A Baker's Dozen: My Favorite Children's Books
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
I
love children's literature so much that I took two graduate classes
on the subject. I learned which books to choose for different ages
and interest levels, and I think I must have purchased them all,
for my bookshelves overflow with a wide variety of colorful choices.
Amazon
lists the following books as being most appropriate for the 48
year olds, but we began reading them to David when he was in diapers
and footed pajamas. Now I read them to students. When I find myself
missing the years when my only child was small enough to cuddle
in my lap for the routine "couple good books before bedtime"
I choose these favorites and take a read down memory lane. I find
each of these books especially precious since the characters almost
became members of our family as they shared their stories, as well
as their life lessons, with us.
ROXABOXEN
by Alice McLerran, illustrated by Barbara Cooney.
Roxaboxen
is a view into the imaginative play of childhood, and just may
be my very favorite book, for it takes me back to Grandfather's
farm and the massive rock in the middle of the hay field. Grandfather
had tried everything to get rid of that stone beating, blasting,
piling wood high for evening bonfires all in hopes of cracking
the stone into smaller pieces that could be moved out of the path
of the tractor. They only ever managed to knock pieces off here
and there making perfect little seats for our group of small cousins seats
according to "rank" on our "mountain" in our imaginary "kingdom."
In
Roxaboxen, a real place in Yuma, AZ, the children created
an imaginary town, and built lives there. None of the children ever
forgot, no matter how old they grew; how far they traveled from
Roxaboxen:
"…There
across the road, it looked like any rocky hill nothing but
sand and rocks, some old wooden boxes, cactus and greasewood
and thorny ocotillo but it was a special place. The street
between Roxaboxen and the houses curved like a river, so Marian
named it the River Rhode. After that you had to ford a river
to reach Roxaboxen…The years went by, and the seasons changed,
until at last the friends had all grown tall…So you might think
that was the end of Roxaboxen but oh, no…Not one of them ever
forgot…More than fifty years later, Frances went back and Roxaboxen
was still there…there where she had built her house the desert
glass still glowed amethyst, amber, and sea-green."
A
few summers back, just before I had to sell Grandfather's farm,
cousins in their fifties arrived from as far away as Georgia, to
walk through thick pine trees, trying to find the rock, wanting
to see it one last time. It was gone. My father had paid to have
it buried, and we grieved for that lost part of childhood.
SONG
AND DANCE MAN by Karen Ackerman; illustrated by Stephen Gammell.
This
is another favorite that again takes me back to my childhood with
Grandfather. I often stayed with my grandparents and for many days
at a time. My parents left me there when they had to be at University
of Michigan Hospitals as my two brothers underwent numerous surgeries.
I slept on the couch under the unbelievably heavy, hair-covered,
horsehide sleigh blanket which I now own. Most nights I would
fall asleep as Grandfather played the violin for me. Some nights
Grandma would chord on the piano as Grandfather fiddled, showing
me how they provided the music at dances in their past.
The
Song and Dance Man is a story about NOW as grandchildren
visit their grandfather who demonstrates that THEN:
"Grandpa
was a song and dance man who once danced on the vaudeville stage…the
smell of cedar ships and old things saved fills the attic…There
are too many dance steps and too many words in the song for
us to remember, but the show is better than any show on TV…At
the bottom he hugs us, and we tell him we wish we could have
seen him dance in the good old days, the song and dance days.
He smiles, and whispers that he wouldn't trade a million good
old days for the days he spends with us…"
THE
RELATIVES CAME by Cynthia Rylant is another treasure that will
delight children and adults, alike. The descriptions of the family
members, activities, and feelings should bring back so many fond
memories. I always laugh out loud at the descriptions of how many
hugs and kisses one must accept in order to move through the house
once all the relatives have arrived; of the different breathing
in the nights as relatives sleep any place where space can be found.
A charming book.
MY
GREAT-AUNT ARIZONA by Gloria Houston, illustrated by Susan Condie
Lamb, will warm the heart of any teacher or student who has worked
or studied in a one-room schoolhouse; will give children a peek
into schools that were comforting places where students actually
were educated; will bring a smile to anyone who has an aunt like
my Aunt Mildred, who taught school for fifty years.
"She
taught in the one-room school where she and Jim had sat…She
taught students about words and numbers and the faraway places
they would visit someday. 'Have you been there?' the students
asked. 'Only in my mind,' she answered. 'But someday you will
go.'…The boys and girls who were students in her class had boys
and girls who were students in her class. And they had boys
and girls who were students in her class. For fifty-seven years
my great-aunt Arizona hugged her students. She hugged them when
their work was good, and she hugged them when it was not…Did
she ever go to the faraway places she taught us about? No, but
my great-aunt Arizona travels with me and with those of us whose
lives she touched…She goes with us in our minds."
OX-CART
MAN by Donald Hall with pictures by Barbara Cooney is a wonderful
story of an independent, self-sufficient, thrifty farm family in
which all of the members work together to make their living:
"In
October he backed his ox into his cart and he and his family filled
it up with everything they made or grew all year long that was left
over." He walked to market and sold everything, including the ox
and the cart. He bought only necessary things, then he walked home
with "coins still in his pockets…" to begin the cycle over a self-sufficient
family meeting their needs, then selling extras to buy the items
that they are unable to make.
