Saturday, July 27, 2019

Cinnamon

Neil Gaiman
pictures by Divya Srimivasan
2017

I'm definitely a fan of Neil Gaiman, though I don't love all his books.  (Coraline and Neverwhere are favorites). This book is a great pairing with the illustrator Divya Srimivasan.  I thought this might be based on the Indian Folktale:  The Brahmin Girl that Married a Tiger but it certainly is not!  I think this is what Gaiman does so well- takes common elements of folk and fairy tales, but twists and weaves them into his own original story.  He doesn't simply retell a story, instead, he leaves you with a feeling of something old and familiar but also mysterious and slightly dark and dangerous.   

In this tale, a young Indian princess is blind and does not talk.  Her parents offer "a room in the palace, a field of stunted mango trees, a portrait of the Rani's aunt executed on hardwood in enamels, and a green parrot, to any person who could get Cinnamon to talk".   They are certainly surprised when a fierce tiger shows up for the task!  And he teaches Cinnamon in an unexpected way.  The ending does not wrap up as most princess tales do, but is satisfying none the less.








Thursday, July 18, 2019

Anna's Summer Song

Summer is well underway.  The days have been hot and humid and the cicadas are in full chorus.  Lena Anderson's pictures, each featuring a flower or plant are full of Summer feelings.  The poems by Mary Steele are fine, (some better than others) describing such summer things as honeysuckle scent at night, ferns in the rain, and cornflowers by the road.  Some books are just easily appealing, like long summer days...

Mary Q. Steele
pictures by Lena Anderson 1988






















Wednesday, July 17, 2019

The Provensen Book of Fairy Tales



compiled and illustrated by Alice and Martin Provensen
1971

The Provensen's have illustrated some fine books.  This collection of fairy tales has many full page illustrations showcasing their work.   In the introduction they explain that the stories are literary versions of the fairytales.  All the classics are here.


How beautiful is this contents page?!







If you are a fan of the Provensens, this is a must have!

Thursday, July 11, 2019

Tom's Midnight Garden



Philippa Pearce
illustrated by Susan Einzig 1992


I absolutely LOVED this book.  Published in 1958, somehow it was unknown to me until Charlotte picked up a copy at the thrift store.  The cover was cheesy but the title intrigued her and you just never know what delights you might discover (L.M Boston was found this way!).

The writing and plot does, in fact, remind me a bit of Boston's Greene Knowe.  Because of his brother's measles, Tom has to spend weeks with his aunt and uncle in their very boring apartment.  But it turns out that the apartment house used to be a grand country manor and the most extraordinary thing occurs when the old grandfather clock in the lobby strikes thirteen!

     "Thirteen?  Tom's mind gave a jerk:  had it really struck thirteen?  Even mad old clocks never struck that.  He must have imagined it.  Had he not been falling asleep, or already sleeping?  But no, awake or dozing, he had counted up to thirteen.  He was sure of it.

     He was uneasy in the knowledge that this happening made some difference to him:  he could feel that in his bones.  The stillness had become an expectant one; the house seemed to hold its breath; the darkness pressed up to him, pressing him with a question:  Come on, Tom, the clock has struck thirteen- what are you going to do about it?"

What Tom finds blends magic and mystery and all the glorious adventures of childhood.  Philippa Pearce has written a story that conjures up fantasy and ghosts and that peculiar fascination with Time that always draws me in.

     "Tom was thinking about the Past, that Time made so far away.  Time had taken this Present of Hatty's and turned it into his Past.  Yet even so, here and now, for a little while, this was somehow made his Present too- his and Hatty's.  Then he remembered the grandfather clock, that measured out both his time and Hatty's, and he remembered the picture on the face."

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Talking to the Sun

Kenneth Koch and Kate Farrell 1985

Wonderful collection of poems paired with artwork from The Metropolitan Museum of Art.  The poems span centuries, countries, cultures, and forms.  The Preface says it all...