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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: cinco de mayo, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!

It’s Cinco de Mayo! Celebrate by sharing these books starring the holiday itself, Mexican and Mexican American protagonists, and the Spanish language — all recommended by The Horn Book Magazine and The Horn Book Guide. (For more recommended Spanish-language and bilingual books, click here.)

Picture books

ada let me help ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!In Alma Flor Ada’s Let Me Help! / ¡Quiero ayudar!, pet parrot Perico knows how to say “Let me help!” He repeats this statement as his (human) family members prepare for the San Antonio Cinco de Mayo festival. They shoo him away, but to everyone’s surprise he eventually finds a way to help. Angela Domínguez’s warm-hearted illustrations — from a bird’s-eye view — support the family-centered text, printed in both English and Spanish. (Children’s Book Press, 2010)

cumpiano quinito day and night ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Quinito describes, in English and Spanish, his family, friends, and activities in terms of opposites: “My Mami is short. My Papi is tall…I’m just the right size.” Quinito, Day and Night / Quinito, día y noche by Ina Cumpiano succeeds as a book of opposites, an exposition of bilingual vocabulary, and an engaging portrayal of family and neighborhood. José Ramírez’s naive-style paintings in warm colors over black are both comforting and energy-packed. (Children’s Book Press, 2008)

medina tia isa wants a car ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!The young narrator of Meg Medina’s Tía Isa Wants a Car, who lives in America with her aunt and uncle, describes how Tía Isa wants a car, one that’s “the same shiny green as the ocean.” However, they don’t have enough money — yet. The narrator incorporates Spanish words naturally, giving the dialogue an authenticity that is neither laborious nor stilted. Soft watercolor illustrations by Claudio Muñoz mirror the text. Also available in a Spanish-language edition. (Candlewick, 2011)

morales ninowrestlesworld 297x300 ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Pint-sized Niño, fearless luchador and reluctantly attentive big brother, dons his red mask, ready to take on all comers, in Niño Wrestles the World. He battles a series of imagined foes from Mexican history and popular culture before facing the trickiest of opponents, las hermanitas! Working in digital collage, author/illustrator Yuyi Morales packs every polychromatic double-page spread with action, trying — not quite successfully, fortunately — to contain Niño’s energy within their frames. (Roaring Brook/Porter, 2013)

reiser my way ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Author/illustrator Lynn Reiser uses the bilingual structure of My Way: A Margaret and Margarita Story / A mi manera: Un cuento de Margarita y Margaret in an ingenious way, with the English (Margaret’s voice) and Spanish (Margarita’s) mirroring each other on facing pages, but with each girl presenting a distinct self. Reiser’s cheerful primary-bright palette signals readers that friends liking different things is just fine. A satisfying, upbeat reminder that kids can be true to themselves and be a good friend, too. (Greenwillow, 2007)

saenz perfect season for dreaming ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!A Perfect Season for Dreaming / Un tiempo perfecto para soñar begins on the first day of summer as Octavio Rivera begins to dream. He shares these visions with his granddaughter Regina, who also experiences dreams as if they are “good friends who…console you when you’re lonely.” Author Benjamin Alire Sáenz beautifully evokes a dream state with long, languorous sentences in English and Spanish. Esau Andrade Valencia’s richly hued and textured surrealist tableaux are both accessible and inspired. (Cinco, 2008)

soto big bushy mustache ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!In Big Bushy Mustache by Gary Soto and Joe Cepeda, the only costume Ricky wants to wear for his class’s Cinco de Mayo play is a big, bushy mustache, because it looks just like Papi’s. When he wears it home from school to show his parents, he loses it along the way. Papi’s solution — he generously offers his own freshly shaved mustache — is a little unlikely, but the warm family relationship, emphasized in Cepeda’s bold paintings, comes across nevertheless. (Knopf, 1998)

 

