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Mini Media Mogul: Three recent kids’ books, and one oldie but goodie

Mini Media Mogul: Three recent kids’ books, and one oldie but goodie
Our first three recent-release book picks are ranked from our favorite downward, and then we have an "oldie but goodie" for you.

Fiona the Flower Girl


by Carley Roney and the editors of the knot

Eight-year-old Fiona is going to be the flower girl at her aunt Caroline's wedding. This book begins with her aunt's engagement ("Fiona thought it would be much better to have a ring that was purple, but she could tell that Aunt Caroline was very happy with her clear ring."), then goes on to dress shopping, the bridal shower, the rehearsal, the all-important walk down the aisle, and the reception.

This is an excellent book for flower girls-to-be. It explains wedding lingo and a flower girl's role simply, while still functioning more as a fun story than as an instructional manual. There is, however, a guide for parents at the end that reads more like a good magazine article, suggesting flower girl etiquette and traditions. The illustrations are charming, with girly patterned backgrounds and accents. The book includes a little purple flower necklace on a ribbon to match the one Fiona receives from her aunt.

Holy cow, it's on sale on Amazon, down from $16 to about $6.50!

Little Chick


by Amy Hest, illustrated by Anita Jeram

Little Chick is a sweet book made up of three similar mini-stories. In the first, Little Chick is waiting for a carrot to grow - but "Old-Auntie" says that sometimes a small carrot is just what you need, so the chick pulls it. In the second, she's waiting for her kite to fly. Old-Auntie comes along and walks with her, and eventually, the kite catches the wind. In the third, she wants to pluck a star from the sky, but Old-Auntie says the star makes the sky sparkle, so she leaves it there.

I was waiting for more with each of the stories. Little Chick is a cute character, and appropriately preschooler-ish in personality (a little impatient, exuberant, adventurous), but the stories lacked punch. I twice wondered if I had accidentally skipped a page, or if they really did just end like that. The storylines are very simple, and to me, a little boring. I was also put off by the name "Old-Auntie." I imagined my aunt getting indignant if Sarina were to nickname her that.

The illustrations are watercolor and pencil, with large gray text.

My daughter asked me to read the story to her twice, and then never again. I think she was a little bored by its repetitiveness, too. But if you have a particularly gentle child, this might be just right.

On sale in hardback, down from about $17 to just over $12.

Dinosaurs Roar, Butterflies Soar!


by Bob Barner

The illustrations in Dinosaurs Roar, Butterflies Soar! are superb; made with cut paper and pastels, they're simple and bright and friendly. That's where my nice review ends.

The text is dry and tries to cover too much. The top half of each layout is supposed to be the simple storyline, while the bottom gives more in-depth facts and bits of trivia. This in itself was confusing, because if I read both, it broke up the storyline and I’d forget where we were by the next page. It didn't matter much, though, because the storyline felt like a school lecture. What a wasted opportunity to give the (worthwhile) lessons some real life by making it a personal story that kids can relate to.

While the recommended audience here is from 4-8, I'd suggest it's for ages 6 and up... if you happen to have a kid who's really into not just the "fun" aspect of dinosaurs, but the historical aspect.

$13-$14 on Amazon.com.

Oldie But Goodie: Honey Bunny Funnybunny


by Marilyn Sadler

Honey Bunny Funnybunny is one of the Cat in the Hat Beginner Books for early readers, and it's a good pick for kids who are dealing with sibling squabbles. In this book, Honey Bunny has an older brother, P.J., who loves to drive her crazy. He pulls the covers off her bed, ties knots in her sleeves, switches the colors her paint jars, and even switches the heads on her dolls.

Finally, their dad yells at P.J., and he stops teasing his sister. For a while, she's happy - "but after a while, she began to feel that something was missing." P.J. is out playing with his friends now, and he's ignoring her entirely. She realizes she actually misses his teasing, and is afraid that he doesn't love her anymore. But when she wakes up one morning and discovers that he's painted her face with polka dots while she slept, she's elated. "P.J. loves me!" she cries. A cute take on quirky sibling relationships.

A mere $9 on Amazon.com, and if you like that, there's a whole series of these books.

