Showing posts with label Bah! Humbug!. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bah! Humbug!. Show all posts

Monday, December 17, 2018

It's Monday - Books Read I Loved



              Visit Kellee and Ricki at UnleashingReaders and Jen at Teach Mentor Texts to see what they've been reading, along with everyone else who post their favorites. 
              Wishing everyone peace and joy during this holiday season, and a lot of restful reading time, too.

         Sharing a couple of new and loving Christmas books. Thanks to Candlewick Press for Oliver Elephant.



        Lou Peacock's shopping trip in rhyme makes a sweet story of a mom and her two children, the oldest bringing along Oliver, his stuffed elephant. What fun the boy and Oliver have while Mom shops! They purchase all the things on the list, get ready to go, but sad to say, Oliver, who also had fun playing, was missing. Helen Stephens' illustrations are soft watercolor, loving depictions of this Christmas story. 

         Lovely illustrations and another tale that brings happy Christmas feelings of a little tree that lives by a railroad track, soon chosen to go home to be a Christmas tree in a little boy's home. She is lonely, but Santa soon fixes that, bringing the boy a toy train. The tree is happy again, hearing that train chugging beneath her. You'll find the ending comes full circle in this sweet imaginary tale. It brought my own memories of putting a train around our tree when my children were young. My husband's father was a train engineer and trains were an important part of our lives with the kids growing up.


         Thanks to Candlewick Press for this wonderful story, too. Knitting together "A Christmas Carol" with a modern-day family made a lively, heartwarming tale. It's real and magical all at the same time. Harry Gruber plays the role of Scrooge in his school's production of "A Christmas Carol," and the challenge is that his father is coming, not leaving to work just a few more hours as he often does. The thoughts of Harry as he plays out his part are poignant, and Rosen allows us to know the feelings of the mother and the sister from the audience, and also of that father with a last minute business emergency. I hated to see the story end, wonder if kids could persuade their own parents to read it for its important message?