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Third Carnival of Children’s Literature

Wild Rumpus


Welcome to the Third Carnival of Children’s Literature. Since April is National Poetry Month, the theme for this carnival is poetry. However, we have all sorts of posts, both poetic and prosaic, about children’s literature to give you enough reading to keep you busy all month. You can visit them all today (you glutton!) or bookmark this post and stop in daily for a dose of poetry and children’s literature all April long.

April 1 was, of course, April Fool’s Day, and we have some foolish fun posts just for a late celebration:
Susan at Chicken Spaghetti shares David Moody’s funny literary poem about Laura Numeroff (and other writers).
And then there are The Three Disco Mermaids who are actually three authors discussing writing for children. They must have been on the receiving end of a few rejection letters from publishers because their submission is 12 Form Rejections, a Christmas-time parody of the Twelve Days of Christmas using phrases from form rejection letters. With writers it’s all grist for the mill, right?

April’s not only National Poetry Month; it’s also Mathematics Education Month. So for April 2 (yesterday), head on over to At a Hen’s Pace to read about poetry, multiplication tables, and a very special teacher in the post, My Fourth Grade Poetry Muse.

Melissa Wiley In the Bonny Glen says today, April 3, is her due date (she’s great with child), so today is a great day to read her submission, Peeping at Spring with Poetry. I wonder if Melissa is peeping into the eyes of her new baby today?

April 4: It’s National Library Week (April 2-8, 2006), and Kim Winters, author of Kat’s Eye, an online journal featuring rants, raves, and musings about writing, balancing work and family, and life after the MFA, commits the Faux Pas of all Faux Pas in her post by the same name. Unfortunately, it involved a library book and RAIN.

April 5: Wednesdays are poetry days at The Immaculate Castle, and the family there recently found themselves memorizing Tennyson. Then, mom asked the question: What did Alfred Tennyson’s mother read to him as a child?

April 6: This week is also The Week of the Young Child (April 2-8, 2006). The Queen of Carrots is here with some advice on Poems To Say All Day Long. She writes, “The first introduction to poetry I can remember is the poems my mother would recite at suitable times. These are poems I find myself reciting to my little ones (both still under two) when the occasion arises.”
Meanwhile, Camille at Book Moot ponders Poetry and the Very Young. Do you consider a bookcase to be essential furniture in the nursery? Yeah, me too.

April 7 is the birthdate of the English poet Wiliam Wordsworth, and we join Cindy at Dominion Family as she puts together a bound family poetry book consisting of a few favorites from each member of the family. One of Cindy’s favorites is Lucy II by the birthday boy himself.

April 8: Happy Hearts Mom of the blog Sweetness and Light also reads poetry with her young children and helps the older ones to memorize poems. She writes about Poetry at Our House. The poems they’re memorizing? A.A. Milne, of course. The Deputy Headmistress at The Common Room has a wonderful tribute to Mr. Milne from his birthday back in January. Accept no substitutes, says she.

April 9: Palm Sunday. On April 9, 1865 General Robert E. Lee surrendered to General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House. The Civil War was over. Unfortunately, the enmity between North and South, and between black and white, was not over. Liz B. at A Chair, A Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy reviews the YA title, A Wreath for Emmett Till by Marilyn Nelson. The book is made up of a series of sonnets about the life and death of Emmett Till, a 14 year old black child who was brutally murdered for the “crime” of whistling at a white woman.

April 10: April is also Autism Awareness Month. The always-insightful blogger who is Blest With Sons talks about her family’s recent forays into poetry, from which she suggests that poems are best for the Asperger kids with which you’ve been blessed. It’s called Rhyme Time and features Mr. Milne—again.

April 11:Karen Edmisten says you are what you read. (Shhh! don’t tell anyone, especially not her husband, but she sometimes dog-ears pages to mark favorite passages—very gently.)
The Prattling Pastor’s Wife once thought poetry was a waste of time, until she discovered children’s poetry and later began to enjoy poetry with her own children. Now it’s Poetry Every Day.

