comes true: Jane Goodall does get to work with animals and nature when she grows up.
This picture book biography was awarded:
the 2012 Caldecott Honor Book,
the Charlotte Zolotow Award Winner,
It was a Horn Book Fanfare Book,
a New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book
a New York Times Notable Children’s Book,
a Booklist Editor’s Choice Book and a Kirkus Reviews Best Book. It also was a 2011 Bank Street College Children’s Book Committee Outstanding Book
a University of Wisconsin-Madison CCBC 2012 Children’s Choices Book
a Parents’ Choice Silver Honor Book
a National Parenting Publications Awards Gold Winner
a Booklinks Lasting Connections Book
a 2014 Illinois Monarch Children’s Choice Award Winner and
a 2014 Iowa Goldfinch Book Award Winner

• Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers; 1st edition (April 5 2011)
• Language: English
• ISBN-10: 0316045462
• ISBN-13: 978-0316045469

Some Writer! The Story of E.B. White by Melissa Sweet
is a very different book but also a children’s biography.
This is not your standard picture book: it has 176 pages. But the art and text in this book make it a master piece.
Every page is a treat for the eyes. Collages of pictures, bits of wood and yarn, typed quotes and information work together seamlessly to paint an extraordinary picture of a writer’s life well lived. E.B. White’s biography could well have turned into a boring book since not too much out of the ordinary happened in his life. But this tender book shows how a young boy grew up, in a loving family, with a huge interest in common farm animals. The book makes you realize how little events can be turned into big stories, if written with the right touch of love and devotion. How many of us even know E. B. Whote’s first name? This book made me feel that I got to know him intimately. But mostly it showed me how text, art and design can create a stunning book that I ket touching, feeling and reading. Its one story I did not want to end.

Awards:

2018 Boston Globe-Horn Book Nonfiction Honor Award
Amazon Top 20 Children’s Books of 2016
Booklist Editors’ Choice 2016
Book Links’ Lasting Connections 2016
Book Page Best of 2016
Bulletin Blue Ribbon 2016
Chicago Public Library’s Best of the Best Books of 2016
Horn Book Fanfare
Kirkus Best of 2016
Nerdy Book Club Nerdies 2016 Longform Nonfiction
New York Times Bestseller
People Best Children’s Books of 2016
Publishers Weekly Best of 2016
Raleigh News & Observer Best of 2016
San Francisco Chronicle Best of 2016
School Library Journal Best of 2016
Shelf Awareness Best Books of the Year
Nonfiction Detectives: Best of 2016
Washington Post Best of 2016

• Hardcover: 176 pages
• Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers (Oct. 4 2016)
• Language: English
• ISBN-10: 0544319591
• ISBN-13: 978-0544319592

The ABC of Poetry Books

Poetry is one of my favourite genres.
Poetry can be rhyming but it doesn’t need to be! Alliteration is one of the oldest forms of poetry and gives stories and songs its rhythmic flow. Poetry is perhaps the best form of story to read aloud, to share at bedtime or any time. Poetry can instil a life long love of language in a child, so use it often regardless of which language you speak.

Here is a list of some of my favourites. As always, the hardest thing is to limit it! There are so many wonderful poets, so many beautiful, funny, touching books! Enjoy sharing these with your favourite reader, or curled up by yourself:

African Acrostics, Avis Harley and Deborah Noyes
Barn Dance, Bill Martin Jr, John Archambault
Canoe Days, Gary Paulsen 
Dinosaurs, Lee Bennett Hopkins
Edward The Emu, Sheena Knowles
Falling Up, Shel Silverstein
Good Night, Sweet Pig, Linda Bailey 
Hooray for Diffendoofer Day, Dr. Seuss + Jack Prelutsky
I Did It Because, How A Poem Happens, Loris Lesynski
(The) Jolly Postman, Janet and Allan Ahlberg
Keep A Poem in Your Pocket, collected by J. Patrick Lewis
(The) Little Blue Truck, Alice Schertle
Mabel Murple, Sheree Fitch
North Country Night, Daniel San Souci
Out of the Dust, Karen Hesse
Pearl Versus The World, Sally Murphy 
Quiet as a Cricket, Audrey and Don Wood
In the Red Canoe, Leslie A. Davidson
Sleeping Dragons All Around, Sheree Fitch 
There’s A Wocket in My Pocket, Dr. Seuss
yoU Nest Here With Me, Jane Yolen and Heidi Stemple
Valentine Hearts, selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins
(The) Waterhole, Graeme Base
eXtra Innings, Baseball Poems, Lee Bennett Hopkins
Yertle The Turtle and Other Stories, Dr. Seuss
Zombies! Evacuate The School, Sara Holbrook


The ABC’s of Picture Books

Having written several alphabet books, I love to play with language.
I wanted to share a list of some of my favourite picture books with you and decided to do that in alphabet format. The hardest part was leaving some of my favourite reads ply because I already had one for ‘B’ or ‘W’! But… here it is. Some are brand new books, others are classics. I hope you know some of them but that this might also help you to discover new ones.
More lists to come. Enjoy this one.

