When We Were Little

When We Were Little

I have never forgotten these words…

‘Tikki tikki tembo-no sa rembo-chari bari ruchi-pip peri pembo’

I’m sure there are so many others of you that also remember and can recite this, the name of the little boy who falls in the well, whose little brother takes so long to say his brother’s name and to get him help. The story, written to sound like a folktale, supposedly tells of why the Chinese give their children short names.

I vividly remember chanting ‘Tikki tikki tembo-no sa rembo-chari bari ruchi-pip peri pembo’ in primary school and know that it was read to us many times. Published in 1968, it is one of the absolute classics of my generation and it was interesting to see it featured on We Love You So - the blog dedicated to Spike Jonze and the Where The Wild Things Are film. Like the Sendak book, Tikki Tikki Tembo is also a picture book that has gathered a cult following and inspires passionate reminiscences.

There is controversy, as it seems comes with many of the picture books published in the 60s and 70s. It is said that the story is making fun of the Chinese and their names and it is also debated whether the tale is Japanese rather than Chinese.

The evidence of its continuted popularity however is obvious with a search on Youtube, with so many different tellings of the story listed from a fantastic shadow puppet play to numerous kindergarten performances.

Like my review on The Story Of Ping much of the impact of this book on me was the beautiful illustrations that give the book a lovely, even if false, sense of traditional China.

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||Tikki Tikki Tembo is available in the We Heart Books store||

Charlie and Lola’s House

Charlie and Lola’s House

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Is this not the coolest doll house ever? Go and have a look at the rest of the amazing photo’s at the beautiful blog Sweet Sweet Life.  I found Amy’s blog featured on Bloesem Kids and fell in love with the photo’s of this house made from a pattern from Cookie magazine. Amy used only materials from around her house and made the most spectacular dolls house for Charlie and Lola to live in.

Everything is there and totally gorgeous right down to the little pile of books on the foot of Lola’s bed.

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Books for mums for kids…

Books for mums for kids…

Favourite picture books at We  Books are the ones that adults love to read, and kids love to listen to: those ones that bear repeated readings because big people love them too.

I’ve just discovered another category of book – instructional books of activities for kids that mums love to flick through, for inspiration and for pure eye candy…

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Little Kitchen is subtitled 40 fun and delicious things that children can really make but the simply stunning design makes it so much more for mums. Candy colours, polka dots and gorgeous illos abound – not to mention the photos of little chefs in action and quirkily styled food.

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Little Kitchen Carrot and Zucchini Cake

Little Kitchen Chocolate Pudding

Melbourne mums may know the Little Kitchen Children’s Cookery Centre in St Georges Road, North Fitzroy, which Sabrina established, and which is also home to a range of children’s cookware. We love her philosophy that cooking provides endless opportunities for ‘natural’ learning and is an activity that doesn’t distinguish between boys and girls. You can read more about it here in our store

Handmade Home Amanda Blake Soule

Another book for big people centred on family and home, and equally delicious to flick through is Handmade Home. Readers of Amanda Blake Soule’s blog, soulemama.com will already be familiar with her much-anticipated second book. (If you don’t know Soulemama, go there now!) Amanda’s thoughtful reflections on life as a mama to four small children, crafting, thrifting and exploring her Maine coastal environment are invariably inspirational and always reassuringly down to earth.

In Handmade Home, Amanda not only presents easy-to-follow instructions for some beautiful handmade items, she describes crafting as a lifestyle. The underlying principles are consuming less and re-using more, appreciating the environment, and connecting to our families. She has included in the book a collection of 30+ projects organised by categories: Nourish, Nurture, Play, Seek and Retreat. Some of the projects are non-sew and many are designed to include children. All the crafts are simply beautiful and have Amanda’s gorgeous style.

Now I just need to find time to actually do as well as be inspired by… 

||Handmade Home and Little Kitchen are available in the We Heart Books store||

 

The Children’s Book Council of Australia Awards

The Children’s Book Council of Australia Awards

Our congratulations to all the winners and recipients of honour book awards for the CBCA awards last week. We were so pleased that two of our very favourites were winners.

You can read our posts about Collecting Colour here (including an interview with author and illustrator Kylie Dunstan) and about How to Heal a Broken Wing here.