April 12: On this day at sunset, the Jewish celebration of Passover begins. And Wordswimmer, a blog on writing and the writing process, with a special focus on writing for children, shares excerpts from a conversation with Yehuda Amichai, Israeli poet, on the writing process entitled Encouraging Words to a Young Poet.
In addition, Beverly Cleary is 90 years old today and the celebration includes D.E.A.R. Day. Do all you children’s literature aficionados know what D.E.A.R. stands for?

April 13: Maundy Thursday. Also the birthday of Thomas Jefferson and Lee Bennett Hopkins. So Many Books is Celebrating National Poetry Month with a poetry mad-lib. It’s not targeted for the younger set, but I think it would be a fun poetry game for children and young adults.

April 14: Good Friday. Also the anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination in Ford’s Theatre by John Wilkes Booth. Lincoln died on April 15, 1865.

April 15 is the birthdate of Leonardo Da Vinci, so it seems an appropriate date to read about the evolution of a painting. The Bluedorns show us how daughter Johannah creates a masterpiece: Piglet Paints a Picture, or, The Evolution of a Painting. I reviewed Johannh Bluedorn’s beautifully illustrated book, Bless the Lord: The 103rd Psalm here.

April 16: Resurrection Day.
It's Me Eloise



April 17: “In March 1957 Hilary Knight completed a painting of Eloise, which was hung in the lobby of the Plaza Hotel. On December 6, 1960 the Eloise painting disappeared from the hotel, and later that month Kay Thompson offered a reward for its return. It never turned up. On April 17, 1964 a new oil painting was completed by Hilary Knight, which is the one that currently hangs in the Plaza.” Fast Facts about Eloise from KidsReads. At Cajun Cottage they Absolutely Love, Love, Love Eloise! Read and find out why.

On April 18, 1906 the business section of San Francisco, California was destroyed by an earthquake and subsequent fire. Nearly 4000 people died.

April 19: ForKelly at Big A Little a, Wednesdays and poetry are a traumatic combination. Find out why in her post about two well known children’s poems, one a comforting favorite (“The Land of Counterpane”) and the other a trauma (“Monday’s child”).

April 20: Mathematics Education Month continues with Fibonacci numbers. Engineer Husband told me about this special series of numbers a long time ago, but I had no idea they could relate to poetry until I read Gregory K’s post The Fib at GottaBook in which he writes about using a very precise (and geeky!) form of poetry to help train the writing brain… and having fun doing it. I’m definitely going to try this idea out on the urchins. While you’re visiting GottaBook, check out some of Mr. K’s own poetry (links in the sidebar) and this post, Poetry, It’s Not Just for April Anymore.

April 21: San Jacinto Day. On this date, Texans commemorate the Battle of San Jacinto in which the Texicans under General Sam Houston defeated Mexican troops led by Dictator/General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna to gain Texas its independence from Mexico. On this day since author Chris Barton is a fellow Texan, the carnival features two of his posts on children’s literature: first the one he submitted, The Power of the One-Two Punch, and then the one your hostess couldn’t resist, a reflection on poetry called Stop. Me If You’ve Heard This One. Money quote: “I feel about poetry the same way I feel about Chinese food: While I may well find it delicious on the occasions when I partake, if you were to ask me right now if I’d like some, my instinctive response would be ‘No, thanks.'” Chris is a nonfiction kind of a guy.

April 22: Dawn just started her blog in March at By Sun and Candlelight, but she already has a plethora of posts, mostly about poetry. I thought this one, All Things Bright and Beautiful was a particularly good reminder for Earth Day. We can celebrate not just the Earth, but the Lord God who made it all.

On April 23, celebrate Shakespeare’s birthday with my dear cyber-friend MFS of Mental-Vitamin (who was once reprimanded for “dipping into a gilt-edged set of Shakespeare�s complete works. ‘You�ll ruin the pages!’ cried my mother as she swooped in to ‘save’ the books and promptly return them to their purely decorative function as knickknacks on her colonial-style drum table.” Ouch!). MFS has a much more enlightened attitude about books in her post, In the company of books.
Amanda at Wittingshire on The Bard’s Birthday (from last year), including a nine year-old’s reaction to Romeo and Juliet.
And for the last post in today’s Triple Treat, here’s Carmon of Buried Treasure on poetry and Shakespeare: Fun Poetry Lessons With Carmon.

