Harry and Horsie

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Isn’t this little guy gorgeous? It’s an image from the picture book Harry and Horsie due in Australia in November.

I’m going to get it for Ned for Christmas. You can have a little peek inside on the Harper Collins US website and it is one of the most gorgeous things I’ve ever seen. The illustrations are so funky, I’m thinking I’d like to frame them up for Ned’s walls.

Harry is a little boy who undertakes a deep space adventure with his trusty toy Horsie, who he never goes anywhere without.

Ned is so keen on Space and stars and also has his pal ‘Hutchy’ who goes everywhere with him so this book sounds quite appropriate.

The Harry and Horsie story started out as a homemade gift from a nanny, Katie Van Camp for a little boy called Harry who is actually the son of David Letterman. Have a look at the gorgeous website for the book here.

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If you know a 2 to 5 year old Harry, this just has to be the perfect gift!

Giveaway – The Red Piano

The Red Piano

We did a post recently about the beautiful picture book The Red Piano published by Wilkins Farago. The Red Piano is in stores now and we have been lucky enough to have received two copies from Wilkins Farago to give away to readers.

To win a copy of this stunning book all you have to do is visit the Wilkins Farago website and then leave a comment on this post telling us of another Wikins Farago book that you think looks beautiful – there are lots.

Entries close Thursday 1 October.

When We Were Little…

A guest post by one of our favourite bloggers, Scribbler, founder and writer extraordinaire of the utterly fabulous blog called Vintage Kids’ Books My Kid Loves. She is mum to a 4-year-old aficianado of vintage kids’ books.

Molly Brett Goodnight Time Tales

I’ve loved books my whole life. Children’s picture books in particular, and if you read my blog, you know I sort of went nuts after I had my son… obsessively collecting books for him that I’d had as a child and ones I wished I’d had. I don’t remember exactly which Molly Brett title was my first… I just remember an American childhood filled with her books and illustrations. Wonderful little worlds inhabited by cuddly animals and fairies. Adorable wooded scenes with teddy bears and squirrel babies. A moss-covered wonderland where salamanders lead pet snails around on leashes. Owls wear top hats. Where children’s toys are in cahoots with sparrows. And frogs shop for sausage links. All the sorts of things little girls imagine to be happening right outside their bedroom windows when they are just out of ear shot.

Molly Brett beach illustration

A native of Surrey, England, Molly’s mother was a painter of animals, so although Molly had no training, she was a natural at creating the stories so many children around the world came to love. Under her publisher, The Medici Society of London, she produced 21 books and countless illustrations for greeting cards and prints before her death at 88 years old in 1990.

Molly Brett tea party

I spent hours and hours of my youth, poring over these intriguing tales, then would close my eyes at night and wish and pray they were real. Oh, what I would have given to be invited to an animal tea party! One of my favorite stories from this book in particular is called “The New Policeman” and involves a mess of sweet forest animals driving around in toy cars:

Fuzzy Hedgehog felt rather lonely as he scuttled through the wood, for the other animals found him too prickly to play with, although he longed for friends and to join in all that went on around him. Just then he saw a notice on an oak tree which said—‘Nest Builders and Hole Holders are asked to a Meeting to discuss the Dangers of Traffic on Winding Way.’

Well, one thing leads to another, and one can only imagine how proud Fuzzy must’ve felt when he received his policeman’s helmet and set to work making the traffic right. Delightful! If I remember correctly, most of her books were made up of a series of stories, each with one illustration in color and then sketches on the type-page in black and white.

Molly Brett Fuzzy Hedgehog

There is lots of Beatrix Potter on these pages, and one has to assume Molly grew up studying her books. There’s just something about the English countryside that breeds this sort of enchantment. Brett… Potter… Milne. The landscapes and gardens are ripe for one’s imagination to pick. A medley of trickling brooks and sparkling skies. Shadows and toadstools and beds of leaves hidden beneath shady branches. Really, I could wax poetic for a lifetime about these amazing people who brought the magic of England all the way across the pond to my own little bewitching corner of the globe. South Carolina might be a world away from Surrey, but to my childish heart, we were all living in the same hundred-acre wood.

