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Jennie on Our Wish Tree at the Libr… Jennie on Our Wish Tree at the Libr… Jennie on Our Wish Tree at the Libr… robertawrites2356819… on Our Wish Tree at the Libr… Jennie on Our Wish Tree at the Libr… Archives
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Two Moons, Two Jane Yolen Books
The year was 1987. I had been teaching preschool for three years. I was immersed in children’s books, reading the great ones and the new ones. That was the year I became picky about books, because what I read aloud to children made all the difference in the world. I had mastered the art of stopping in the middle of reading to laugh, or cry, or to have an important conversation. Reading aloud and knowing good books had become ‘my thing.’
1987 was also the year Jane Yolen wrote Owl Moon. It won the coveted Caldecott Medal. It is that good.
The book transformed my reading, or perhaps it transformed me. I did far more than just read the words aloud. Children went on a hunt outdoors to find bits and pieces of nature in order to create our own Owl Moon mural. I remember showing children the illustrations and how to draw with a pencil before water coloring. I remember children breaking off pieces of pinecone to create the big wings of the owl.
This was something I had never done before, a major group art project based on a children’s book.
I hosted a family event at school at night. We went owling in the woods beyond our playground. It was very dark, it was wonderful. Children also made paper bag owls. Decades later, a child who had been in my class told me she still had her paper bag owl. Families still reminisce to this day about going owling.
This was completely new for me, hosting a major event for families based on a children’s book. It fueled my fire for good children’s books.
Fast forward to a few years ago. Jane Yolen was a guest speaker at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art in Amherst, Massachusetts. The museum is dedicated to children’s book art, and often has authors as guest readers and speakers.
After her wonderful presentation, I had a chance to meet Jane Yolen. I told her about going owling, and how her book had made such a difference. We talked! I realized that people around us were silent, as our conversation was deep and true.
Jane Yolen and her talented author daughter Heidi (yes, the child in Owl Moon!) have written a new book this year. It is about a moon. Well, it is about far more than a moon. Who better to write a children’s book about a moon?
It’s been thirty-two years since Owl Moon was published. Yet, 2019 was just the right year for this book, A Kite for Moon. Fifty years ago, astronauts landed on the moon. Neil Armstrong made the event famous with his words. Jane Yolen makes the event more meaningful by writing what may have inspired many children like Neil. “A very small boy was flying his kite on the beach near his house. He looked up, at the moon.”
The story is simple, yet filled with hope and promise over many years. The boy never gives up sending a kite to the moon. Never. He works hard at his studies, he dreams, and he promises a visit. Words like waxed and waned, eclipsed, and math words like equations, keep children curious. They make teachers pause for spontaneous discussions and sidetracked lessons.
In the final pages of the book, the grown boy reaches the moon as an astronaut, yet his words carry the message he has always felt and worked hard for — “Hello Moon”, he said. “I’ve come for that visit.” And the whole world watched.
I have read this remarkable book only six times, and I feel fire and hope every single time. I can’t wait for the school year to start and read this book to the children.
Owl Moon took the children owling. I wonder where A Kite for Moon will take my class. A telescope to look at the moon at night? Whatever it is, I echo the dedication and tribute words in the book:
For Neil Armstrong, who showed us the way.
Jennie
Posted in Author interview, Book Review, books, children's books, Early Education, Eric Carle, Inspiration, picture books, preschool, reading aloud, reading aloud, Teaching young children, wonder
Tagged 50th anniversary landing on the moon, A Kite for Moon by Jane Yolen, astronauts, children's books, Early Education, Heidi Stemple, Jane Yolen, literacy, Neil Armstrong, Owl Moon by Jane Yolen, Owls, reading aloud, reading books to children
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Heaven at Night
The dragonfly show has finished.
Summer children are sleeping.
The sun has set.
Another beautiful world is awakening.
Heaven, indeed.
Jennie
My Summer Children
Children are a wonder.
Nature is a wonder, too.
Both grow, with the help of loving adults.
I take care of my ‘summer children.’
My eyes are witness to life, and sometimes death. I see beauty, and I am humbled by my ever changing ‘children’. They all have names, of course. Mister Mica is the beautiful protector. Tropicana gives everyone orange brilliance. The hand carved Huntington fish is playful. Ted, (not shown) the really big fish, is Hubby’s brother. Flashy shimmers when the sun goes down. So does Jewels. The list is a long one. It is our wonderful family.
From flowers to fish, these are my ‘summer children’, and my little piece of heaven.
Jennie
Wish Tree
Have you ever seen a Wish Tree?
Walking along a beach on Cape Cod with friends, we rounded a bend along the sand where it meets the shore. This was a remote stretch of the beach, quite a distance from the usual spot where people set up their chairs and umbrellas. The walk was long.
And there it was. An old felled tree. It was covered with shells, each one placed carefully. The shells were a multitude of types and sizes. The enormity of what was right in front of us was enough to stop everyone in their tracks.
