children's books: the best literature, the most breathtaking art

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Thursday, April 13, 2006

Five Little Ducks

Paparone, Pamela. Five Little Ducks. New York: North-South Books, 1995.

You’ve probably heard and sung the rhyme, “Five little ducks went out one day, over the hills and far away . . .” Pamela Paparone added adorable illustrations and created a winner of a children’s book. The pictures themselves tell a story of mother duck working from sunup to sundown in and around the cozy little house. She does yardwork at the flush of dawn, hangs out laundry, irons, indulges a painting hobby outdoors, picks apples and makes a giant apple pie in a homey kitchen I could envy, and at the end serves pie and milk to her prodigal children while stars and a crescent moon hang outside the window. Other small touches will fuel conversation between you and your child: on the title pages, the little ducks romp with their bat and ball, wagon, ride-on toy and swing. Almost every page features a quiet wild animal in the foreground. For crisp, colorful pictures packed with detail, Five Little Ducks gets an A.

Saturday, April 01, 2006

It's Not Too Late to Experience These

We just got some more dusty books down from the attic, among them most of Laura Ingalls Wilder's series I knew I had around somewhere. Since I'd already read the first one to my older daughter, we embarked on the second one, Little House on the Prairie. This time my three-year-old is more tuned in, wondering whether the family would ever get their dog Jack back after he was lost at a creek crossing and happy to find that they did.

I am thankful that Wilder recorded her childhood on the frontier so eloquently for us. Her books became a part of my mental landscape first when my mother read them out loud to us, then when I read them to myself. I reread them a few years back, before the kids were born, and now I'm reading the books again to them.

As a child, I didn't conciously appreciate how well-done these stories are. Read aloud, the language is spare and the words well-chosen. The sentences flow gracefully and the events unfold like real life. Now we know how it felt to sit in a wagon day after day while the horses plodded on through the grass of the never-ending prairie. We witness through vivid writing how meals were made in primitive conditions, and how families like Laura's tried to live as properly as they could in the circumstances.

Adding to the historical value of the books is the fact that Mrs. Wilder recorded details of pioneer life in technical detail. Her thousands of young readers know, for instance, exactly how pioneers took care of their guns and made bullets because Laura talks about her Pa's regular ritual with his gun. They understand how and why Laura's family smoked meat, how they built furniture and houses and how they got maple syrup. And Laura's primary emotions in looking back--at least in the early books, I haven't reread the other ones yet--are feelings of contentment and safety. They're brilliant books.