Category Archives: Books

Recommended Reads: Mo Willems

I’ve been going through the kids’ books and, as much as it pains me to get rid of some of their first books, I found quite a few that I must recommend to folk with younger children.

Mo Willems is one of my favorite authors of children’s books. Willems once worked for Sesame Street as a writer and illustrator, winning 6 Emmy’s for his work. He has a great imagination and it shows in his lovable characters and amusing stories.

I believe our first peek into the wonderful world of Willems was the book Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale, a story of what happens when Trixie can’t find her beloved stuffed rabbit after a trip to the laundromat. The characters are illustrated but the backgrounds are pictures of a real New York neighborhood.Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!- The tables are turned as your child has to tell the pigeon, “no,” as he begs to drive the bus using explanations that sound pretty familiar to parents. Just once around the block? I’ll be your best friend. The subsequent Pigeon adventures (The Pigeon Finds a Hot Dog!, Don’t Let the Pigeon Stay Up Late!, and more) are an amusing read for any child. Look out for the Pigeon in all of Willem’s books. He hides in backgrounds and inner covers. My kids loved to see who could spot him first.

Read more:

Have you read any of Willem’s work? Do you have a favorite author for the preschool set?

What We’re Reading Wednesday: The Overworked American

Most economists regard the spending spree that Americans indulged in throughout the postwar decades as an unambiguous blessing, on the assumption that more is always better. And there is a certain sense in this approach. It’s hard to imagine how having more of a desired good could make one worse off, especially since it is always possible to ignore the additional quantity. Relying on this little bit of common sense, economist have championed the closely related ideas that more goods yield more satisfaction, that desires are infinite, and that people act to satisfy those desires as fully as they can.

Now anyone with just a little bit of psychological  sophistication (to go with this little bit of common sense) can spot the flaw in the economist’s argument. Once our basic human needs are taken care of, the effect of consumption on well-being gets tricky. What if our desires keep pace with our incomes, so that getting richer doesn’t make us more satisfied? Or what if satisfaction depends, not on absolute levels of consumption, but on one’s level relative to others (such as the Joneses). Then no matter how much you possess, you won’t feel well off if Jones next door possesses more. (p. 9)

-The Overworked American: The Unexpected Decline of Leisure by Juliet B. Schor

This book was published in ’93. Not much has changed.

New Deal on the Kindle

Because I promised my mom I’d post it today:

Amazon has a new deal on the Kindle. The regular Kindle is still $139 but a model with “special offers and sponsored screeensavers” is only $114.

I think it’s their way of saying, “Thought reading a book was your last sanctuary from the constant bombardment of advertising? We found a way to fix that.”

From Amazon:

New, Lower Price
Get the same bestselling Kindle for $25 less—only $114.
Special Offers & Sponsored Screensavers
Receive special offers directly on your Kindle. Examples include:

  • $10 for $20 Amazon.com Gift Card
  • $6 for 6 Audible Books (normally $68)
  • $1 for an album in the Amazon MP3 Store (choose from over 1 million albums)
  • $10 for $30 of products in the Amazon Denim Shop or Amazon Swim Shop

Special offers and sponsored screensavers display on the Kindle screensaver and on the bottom of the home screen—they don’t interrupt reading.

I think Mom is still holding out for the Kindle 3G, while I am completely happy risking long-term injuries reading regular books.

What We’re Reading Wednesday: The Lord of the Rings

We finished rereading The Hobbit this weekend. I read it to Wesley when he was 5, but I wanted to read it again to make sure that Gracie was caught up. A lot of the time, I wasn’t sure if she was even listening. Toward the end, she burst into tears when some of the main characters died (if you don’t know who, get thee to Amazon). I guess she was listening after all.

As soon as we finished, Wesley insisted that we proceed directly to The Lord of the Rings.

Paul pulled out a a large hardback tome housing the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy that a friend had given to him when he was a teenager (back before steam power). It’s dark red with embossed designs on the cover and a map that unfolds from inside. I’ve always been a sucker for a book with a map in it.

The kids and I were duly impressed but I am risking a wrist injury by trying to hold the whole thing up, especially when Wesley gets his way and we read 50 pages at a time.

My father read all of these books to us when we were kids. I remember the trilogy being decidedly darker than The Hobbit. The Lord of the Rings is no barrel of dwarves. I still remember getting cold chills at the parts with the Ring Wraiths or the sounds of footsteps following them in the mines of Moria. I’m looking forward to scaring the crap out of sharing the experience with my own kids.

What We’re Reading Wednesday: Douglas Florian

We recently discovered the works of Douglas Florian. He writes children’s books of poetry on different topics and has quickly become a favorite in our house.   So far we have read Dinothesaurus, Mammalabilia, and Laugh-eteria, and I plan on finding everything else Florian has written and illustrated.
The poems are hilariously punny and the kids have quite a few of them memorized. (I’ll have to wait for Wesley to get up to share the ibex poem.)

Edit: He’s up now.

The daring ibex risk their necks
On scary, airy mountain treks
Each one must climb with skill complex,
Or else become an exibex.