Intermediate

ada love amalia ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Amalia is devastated when she learns her best friend is moving to California; fortunately, her abuelita comforts her with stories about loved ones far away. When Abuelita suddenly dies, Amalia must draw on what her grandmother has taught her to accept her grief and anger. Love, Amalia, written by Alma Flor Ada and illustrated by Gabriel M. Zubizarreta, portrays a multigenerational immigrant family with sensitively drawn characters and a low-key story. Concurrently published in Spanish. (Atheneum, 2012)

ryan esperanza rising ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!In Esperanza Rising, Pam Munoz Ryan’s poignant look at the realities of immigration, thirteen-year-old Esperanza, daughter of an affluent Mexican rancher, is forced to trade fancy dolls and dresses for hard work and ill-fitting hand-me-downs after her beloved father dies. Laboring in the United States, picking grapes on someone else’s land for pennies an hour, Esperanza is transformed into someone who can take care of herself and others. (Scholastic, 2000)

 

Older

de la pena mexican white boy ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!The one place Danny feels accepted is the baseball field. He imagines becoming a star, making his father proud enough to return from Mexico. Matt de la Peña’s Mexican White Boy is a fast-paced baseball story is unique in its gritty realism, framed in the context of broken homes and bicultural pressures. De la Peña poignantly conveys the message that, despite obstacles, you must shape your own future. (Delacorte, 2008)

mcneal dark water ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Fifteen-year-old Pearl starts an illicit relationship with Amiel, an undocumented migrant laborer. When fire consumes southern California, Pearl abandons her family to warn Amiel of the approaching flames. Pearl ominously hints at impending disaster throughout the narrative; this foreshadowing heightens the climax’s suspense. Inspired by southern California’s 2007 fires, Laura McNeal’s National Book Award finalist novel Dark Water captures the desperation of both love and survival with wrenching authenticity. (Knopf, 2010)

saenz aristotleanddante 199x300 ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Two boys strike up a friendship that will change their lives in ways both subtle and profound in Benjamin Alire Sáenz’s Belpré Author Award—winning Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe. Ari saves Dante’s life but breaks his own legs in the process, cementing the bond between the two Mexican American families. Ari’s first-person narrative — poetic, philosophical, honest — skillfully develops the relationship between the two boys from friendship to romance. (Simon, 2012)

saldana finding our way ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!In the eleven disparate coming-of-age cuentos about Chicano culture collected in Finding Our Way: Stories, author Rene Saldaña Jr. forces the reader to experience the linguistic world of many of his protagonists — the decision to offer no glossary for the Spanish phrases that infuse his text serves as a curative disadvantage for the English-speaking reader. Never maudlin or overdrawn, these taut but lyrical tales bring light into the corners of kids’ lives. (Random/Lamb, 2003)

 

Poetry, folklore, and nonfiction

muu moo ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Alma Flor Ada and F. Isabel Campoy’s ¡Muu, Moo!: Rimas de animales / Animal Nursery Rhymes collects sixteen traditional nursery rhymes. Spanish is the preeminent language, with each rhyme presented first in Spanish and then in a free retelling in English (by Rosalma Zubizarreta) that captures the flavor of the original. This will be an invaluable resource for librarians and teachers, and with soft, warm watercolor illustrations by Viví Escrivá, it also makes an attractive gift book.

delacre arrorro mi nino ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!Selector/illustrator Lulu Delacre includes the best known Latino lullabies and finger plays in her collection Arrorro mi nino: Latino Lullabies and Gentle Games, a veritable Latina Mother Goose. The fifteen selections are presented bilingually; the English versions are literal (unrhymed) translations of the original Spanish. Oil-wash illustrations capture lovely scenes of mothers and grandmothers with children and offer glimpses of Latino life. Finger-play instructions and music are included. (Lee and Low, 2004)

hayes coyote under the table ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!The Coyote Under the Table / El coyote debajo de la mesa: Folktales Told in Spanish and English, Joe Hayes’s collection of bilingual folktales drawn from the Hispanic New Mexico oral tradition, provides refreshing depth and humor. Brief source notes expand on the history of each of the ten tales and add social/historical context. Clean, unencumbered prose draws attention to the structure and rhythm of the stories, which are best read aloud. Antonio L.Castro’s amusing illustrations face the start of each entry. (Cinco Puntos, 2011)

shahan fiesta ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!In ¡Fiesta!: A Celebration of Latino Festivals, author Sherry Shahan describes twelve Latino festivals, one for each month of the year, in brief poems accompanied by short explanatory paragraphs. Some of the celebrations, such as Cinco de Mayo and Día de los Muertos, will be familiar; others that are very specific to certain countries or ethnic groups may not be. Paula Barragán’s vibrantly flowing digitally enhanced cut-paper illustrations accompany the text. (August/Little Folk, 2009)

share save 171 16 ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!

