Nana and Rowan

Rowan has recently been able to spend some time with his great grandmother, my Nana. Here they are reading a few weeks ago.

My Nana was an amazing person, and an inspiration to me. She went to university at a time when not many women did. She was a pharmacist and co-ran a small business, at the same time as having four children under 9. She made legendary Anzac biscuits. She had a big family of children, grand-children and one great-grandchild, Rowan. How lucky he is to have known her, and to have shared with her some good books.

Mortimer’s Christmas Manger

35 days until Christmas said the sign when I went to the supermarket today! Time to start stressing about Christmas presents not bought and fitting the many parties in. At least it means we can start reading Christmas books! I have always loved the tradition of having books that are just read at Christmas and I can remember dragging them all out of the shelves when I was little and reading them at night by the tree.

One recent Christmas book that I love is Mortimer’s Christmas Manger. Mortimer is a mouse who lives in a house occupied by a family, he occupies a hole that is cold and just not very comfortable. It’s when he ventures out to look for a new home that he comes across the manger and nativity scene that the family have set up beside their Christmas tree. Mortimer promptly moves all the statues out of the little barn, including rolling the baby Jesus out of the manger and snuggling himself up in the hay. He loves his new house but is annoyed that each day the family reassembles the Christmas scene; that is until he hears the family reading the Christmas story together and realises who the baby is and what he means to the world.

© Jane Chapman

Although this is a story essentially about the nativity, it is done in a very gentle and subtle way, it’s not in your face and is quite a lovely quirky introduction to the traditional Christmas story. I love its humour, with Mortimer rolling baby Jesus out of the manger every night so he can sleep in the hay and Jane Chapman’s illustrations are just so divinely cute that Mortimer is irresistible.

||Karma Wilson’s gorgeous website||

||Mortimer’s Christmas Manger available online from Amazon||

Small Gorgeousness

Issue .08 of the beautiful and funky Small Magazine is out today and we are in it!

We think this mag is just so stunning and an absolute inspiration. Have a little look at -www.smallmagazine.net

Haiku Baby

Recently I was discussing the books I loved as a child with my mum, getting some inspiration for When We Were Little Sunday, when she told me that when I was a baby she actually borrowed books of Haiku poetry from the library to read to me.

I thought this was really lovely and then I found this little board book called Haiku Baby by Betsy Snyder and I have fallen in love with it. 

Flower

In tickly-toe grass,
a buttercup offers up
yellow nose kisses

The little blue bird on the jacket flits across the pages of this sweet book visiting his animal friends. Each gorgeous illustration is accompanied by a haiku celebrating an element of nature.

When I read this book I realised what a perfect form haiku is for reading to a baby; it is simple but melodic and soothing. I just find it really nice to find something different to all the other board books available and to find a book that has been so lovingly produced.

I am looking forward to sharing this gorgeous book with my new baby niece or nephew next year.

The author/illustrator Betsy Snyder is a blogger herself and recently mentioned we heart books on her blog, along with another of our favorite books Around the World With Mouk. The book Haiku Baby also has a really spectacular website, which even sings to you, it’s really worth a look.

||Haiku Baby available online from the we heart books/store||

||Betsy Snyder’s Blog||

||The Adventures of Mouk available online from the we heart books/store||

 

 

Nobody Owns The Moon

People who know me well know that I have a soft spot for the moon. Which might have been the first thing that led me to pick up a copy of a new book by Tohby Riddle, Nobody Owns the Moon. That and the distinctly urban look of the cover in beautifully muted shades of colour.

Nobody Owns the Moon opens with an arresting and evocative line: ‘The fox is one of the only wild creatures in the world that can successfully make a life for itself in cities.’ The facing illustration pictures a fox in brown cords and a shirt and jumper sitting in an armchair. Through a window we can see a city streetscape.

What follows is a quirky and whimsical story about life in a big city – told from the perspectives of two characters living somewhat on its perimeter. Clive Prendergast is a fox with a regular job and apartment and he leads his life with a confident, unassuming attitude. His friend Humphrey is a donkey, a sensitive soul, who can’t keep a job for long and doesn’t always have a fixed address. One day, Humphrey finds a special-looking envelope, which gives Clive and Humphrey the entree into a very special night on the town.

