Posted in picture books

Crow Not Crow, birding, and a guest post from Jane Yolen!

Crow Not Crow, by Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple/Illustrated by Elizabeth Dulemba, (Aug. 2018, Cornell Lab Publishing Group), $16.95, ISBN: 978-1-943-645-31-2

Ages 5-9

Hi everyone! I hope you and yours are having a wonderful holiday season. I took a few days off from blogging to enjoy the chaos that is Christmas, but I’m back, with an armful of books to talk about. Today, I’ve got a book about birding, along with a guest post by author Jane Yolen, who’s basically a superhero in our home. Let’s dig right in.

A dad and his daughter take a walk on a Fall day. She’s finally ready for her first birding walk – her brothers are all experts, but she thinks all the birds kind of look the same. Her dad teaches her a simple way to start identifying birds: Crow, Not Crow. Is it a crow? Dad asks leading questions as daughter looks on, describing identifying characteristics for the birds they encounter; he teaches her to look, really look, at colors, textures, beaks, wings – and boosts his daughter’s excitement and confidence as the story progresses. Back matter includes a section on the birds discovered in the book, split into “crow” and “not crows”. Download Cornell Lab’s Bird QR app to scan and hear bird calls for each bird.

I’ve enjoyed the Jane Yolen/Cornell Lab books. The nonfiction-fiction blend is a hit with my kids, and the artwork and words are soothing, calming, like a quiet morning. Crow Not Crow introduces birding to a young audience by giving them an accessible opening: identify a crow, note its characteristics, and go from there. Crow Not Crow teaches kids to be mindful and notice details, and creates a love and respect for nature within its pages. Elizabeth Dulemba’s color pencil artwork creates realistic, beautiful spreads with the birds taking center stage, and breathes life into a sweet story about a dad and his daughter spending a day together.

I’m thrilled that author Jane Yolen offered to write a guest post for MomReadIt! I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.

Everyone in my family is a birder, though I am the worst of them.The older I get, eyes compromised by small cataracts and Sjogren’s Syndrome, I find it harder to tell the small birds apart. LBJ’s they were dubbed—“little brown jobbies” by my husband years earlier. They seem to have gotten smaller and duller ever since. So I concentrate on crows and larger—raptors and corvids. (I am also in a band called Three Ravens, but that’s another story altogether.)

My (late) husband and our three (now grown) children were and are great birders. Not me. Though I try. In fact, I am very trying.

Not only are we bird fanatics, we are bird writers. Apart and together my family and I have published at least a dozen books about birds, starting with OWL MOON. And If you count stories and poems and songs—we are hitting somewhere north of 100. We have simply lost track.

But when Adam and I began this book—he’s the middle child with a wife and two children of his own—he professed to be bedazzled by writing a picture book. He insisted he was a song writer, a novelist, a poet, a short story writer. What did he know about picture books.

You had them read to you as a child,” I said, though in fact he was reading them himself by two-and a-half, and to his nursery school fellows by three.

I told him picture books, in their own way, are harder than all of the others and so much more of an interesting challenge. They have the line structure and lyricism of  a song or a poem. They have to have interesting characters, a plot, and an arc like a novel. They have to have a taste of adult language but be easy enough for a child (or a tired adult) to understand. They have to be about something a child is interested in. And all that has to be with every page being visual enough for an illustration.

He took a deep breath, and we began.

New York Times bestselling children’s author, Jane Yolen, and her son, Adam Stemple, have teamed up to write a gentle tale of a father introducing his daughter to the joys of bird watching. Using the simple “Crow, Not Crow” method for distinguishing one bird from another, father and daughter explore the birds near their home…and there are so many to see! After the story ends, readers learn more about all the birds that appear in the book with photographs, descriptions, and QR links to bird sounds.

Posted in Non-Fiction, picture books, Preschool Reads

Take a nature walk On Gull Beach

On Gull Beach, by Jane Yolen/Illustrated by Bob Marstall, (March 2018, Cornell Lab Publishing Group), $16.95, ISBN: 9781943645183

Recommended for readers 4-7

The latest book in Jane Yolen and Bob Marstall’s On Bird Hill & Beyond series takes us to the beach, where a boy wanders along the shore, observing the wildlife as he goes. He sees a starfish get snapped up by a gull, and he follows along as a group of gulls toss the sea star, trying to grab it as the birds pass it from one to the next. As he follows along, readers learn about the shoreline ecosystem; the tidepools, seaglass, and crabs.

All of the On Bird Hill books are standalone stories, each looking at a different ecosystem through the eyes of a child; all come together to form an early reader science and nature series on habitats. On Gull Beach looks at life on a New England beach, with extra information about different gulls, shorebirds, sea stars, and crabs that make an appearance in the book. There’s also a note about supporting our beaches and wildlife that back up discussions about ecology and conservation. This is a beautifully written and illustrated rhyming story about nature that kids will enjoy and that supports early earth science and habitat study. Have kids point out the different birds they see, and the crabs they spot – that’s my son’s favorite part of the book!

Posted in Animal Fiction, Preschool Reads

On Duck Pond, there is chaos… and then peace.

On Duck Pond, by Jane Yolen/Illustrated by Bob Marstall, (Apr. 2017, Cornell Lab Publishing Group), $15.95, ISBN: 978-1-943645-22-0

Recommended for readers 3-7

A boy and his dog walk by a duck pond in the morning, when nature is at peace; when a quack of ducks appear, they splash, they chitter and chatter, and the pond’s inhabitants scramble in the momentary chaos. The boy notes that even his reflection looks different in the disturbed water. When the ducks move on, the pond returns to its peaceful setting, the pond life resumes, and the boy, contemplative, heads home.

This rhyming tale is a sequel to On Bird Hill, but it’s not necessary to have read it to enjoy this quiet nature tale. Award-winning author Jane Yolen gives readers a wonderful rhyming tale of quiet and chaos, coming up with fun, descriptive terms like “a quack of ducks”, and evocative phrases like, “Old Duck Pond, once still and quiet/Now seemed battered by the riot”, and, of the boy’s reflection, “Every part of me was changed/I looked like I’d been re-arranged”. She captures the riot of noise and blunder of movement that disturbs the quiet  morning, and the gradual pace with which nature recovers when the ducks move on, all witnessed by the boy and his dog. We meet some of the pond’s inhabitants – turtles, herons, frogs, and tadpoles – during the course of the story; the realistic illustrations introduce us to even more wildlife. There are lovely, detailed drawing of the pond from various angles, from close-ups of lily pads to sweeping vistas. The ducks’ descent is beautifully rendered, with wings spread, water splashing, beaks open, communicating the movement and noise they bring to the scene. A section on pond habitats and birds, and information about the ducks and other birds and animals featured in the story, adds a nice non-fiction section to the book.

This is a great read-aloud for storytimes – the rhyming text provides a nice cadence for readers to listen to – and for introductions to habitats for younger readers. Kirkus captures the spirit of the narration by referring to it as a “sense of wonder” book.

Pair this with some of Jane Yolen’s  more nature-oriented books, like On Bird Hill or Owl Moon for an author study, or display with books like Denise Fleming’s In the Small, Small Pond and Henry Cole’s I Took a Walk.