Happy reading!





Amos’ Sweater, Janet Lunn

(The)Boy Who Was Raised By Librarians, Carla Morris
Clack-Clack Moo, Doreen Conin
Diary of a Worm, Doreen Cronin
(The) Empty Pot, Demi


Fourteen Cows For America, Carmen Agra Deedy
Gifts, Jo Ellen Bogart, Barbara Reid
Hope Springs, Eric Walters, Eugenie Fernandes
If You Happen To Have A Dinosaur, Linda Bailey, Colin Jack
Jeremiah Learns to Read, Jo Ellen Bogart,

Knuffle Bunny Free, Mo Willems
Last Day Blues, Julie Danneberg





ama Miti, Donna Jo Napoli 

Not a Box, Antoinette Portis
One Word from Sophia, Jim Averbeck
Pog, Lynn Lee
Be Quiet!, Ryan T. Higgins
Round Trip, Ann Jonas
Something From Nothing, Phoebe Gilman
Totem Tale, Deb Vanasse
Up The Creek, Nicholas Oldland
Violin, The Man With The… , Kathy Stinson
Waiting For The Whales, Sheryl McFarlane
EXcellent Ed, Stacy McAnulty
Yetsa’s Sweater, Sylvia Olsen
Zoom, Istvan Banyai


Special Books About Special Kids – novels about learning difficulties




I’ve read some powerful books about children who are different; kids who face more challenges than most people.


Wonder by R.J. Palacio is one of the most recent ones and received a lot of attention, also thanks to the movie with Julia Roberts.

I liked A Mango Shaped Space by Wendy Mass a lot.

And Rules by Cynthia Lord is one of my favourites.

But Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper wins the prize.
Wow.
What a powerful story.
Written so perfectly.


Out of My Mind is written in the first person, which is a brave and bold move by this award winning author. Because Melody, the main character, has cerebral palsy. She cannot speak, her limbs move involuntarily, she drools and makes funny sounds. What no one realizes is that Melody’s brain works perfectly. She remembers facts, she gets match, she can spell like the best of them but she cannot let anyone know. Imagine the words and thoughts all stuck inside your brain and no way to let them out… Thanks to Draper’s skillful writing, we are inside Melody’s head and feel her frustration.
Melody is mad and frustrated to no end. She ends up in a special class of kids who cannot learn.
Eventually, however, classroom integration allows her to be in a class with “normal” kids and learn more. It isn’t until a new computer allows her to communicate, much like Stephen Hawkins, that her family and friends realize her potential. But even when they do, Melody faces obstacles that make life more difficult for her than for most people. With her strong determination, she overcomes it all.
This book is a must-read for all booklovers, but a special eye opener for all those (educators) who work with children who have physical challenges.

ISBN 141697170X (ISBN13: 9781416971702)

Flat Stanley Inspired Travels

Do you know the Flat Stanley books? (see: https://www.scholastic.com/teachers/books/flat-stanley-by-jeff-brown/)


These fictional books are fun stories about Stanley, who was a regular boy until he got flattened by a bulletin board that fell on his bed. Since then he’s had amazing adventures because he fits under doors and through mail slots.


My dream is for my grandsons to be able to travel, albeit it not in a flattened state. I’d love it if, one day, they can come along on some of my travels to schools around the world. I would dearly love to show them Hong Kong, have them meet kids in Cambodia or see life in Dubai. One day I hope I can realize this dream. But for now, I decided to take two flat grandchildren with me on my latest trip.
The boys each coloured a ‘flat Nico’ and a ‘flat Aidan’, giving them the clothes they were wearing that day, as well as an attractive hairdo.
The two flat boys were tucked neatly in our daypack and they came along on the airplane!














They made new friends in a school in Cambodia and visited one of the most amazing sites in the world: the Angkor Wat temple complex.

















Flat Aidan and Flat Nico made a trip on a wooden boat on the Mekong river but mostly they loved the white sand beach of Koh Rong in southern Cambodia.

Then the flat boys visited Hong Kong – they saw skyscrapers and a metropolis of apartment buildings and green hill sides. They saw the Star Ferry and bowls of rice with chicken.

Peace is achieved when people make friends, when cultures understand and respect each other. My dream is to help my grandsons make friends around the world. I can’t wait for that to happen.