April 24: Verse novels? Author Susan Taylor Brown has made list of novels for children and young adults that are written in verse form. YA author Brandi Lee reviews Ms. Brown’s verse novel, Hugging the Rock and another by Christine Ford called Scout. And Kim, One Over-Caffeinated Mom, also reviews Ms. Brown’s novel.

April 25: National TV Turn-off Week started yesterday. Isn’t a reading good historical novel a lot better way to entertain oneself than watching TV anyway? Henry Cate of Why Homeschool? recommends the historical novel A Thane of Wessex by Charles W. Whistler.

April 26: Birthday of Charles Francis Richter (b.1900), American author, physicist, and seismologist and also of John James Audubon (b. 1780), American artist and naturalist.

April 27: Ludwig Bemelmans was born on this date in 1898, and millions of children have visited “an old house in Paris that was covered with vines” since that time. Students for Literacy Ottawa runs free Reading Circles for Kids to improve their reading skills, so that they can read about Madeline and other heroes and heroines of children’s literature. This post highlights some of the other activities, besides reading, that are done at the circle to help the kids with their reading and to ensure they have fun. And who doesn’t love playing games?

April 28: Arbor Day. With apologies to Joyce Kilmer, Becky of Farm School gives us Poetry as broccoli, and a wrap-up for National Poetry Month,
described as “how to make poetry and broccoli palatable to kids, with links added to recent Farm School posts about poetry, to help celebrate National Poetry Month.” Lots of good stuff for a poetry-appreciating Arbor Day.
It’s also Poem in Your Pocket Day in New York City. Why don’t other cities celebrate this day?

April 29: Catherine Ross would appreciate our perusing her review of The Snail and the Whale by Julia Donaldson on this day. The book itself is “a poetic tale of adventure that reminds us that even the smallest creature are valuable.”Bluebonnet



April 30: The bluebonnets should be out in full force in Texas by the end of April, and so we end this edition of the Carnival of Children’s Literature with a post “introducing Miss Rumphius to the lover of children’s literature. She isn’t as well-known as Laura, Anne or Jo, but is a heroine for adults and children, deserving a place on the home library shelf. Barbara Cooney, her author, also illustrates her beautifully.” Read about The Lupine Lady from The Wellspring.

The Carnival of Children’s Literature is registered with the TTLB Ubercarnival.

Past carnivals:
First Carnival of Children’s Literature at Here in the Bonnie Glen by Melissa Wiley, our initiator and fearless leader. Email Melissa if you’re interested in hosting the carnival in future months.

Second Carnival of Children’s Literature at Chicken Spaghetti by Susan.

The May Carnival of Children’s Literature will be hosted at In the Bonny Glen. Submissions are due to Melissa by May 20.
Happy April everyone!

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

Melissa Wiley celebrates strawberries in the Bonny Glen.

Lanier Iverson reviews the documentary movie Ballet Russes, about the Russian ballet company.

Has any one tried making these Easter Story Cookies? It sounds like a great lesson.

Annie and her readers discuss the grocery budget, a subject near and dear to my heart.

Joseph Bottum on Beckwith and Baylor. If neither of those names rings a bell, you might still be interested in reading about the struggles of a Christian university to become a nationally recognized research university and still remain Christian. Mr. Bottum thinks Baylor has lost its chance to do so. I’m not so sure, but I’m prejudiced. Eldest Daughter attends Baylor, when she’s not NOT attending classes at the Sorbonne in France.

Blest With Sons hits another home run with her story, The Terrible, Horrible, God Made It Good, Bible Study Day. We Christians absolutely must learn to give grace to one another and allow God to bring judgment as He sees fit.

Book-Spotting #9

Dancer Daughter has a kindred spirit; another homeschooled girl is reading nine books at once. Here’s the list of DD’s nine in-process books; Autumn Rain doesn’t list her nine, but she has interesting thoughts on the reading life.

JavaMom posts her list of books-in-progress and books-just-read, and she asks, “What are you reading?” Share your reading-in-progress either here or there.

