Clatter Bash! A Day of the Dead Celebration by Richard Keep

Multicultural Literature, Uncategorized No Comments

This book is about the Mexican holiday Day of the Dead, and shows what kind of celebrations and noises that arise during this time of celebration. It is a really great rhyming book and it’s really colorful too. 

 

Chanticleer And The Fox

Traditional/Folk Literature, Uncategorized No Comments

611awd44hjl__sl500_bo2204203200_aa219_pisitb-sticker-dp-arrowtopright-24-23_sh20_ou01_.jpgThere is a widow with two daughters and one of the animals she has is a rooster named, Chanticleer. Chanticleer had a beautiful crow that everyone loved to hear, and one of his seven wives had a beautiful crow too. They would sing together in perfect harmony. One day Chanticleer was having a bad dream, so she woke him up and ask what was wrong. He explained to her that he was having a bad dream that a fox came and grabbed him up from the yard. She brushed off the dream and said she could not be in love with someone that was not fearless. The very next day, a fox was waiting for the perfect moment in the herd bushes. Chanticleer so him, the fox gloated about how well he thought Chanticleer could sing, so he started to sing for the fox and then he was grabbed up. The fox took off and everyone, the widow, her daughter, the sheeps, and all the other animals, took off after the fox. When Chanticleer asked the fox a question he answered and this is when Chanticleer escaped from the foxes mouth. The lesson is that you cannot trust in flattery.

Paul Bunyan

Traditional/Folk Literature No Comments

This is a story about a baby who was big for his age.  It was said that it took five storks to deliver him Paul to his mother.  Instead of playing with toys like other children, Paul played with an axe.  It is said that Paul did great things with his axe, therefore this tale has been passed down for some time now. 

“Cinderella” (Pop-Up Book Published by Grandreams USA)

Traditional/Folk Literature No Comments

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The fairy tale entitled “Cinderella” is one of the most beloved of all the folktales.  It is the story of a beautiful young maiden whose daily hard work was unappreciated and taken for granted by a mean stepmother and two ugly stepsisters.  When the stepsisters and stepmother, dressed in finery, were on their way to a ball hosted by Prince Charming, Cinderella, dressed in rags, uttered her desire to accompany them.   She was told to go back to work because the Prince would never want to dance with a girl in rags.  Cinderella ran back to the kitchen and sobbed in despair, only to be comforted by mice (who were the only friends that she knew).

She then heard another voice — the voice of her Fairy Godmother!  The magical transformation of an ordinary pumpkin into a grand coach with a coachman sitting on top, six mice into six beautiful white horses, and Cinderella’s raggedy clothes into a beautiful gown befitting a princess simply by waving her wand elicits a desire within readers and listeners for a fairy godmother of their own!

When Cinderella arrived at the ball, the Prince was smitten by her striking beauty and asked her to dance, causing the mean stepsisters to think that Cinderella truly was an unknown princess.

The headiness of the event caused Cinderella to forget her Fairy Godmother’s admonition that she must leave before midnight!  The striking of the clock caused her to remember, but her magical things were already disappearing as she ran from the ballroom; the only thing that remained was one of her glass slippers.  That slipper was the identifying object that led Prince Charming to his future wife, Cinderella, whose ugly stepsisters wept in a jealous rage over Cinderella’s enviable fate.  (Their feet had been too big to fit the slipper!)

The pop-up illustrations within this abbreviated version of this rags-to-riches, happily-ever-after folktale will enthrall ALL who read or see this book!

Stone Soup by Ann McGovern

Traditional/Folk Literature No Comments

Cover ImageThis story is about a small hungry boy who needs something to eat. He visits an old lady who tells him she has no food, so he offers a stone to make soup. By the time they finish they have a wonderful soup. After they eat, he takes his soup and continues on his journey thinking about the wonderful dinner for the next day.

Anna and the Seven Swans by Maida Silverman

Traditional/Folk Literature No Comments

Anna and the Seven Swans Anna and the Seven Swans is a warm story about a little girl that is told to look after her little brother Ivan while her parents are away. Anna mistakenly turns her attention away from Ivan for a moment too long and he is captured by the evil witch, Baba Yaga’s, swans. On Anna’s journey to get Ivan back, she stops along the way to perform three acts of kindness that benefit her in the end. This is a magical tale that depicts the power of kindness with wonderful illustrations.

The Gingerbread Boy by Paul Galdone

Traditional/Folk Literature No Comments

A little gingerbread boy thinks he can outrun everybody. Everybody was trying to eat him and he managed to get away. He thought he was getting good at outrunning everybody until he met his match and wasn’t so lucky. He was eaten.

Jamie O’Rourke and The Big Potato By:Tomie DePaola

Traditional/Folk Literature No Comments

imagedb.jpgAbout the time that Jamie O’Rourke’s wifes back goes out, he is lazy but lucky, and traps himself a leprechaun.  From this leprechaun, Jamie wins a single wish.  He wishes for all the potatoes he can eat. However, he may have bitten off more than he can chew.

Rapunzel by Paul O. Zelinsky

Traditional/Folk Literature No Comments

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A pregnant woman craves some rapunzel from a sorceress’s garden.  Her husband gets her some, but it costs him his unborn child.  The sorceress raises young Rapunzel; when Rapunzel is put into a tower with no doors when she is 12.  A prince falls in love with her and gets into the tower using her hair.  When she ends up pregnant, the sorceress banishes her to the wilderness and blinds her prince.  Eventually the prince finds his bride and their 2 children.

This book is a Caldecott Medal Award Winner.

Now and Ben by Gene Barretta

Non-Fiction/Informational, Uncategorized No Comments

This book puts in perspective what a great inventor Ben Franklin was.  Things such as odometers, lightening rods, and bifocals were all due to his genius.  It shows on one page Ben making the invention, and on the other us using it .  This is a great book to read to students while discussing history. 

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