The illustrations, “painted in gouache on primed brown paper bags,” are amusing and eye-catching. These are great books with tons of re-readability.

Caution: Your Kids Might Just End Up Just Like Their Parents

We’ve been having a problem with Wesley lately: He will stay up to all hours reading when he’s supposed to be asleep. Yay for reading, of course, but the biggest problems are the aftereffects. He sleeps in the next morning and spends the rest of the day arguing and complaining.

We have tried everything to make him stop. I took away his TV privileges, which seemed pretty silly. “Keep reading and you’ll never watch TV again! That’ll teach you!” We gave him half an hour of reading every night before bed if he would just please stop when it was over. We took his lamp away and he turned on his room light. We started patrolling the hallway more regularly (German Shepherds, searchlights, concertina wire…we go all out), and he started reading by the streetlight. Tonight I came upstairs and heard some rustling. I stepped into his room and gave him my best mommy-guilt eyebrow. He sadly lifted up his pillow to reveal two books hidden underneath like it was his meth stash.

This is a case of the nut not falling far from the tree. I used to and still do stay up way too late reading books. The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo series was my biggest problem last year. I read each one in 2 days and I was not fun to live with. I imagine. I’m not really sure. It’s all kind of a blur. I know I have a problem because it doesn’t even take a particularly good book to keep me up, hence the recent spate of Jack Reacher novels.

Wednesday night, while I was up reading The Dog Listener, he clandestinely stayed up reading The Lightning Thief. Thursday morning we were both grouchy. After much grousing about his math lessons (the day before he was learning long division and all of a sudden subtraction is “too hard”), I gave up and called school off for the day. We cuddled up on the couch and went back to reading. Now I’m an enabler.

.

Post Christmas Christmas Post: What a mom wants

Throughout December Paul threatened me with a Snuggie. He swore it would be my only present and I would love it. I assured him that the best thank-you note for a Snuggie would be divorce papers.

Luckily, my real present arrived in an Amazon box where it stayed until I opened it Christmas morning. Somehow the box made me anticipate it more than any wrapping paper could have. It meant books!

Thinking in Pictures: My Life with Autism I was a little thrown by the title of this book until I saw the author’s name: Temple Grandin. Then I remembered an excellent BBC documentary I watched quite a while ago entitled The Woman Who Thinks Like a Cow. It was a very intriguing story of a woman born with severe autism (available on YouTube here and highly recommended) who now has a PhD and a successful career. Paul heard her on NPR and thought I would like the book. I do. Temple Grandin does an excellent job of describing autism from the inside. Her description of sensory sensitivity and sensory overload are eye-opening. I’m sure her suggestions for treatment and therapy will benefit many parents and caretakers of autistic children.

The Ordinary Parent’s Guide to Teaching Reading by Jessie Wise  This is another book I originally checked out at the library. Gracie wants to read so badly and I work with her quite a bit. However, I wanted something a bit more structured to get her on the right track. This book has short lessons that build up her reading skills and it has suggestions for fun activities to help her practice.  The book is set up in such a way that it is easy to skip ahead to the section she needs without any trouble. I’m also using it as a review for Wesley. I like that it is so comprehensive. It starts with letter sounds, builds up to longer letter combinations, and ends with words like “enthusiastically” and “anticipation.”

  A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir: Our library has this book and I read about three chapters before I took it back. There were so many passages and quotes that I wanted to highlight or underline that I didn’t want to read through it unless it was mine. That was a year ago. My dear husband remembered and bought it for me. Now I’m ready to get back into it.

After that cornucopia of literature, I was a happy camper, but Paul ran out to the car to get one more present… A heated throw for my shivery little self! Finally winter might be bearable after all. It’s so warm and comfy. It shuts off automatically after 3 hours so I won’t bake myself if I fall asleep under it. Of course now my living area is limited to the radius of the cord until April but that gets me out of doing laundry.  Best Christmas present ever!

Get Your Kids Into Sci-Fi Early

College Humor has Five Sci-Fi Children’s Books and they are awesome. If they were real, I’d buy every one of them for myself my kids.

Check out the rest here.

Via

We might have to have an intervention

I popped into Wesley’s room at 9:45 and he was lying there reading a book.

I said,”Aha! Reading again? I should have known! I’m so disappointed.”

He laughed and said, “You’re really proud, Mom.”

I said, warily, “I don’t know…I guess so.”

(pic by Shannon Archuleta)

Excerpt from last week’s book

But now, my dears, we think you might
Be wondering–is it really right
That every single bit of blame
And all the scolding and the shame
Should fall upon Veruca Salt?
Is she the only one at fault?
For though she’s spoiled, and dreadfully so,
A girl can’t spoil herself, you know.
Who spoiled her, then? Ah, who indeed?
Who pandered to her every need?
Who turned her into such a brat?
Who are the culprits? Who did that?
Alas! You needn’t look so far
To find out who these sinners are.
They are (and this is very sad)
Her loving parent MUM and DAD.
And that is why we’re glad they fell
Into the garbage chute as well.

-Oompa Loompas in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

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