“I wish for a change and a friend,” says Little Pig, when he learns these three new words. And just like that, it happens. Simple, easy, wonderful!
Wish, Change, Friend, which is written by Ian Whybrow and illustrated by Tiphanie Beeke (and which seems to be, sadly, out of print) is a brilliant, charmingly illustrated picture book that tells the story of someone - Little Pig - who inspired to get outside of his box. Little Pig lives alone in the forest. He loves to read, and he has all the books and acorns and twigs that he needs. Until one day he finds three words in one of his books: wish, change, and friend.
The next morning, after making his wish for a change and a friend, he wakes up to find that it’s snowed (a change). He makes a snowman, who comes alive (a friend). Little Pig decides he likes these new experiences, and so he and his snow friend take a journey. They meet a penguin, who himself has been reading and
who is learning new words: pig and together. Well, what do you know? Pig is there! And he and his snow friend are together with the penguin! They ponder the fantasticness of this, and then decide that together is the best word of all. The end!
I read this book with kindergartners right before the holiday break (winter theme) and I was a tad worried that the book was too existential for them. But it wasn’t. They got it. They really did. Just like Little Pig, they make text to self connections all the time. And if you’re going to believe a talking, reading pig whose snowman comes alive, the coincidence of wandering off and finding a talking, reading penguin who just happens to be learning new vocabulary about YOU makes total sense!
After I read it (twice) we did some really fun collage art, too!
Snow, by Uri Shulevitz, is a wonderful celebration of what a pure JOY snow can be, especially through the eyes of a child. It sums up that feeling you had when you were a kid (and can still have now you’re a grown-up), when you wish and wish and wish for it to snow…and then it does. Even when the radio and tv say differently:
But snowflakes don’t listen to radio,
snowflakes don’t watch television.
All snowflakes know is snow, snow, and snow.
This book has a very few words mixed in with marvelous, humorous illustrations that you need to pause and pore over before turning the page. When I read it to a group of 1st graders last year we looked at each page slowly, then the next, and the next, until I got to the final, satisfying page. Everyone was quiet when I was done. We were all wishing for snow.
This morning I could not get the song “Let it Snow” out of my head. Probably because we’re listening to a streaming Christmas radio station in the library, or maybe because it’s almost Thanksgiving break, which makes it almost Christmas break, which leads to January, which is pretty much the only month in central NC when we might get snow.
In honor of that song (which is now once again stuck in my head), I want to talk about a sweet little picture book about snow: Tracks in the Snow by Wong Herbert Yee. This is a cozy little book about a girl who takes a walk in the snow, following some mysterious tracks: “Tracks in the snow / Tracks in the snow / Who made the tracks? / Where do they go?” goes the refrain, and the little girl speculates it could be a rabbit, a bear, a hippopotamus, a duck, a woodchuck, or a number of other animals.
Wong Herbert Yee, who I know from the Fireman Small books (a favorite to read during Fire Safety week or any time kindergarten and 1st grade talk about community helpers), illustrates the story with soft, stippled watercolors that somehow make me think of the quiet inherent in walking by oneself through a snowy landscape.
Tomorrow: more books on snow!
Snowflake Bentley, by Jacqueline Briggs Martin, is a wonderful picture-book biography about Wilson Bentley, the man who first photographed snow crystals. It’s a wonderful story of perseverence and focus and perfectly relevant, too: even though the events in this book took place well over a hundred years ago, who doesn’t see the wonder in that first falling snowflake?
The pictures are gorgeous, and in fact, the illustrator, Mary Azarian, won a Caldecott medal for the woodcuts she uses to portray Bentley’s life. The text is pretty fantastic, too. It’s a longish book, for a picture book, but when I’ve read it
to 6 and 7 year-olds they stay riveted to every word. Part of it is Martin’s wonderful, descriptive text: Bentley thought “snow was as beautiful as butterflies, or apple blossoms,” and part of it is the detailed illustration.
Snowflake” Bentley was a truly inspirational man, and even small children can recognize that his life illustrates a life with purpose and meaning, and his devotion to finding a way to photograph snow personifies the idea of keeping a dream alive.
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