I knew right away it was a Wish Tree.
“Look at all those shells. They’re so pretty”, said my friend. And she reached to take one.
“No!” I shouted. Everyone looked at me like I’d lost my mind.
“Don’t you know what this is? It’s a Wish Tree. Every shell is a wish that someone has put on this tree.”
Silence
“These are sacred. Well, they are to the people who placed their wish on the tree. No wonder it’s out of the way, far from tourists. The shells are so beautiful.”
More silence.
“I’d like to make a wish. Would you?”
I carefully looked for just the right shell, one that spoke to me. I picked the right one, and I had a ‘moment’, making a wish and hanging it on the tree.
Alice did the same thing. And Jane and Paula did, too. We were quiet. Everyone was now part of the Wish Tree. How can so many thoughts and emotions run like a speeding train, and then settle into a warm, vibrant sunset, all in a matter of minutes? That’s what happened at the Wish Tree.
While I had heard of Wish Trees, I had never seen one until now. Lucky for me that I had read the outstanding YA book Wishtree by Katherine Applegate.
She also wrote the Newbery Award winning book, The One and Only Ivan. Yes, she is that good. Wishtree should have won the Newbery, too. I read the book aloud to my grandchildren – four hours, multiple days, and we never stopped.
When I visit with the grandchildren, a beloved ritual is reading a story before bedtime. The musicality of words floating into the ear and going into the mind becomes an arrow that pierces the heart. It always happens that way.
Thanksgiving a few years ago I brought along plenty of books to read aloud. I also brought a new book to read. Not a read-aloud for the children, but a book for me. I never expected what would happen next.
The children were camping out and snuggled in sleeping bags in the bedroom. It was fun, but didn’t lend itself to seeing the pictures in a picture book. I thought I would read to them a little of my book, Wishtree by Katherine Applegate. I hadn’t read the book, so we were all jumping into something new.
What started as one night of bedtime reading became the focus of our holiday together. The book is outstanding. It plucks at every scintilla of the heart. There is no stopping, as the storyline keeps going. So, we had to keep going. We read the next day, and the next night, and so on, until we finished the book. 211 pages. Just like chapter reading in my classroom at school, I was reading aloud with no pictures. The big difference was reading the book in only a few days. Somehow, that made reading more exciting. Breathless. Heart pounding.
Red is an oak tree with two hundred and sixteen rings. He’s been around a long time, and he tells the story. He’s a Wishtree, with a long and honorable history. On the first day of May it’s been a tradition for people to put wishes on his tree, written on paper or cloth and tied to his branches. Sometimes those wishes are also whispered to Red. He talks about his neighborhood:
Different languages, different food, different customs. That’s our neighborhood: wild and tangled and colorful. Like the best kind of garden.
Red talks about himself and people:
For a tree, communication is just as complicated and miraculous as it is for humans. In a mysterious dance of sunlight and sugar, water and wind and soil, we build invisible bridges to connect with the world.
Can you imagine reading those sentences to children? I had to stop. My grandchildren said not a word. Words were not necessary because Red had said them all. We were humbled. Spellbound.
The story is centered on two children in the neighborhood, Samar and Stephen, the host of animal families who live in Red’s tree, and Francesca, whose family has owned Red for centuries. It is history and uncovering the past, diversity and acceptance both then and now, friendship, nature, understanding, and great adventure. Oh yes, adventure. My grandchildren and I fell in love with Bongo the bird, Red’s best friend. Lewis and Clark are cats, FreshBakedBread is the mama skunk, and on and on, with animals who are the supporting characters in this book.
When someone carves LEAVE on Red, the plot thickens. This becomes sleuth work. The stories of the children, and Francesca’s past, and also Red’s past come together. It is captivating. The message it sends is a beacon of hope and promise.
Like Red, I’ve been around a long time. I know the best, and this is one of the best.
And to think that I happened upon a real Wish Tree on Cape Cod. Wow!
Jennie
Posted in Book Review, books, chapter reading, children's books, Diversity, Early Education, Expressing words and feelings, Inspiration, Nature, reading, reading aloud, Teaching young children, wonder
Tagged Cape Cod, children's books, Early Education, Inspiration, Katherine Applegate, Making a Difference, Making wishes, Nature, reading aloud, Wishtree
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A Few Quotations on Reading
Excellent quotations on reading from Charles French.
charles french words reading and writing

“No matter how busy you may think you are, you must find time for reading, or surrender yourself to self-chosen ignorance.”
Confucius

“Once you learn to read, you will be forever free.”
Frederick Douglass

“There are many little ways to enlarge your child’s world. Love of books is the best of all.”
Jacqueline Kennedy
Remember to keep reading!
Gallows Hill can be found here in ebook.
Gallows Hill in paperback can be found here.
An interview about Gallows Hill can be found here.

Please follow the following links to find my novel:
Thank you!
The book trailer:
Maledicus:Investigative Paranormal Society Book I
My radio interview:


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