from goodreads |
My four year old brought this book home from her school library. There were many moments when I thought this is exactly how I would react!
Synopsis
It follows the life of a blue bird who woke up on the wrong side of the nest. As he walks through the day, for he is too grumpy to fly, he meets other animals that help him find his happy back.
My Thoughts
I thought this was a very clever book. It shows that you can be grumpy in a non-destructive way. It also shows that when you encounter someone who is grumpy to the extreme you can still be pleasant and not add to the grumpiness. What is so great about this book is it helps us learn about ourselves and how we react to things and teaches our children how to navigate emotions.
Because of the repetitiveness of the book, my four year old was shortly reading this to me! It was nice to be able to foster her reading and storytelling confidence.
This is a fun read that child and parent enjoy and will be laughing at together.
from goodreads |
3.5 stars
This book is beautifully illustrated by Cozbi A. Cabrera.
Synopsis
This is a beautiful book of a mother, who is a slave, and her daughter. The mother creates a quilt with each square representing something. In the end the mother sends her daughter, along with the quilt, with people belonging to the underground railway. It is a book about love and sacrifice.
My Thoughts
This is a book that shows the difficult choices that many faced during this hard and sad time of history. Families were broken apart. Children sent with others in the hopes that their future would be brighter. It is heart wrenching.
I liked how this book allowed us to bring up the topic of slavery and race relations. I was able to explain to my children what it meant for someone to be whipped and why freedom was so important. For my children it is hard to for them to fathom a person owning another person. They are so blessed. This book helped them understand kindness and empathy towards others.
The illustrations in this book are beautiful. Many pictures use textiles so we can actually see the quilt the mother is diligently making. The other pictures, while beautiful, are somewhat abstract from a child's standpoint so a child may not enjoy them as much as an adult.
The flow of the book was, at times, awkward. Some of the words more in a southern type voice while others were not. It may have helped to have it all one way or the other.
On the whole it was a great book and a great conversation starter.