Saturday, July 23, 2011

Eating Habits: Where'd They Come From?

In Patricia Lauber's non-fiction picturebook, What You Never Knew About Fingers, Forks, and Chopsticks (illustrated by John Manders), we get answers, sometimes serious other times funny, to just this question. Going all the way back to the Stone Age, Lauber speculates how cavemen could have developed the first knife-like instrument: a piece of flint to possibly cut meat. The funny part is her idea how a caveman could've stubbed his toe on a piece of the sharp stone, cutting himself, and then thinking, basically, Well, if it can cut the meat of my toe, perhaps this flint can make cutting meat to eat easier too. Lauber moves forward through time to the Bronze Age and well beyond, then from one culture to another, showing how different cultures or peoples have taken to eating. It's a cool book. Kids should like it.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

A Graphic Collection of Native American Trickster Tales

Though a great many of us have either heard or read Trickster tales (Br'er Rabbit being among the most common to the general readership, while the form is also closely associated with American Indians), this book edited by Matt Dembicki (himself not an Indian) is indeed one of a kind. Though it is jam-packed with Native American trickster tales (mostly involving animals or animal/human beings), what sets this book apart from any other is the format. In place of the text-based rendering of such tales, we get these very stories but set to comic book form.

Though a very interesting concept and a fairly solid collection of graphic shorts, the trickster tale does tend to be a tad overdone (though I get that this is the concept for the book). Most of them are of the "here's how this animal ended up looking this way or that" variety. I'd recommend educators using this book selectively. Teachers can read the book, choose their favorite tales and bring those to class. The alternative is that students would read the whole book and wonder if this is it for Native American writing, which is so not Dembicki's hope for the book: from his "From the Editor" note:

"The point wasn't to westernize the stories for general consumption, but rather to provide an opportunity to experience authentic Native American stories, even if it sometimes meant clashing with Western vernacular.

"I hope this book serves as a bridge for readers to learn more about the original people of this land and to foster a greater appreciation and understanding among all inhabitants" (225).

My particular favorites that I'd so use with middle school readers/writers/artists include "Rabbit and the Tug-of-War"by Michael Thompson and illustrated by Jacob Warrenfeltz, "Rabbit's Choctaw Tail Tale" by Tim Tingle and illustrated by Pat Lewis,  "Giddy Up, Wolfie" by Greg Rodgers and illustrated by Mike Short, and "When Coyote Decided to Get Married" by Eirik Thorsgard and illustrated by Rand Arrington.

Visit cartoonist Dembicki's blog for news on this book: http://matt-dembicki.blogspot.com/.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Chris Crowe's Next Biography

Just As Good: How Larry Doby Changed America's Game, written by Chirs Crowe and Illustrated by Mike Benny (http://mikebenny.com/) is due out in January of 2012. I love Crowe's other books: Getting Away With Murder: The True Story of the Emmett Till Case, Thurgood Marshall: A Twentieth Century Life, and the novel Mississippi Trial, 1955, and though I haven't read this picture book, I'm so looking forward to it!

Though Crowe has written fiction, he's quickly become a first rate biographer, whose focus is the Civil Rights Movement and various of its predecessor events and figures. Partner this latest book with We Are the Ship and Strong Right Arm, and you've got a great unit on baseball, the part African Americans have played in it, and the struggle for equal rights.

Monday, July 11, 2011

A Great Read, In Spite of Our Own Dry Weather

The Dust Bowl: Through the Lens: How Photography Revealed and Helped Remedy a National Disaster by Martin W. Sandler is a great collection of famous and not so famous photos of the Dust Bowl era, including perhaps the most famous of them, "Migrant Mother" shot by Dorothea Lange. Each photo comes with some really solid research oftentimes tied directly to the photo, other times using the photo as a place from which to start. Partner it with Karen Hesse's Out of the Dust and you've got yourself a very interesting and moving set of reads.


Other titles of interest by Sandler:
Vaqueros: America's First Cowmen (Henry Holt, 2001)
America Through the Lens: Photographers Who Changed the Nation (Henry Holt, 2005)