It's time to fly home for dinner! In this witty picture book from award-winning and bestselling author Mac Barnett, a mother bird gives the bird next to her a message for little Peter.
Add a CommentViewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Jen Corace, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 10 of 10
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 4-8, Picture Book, Picture Books, Birds, Humor, featured, Jen Corace, Animal Books, Humorous Books, Mac Barnett, Add a tag
Blog: MISS O's SCHOOL LIBRARY (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: birds, Jen Corace, Telephone, Mac Barnett, The Bird Lady, Add a tag
Telephone Wires With Birds on Top?
Not unusual in the City!
Blog: Susanna Leonard Hill (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Jen Corace, Randall de Seve, Perfect Picture Book Fridays, Balzer & Bray, Mathilda And The Orange Balloon, Add a tag
Would someone please tell me how it got to be Friday?
Seriously! Where did this week go? I am still somewhere back around midday Monday...
But since the rest of the world seems to agree that it's Friday, let's have a Perfect Picture Book, shall we?
Written By: Randall de Seve
Illustrated By: Jen Corace
Balzer & Bray, Feb. 2010, Fiction
Suitable For Ages: 3-7
Themes/Topics: imagination, be yourself/individuality
Opening: "Mathilda's world was small. Here's what was in it: Green grass. Green barn. Gray skies. Gray stones. Gray sheep."
Brief Synopsis: Mathilda lives in a small, familiar world, which is all very nice, until one day she spies an orange balloon. She is captivated, and she believes that she can be an orange balloon too!
Links To Resources: Preschool lesson plan for the color orange; learning activities for the color orange; preschool lesson plan for sheep; pair this book with other sheep books like Sheep In A Jeep by Nancy Shaw and discuss how the sheep in the books are alike and different; pair this book with other imagination books like Harold And The Purple Crayon by Crockett Johnson and discuss how Mathilda uses her imagination compared to how Harold uses his.
Why I Like This Book: This book is just darling! Mathilda is so delightful, so cheerful, so optimistic and imaginative and determined. "What is a balloon?" she asks, and when the others answer that it is round and it flies, Mathilda (who is a gray sheep) shows them that she too is round and can fly. "What is orange?" she asks, and when the others answer that it is fierce like a tiger, warm like wool, and happy, she shows them that she is all those things too. The art and the text are simple and sweet, and the message that you can be anything you want if you believe in yourself is one that is near and dear to my heart (since it is the same message that Punxsutawney Phyllis has :)) And I just have to share my favorite line from the story when Mathilda first catches sight of the orange balloon: "Mathilda had never seen anything so magnificent." :)
For the complete list of books with resources, please visit Perfect Picture Books.
PPBF bloggers, please be sure to leave your post-specific links in the list below so we can all come visit you and enjoy your selections for this week!
Have a great weekend, everyone! I guess we will all be working on writing our fairy tales... wink wink nudge nudge... right??? :) (For March Madness Writing Contest guidelines go HERE.)
Blog: Where The Best Books Are! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Halloween books for kids, books about kids biting, cute books about vampires, gibbus moony wants to bite you, books about being a big boy, leslie muir, Jen Corace, mommy bloggers, 2011, Add a tag
Mom, all dolled up with an up-do and red lipstick, suggests Gibbus swing from the rafters like a good little vampire. But Gibbus is a big boy now and he's got his eye on his stuffed gargoyle Werner.
Blog: the pageturn (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: YA Books, Greenwillow, Amy Krouse Rosenthal, Jen Corace, Gretchen McNeil, Balzer+Bray, Michael Hall, Trailee Awards, Trailees, Awards, HarperCollins, Libraries, Books, School Library Journal, Picture Books, Videos, book trailers, SLJ, Add a tag
It’s time for School Library Journal‘s annual TRAILEE AWARDS!
Between now and August 31st, 2011, you can nominate book trailers (posted between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011) in the following categories:
- Publisher/Author for elementary readers (PreK-6)
- Publisher/Author for secondary readers (7-12 grade)
- Student created for elementary readers (PreK-6 grade)
- Student created for secondary readers (7-12 grade)
- Adult (anyone over 18) created for PreK-12 grade
- Educator/Librarian created for PreK-12 grade
Check out the website for a list of criteria, instructions on how to nominate videos, and a list of the selection committee members.
Naturally, we have many book trailers that we particularly love. Here are some of them:
PERFECT SQUARE by Michael Hall
POSSESS by Gretchen McNeil (on-sale 8.23.11)
THIS PLUS THAT by Amy Krouse Rosenthal, illustrated by Jen Corace
Which book trailers have you created or seen that you’ll nominate for the awards?
Add a CommentBlog: the pageturn (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: book reviews, Books, Reviews, Kirkus, Authors, Picture Books, Videos, math, blogs, Booklist, book trailers, Illustrators, Amy Krouse Rosenthal, BCCB, A Year of Reading, Jen Corace, starred reviews, Blogs and bloggers, Literacy and Laughter, Memorial Hall Library, The BK Club, Add a tag
Don’t listen to us gab about the newest picture book from Amy Krouse Rosenthal and Jen Corace…check out the three starred reviews for THIS PLUS THAT!
“Teachers could use the book, perhaps paired with Betsy Franco’s picture book Mathematickles! (2003), to introduce math equations or to inspire students to create their own verbal equations. But first, just read this unusual book aloud and let it work its magic.” ~ Booklist (starred review)
“Clever premise + artful execution = sure winner.” ~ Kirkus (starred review)
“Corace’s tidy figures echo with prim grace the gentle theme of the book, that life can be parsed into the simplest terms that recombine to create something joyous.” ~ Bulletin for the Center for Children’s Books (starred review)
Check out the adorable book trailer:
And check out these other great reviews:
A Year of Reading
Literacy and Laughter (look how she used it in the classroom!)
The BK Club (the Children’s Room at Memorial Hall Library)
Blog: A Garden of Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Jen Corace, Randall de Seve, Add a tag
Published by Balzar + Bray An Imprint of Harper Collins 2010/32 pages/for ages 3-6
Link for the book @ publisher:
http://www.harpercollinschildrens.com/books/Mathilda-Orange-Balloon/?isbn13=9780061726859&tctid=100
Young Matilda is a gray sheep. Her small world appears to be gray or green. One day she spots an orange balloon and then wishes to become one herself!
The story of Mathilda is about imagination and the possibilities of dreams.
Orange is my least favorite color, yet it is a color that you cannot miss. For Mathilda orange is so radically different than her blah or bah world! The orange color catches her eyes and her imagination.
I felt this was a good story to open up the eyes for a young child to their own environment, to make them more attentive to what is going on around them. A fluffy sheep seems to be such a docile and dim animal, yet gentle for a child.
The illustrations are simple and focused on the sheep, little color is used except in the bold orange.
Blissful Reading!
Annette
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Imagination, Birds, Art, Animals, France, Spring, Sheep, Insects, Geese, Picasso, Elizabeth Alexander, Jen Corace, Carin Berger, Ages Four to Eight: Books for pre-school to second grade, Book Lists: Specialty picks, Ages Baby to Three: Books for infants and toddlers, Seasonal: Holiday Events, Marjorie Priceman, Picture Book - Wordless, Randall de Seve, Freindship, Jennifer Christie, Joan Yolleck, Joung Un Kim, Nancy Tarfuri, Rabitts, Add a tag
Spring just may be my favorite season. The following books are a great representation of this sweet and thriving time of year.
Add a CommentBlog: Children's Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Amy Krouse Rosenthal, Jen Corace, Add a tag
Blog: Children's Illustration (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Tiny Showcase, Jen Corace, Add a tag