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Sunday, April 14, 2013

It Jes' Happened

When Bill Traylor
Started to Draw

This post is part of Nonfiction Monday hosted today
at NC Teacher Stuff
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

(pub. 4.1.2012) 32 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthor: Don Tate
     and Illustrator: R. Gregory Christie

haracter: Bill Traylor

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "Growing up as an enslaved boy on an Alabama cotton farm, Bill Traylor worked all day in the hot fields. When slavery ended, Bill's family stayed on the farm as sharecroppers. There Bill grew to manhood, raised his own family, and cared for the land and his animals.
      By 1935 Bill was eighty-one  and all alone on his farm. So he packed his bag and moved to Montgomery, the capital of Alabama. Lonely and poor, he wandered the busy downtown streets. But deep within himself Bill had a reservoir of memories of working and living on the land, and soon those memories blossomed into pictures. Bill began to draw people, places, and animals form his earlier life, as well as scenes of the city around him.
      Today Bill Traylor is considered to be one of the most important self-taught American folk artists...It Jes' Happened is a lively tribute to this man who has enriched the world with more than twelve hundred warm, energetic, and often humorous pictures."

T antalizing taste: 

       "Bill could not contain his memories. One day in early 1939 he picked up the stub of a pencil and a piece of discarded paper and began to pour out his memories in pictures. Bill's first drawings were simple items: cats, cups, shoes, baskets. Then he began to draw human and animal forms too. He used the side of a stick to rule straight lines and shapes. Rectangles became bodies. Circles became heads and eyes. Lines became outstretched arms, hands, and legs. He filled in shapes with sketchy lines and smoothed out edges...
      And the clang-clang-clang from the nearby blacksmith's shop provided background music for Bill while he worked."
                       
and something more:  I was impressed by the wealth of information available on the Teacher Activity Guide for It Jes' Happened on Don Tate's website. I particularly enjoyed reading about Don Tate's personal and artistic connections to Bill Traylor: 

"What aspect of the man is most compelling to you, his art or his life?

"Bill Traylor’s life as a slave, sharecropper and artist are all compelling stories. Definitely not easily separated. But I was most moved and inspired by his story of becoming not only an artist, but one of the most important artists of our time..."



"In what ways do you relate to Bill Traylor? As an artist? As a father? As a man?

"When I began to research and study the life of Bill Traylor, I immediately felt a kindred spirit to the artist. With no formal training (or any artistic experience that we know of), Bill answered his calling to become an artist late in his life. I did, too. I’ve been drawing since I was old enough to hold a pencil in my hands, but I didn’t discover a love of writing until just a few years ago, well into my 40s. And like Bill, I had friends along the way who helped me develop my new found love of words...

       Words have a way of finding your past. And so do pictures, as Bill discovered. When I write, I often find myself laughing, or frowning, or even on the verge of tears, as I recall childhood events. I imagine Bill did the same thing as he drew pictures from his life as a slave, as a hardworking sharecropper, as a homeless man living on the streets."

Monday, April 8, 2013

Hands Around the Library

Protecting Egypt's Treasured Books

This post is part of Nonfiction Monday
hosted today by a wrung sponge
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

(pub. 8.30.2012) 32 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

     and Collages:  Susan L. Roth

haracters: A librarian and the people of Alexandria, Egypt 

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "It was a moment that captured the hearts of people all over the world: Thousands of Egypt's students, library workers, and demonstrators surrounded the great Library of Alexandria and joined hands, standing strong. They were forming a human chain to protect the glass building from harm in the midst of widespread protests and chaos. In that moment, the people of Egypt revealed how the love of books and libraries can unite a country, even one in turmoil.
        Now, through lyrical words and gorgeous collage illustrations, this amazing historical moment is brought back to life..."
        
T antalizing taste: 

"That day the whole world heard
his words
and watched
our Alexandria Library,
our Bibliotheca Alexandrina,
with all our people
holding hands
in the perfect circle
surrounding it.

And because together
we all protected
our Bibliotheca Alexandrina,
once upon a time
not long ago,
the library still stands today
holding all of our stories."
                       
and something more: As always, I love the story behind the story, and the author/illustrator connections to Hands Around the Library. "A Note from Susan L. Roth" explains: "If my friend Karen Leggett Abouraya [co-author] hadn't married her Egyptian husband, Tharwat, perhaps she wouldn't know and love Alexandria so much. And certainly if it weren't for Karen's tales of this gorgeous city, I might never have visited Alexandria... 
              When my family and I finally arrived at the library, we stood still, dazzled by the extraordinary space. Outside, the sun sparkled on the Mediterranean Sea and Egyptians bought fresh fish to grill for dinner in the same places where they would soon be marching and protecting their library. When Dr. Serageldin wrote with such pride that the library was safe, thanks to Egypt's youth, I knew right then that Karen and I had to tell their story."
               And I'm so glad they did!  And to learn more about this story and other libraries throughout the world, visit the Hands Around the Library website. 

Monday, April 1, 2013

Miracle Mud


Lena Blackburne
and the Secret Mud
That Changed Baseball

This post joins Nonfiction Monday
hosted today at Wendie's Wanderings
and also joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

(pub. 1.1.2013) 32 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

A uthor: David A. Kelly
     and Illustrator: Oliver Dominguez

haracter: Lena Blackburne

O verview from the publisher: 
     "Lena Blackburne loved baseball. He watched it, he played it, he coached it. But he didn't love the ways players broke in new baseballs. Tired of soggy, blackened, stinky baseballs, he found a better way. Thanks to a well-timed fishing trip and a top-secret mud recipe, Lena Blackburne Baseball Rubbing Mud was born. For seventy five years, baseball teams have used Lena's magic mud to prepare baseballs before every game...Lena's mud went from a riverbank to the major leagues and all the way to the Hall of Fame." 

T antalizing taste: 

"Splooootch! He stepped into some dark brown
mud. It was soft and gooey. Lena’s boot stuck in
the mud. He slooooooooowly pulled it out.

Lena had an idea.

He reached down and scooped up some of the
dark brown mud. It looked smooth and creamy
like chocolate pudding. But it felt gritty.

Lena took the mud to the ballpark." 
                       
and something more: What a great concept for a children's book -- mud meets baseball! And I enjoyed reading the background and mystery behind the Miracle Mud in the Author's Note: "While baseball mud is used during every game from spring training to the World Series, the mud harvesting season starts in July. [The Lena Blackburne Baseball Rubbing Mud] crew take a boat out to their secret mud hole. They scoop up hundreds of pounds of mud and bring it back to shore. Then comes the super-secret part: they store the mucky brown mud in barrels over the winter Perhaps something special happens in the barrels We don't know. And they won't tell."