Cindy on How I Apply the Gospel to my Life Through Reading “Which is a better example to children, a little girl who is so good she won’t break the Sabbath even when her father insists upon it or a mouse who struggles with himself and his desire for greatness and finally finds peace by dying to himself and seeking the face of his king against fearful odds? Isn’t there always something distasteful about a goody-two-shoes? The Gospel is not for the pharisee but the sinner. I relate so much more to the depth of struggle my good friend Reepicheep faced than to Elsie’s simpering goodness.”

Amen. Preach it, sister.

The Third Carnival of Children’s Literature

. . . is coming up in April here at Semicolon. You may submit any post related to children’s literature; however, since April is National Poetry Month, the theme for the carnival is children’s poetry, developing an appreciation for poetry, enjoying poetry with children—you get the idea. Think Poetically.

Since I’m a rather prosaic sort of person, here are the prosaic details:

Email all submissions to me at sherryDOTearlyATgmailDOTcom by 6 PM, Saturday, April 1st. You should include the URL of your post, the title of the post, the URL of your blog, and a short description or teaser telling about the post you’ve submitted. Please include the words “third carnival of children’s literature” in the subject line of your email. Everyone is invited, so get those posts in now and beat the deadline.

I should have the carnival posted by Monday morning, April 3rd.

Past Carnivals of Children’s Literature:

First Carnival of Children’s Literature at Here in the Bonnie Glen by Melissa Wiley, our initiator and fearless leader. Email Melissa if you’re interested in hosting the carnival in future months.

Second Carnival of Children’s Literature at Chicken Spaghetti by Susan.

Book-Spotting #7

Carmon on the historical novels of G.A. Henty. I mentioned Henty here a couple of weeks ago, and someone asked some questions to which I didn’t really have answers. Carmon has the scoop.

Kathryn Judson discusses Pooh and the Philosophers by John Tyerman Wiliams (with Ernest Shepard illustrations, of course). I like the idea of this book: “In Which It Is Shown That All of Western Philosophy Is Merely a Preamble to Winnie-the-Pooh.”

Vera Ivanova and Anthony Esolen (Mere Comments) on the (Christian) orthodoxy of Charles Dickens. Did I ever tell you that I really like Dickens?

iMonk names names—of the authors that he’s read and enjoyed. And he dares anyone to evaluate the state or the content of his faith by the eclectic nature of his reading material.

Stefanie at So Many Books wrote a post about all the books she’s reading at one time.
Dancer Daughter rather sheepishly confessed to me today that she’s reading eight, yes e-i-g-h-t, books right now. She says she just can’t limit herself to one book at a time. Should I take her in for bibliotherapy? She’s reading Vanity Fair, Great Expectations, Alice in Wonderland, Jane Eyre, Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey, and three books by Madeleine L’Engle: The Irrational Season, Certain Women, and The Small Rain.
I’m only reading two books right now. How many books do you have going at once? Can anyone beat Dancer Daughter’s eight?

Book-Spotting #6

A novel in which the protagonist rewrites Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice because she believes the novel was really intended to be about Mary Bennett? I’m such an Austen fan; this plot idea could either be really entertaining or really bad.

Another Jane Austen tie-in: A movie is being made in UK about “the doomed love affair” between a young Jane Austen and Tom Lefroy, a young man of her acquaintance who later became Chief Justice of Ireland. The movie is based on the book,Becoming Jane Austen by Jon Spence.

This idea also sounds like fun: books about the history of a house, Home: The History of Everyone Who Ever Lived in Our House by Julie Myerson and The House By the Thames: And the People Who Lived There by Gillian Tindall. I wonder who lived in our house before we did? What if you found out something nasty while researching your house? Would it make any difference to you if your house had been the scene of a murder or some other horrible crime? Wow, this thread of thought is starting to remind me of Agatha Christie, particularly Sleeping Murder, the last of the Miss Marple mysteries.
(HT: Suitable for Mixed Company, a great blog for finding interesting tidbits about books and bookish things.)

The Slaves of Golconda have chosen The Virginian by Owen Wister for their next reading/reviewing selection. As I understand it, anyone can join in, and I may just do so since I’ve been intending to read this book for a long time.

Here’s a beautiful story about the power of great literature. Although Gilead didn’t affect me quite so profoundly as it did this lady, I did enjoy reading about how much she loved the book–because I liked it very much, too.

