Pippi Longstocking and J. Otto Seibold

FOUND - another lovely children’s book post. Orange You Lucky is a funky blog that is one of my favs and this week she mentioned her excitement at finding Lauren Child’s illustrated Pippi Longstocking.

I don’t think there is anyone I would have rather seen illustrate Pippi than Lauren Child. Her penchant for strong girls in her own books really shines through in her interpretation of Pippi. I wrote about my adoration here.

Helen who writes Orange You Lucky also mentions another favorite of mine J. Otto Seibold’s pop up version of Alice in Wonderland. In Ned’s nursery this book has been sitting on display, face out because I just think it’s too gorgeous to put away spine out.

Although the original story has been rather heavily abridged to fit this picture book, the pop ups and fold outs of Seibold’s art are more than enough to make up for it being shortened.

Seibold is also the author/illustrator of Olive the Other Reideer, our favorite Christmas book this year which has it’s own equally impressive pop up. Olive is also on Youtube…

Seibold also has the most awesome website that is definitely worth a visit.


||J. Otto Seibold’s website||

||Pippi Longstocking written by Astrid Lingren and Illustrated by Lauren Child available online from Readings||

||Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll and J. Otto Seibold available online from Amazon||

||Olive the Other Reideer available online from the we heart books store||

Tea For Ruby

Tea for Ruby is available in bookshops in Australia this month. Written by the Duchess of York (yes, The Duchess of York) Tea For Ruby is pleasantly surprising. Its illustrations are gorgeous, very pink, but gorgeous, and of course they are because they are by Fancy Nancy illustrator Robin Preiss Glasser.

Wherever Ruby goes, chaos seems to follow. She is loud and scruffy, she interrupts and she finds it hard to take turns. When she is invited to tea with the Queen everybody gives Ruby advice about how to act:

I’ve been invited to have tea with the Queen!

Ruby, I hope you will say ‘please’ and ‘thankyou’ when you have tea with the Queen.

The text is simple but charmingly repetitive so that the reader can really have fun with dialogue. Published in a large format hardcover with a glossy dust jacket, Tea For Ruby is a really gorgeous production that would make a lovely gift.

Robin Preiss Glasser’s magnificently detailed illustrations show the crazy, chaotic Ruby on one page and then alternate with an imagined version of how Ruby pictures herself refined and polite visiting the Queen. Ruby is fun and wild and has ‘SPUNK’, she is a strong little female character who can still be a ‘Princess’. The surprise at the end of the book is actually who she is having tea with – Granny’s will love this ending.

Tea For Ruby would be perfect for the three to four year old “Miss Independent” in any family.

||Tea For Ruby available online on Amazon||

||Fancy Nancy Website||

More Christmas Loveliness

There is a very beautiful post, and photo, on the gorgeous blog Tutus and Turtles this week about Holly’s lovely December tradition. Her family wraps all their Christmas books and then they unwrap one each night before Christmas to read. So gorgeous!

She may be going to share her families favorites later this week – Yay!

 

The Lonesome Puppy

As Nicci recently rightly pointed out, we have a soft spot for things Japanese, and we do LOVE this book by Yoshitomo Nara.

The Lonesome Puppy has become one of 2008′s hottest books… Since the English translation was published by Chronicle earlier this year, many a style shot of a children’s bedroom in all the coolest design mags and blogs has included a copy of The Lonesome Puppy on the bookshelves.

Nara is an artist who has a massive cult following in Japan and around the world. He became well-known in the 1990s for his distinctive style of pop art, which typically pictures naive child-like figures. The style is spare and deceptively simple, and it is hard to resist the mesmerising wide-eyed faces he depicts.

The Lonesome Puppy is Nara’s first picture book, and I think it’s such an interesting move for an artist of his standing. I love the idea of Nara fans revisiting the genre of the picture book, and being able to share it with little people. And at the same time, children are able to discover an artist’s work, through a genre they are comfortable with.

The story is very simple: a tale of a dog who is so big that nobody notices him, until one day he is discovered by a girl, and they become friends. The narrative has an unusual style, and many of the pages are wordless. It is a lovely book to share as a read-aloud, turning the pages to discover unexpected perspectives of the very large puppy and his little friend.

||The Lonesome Puppy available in the We Heart Books store||

||Previous We Heart Books post on a Nara souvenir brought back by me from Japan||

And The Winner Is….

Thank you to everyone who entered our store giveaway competition. The lucky winner is Kate.

Congratulations Kate.

We will be having more fabulous giveaways and special offers in the future so stay tuned.

When We Were Little

When my brother and I were little we would help mum decorate the tree in our living room. He had one side to decorate and I had the other, each of us had special ornaments given to us by special people. We would move an armchair to each side and sit bathed in the glow of the lights, listening to the cicadas, smelling the pine and reading our piles of Christmas books.

One of our favorites was and still is The Little Drummer Boy illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats. The text is the original words to the traditional carol originally composed in 1958.