Jenna Glatzer (www.jennaglatzer.com) is the author of 19 books. Her most recent collaboration is Unthinkable with Scott Rigsby, the first double-amputee to finish the world-famous Hawaiian Ironman triathlon. Jenna lives with her two-year-old daughter in New York. - Jeremiah
Categories: kids' books and audio stories
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“If Everybody Did” by Jo Ann Stover

“If Everybody Did” by Jo Ann Stover
There's no better way to introduce preschoolers to Kant's moral imperative than Jo Ann Stover's If Everybody Did, an entertaining romp through the consequences of every person in the room engaging in the same minor misbehaviors after one child does a demo round. We have a love/hate relationship with morally instructive children's books, but we are learning over time that what makes them work well in our household is humor. From Jane Yolen's How Do Dinosaurs Eat Their Food? to Maurice Sendak and Sesyle Johnson's What Do You Say, Dear?, the use of humor puts everyone at ease while gently introducing real concepts that need teaching - in this case, helping kids conceive of the consequences of what would happen "if everybody did" what it is convenient or entertaining for them to do in isolation.

Some of the issues covered in the book might feel a little constraining for families with relaxed standards of physical behavior - it covers such issues as rough play, "changing your seat," and slamming doors - but the words are few and the illustrations are pretty hilarious if you ask Z and I, so it's easy to focus the "lesson" on the standards you actually care about enforcing. Consequences include doors falling off and crushing everyone, a sea of unseated children chaotically shifting positions around a room, and (for the action shown above) a pile of people laying like pancakes while the last of a dozen or so people gleefully leaps towards the dogpile.

Proof that this book is serving us well was close at hand recently. Jenni was sick with a cold and dropping used tissues on the floor (there was no trash can handy) and Z waltzed up and "corrected" her. "Mama, what would happen if EVERYBODY did that?"


Personally, this one cracks me up - Stover has an eye for details. The kid with his hands in his mouth makes me laugh every time.

You can pick up If Everybody Did on Amazon.com for about eight bucks. - Jeremiah
Categories: behavioral issues, etiquette, kids' books and audio stories
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Krtek the mole

Krtek the mole
Inspired by Disney anthropomorphism, Czech animator Zdenek Miler invented Krtek the mole in 1956 to star in a short animated film to educate children on the processing of flax seed. In 1963 he began producing new cartoons based on the character, but instead of narraion elected to use his young daughters act as voice actors, providing non-verbal exclamations but no spoken words.

There is something very slow and deliberate about the cartoons in this series that make it feel at once primitive and perhaps a little slow for today's kids but make the stories' jokes that much funnier. Here are a couple of good episodes, which you'll find with translated titles from every eastern European country as well as in English. Like the Smurfs, Barbapapa, and Moomin, Krtek has become an international icon of only transitional importance in the U.S.

I liked this first episode a lot because Z and I have been working pretty hard on learning to read notes on a staff as part of her violin practice. Be patient with the pacing and you and your child will be delighted by it.



Mole's most frequent companions are the mouse and rabbit shown in the episode below. Their near-constant presence makes what happens at about 3:40 in the video you are about to see truly shocking. I find the music that accompanies this tragic turn of events hilarious. It is about as desperate a tenor as this slow-moving action can achieve.



- Jeremiah
Categories: cartoons
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Two online comics creators for kids

Two online comics creators for kids
Toon Books - the series that redefines "comics" for young children and makes them an invaluable early reading tool - introduced us to some surprisingly versatile online comic panel creation software that your kids will enjoy playing with.

After fooling around with it, I wrote:

In fact, it works so well, they should take it further. Add the ability to sequence multiple panels on a page and to draw your own characters with a rudimentarly drawing tool, and they could either sell this software on a standalone basis or provide exclusive access to purchasers of their books through an access code.


Then I started browsing some more and realized that Comics Lab Extreme, a companion product to the Comics Lab that Toon Books had brought me to, does just that. Multipage comic books, artwork upload, and more. Great stuff for tech-savvy kids with an interest in comics. And it's all free.

Anyone out there have kids who love a particular comics software, online or off? - Jeremiah
Categories: computers and software, kids' books and audio stories
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Mini Media Mogul: Four fun Christmas books

Merry Christmas, Punnyboppers! Four new Christmas books for you this time around. We read all of them at the library. Hope you find a great new book to read with your little ones.