Stories Waiting

. . . no matter where you go, east, west, north, and south, there are stories. People are forever asking me where I get my ideas, but one only has to listen, to look, and to live with awareness. As I have said in several of my stories, all men look, but so few can see. It is all there, waiting for any passerby. Education of a Wandering Man by Louis L’Amour

Patry Francis, the novelist who blogs at Simply Wait, fits with this quotation. For all I know she got the name of her blog from Louis L’Amour’s book, although I can’t find anything that says so. Maybe great minds just think alike.

Anyway, I have been so impressed with way that Ms. Francis finds stories just lying in wait for her in the most unlikely places: a New Orleans cab, behind the scenes at the country club, at the gym, even walking by a neighbor’s house.

Ms. Francis obviously listens to the stories that intersect her life. That’s something I’d like to learn to do.

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

What fun! Norma at Collecting My Thoughts links to this “childhood in a jar” garage sale find. Now, this project is about at the level of my crafting abilities—which are zero to nonexistent. Even I could collect some stuff in a jar!

Fa-so-la-la at The Beehive shares a jarful of her life, telling the top ten or so things she’s learned in the past year. I’d say she’s learned a few valuable lessons.

Poppins on medieval marriage and romance. You might be surprised at her conclusion.

Jen Robinson has the scoop on two bookish celebrations coming up soon: Read Across America Day, March 2, and National D.E.A.R. Day on April 12th. I’m sure we’ll be celebrating here at Semicolon since each holidays is tied to an author’s birthday. Can you guess which children’s author was born on March 2nd and what other children’s author was born on April 12th? No peeking until you’ve guessed. Hint: The spokesperson for D.E.A.R. used to love Sustained Silent Reading time in her elementary school classroom.

Book-Spotting #5

Amanda Witt of Wittingshire has a list of books that her children love to read over and over again. Most of these are old friends, but a couple I’ve never heard of or never read. Rowan of Rin? My Family and Other Animals? And I tried one of the Swallows and Amazonsbooks a few years ago, but couldn’t get into it. Maybe some of these would be good prospects for THE LIST.

Several bloggers are talking about journalist Rod Dreher’s new book, Crunchy Cons, that’s “cons” as in conservatives, not convicts. In case you haven’t already read about it, here’s a Wall Street Journal review by George H. Nash.

Debra (As I See It Now) is re-reading Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson, also the author of Gilead. I haven’t read Housekeeping, but I want to–even more now that I know how much Debra likes it.

AJ of Bittersweet Life in defense of PD James.. She doesn’t need defending to me, but I like reading what Mr. Vanderhorst has to say anyway.

Circle of Quiet asks, “What title would you give to your autobiography–if you were to write one?” Interesting question, but I’m not too good at snappy titles. To This Great Stage of Fools: A Semicolon? (I must admit that I originally got the Semicolon thing from Eldest Daughter—who is good at snappy titles and many other things.)

Friday’s Center of the Blogosphere

If you’re a book person, you know that what the people of New Orleans need right now is . . . libraries. Read a story of New Orleans, churches, and libraries by Joe KcKeever.

Here’s a different kind of a story of Elizabethan poetic dialogue between Sir Walter Raleigh and Christopher Marlowe, thanks to Amanda at Wittingshire.

Contributors to National Review Online (NRO) discuss the “most conservative love stories.” Some of the candidates are: Levin and Kitty, Elizabeth and Darcy (natch!), Newland Archer and Countess Olenska, or the lovers in Song of Solomon. What do you think is the most conservative love story ever told?

Melissa Wiley on the quiet joy of having a child who is not physically perfect.

AJ at Bittersweet Life asks some questions about causality. It’s interesting. I noticed long ago that when children ask “why” and “why” again and then “why” again, the only ultimate answer is “because God made it that way.” So, how do unbelievers answer the Why Question?

First Carnival of Children’s Literature at Melissa Wiley’s Here in the Bonny Glen.
The Second Carnival of Children’s Literature will be held at Chicken Spaghetti on March 5. Submissions are solicited now through March 3rd.
Carnival of UnSchooling at ATypical Homeschool.