Come they told me, pa rum pum pum pum
A new born King to see, pa rum pum pum pum
Our finest gifts we bring, pa rum pum pum pum
To lay before the King, pa rum pum pum pum,
rum pum pum pum, rum pum pum pum,

Ezra Jack Keats, who died in 1983, is a favorite in the US particualarly for creating the character of Peter who stared in a whole series of books, including another of my childhood favorites – Whistle for Willie. His illustrations mesmorised me, his use of bold colours that often clashed was fantastic and it’s that style that suits the story of the drummer boy perfectly.

The Little Drummer Boy is still available, also in board book format, and is a really special book to own. I’m just glad that my brother and I still have our original copy and we can now share it with our children.

||The Little Drummer Boy available from Amazon||

||Website of the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation||

These Are A Few Of Our Favorite Things

If you are looking for something a bit different and quirky in a Christmas book then you might like these favorites of ours…

Olive The Other Reindeer is J.otto Seibold and Vivian Walsh’s story of a little dog, Olive, who has a few identity issues. While listening to the lyrics of Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, instead of hearing ‘All of the other reindeer’ she hears ‘Olive, the other reindeer’. Of course! Believing she must be one of Santa’s helpers, Olive jumps on the polar express and heads to the North Pole to report for duty.

Released this year, there is a gorgeous tenth anniversary deluxe edition of the original story.

The new edition is a larger version of the original book, and it features flaps to lift, spots to scratch and sniff – including gumdrop and gingerbread smells – yum, and a most magnificent pop-up of the North Pole as a grand finale.

Although a rather silly story the charm of this book is definitely in the very funky and modern artwork for the illustrations. The book does have a great sense of humour and now the deluxe edition with its bits and bobs has just added a whole new lovely dimension to it.

||Olive the Other Reindeer Deluxe Edition available from the We Heart Books Store||

The whole series of the Toot and Puddle books by Holly Hobbie are simply gorgeous but I’ll be Home For Christmas is probably my favorite. These little pink pigs are best mates and they LOVE Christmas but this year Puddle is waiting at home for Toot to return from his trip to Scotland. Wouldn’t you know it, Toot’s flights are cancelled because of bad weather and the pair fear that they won’t spend Christmas together. Forever the optimists they both make the best of their situations and finally they are together again.

The classic illustrations in this book make it a beautiful keepsake for Christmas but don’t be fooled by its cuteness, there are funny little twists to each illustration giving the book a really quirky edge that parents will appreciate – like the page where Toot is carolling cheerfully in the snow accompanied by some very adoring sheep in Scotland.

||Toot and Puddle I’ll Be Home For Christmas available from Amazon||

Sophie Kringle lives with her family in a penthouse in New York City that is decorated for Christmas all year round. The penthouse belongs to her great aunt, Auntie Claus who always has a reminder for Sophie:

“And darling, always remember my first and final rule–whether it’s birthdays, Christmas, or Halloween, it is far better to give than to receive!”

Auntie Claus dresses in a luscious red dress with white trim and mysteriously disappears on a business trip each Halloween and is not seen again until Valentines Day. So Sophie decides to stow away and find out what her Auntie Claus is really up too.

Elise Primavera’s story is pretty heavy on the text so Auntie Claus and its sequel Auntie Claus and the Key to Christmas are picture books for ages four to five plus. Primavera’s illustrations can only be described as magical. They are deliciously warm, textured and really have that Christmasy feel. I’m very surprised that no-one has made a film of this picture book yet; as based on the subtle moral message, it could be another Miracle on 34th Street.

||Auntie Claus available from Amazon||

All children love books where they need to find things within the pictures. Ned at the moment pours over illustrations, running his fingers over the page and pointing at things that he may or may not have seen before. Walter Wick has created a brilliant series called Can You See What I See? and his Christmas book is called Can You See What I See? The Night Before Christmas. Wick and his team passionately create each scene for the books, making models and lots of tiny little props to make the spreads look so realistic. Each scene is photographed and then instructions are given in the books to find certain objects within each illustration.

Walter Wick has an amazing website where you can actually follow the process of how they create the books – oh how I would love a job there!

||Can You See What I See? Night Before Christmas available from Amazon||

And finally for something completely different, there is The Elf on the Shelf gift box. The description of the concept is…

‘This children’s book explains that Santa knows who is naughty and/or nice because he sends a scout elf to every home. During the holiday season, the elf watches children by day and reports to Santa each night. When children awake, the elf has returned from the North Pole and can be found hiding in a different location. This activity allows The Elf on the Shelf to become a delightful hide-and-seek game. ’

I’m not sure I’m up with the concept of the Elf appearing somewhere different each morning. Creepy or cute? Design Mom wrote a post last year on using The Elf on the Shelf at her house.

||Elf on the Shelf Website||

Last year we talked about some Christmas faves too, you can find that post here. And also a lovely post by Melbourne mum Sing a Song about The Christmas Book by Dick Bruna and her amazing advent calendar.