The post ¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo! appeared first on The Horn Book.

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2. Cinco de Mayo!

Image

photo by D. B. King

On May 5th, around the United States and Mexico, colorful decorations will hang, mariachi bands will play, and people will party in the street to celebrate Cinco de Mayo. This holiday celebrates Mexican culture – the music, the traditions, the food, but why, exactly, are we celebrating on this day? Some people think that Cinco de Mayo marks the day when Mexico became independent from Spain, or when the Mexican Civil War ended. Nope! Actually, Cinco de Mayo celebrates a battle in a war that Mexico lost!  

Mexico had a tough start as a country, enduring war after war, first against America in 1846, then against themselves in the Mexican Civil War. When all this was over, the country had spent so much on war that there was very little money for regular people to spend in their lives; in other words, the economy was hurt. As countries sometimes do, Mexico borrowed money from other nations in order to help itself. And, as friends sometimes do when you borrow a toy or book from them, those countries got tired of waiting for Mexico to give their property back and came over to collect. No, their moms didn’t drive them over in the van or anything like that; fleets of warships representing England, Spain and France crossed the Atlantic Ocean, entered the Mexican coastline and demanded that Mexico pay them back.

Mexico didn’t have the money to pay them though! What’s a young country to do?! All they had were vouchers to give to the representatives from these countries, papers that double-super-promised to someday pay them back. This satisfied England and Spain and they went home, but to France, this meant war! Sacre bleu!

Under the command of Napoleon III, France invaded Mexico with the intention to totally control it. They marched from the coastline to Mexico City, and on the way passed the small Mexican state of Puebla. The Mexican soldiers at Puebla were vastly outnumbered, but in this fight on May 5, 1862, called La Batalla de Puebla, Mexico somehow overcame the odds and defeated the French forces! Now that’s reason to celebrate!

France eventually managed to occupy Mexico, but they were delayed a whole year by this surprising Mexican victory. The shocking, underdog victory at Puebla has come to symbolize the Mexican spirit of resilience and tenacity. Therefore, on its anniversary every year, Mexico and places with many people of Mexican descent play Cumbia music, wave the Mexican flag, eat tamales, hit pinatas, and generally celebrate all things Mexico!

Of course, at Sylvan Dell we celebrate Mexican people and culture every day! Each and every one of our dozens of titles are available in Spanish, such as Los árboles de globos and La naturaleza recicla—¿Lo haces tú? and El detective deductive!

ImageImageImage


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3. Chicanonatuica: Burning Judas Beyond Cinco de Mayo


El Cinco was on Thurday, so all over Norteamerica, the tequila, guacamole, and chip&sala rituals are probably still going on. Lady Mayahuel, the Aztec Goddess of Alcohol is happy, but my mission here at Chicanonautica is to show that there is more to Mexican culture than all that. Besides, we could use more re-enactments of the Battle of Puebla, and Zacapoaxtla antics.




We also just had those fantastic crucifixion re-enactments – especially the one in Iztapalapa that does it right with sets, costumes, penitentes, and belly dancers.


Not quite sacrifices of the festival Tlacaxipehuatliztli, the Flaying of Men in Honor of Xipe Totec, but the same resurrection theme come through loud and clear.



Also for Easter, there's another interesting tradition, la Quema de Judas, or the Burning of Judas. For this, fantastic effigies are constructed, usually with horns and with the forms of imaginative demonic creatures, but sometimes with political overtones. They are also endowed with fireworks that shower sparks and explode when they are set ablaze.