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When We Were Little Sunday

When We Were Little Sunday

A guest post by Sue, Mum to Katie, and Nanou to Rowan.

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Some of the books I particularly remember from my childhood were the special ones that my paternal grandmother, known affectionately as Marty, kept in a wardrobe for visiting grandchildren. I visited quite frequently, often staying during school holidays and I have vivid memories of these times and being snugly curled up in a very comfortable bed with a selection of books for reading ‘in the morning’ before Marty got up. Books were important to her and an obvious presence in her home. She valued them greatly and indulged in purchasing them from the Folio Society, a luxury she couldn’t really afford. Although we didn’t get many presents from her, when we did they were often books.

All the children’s books in Marty’s wardrobe were produced in the late 1940s or early 1950s and so all now suffer from yellowed paper which is quite embrittled; most have been read so many times that they have been mended in the past with Sellotape, and so are quite stained along the spine edges.

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My favourites were the titles from Peg Matby’s Ben and Bella series and Marty had a number of them. However, there were also four books which now are of interest looking back as an adult and with my ‘social historian’s hat’ on. They are the Adventure series produced by Barker & Company and printed in Australia “by the New ‘FANTASCOPIC’ Method.” (I haven’t been able to find out exactly what this method was, but it supposedly produced more realistic colour.) Two of the four titles have been passed down to me: The Zoo Garden Mystery by John Tombs and Excitement on Elf Island by Elsie Sheppard; both are held in the National Library of Australia and listed as printed in 1948. Other titles are The Story of Thought Castle and Fairy Grandmother’s Story. There is no mention of illustrators and as the style differs, I imagine that Tombs and Sheppard were both author and illustrator. A number of internet sites list the titles as rare and have them for sale, for widely varying prices, but most do not seem to have stood the test of time any better than mine.

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A re-reading of the stories is somewhat disappointing. I did like these books as a child, although now I cannot imagine why! Both have the text pre-eminent in a central box on each page with illustrations awkwardly placed surrounding them. Both are text heavy and John Tombs particularly tends to over-write. The language is very dated and at times overly moralistic, but what does interest me now is seeing the resurgence of an Australian orientation, post-World War 2. This is obvious in the case of the The Zoo Garden Mystery. My copy has koalas in a gum tree on the cover and indigenous fauna mixed with exotic zoo creatures central to the story. This focus is less obvious in Excitement on Elf Island, but the gum trees are there and are something that the publisher feels the need to explain.

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Time and perspective change. The importance of these books was not intrinsic. What was important was the love of books that they helped develop.

Peek a Poo

Peek a Poo

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We love irreverent picture books in our house because we can all have a laugh together. While at the beach over the weekend we bought a copy of Peek A Poo What’s In Your Nappy? by Guido Van Genechten because while we were in the shop Ned’s dad and I couldn’t stop giggling so we just knew Ned would like it too.

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The main character is a mouse who is very inquisitive and decides that he would like to discover what is in each of his friends’ pants. The friends have nappies that are lift the flap so that when Mouse asks if he can have a look, it’s the reader who can reveal what is in the nappy! We see rabbit has seven pellets, dog has a poo with a pointy end, cow has ‘One big fresh cow pat’, etc

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Besides the fact that we all find it terribly funny there is actually a message in the madness. When his friends ask Mouse what is in his nappy he proudly shows them that it is empty.

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Mouse does his poo in the potty, he shows his friends and then they all want to have a go. Ned has related really well to the story both for its humorous style and also for its practical description of what is in the nappies and about going to the toilet. He doesn’t like going to the potty at all but will sit on the toilet and I think he thinks that they are one in the same anyway.

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Like Katie says in her post about potty training books I liked this book because no one used the potty as a hat and although the Mouse likes to look in the nappy of his friends there is no playing with the contents!  The illustrations are great and it is fun to read aloud – a little gem of a book.

Spring reading… My Child mag

Spring reading… My Child mag

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What a lovely surprise to find out via posts and tweets from our friends at Magnolia Square and Pru (the talent behind Little Bird Photography) that we had appeared in the latest My Child magazine, which came out on Wednesday…

And look! Here we are in print under ‘Website Reviews’.

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Lots more fun things to read in this issue – including a lovely craft spread by our friend Melinda of Paperklip and lots of stunning photos by Pru (including the cover – aren’t those blue eyes mesmerising!?)