Monday, December 30, 2013

The Night Before Christmas

Although it is past Christmas, it is worth noting that Ivy adored this book this season. Perhaps four begins the height of Clement C. Moore's poem? Every Christmas Eve Ivy's grandmother calls her and reads her The Night Before Christmas over FaceTime. This year her Nana and Papa gave her an audio version with their voices from Hallmark. Ivy listened to it, for better or worse, all the way back home from visiting them (3 hours!). She has mostly memorized the poem by now. For all you grandparents out there - try these recordable little pieces of history.

The Three Questions

End of December...good time for a four-year-old to ponder the meaning of life, right? Jon J. Muth has taken Tolstoy's work and created a work for children with his beautiful watercolors. A young boy, Nikolai, attempts to answer his three big questions - What is the best time to do things? Who is the most important one? What is the right thing to do? Not satisfied by his friends' answers, he seeks the counsel of a wizened old turtle. He finds his answer in an unexpected way!


Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Christmas on Exeter Street

This is an unusual book as well as Ivy's favorite this holiday season. It is Christmas Eve in the big house on Exeter Street. A mother and her two children are expecting a few guests, but the house ends up bursting full by the end of the night. Each guest sleeps and a more and more unusual place - shelves, a baby in the sink, bathtubs, etc. Even the guests are unusual - "two fat men and their wives", a homeless woman and her baby, and kids with parents vacationing in Timbuktu. The book just gets more and more unusual. However, the message is a holiday message - open your heart and your home; Saint Nick will find you wherever you roam!

Merry Christmas!

By: Dianne Hendry
Illustrator: John Lawrence

Saturday, December 14, 2013

I'll Be Home For Christmas

One of my favorite Christmas stories. Toot is not home from Ireland, and Christmas is fast approaching. Puddle has done all the preparations, save signing Toot's name on the Christmas cards. Toot promises to be home for Christmas, but when a big snow storm hits Boston, Toot struggles to get back to his friend. When he feels like hope is lost, he sits in the snow and takes out his lucky nut from his Aunt. Soon a mysterious visitor in a red suit and sleigh appears to help him out.
In this heartwarming story about friendship, Holly Hobbie dazzles us once again with the warmth and spirit of her drawings. A must read. There was a wonderful movie made as well.