What a show! I'd like to see more of this, especially on our side of the border, here in Arizona:

“It kind of looks like the Governor . . .”

“Naw, it's La Llorona.”

Technology could allow the effigies to move and speak before self-destructing. Once again the myth behind the basic monster movie plot is revealed. This could be a newfangled kind of robotic exorcism.

We could use some exorcisms in these troubled times.

Ernest Hogan is working on a story about Pancho Villa, an airship, and a death ray.

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4. Beautiful, Bilingual Picture Books

By Bianca Schulze, The Children’s Book Review
Published: May 4, 2011

To celebrate Cinco de Mayo, take a look at the bilingual books that we’ve been reading …

The Cazuela That the Farm Maiden Stirred
by Samantha R. Vamos (Author), Rafael Lopez (Illustrator)

Mama and Me
by Arthur Dorros (Author), Rudy Gutierrez (Illustrator)

Ten Little Puppies/Diez perritos
by Alma Flor Ada (Author), F. Isabel Campoy (Author), Ulises Wensell (Illustrator)

5. Cinco de Mayo

This is something I'm working on that actually doesn't have anything at all to do with Cinco de Mayo, but its such a good fit I had to share.


Its based on my late kitty, Wendell, who loved to eat. He was black and white, and had a bobbed tail, so I'm working out how to show his pattern just right, and am also wondering if the lack of a tail (in some views) makes it hard to tell that he IS a cat. Like in this one, where his ears are hidden, I hope there's enough there to make it obvious he's a kitty. (I just realized I forgot to draw in his whiskers.)

This was my first idea sketch for this.




Something I always do is make a tight front, back and side view of a character, especially if its sort of complicated. It helps to keep proportions right when doing complicated views or perspective.


So my little Wendelito has some work to be done on him, but right now he's going to enjoy a nice plate of fish tacos and some tortillas and guacamole.

Adios!

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6. Happy Cinco De Mayo: Up at 2AM

One of those nights. You know how it goes. Spent the first part of the night asleep trying to work out issues with the story I'm trying to tell. Trying to make the impossible possible. Tossing and turning until, I'm up. Really awake. I grab the glass by my bed. Gulp all the water down. Go to the kitchen open the refrigerator and pour some more out of the Brita. Amble back to bed. Pull the covers over me and stare up at the stars through our skylight. It's no use. I'm worried about my daughter. Can't get her off my mind. Want to make sure she's ok. Last time I had a feeling like this, exactly a week ago, she wasn't. So I shuffle out of bed and call her at 3AM, 11 AM in Italy. She's sounds great. Laughing, having a great time. I go back to bed. She's safe. I should be able to sleep. But, no. There's a new way to begin the story I have to jot down. There's things I can't forget to do in the morning. And I lay awake for hours. But, before morning comes, I look at the stars again. And in this little space of the gigantic universe, this little 2 foot by 5 foot slice of sky, I see the most beautiful, brilliant shooting star. It was the kind of shooting star meant for BIG dreams. The kind that meant to say that everything would be OK.

Which leads me to today's question...

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7. Color Me: Cinco De Mayo Mariachi Band

Did everyone have a great Cinco De Mayo? I hope you had your fill of burritos, tacos, and quesadillas! Ever wonder the true meaning of the Mexican holiday? Find out here .
Can you find 3 things wrong with this picture? Color in this silly Mariachi Band coloring page and send it to me at [email protected] as a jpeg or pdf and I'll post it on my blog! Happy Coloring!! For more Coloring pages click here.

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8. Blogging on the Fly

I'm blogging in a rush, but blogging nonetheless.

80 rejected chapter subs went out over the past 4 days. All of our adult follow ups are done, and adult new subs will be done tomorrow. Half through the children's follow ups, but have to go out of office for a bit today to take care of all the fun stuff (like buying paper and ink and making a postal run, etc.).

Do have a project that may be going to auction soon, but more on that and the auction process later this week (I pinky swear!).

Happy Cinco de Mayo, my little beasties, and stay literate;)

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