There are better versions out there. This is a simple volume of 13 traditional nursery rhymes, one rhyme on each two page spread, accompanies by full-page painted illustrations. The illustrations were a bit bland and washed out. But it’s got a really sturdy binding!
Author Archives: Courtney Morgan
Faith: five religions and what they share
This is a beautiful, informative, and valuable book. Our world is so often torn apart when we look at the things that divide us. This is a text on comparative religions that uses the approach of looking at similarities. It starts with a brief description of what faith is, and what the five most common world religions are. It then looks at various elements that are common to many or all of these, such as sacred texts, symbols, prayers, etc. It is illustrated with photographs (often of children), and next to each photograph is a simple caption stating which religion it is depicting. I think every school library needs to have this book.
Your Moon, My Moon
This book is one that just makes you go, “ahhh…” For every kid who has relatives who live far away, this touching book about a grandmother missing her grandson will touch home. The text is downright poetical. The illustrations are beautiful. After comparing all the ways life is different where she lives from where he lives, it ends with the acknowledgment that they share the same moon.
Simple Machines
Over all, I am generally a fan of Scholastic’s True Book series, but this one didn’t seem to do as good a job as the others of really getting concrete and clear in its explanations of complex scientific concepts. Perhaps it was a function of how much material they were trying to cover within the same number of pages, but the information seemed to skim a bit more across the surface level. It’s not bad, but I think it would have been stronger if it had gone more in depth, maybe having a different volume for each type of simple machine.
Energy
Like other books in this series, this one takes some pretty abstract scientific concepts (such as the difference between different types of energy), and explains them in simple terms, using concrete examples that are familiar to students. It’s a useful and worthwhile tool to support the science curriculum, though it’s unlikely to be chosen for recreational reading.
Experiments with Motion
This book does a good job (as I have found to generally be the case with this series) of taking some pretty complex scientific concepts, such as friction, inertia, and centrifical force, and explain them in clear and understandable language. It sets up several experiments to illustrate its points that students could fairly easily replicate on their own. In addition to the experiments for students, it also includes information about famous scientists and the early discoveries regarding motion. I do however have one and a half gripes: gripe number one is that when it is describing the effects of centrifugal force, it never actually names it as such, missing a perfect opportunity to build scientific vocabulary; my half gripe is that it sets up experiments for students to conduct, and then proceeds to describe what the results would be, thereby taking away the need for students to actually try it themselves (but it’s only half a gripe, because I grudgingly acknowledge that this way students who wouldn’t bother to do the experiments may actually learn from them anyway).
Tom Thumb
This is actually a collection of four of Grimms’ tales: Tom Thumb, The Fisherman and His Wife, Hans in Luck, and The Seven Swabians. I would have liked it better if Eric Carle had dedicated an individual book to each of the first three (the last one was a little odd — could’ve just not bothered). His distinctive and fabulous artwork is what makes Eric Carle’s work so amazing, but this volume had too high a ratio of white space and words to somewhat limited artwork.
Lives of the Presidents: fame, shame (and what the neighbors thought)
I loved this book. I put off reading it for a long time because I thought it was going to be a chore, but it was actually a lot of fun, and I learned a lot, too. A collective biography of U.S. presidents from George Washington to Barak Obama, this book focuses more on who the presidents were as people, rather than focusing on policies and politics. With some of the less interesting presidents earning only 1/3 of a page, and others granted four whole pages, each biography includes a caricature, birth and death dates and locations (where applicable), and an interesting look at who that president was, including bits about their marriages and family lives, and what kinds of foods they liked to eat, as well as some pertinent historical stuff. I gotta tell you — over the years we’ve had some pretty useless presidents. I just wish they included at the beginning of each (or else a timeline somewhere) the dates for which each was president.
The Lincoln Memorial
Other than as a souvenir from one’s visit to the Lincoln Memorial, I’m not really sure what the purpose or target audience of this book is. It’s got a lovely, sturdy binding, and it’s even got good solid information presented in simple-enough language for young readers. I just don’t think it has enough information to warrant the cost of a book all of it’s own. The same information could be offered within a book more broadly about Lincoln, or about Washington D.C. I can’t recommend spending this much money for a book with such a narrow niche.
Magritte’s Marvelous Hat
I wish the author’s note in the back of this book had been printed in the front instead. Unless students are already fairly familiar with the artist’s work, they won’t know until the end (if they bother to read it) that the illustrations in the story are based on the surreal paintings of Rene Magritte. Though the artwork is certainly intriguing on its own, and the occasional clear pages which alter the pages behind them with just a turn of the page will delight readers, the story of this artistic dog who purchases a mysterious hat that goes off on adventures of its own is certainly more grounded when read with some context. Those readers who don’t bother reading the author’s note may be left puzzling over the book (which I guess is what happens when one views surreal art, too). This is one of those picture books which could be useful in high schools as well, as part of the art curriculum.