Grumpy Badger's Christmas


Written by Paul Bright, illustrated by Jane Chapman | $12, Amazon.com

All Badger wants to do is go to sleep; he doesn't care about Christmas. It's his time to go underground and sleep all winter through. When his animal friends come knocking on his door trying to bring presents and asking to borrow his ladder to decorate a Christmas tree, he angrily sends them away. "Piffle!" he shouts. "I don't like presents and I don't like Christmas!"

But then one of them shows up to ask for his help because Mole is stuck on top of the tree he was trying to decorate. Again, Grumpy Badger wants to be left alone, so he closes the door and goes back to sleep... but he has a terrible dream that Mole is about to fall out of the tree. When he startles himself awake, he realizes what a bad friend he has been, rushes out to save Mole, and apologizes to everyone for being so grumpy.

To make it up to them, he throws a wonderful Christmas party, which he intends to make an annual tradition.

This story's only possible flaw is that badgers don't actually hibernate. They're less active in cold weather, and sometimes stay underground for long stretches, but they don't sleep through the winter as it suggests in this book. If you forgive this bit of artistic license, and the fact that the text can be a little hard to read against the background on some pages, it's a winner all the way. A solid message, an entertaining story, and nicely expressive acrylic paintings.

Merry Christmas, Splat


by Rob Scotton | $12, Amazon.com

In this latest book of the Splat the Cat series, Splat writes out his Christmas list for Santa: he wants a really big present. That's all he specifies. But his little sister gives him a "look" and asks, "Are you sure you've been good?" Of course he's sure! Well, almost sure. Just to be extra sure, he volunteers to help with all the Christmas preparations. He washes the dishes (which were already clean), redecorates the tree (which has already been decorated), and other such "helpful" tasks.

Then he tries to go to sleep, but is filled with anxiety - maybe he should stay up and tell Santa what a good cat he's been, just in case Santa doesn't realize it.

In the end, he awakes to find no presents under the tree, and he fears he wasn't good enough after all - but his family pops out from behind the tree with a big box just for Splat. He says it's the best Christmas present ever, though we never see what it is; that’s left up to kids' imagination.

The book is recommended for 4- to 8-year-olds, but my 2 1/2-year-old loved it, and so did I.

Olivia Helps With Christmas


by Ian Falconer | $11, Amazon.com

Surely you know of the little pig with the big personality, right? In this book, Olivia (of TV fame) sets out to help with the Christmas preparations, but mostly gets herself into trouble, similar to Splat (reviewed above). My daughter made me keep turning back to the page where Olivia gets all tangled up in the string of lights.

Olivia keeps peeking up the chimney to see if Santa is arriving yet, and gets soot on her snout. On Christmas morning, she and her brothers find some great presents (oh, yeah, and some clothes) under the tree.

The focus of the book is on the preparations and the waiting, rather than on Christmas day itself. Could have used another funny Olivia antic or two, and I really could have done without the illustration of her baby brother throwing up blueberry pie all over the floor, but aside from that, Olivia fans will love this one.

Suzy Goose and the Christmas Star


by Petr Horacek | $11, Amazon.com

Suzy Goose and her friends are finished decorating their Christmas tree, and it looks perfect, except one thing: It is missing a star for the top. Suzy sees a perfect star in the sky, so she sets out to get it. She reaches as high as she can, but can't reach it. She tries jumping to it and climbing to it and walking to it, but she only succeeds in getting herself lost and tired.

Finally, her friends lead her back home, where they all see that although she was not able to pluck the star out of the sky, it's now shining right above the Christmas tree.

I enjoyed this book and the mixed-media illustrations. For me, though, the ending wasn't as satisfying as it could have been.

Jenna Glatzer is the author of 19 books, including authorized biographies of Celine Dion and Marilyn Monroe. Read about what she’s up to at www.jennaglatzer.com. - Jenna Glatzer
Categories: Christmas
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Sesame Street Word Families: -ape, -op

We're using Hooked on Phonics' newly revised curriculum to teach our five-year-old daughter Z to read. A lot of that learning centers around word families, groups of short words with similar endings (basically, they rhyme) that can be easily learned as a group. This is the second in a series. (Here's the first.) Enjoy!

-ape



-op




- Jennifer
Categories: learning - letters, spelling, writing
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