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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Ramona and Her Father, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Video Sunday: 90-Second Newbery Edition

About a week ago the 90-Second Newbery premiered at New York Public Library (PW did a nice write-up of it here) and the afternoon was a stellar success.  My Lit Salon went over so I didn’t have a chance to see much of it, but fortunately James Kennedy, who created the darn thing, did me a favor and curated some of the best little videos of the year.

First off, what may well be my favorite video.  Claymation has always done the 90-Second Newbery proud.  Now they’re all the prouder with a Claymation version of Steve Sheinkin’s Bomb: The Race To Build–And Steal–The World’s Most Dangerous Weapon by Jennings Mergenthal of Tacoma, WA.

Extra points for the Tom Lehrer at the end.

Then it’s Ramona And Her Father done as a musical by the kids at Northwestern University’s Center for Talent Development.  I felt very proud that as an adult I could identify all but two of the tunes they were singing.

How about that father doing The Snake?  Kid’s got moves!  Plus this had the advantage of making me want to read that book again.

But why watch just one?  In today’s economy a story about a dad losing his job has special significance.  This Ramona And Her Father is done as a James Bond movie by a different set of kids at Northwestern University’s Center for Talent Development.

What’s particularly interesting to me is that both Ramonas used very similar stock images of suburban houses between their shots.  I also love that in this one they decided to pay attention to the details and put the driver on the British side of the car.

I love too clever teenagers.  So this ominous foreshadowing ridden version of Bridge To Terabithia by Rochester Community Television in Rochester, NY appeals to the 15-year-old in me.

And finally . . . MORE stop animation!  This time it’s the Atwater’s Mr. Popper’s Penguins courtesy of Girl Scout Troop 2539 from Urbana, IL.

I told you I had a weakness for that stuff.

For our off-topic video, this has nothing to do with 90-Second Newbery and everything to do with House of Cards.  It’s the Sesame Street parody.  Seemed fitting in an odd way.  We’re all about the homages today.

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2 Comments on Video Sunday: 90-Second Newbery Edition, last added: 3/16/2015
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2. Top 100 Children’s Novels #94: Ramona and Her Father by Beverly Cleary

#94 Ramona and her Father by Beverly Cleary (1977)
20 points

I grew up reading the Ramona books (up to Ramona Forever). Ramona and Her Father is my favorite, and one that I try to read every Christmas. Although first published in 1977, the upheaval caused by Mr. Quimby’s unemployment remains relevant, especially today. (And Mr. Quimby accepting a job for which he is overqualified-in Ramona and Her Mother —is also quite relevant). - Jennifer Schultz

It was #89 two years ago on the previous poll.  Now it squeaks in here at #94 but I think the drop only occurred because this isn’t the first Ramona title in the series.  Then again, what exactly is the first Ramona title?  The first she starred in solo?  The first where she made an appearance?  Henry freakin’ Huggins?  Impossible to say.

Now considering the state of the current economy I was particularly pleased to see this book make our Top 100 list.  If I were to ask you to name me all the great children’s novels where a parent has lost their job and suffered depression, the answers don’t come as readily to the lips as they might.  This is what I love about Beverly Cleary.  She took a light and seemingly fluffy series and dared to add some realistic issues to it.  Even better is the fact that the dad doesn’t get a job as a high powered lawyer or business manager at the end.  He becomes a check-out cashier, and you know what?  That is great.  Not every contemporary family in children’s literature has to be affluent, for crying out loud.  As Gwenda Bond at Shaken & Stirred put it, “This is the one where her father gets laid off from his job; eventually, at the end, he gets a new one as a check-out cashier. I can’t remember the last time I read about a real blue collar family like this, where it was portrayed as okay and a non-issue to not be the Joneses.”

The plot description from the publisher reads, “Ramona just wants everyone to be happy. If only her father would smile and joke again, her mother would look less worried, her sister would be cheerful, and Picky-picky would eat his cat food. But Ramona’s father has lost his job, and nobody in the Quimby household is in a very good mood.  Ramona tries to cheer up the family as only Ramona can, but her best efforts just make things worse. But when her father admits he wouldn’t trade her for a million dollars, Ramona knows everything is going to work out fine in the end.”

06_ramona2This book was included in a fantastic Slate article that took a long hard look at Great kids’ books about financial ruin.  Erica Perl puts it best when she says, “The Quimby family is not as poor as the Peppers [Five Little Peppers and How They Grew] were, but there is a consistent theme of scrimping and ‘making do,’ which comes to a head in Ramona and Her Father, when Mr. Quimby loses his job. He sinks into a depression, smokes a lot, and snaps at his kids. Ramona and her older sister, Beezus, respond by trying to get him to quit smoking (which does not go over well). Cleary creates an impressively honest portrait of a family’s struggles, complete with 7-year-old Ramona fretting that her querulous parents will split up. Although Ramona’s parents do not divorce and ultimately reassur

5 Comments on Top 100 Children’s Novels #94: Ramona and Her Father by Beverly Cleary, last added: 5/15/2012
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