So many good videos to choose from today! First and foremost, I begin with a very special message from Jon Scieszka. It seems you still have two days to vote in the Children’s Book Choice Awards and . . . well . . . Jon would really like your kids to do so. Seriously.
I own that suit!
I also enjoyed this video from Storycorps. In it, a woman reflects on the bookmobile that changed her life:
In other news, it’s been a good book trailer season. When I went to Zootopia the other day (and how cool was its Emmett Otter reference?) I got a couple before the show. In this first video I spent the bulk of it trying to figure out if it was an adaptation of the Mac Barnett / Jory John Terrible Two series. It is based on a book, but we just aren’t that lucky:
On the plus side, the new BFG trailer looks pretty darn good:
And there’s a new trailer for A Monster Calls that I really enjoyed.
Finally, for the off-topic video, I actually think you could make a case for this being on-topic. I mean, have you ever seen a truer to life version of Are You My Mother?
It comes with its own Snort!
#45 Are You My Mother? by P.D. Eastman (1960)
39 points
I am such a big fan of the truly excellent easy reader. This is another one that blows you away with its perfect simplicity. – Amy M. Weir
This has everything. Different animals. A car, a plane. And all the drama and emotion of the baby bird trying to find his mother. But best of all — the Snort! I remember when my own mother bought this book for me and I could read it myself! I also remember my husband reading it to my son the first time when he was very young. When my husband cried out with the baby bird, “You are not my mother, you are a Snort!” my son burst into tears. I had to restrain the emotion in my voice when reading that part for quite some time, and rush to the end where the mother bird hugs her baby and everything’s better. - Sondra Eklund
NOT to be confused with the excellent Alison Bechdel memoir of the same name out this year, of course.
Well thanks to the wonders of including Easy Books on this list, P.D. Eastman’s other classic title appears (the first, to my mind, being Go Dog Go). Eastman has always struck me as a cursed author. People look at his books and because they were part of Seuss’s beginner book imprint they assume that his titles were by Seuss himself. Not the case.
The plot from Wikipedia reads, “A hatchling bird’s mother, thinking her egg will stay in her nest where she left it, leaves her egg alone and flies off to find food. The baby chick hatches. He does not understand where his mother is so he goes to look for her. In his search, he asks a kitten, a hen, a dog, and a cow if they are his mother. They each say, ‘No.’ Then he sees an old car, which cannot be his mother for sure. In desperation, the hatchling calls out to a boat and a plane, and at last, convinced he has found his mother, he climbs onto the teeth of an enormous power shovel. A loud ‘SNORT’ belches from its exhaust stack, prompting the bird to utter the immortal line, ‘You are not my mother! You are a SNORT!’ But as it shudders and grinds into motion he cannot escape. ‘I want my mother!’ he shouts. But at this climactic moment, his fate is suddenly reversed. The shovel drops him back in his nest, just as his mother is returning home, and the two are united, much to their delight, and the baby bird tells his mother about the adventure he had looking for her.”
My brother-in-law is not a particular fan of this book. He sort of sees it as taking place in this post-apocalyptic hellscape where there’s hardly any color and huge pieces of machinery that influence the daily lives of the characters. Which, to my mind, rather than rendering the book awful makes it FRIGGIN’ AWESOME to consider. Somebody turn this puppy into a YA novel and I’ll guarantee the millions. Maybe.
A little background on my man, P.D. Actually his name was Philip Dey Eastman and like a lot of picture book illustrators he started out as a Disney animators. Then WWII came along and he started doing “picture planning for animated sequences in orientation and training films”. And who, you might ask, was the head of his unit? Just a fellow going by the name of Ted Geisel. Yup. The Seuss himself. Eastman went on later to create Mr. Magoo and then he started freelancing. So Geisel approached him about writing for his Beginner Books series and a career was born, starting with Sam and the Firefly. You can see his site here.
You can hear it read in a kind of Reading Rainbo
The author of "Fun Home" and "Are You My Mother?" on the difficulties of illustrating psychoanalysis and more.
I remember bookmobiles from childhood with great fondness. Does anyone still do that?
Oh yes! Very much so. Not just bookmobiles but mobile hotspots and e-resource vans. But bookmobiles too. Brooklyn Public Library has their own little mini gas station behind the main library just for theirs.
Of course I love the Jon Scieszka video! haha!
This is a great round-up of movie trailers based on MG books. Thank you!