Lucia and the Light

Happy Santa Lucia Day!  My own little Lucia (and her big brother Starboy) served us dinner by candlelight this evening instead of the traditional breakfast in bed, which can be a little harder to manage on a schoolday.  Later we read this lovely book, a favorite from last year:  Lucia and the Light by Phyllis Root; illustrated by Mary GrandPre (Candlewick, 2006).  Note:  The Lucia of Root's original folktale is not the same as the Italian saint or the Swedish legend.  We know; and we don't care!  This is still an appropriate book to read on Santa Lucia Day and around the time of the winter solstice (after all, in the Julian calendar December 13 was the winter solstice).

lucia%20and%20the%20light.jpgLucia and the Light was inspired by Scandinavian mythology (and Minnesota winters).  It's about a brave girl who climbs a snowy mountain in search of the sun and, with the help of her milk-white cat, rescues it from the trolls so it can resume its rightful place in the sky.  I love the opening lines:

"Lucia and her mother and baby brother lived with a velvet brown cow and a milk-white cat in a little house at the foot of a mountain in the Far North.  The cow gave milk, the cat slept by the fire, and the baby cooed and grew fat by the hearth.  They were happy together, even when winter piled snow outside their door."

Who could resist that scene?  Not I.  I adore Phyllis Root's work, its rich and rhythmic language.  And Mary GrandPre's (yes, that Mary Grandpre's) illustrations, done in pastels, manage to be luminous even when there is no light.  Brava Lucia!

Fall Book Basket

The fall books are back on the shelf today.  I pulled them from here and there around the house in September and put them all together in a new basket just for seasonal books.  I'm not sure if we read them a lot more than we would have anyway, but at least they were easier to find when we did want to read books about back-to-school, Halloween, autumn leaves, and Thanksgiving.  Some new books found their way into our fall book basket this year, too:

We Gather Together: Celebrating the Harvest Season by Wendy Pfeffer; illustrated by Linda Bleck (Dutton Children's Books, 2006).  Non-fiction picture book about harvest celebrations from the past that are still carried on all over the world today.  We also added two of Bleck's retro-inspired Pepper the Dog books ("Pepper plays, pulls, and pops!") to our collection (Milly insisted).

How Many Seeds in a Pumpkin? by Margaret McNamara; illustrated by G. Brian Karas (Schwartz & Wade Books, 2007).  This one inspired an afternoon of seed counting (by twos, fives, and tens) at our house.  I really like Karas's illustrations, from the autumnal palette to the many multicultural faces of the children in Mr. Tiffin's class.  Perfect all season.

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Boo and Baa Have Company by Lena and Olof Landstrom (R&S Books, 2006).  I like Swedish children's books in general, but we all adore Boo and Baa.  The droll, deadpan text and the remarkably expressive illustrations of these two googly-eyed and clueless sheep work together perfectly: the result is hilarious.  Apparently there is a whole series of Boo and Baa board books which are not readily available in the States (believe me, I've looked).  Good thing I can read this one over and over again and still think it's great.

Most of our seasonal books come from the library:  we go at least once at week, and we have lots of books out at a time.  These we get to live with all year round, even when it's not their turn in the seasonal book basket.

[Thank you for your patience with the last of this year's fall books.  Now it's time for winter...and Christmas!]

Happy Birthday, Pippi Longstocking!

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It's not actually Pippi's birthday today (November 14), it's Astrid Lindgren's.  It would have been her 100th.  In honor of her centennial, the House of Sweden in Washington, DC is hosting a series of events and exhibits with the theme Children First!  I took the kids (Leo, age 7, and Milly, age 3) last weekend, and we spent an hour or so in the Reading Room alone, looking at all the Swedish children's books (from Elsa Beskow and Sybille von Olfers to Lindgren and new favorites Lena and Olof Landstrom, as well as many others:  I'll be writing about some of them here).  The Reading Room is a cheerful, colorful place to spend a rainy afternoon:  besides the books, which are reason enough to visit, there are toys, games, and lots of bright red cushions to curl up on.  Or jump in.  I'm sure Pippi (and Astrid) would approve.