If you just so happen to be in Honolulu this weekend, check out the Hawaii Book and Music Festival taking place in downtown. I’ll be helping out with an outreach table for the library. There will be storytelling, musical performances, panel discussions, an open mike, arts &crafts, and much more. Local authors featured at this year’s festival include Lois-Ann Yamanaka and Gavan Daws. Linda Sue Park is also scheduled to be at the Festival. For more information go to the Hawaii Book and Music Festival website. A little warning: the pdf files where the majority of the information is housed are quite large so if you have a slow internet connection, they’ll take a while to download.
After hearing this podcast I immediately ordered this children’s book. I love the message and values that it conveys, in addition to your take on the text and its illustrations. The idea of loving oneself regardless is an important message at any age. Validating yourself rather than waiting for others to validate your actions is a life long lesson with great importance. Celebrating independent thinkers is a rare topic for children’s books. This one does it with such grace and truly disrupts any notion of normality.
I listened to this podcast in a very timely manner. I was recently asked to analyze the story of Cinderella in one of my graduate classes. The thing that struck me the most was the idea that Cinderella relied on other people to bring her happiness. I think that this sends a very negative message to kids, especially young girls. It is refreshing to find a book about a girl who is an independent thinker and who can enjoy being herself for who she is. I love that Odd Velvet does not need other people to accept her in order to find happiness in her life. I have never read this book, but I certainly plan on seeking it out. Thank you for introducing this book to me!
I think this book looks critically at the social dimension in schools that can be hurtful to a student if they realize they are not treated the same as the other students. A lot of students can relate to Velvet, weather it is being just a little different or very different from other students. This book is helpful in classrooms where students are not too accepting of other students who live life in their own way. I think students who beat to their own drum will be affirmed by this book, and those students who are the social ring leaders maybe a little more appreciative of people and their differences.