The story cleverly and sensitively conveys some thoughts on life in a big city – in a rarely found non-stereotypical way. A city can be beautiful, can be full of constrasts, and a sense of belonging in a city can be contradictory. The text is made up of a series of thought-provoking lines, and alongside the illustrations convey many subtle messages. I love the style of illustration of this book, which is mixed media and collage. On Tohby’s website, you can read about some of the techniques he uses to construct the illustrations.

Locals might recognise Tohby’s style from his regular cartoons in the Saturday Good Weekend magazine (with both The Age and Sydney Morning Herald). He’s also the author of several picture books, including The Great Escape from City Zoo.

And speaking of very urban-styled picture books, the super-stylish blog, Inchmark, is doing a series of posts this week on children’s books on New York. I can’t wait to read her recommendations.

||Nobody Owns the Moon available from Readings||

||The Great Escape from City Zoo available from Amazon||

||Tohby Riddle’s website||

When We Were Little Sunday…

When I was little we lived for two years in the UK, and amongst the books of my childhood are many very English books. Ernest Owl Starts a School and Postman Joe are two such books and are part of the Blackberry Farm series by Jane Pilgrim, first published in the early 1950s. They are amazingly timeless stories, and the pen and watercolour illustrations by F. Stocks May are beautifully vibrant. The illustration style is very realistic, and detailed. This accuracy makes the lovely additions of clothes on Mrs Nibble the rabbit, and her children, very charming. (Curiously, the rabbits, squirrels and mice are the only animals who wear clothes, although Ernest the Owl sports spectacles and Postman Joe a satchel.)

The books tell stories of life on the farm which is owned by Mr and Mrs Smiles and their children, Joy and Bob. But the main stars of the show are the animals, which include typical northern hemisphere robins and squirrels as well as the all the usual farm crew.

In a sign of the books’ era, Postman Joe tells the story of the arrival of a new animal to the farm: the Large Red Animal – an animal which breathes out smoke as it crawls along the lane. The illustration shows that this animal is in fact what we know is a tractor. Through the illustration of the family standing proudly around the Large Red Animal, and from the other animals’ reactions, you can immediately relate to the novelty of such a vehicle.

Of course there are plenty of baby animals among the residents of the farm, which is why Ernest Owl decides to start a school. I think Ernest was a very progressive teacher for the 1950s, because he structured his lessons for individual learning needs, and even designed tasks to suit personal motivations of his students: Mary Hen was taught to count marbles so that she could tell how many eggs her mother had laid! And meanwhile the bunnies learnt to write the letters of their names.

I love the way the narrative in these books includes lovely asides. When we are first introduced to Mrs Nibble’s three little bunnies, we are told they had been ‘in bed with the measles, but they would soon be better.’ Jane Pilgrim includes some gorgeous details which make the scenes believable, such as the pot-plants which are used for stools in Ernest’s school.

A few years ago, a collection of the Blackberry Farm stories were re-released in a compendium, The Complete Tales of Blackberry Farm, which is available from Amazon. This format doesn’t seem nearly as nice to hold in your hand – especially a small hand – as the individual volumes, but happily ensures a new generation of children will know and love these characters.

When We Were Little….

“O come with me across the sea
To a beautiful palm fringed isle,
Where row on row the coconuts grow –
Yes the coconuts mile on mile
And if you feel hot, you are very soon not
If you plunge in the waves awile;
And if you feel cold, on the sands of gold
You can bask in the sun and smile.”

“The mermaids there, with golden hair.
Sing melodies low and sweet,
The murmuring caves and the winds and the waves
Their magical songs repeat.
And I have come o’er the white sea foam,
Little earth-child, to your feet.
Oh come with me across the sea,
Where the birds wing fat and fleet.”

For this weeks When We Were Little Sunday post skip lighty over to the beautiful blog Vintage Kids’ Books My Kid Loves – the MOST amazing blog and now an Etsy store as well. So much Joy!