BLUEBERRIES
FOR SAL by Robert McCloskey, is a classic, as is his book, Make
Way for Ducklings. Blueberries for Sal was written
the year after my birth, but the story never ages. The story is
heartwarming; the sound effects cute as Sal drops blueberries into
her pail, "kuplink, kuplank, kuplunk!" Mother picks far more berries
than Sal, then after an exciting mix-up, "…Little Sal and her mother
went down the other side of Blueberry Hill, picking berries all
the way, and drove home with food to can for next winter
a whole pail of blueberries and three more besides." I have pictures
of myself back in that era, dressed just like Sal!
AMAZING
GRACE by Mary Hoffman, with pictures by Caroline Binch, is a
story of a girl with a wonderful imagination who is constantly dressing
in costumes and dreaming of roles she could play. Our family especially
enjoyed this book as David was the same kind of child and had costumes
strewn all over his room. We have pictures of him as a pirate, Peter
Pan, a karate kid… Grace wants to play Peter Pan in a school play
but some children tell her that she is inappropriate for the role.
Her grandmother convinces her that she can be anything she sets
her mind to, which Grace does and plays the best Peter Pan, ever.
THE
NAPPING HOUSE by Audrey and Don Wood is a wonderful book for
the toddlers with its repetition and humor; for children a bit older
with its wonderful pictures and the change of perspective as the
viewer is lifted ever higher in the air to finally view events from
above the room. Audrey's prose, and Don's artwork are magical in
all of their books: Quick
As a Cricket, Heckedy
Peg, The
Little Mouse, The Red Ripe Strawberry, and The Big Hungry Bear,
and more…
WHEN
I'M SLEEPY by Jane R. Howard, illustrated by Lynne Cherry, is
a beautiful book that leads a child into imagining other worlds
and lives. It is a wonderful bedtime story for the child is in footed
flannels as she imagines: "When I'm sleepy, sometimes I wish I could
curl up in a basket (pictured cuddled with cats) or fall asleep
in a downy nest (with baby birds). When I'm sleepy, and I stretch
and I yawn, I wonder how it would be to sleep in a swamp (on a log
with turtles) or a hollow log (cuddled in the arms of a raccoon)…"
The book is cozy and imaginative from start to finish.
HOME
PLACE by Crescent Dragonwagon, illustrated by Jerry Pinkney,
is a fine book of the past an imagined past for a family's
home has even been lost to the passing of time. Only the chimney
and the flowers remain. I can no longer find the spot where my own
Great-grandmother's home stood before the railroad town died and
the forest covered its remains. This is the book I grab when I am
asked to read aloud to another class, for it lends itself to theatrical
delivery and oral reading.
"And
if there was a house, there was a family. Dig in the dirt, scratch
deep, and what do you find? A round blue glass marble…A china doll's
arm. Listen. Can you listen, back, far back? No, not the wind, that's
now. But listen, back, and hear: a man's voice, scratchy-sweet,
singing 'Amazing Grace,'…a rocking chair squeaking, creaking on
a porch…and 'Tommy! Get in here this minute!'…and 'Ah, me, its'
hot'……imagining the home place as it might have been, or was, before
the house burned down, or everyone moved away and the woods moved
in."
THE
PAIN and THE GREAT ONE by Judy Blume with illustrations by Irene
Trivas, is a delightful book of two siblings and the way each perceives
their role in the family. I have often given this book as a gift
to feuding children to encourage them to consider the other's point
of view. The Pain is the little brother; The Great One
is the older sister. "My brother's a pain…I think they love him
better than me…My sister thinks she's so great…I think they love
her better than me."
IRA
SLEEPS OVER by Bernard Waber is a funny but touching book about
a boy invited to spend the night at a friend's house but who has
misgivings: "But I had a problem. It began when my sister said:
'Are you taking your teddy bear along?' 'To my friend's house? Are
you kidding? That's the silliest thing I every heard!' 'He won't
laugh,' said my mother. 'He won't laugh,' said my father. 'He'll
laugh,' said my sister. I decided not to take my teddy bear." But
the story doesn't end there…
WHO
WANTS ARTHUR? (Only used copies are available.) This book is
from Australia, and we knew that, but we were still surprised when
David and I stopped in a small Outback town, stepped into the library,
and the first book we spotted was…Arthur! We have loved Arthur since
the Christmas of 1990, when David was two years old. This book encourages
children to accept and appreciate who they are; to understand the
lack of satisfaction that will come from trying to pretend to be
someone else. Arthur tried, and failed: "He had collapsed, exhausted
in the corner of the [pet shop] window. Now he was certain he would
never find a home, whether he was a rabbit, a snake, a fish, a cat,
or a purple, spotted, three-headed donkey. Arthur decided that he
might as well be just an ordinary brown dog." Soon after that, he
was adopted by a girl who had interpreted his attempts, to be like
the more popular animals, as evidence of his ability to do tricks.
Great story with great drawings!
Whether
you are shopping for your children, your grandchildren, or the children
of other families, these books are sure to broaden the worlds, as
well as stir the imaginations, of all children whose lives they
touch.
February
28, 2005
Linda
Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] is an educational
consultant, homeschooling mom, and public school special ed teacher.
She is available for presentations, inservices, and workshops.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
Linda
Schrock Taylor Archives
|