Molly Brett illustration


Awesome World Foundation

For a long time we have been fans of Dallas Clayton and his gorgeous and inspiring work of art An Awesome Book. It has been the bestseller in our store since we began stocking it and we have even met people at Magnolia Square who have cried over it.

Dallas emailed us this week to let us know about his new project, An Awesome World Foundation, a charity he has created to promote literacy. The BIG dream that Dallas has is to donate one copy of An Awesome Book for every copy of An Awesome Book he sells! To achieve this he aims to distribute the donated books to hospitals, schools, camps and shelters worldwide and he wants each child to receive a copy directly, actually placed in their hands.

Watch this awesome video, you will be moved and definitely feel good about the world after you have seen it.

Awesome Book Tour from Dallas Clayton on Vimeo.

An Awesome Book is available in our online store and makes the perfect gift not just for children but for adults too. We are really happy to be able to share the BIG dream that Dallas has for the world.

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The wonderful Kids Style File have also featured Dallas Clayton today and you can read their post here.

Read an interview we did with Dallas here.

A Visitor For Bear

Reading aloud is such a joy when you have the right book and recently I bought one that has even won an award for being ‘terrific’ to read aloud.

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A Visitor For Bear won the E.B. White Read Aloud Award this year and deservedly so. Written by Bonnie Becker, the story is a whole lot of fun. Bear is comfortable being by himself, he has never had any visitors to his house and even has a sign to discourage any arriving in the future. Although bears feature quite heavily in children’s literature I think this bear is definitely one of my favorites.

No one ever came to Bear’s house.
It has always been that way,
and Bear was quite sure he didn’t like visitors.
He even had a sign.

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There is so much comedy in this story and it is great fun to play up while reading it aloud. A very persistent little grey mouse turns up to visit bear – much to his disgust – and hilarity ensues as the mouse continues to pop up causing the bear great anguish.

‘…there was the mouse! (Small and grey and bright-eyed of course.) “BEGONE!” roared Bear.’

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The illustrations match the text perfectly. Illustrator Kady MacDonald Denton captures the humour in the text by making the big brown bear exaggerated in his movements as he tries to make the mouse leave his house; he points to the door furiously, he jumps up and down and finally drops the floor with tears of frustration.

“I give up”, he blubbered. “You win, I am done”.’

Eventually they do a deal and the mouse agrees to leave after they have one cup of tea together.

The stunning format that the publisher Walker Books has used is a long paperback, with beautiful paper and MacDonald Denton makes use of all the space. The spreads are beautiful, one in particular as the mouse and bear kick back and have a cup of tea together, warming their feet by the fire.

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It is then that bear realises that maybe having a friend is not so bad after all. Not preachy, this is a fantastic story about friendship and letting people in, themes that affect both children and adults.

My Little Mouse

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Angelina Ballerina visited our house today as captured on mobile phone camera above. I have had the ears for years but today Ned decided he quite liked them, although he has put them on backwards.

To top off the day when I told him it was dinner time he answered “No mummy, I’m reading”!

Borrowed and Thrifted

Book Affair in Carlton has moved, not very far, just to the other side of Elgin Street. It’s a fantastic new shop over three levels and the children’s books are in a little nook below the stairs in the basement.

There was still a lot of children’s books to unpack when I went in but I did find one gem that I love. It is a shaped board book called The Wonderful Colourful Butterfly. I can’t tell you much about the author, Gottfried Herold or the illustrator Hajo Blank because the little info I have found is in German.

The book is shaped like a butterfly and I can’t help but laugh everytime I open the book. Each page is a different butterfly illustrated comically, each with a human like face and the best expressions. My favorite is The Blue, pictured below.

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The author writes some text on the back of the book about a butterfly’s life cycle from caterpillar, to cocoon, to flying around the garden.

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There is a little bit lost in the translation from German to English I think.  The last paragraph is very cute…

‘Without butterflies, we would probably be the poorer, for it’s beauty is no more than a gentle breath.

Beauty, however, makes the world a little warmer, more liveable and miraculous.’

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