Showing posts with label Father's Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Father's Day. Show all posts

HUGS FOR DADS!

There are lots of ways that parents nurture and hug their offspring -- not just with arms! But no matter how the embrace is made, one thing remains the same: all hugs are given with love.  Told in sweet rhyme with soft pictures: hugs with noses (elephants) and hugs in red roses (ladybugs) show that from the largest animals to the small bug, hugs are important to all! This sturdy board book (best for toddlers) shows how all sorts of animals express affection for one another. I love this little book for Father's Day, because even though it's about all kinds creatures, the last page shows a Dad hugging his child. (Written by Lorie Ann Grove and illustrated by Rebecca Malone)

If you'd like to read my post about Father's Day choices for older readers and Dads-who-love-baseball, CLICK HERE.   Last year I posted "Celebrating Dads", with a variety of picture books for kids up to age 8.  Another great Father's Day book is THE FATHERS ARE COMING HOME, from my recent post about Margaret Wise Brown.

The board book choices listed below are more great stories for First-Time Dads or any Dads with children, ages baby-4 years old:


DADDY HUGS
Daddy Hugs (Classic Board Book)
DADDY KISSES
Daddy Kisses
DADDY CUDDLES
Daddy Cuddles

SOME BASEBALL STORIES THAT WILL HAVE YOU YEARNING FOR THE PAST

Click HERE to read a quick history of this 1908 classic song.
READ ALOUD GRANDPAS AND DADS: Father's Day is this month, and I couldn't pass up the opportunity to share some exceptional (and nostalgic) baseball stories with you. And you Moms/Grandmas out there who don't quite get the obsession with our National Pastime - maybe you'll understand it a little better after reading these enlightening books...


The original lyrics of TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALLGAME, written by Jack Norworth, begin with a little known verse:
"Katie Casey was baseball mad.  Had the fever and had it bad..."
This fictional female character inspired the fun historical picture book Players in Pigtails, when its author, Shana Corey, was doing research on female baseball players after seeing the movie, A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN.  In the book, no team will let Katie play.  It's WWII, and the men have all gone off to war, so the coaches decide to start a women's baseball league.  Illustrator Rebecca Gibbon did a great job bringing the style of the 1940's to the page! (grades K-3)


3 Great Baseball Books written and illustrated by Matt Tavares... these make perfect read alouds for dads/grandpas who want to share their love of baseball with their kids/grandchildren.  I think you'll love Matt's old-fashioned style - you might even blink back a couple of tears...
Zachary's Ball  Zachary goes with his father to his first baseball game - at Fenway Park.  When his dad catches a pop fly ball and hands it to him, Zachary is instantly transported to the mound as a pitcher for Boston!  He strikes a player out and the Red Sox win the game. When the catcher returns the ball, Zachary is suddenly back in his seat. He tells his father that the baseball is magic and his father replies, "They're all magic." After writing his name on the ball, Zachary sleeps with it every night, but eventually the ball disappears.  Years later, as an adult, walking past Fenway, he catches an over-the-wall home run.  He thinks he sees his name on it, but the letters disappear.  He gives it to a girl walking by with her father, telling her that all baseballs are magic.
Zachary's Ball (Tavares baseball books) 
Oliver's Game  Like Players in Pigtails, this touching book, set in the 1940's, has baseball interconnecting with WWII history.  In his grandfather's memorabilia shop near Wrigley Field, a young boy named Oliver (named after his grandfather) discovers an old Chicago CUBS uniform.  After questioning his grandfather about it, he not only learns that the uniform belongs to his grandfather, but that the elder Oliver gave up a chance to try out for the Cubs' team when he enlisted in the Marines after the bombing of Pearl Harbor.  This touching tribute to baseball has a sweet ending, when it is revealed that the grandfather - who suffered a career-ending injury in the war - found another way to feel part of the game and be close to his team.
Oliver's Game (Tavares baseball books)
Mudball  "A lighthearted picture-book romp based on baseball's shortest home run. In 1903, Andy Oyler hit the only home run of his entire career, but it's the subject of a much-loved baseball legend. Tavares casts his hero as the classic underdog: Oyler's the shortest player in the league, and he's trying to overcome a batting slump and the heckling of fans. As he steps to the plate on a cold, drizzly day, he represents the Minneapolis Millers' last hope. The drizzle becomes a downpour, but the umpire, believing that the batter stands a good chance of making the final out, lets play continue. Oyler somehow connects with the ball, which then gets lost in the wet, muddy infield. Tavares hilariously details the ensuing chaotic play as fielders scramble to find it and the batter makes his way around the bases..." -Library School Journal.
Mudball


MORE BOOKS FOR FAMILIES WHO LOVE BASEBALL:
Curious George at the Baseball Game, Margaret & H.A. Rey (4-8)  George is off to watch a game at Mudville Field...you know he'll do more than watch!
Curious George at the Baseball Game

The Babe and I  by David A. Adler, illustrated by Terry Widener (K-3)  Babe Ruth makes an appearance in this book about a boy and his family in the Bronx, as they struggle through the Great Depression.
The Babe & I

Casey at the Bat: A Ballad of the Republic Sung in the Year 1888, by Ernest L. Thayer, illustrated by C.F. Payne (grades K-4)  The stylish caricatures that accompany this well known ballad are full of personality and charm.
Casey at the Bat: A Ballad of the Republic Sung in the Year 1888


Thank you, Jackie Robinson by Barbara Cohen (ages 9-12)  This compelling novel isn't just about baseball, but about the warm friendship between a 10-year-old Jewish boy named Sam and an older African American man.  This man, Davy, is a cook at Sam's mother's New Jersey inn.  It's 1947, and they both love the Brooklyn Dodgers.  And they both love Jackie Robinson.  Davy is a cook at Sam's mother's inn.  When Davy has a heart attack, Sam musters up his courage and gets past many obstacles to get Jackie Robinson's autograph on a baseball for Davy, somehow convinced that the ball with make him better.
Thank You, Jackie Robinson

TWO "GOODNIGHT BOOKS" FROM MARGARET WISE BROWN

Margaret Wise Brown
1910-1952
Today marks the birthday of Margaret Wise Brown, one of America's most prolific children's book authors of the Twentieth Century. She attempted to write most of her books from the "here and now" perspective of a child, rather than in the more popular style of the day: fairytale and fantasy.  Her books often included animals and everyday things that mattered to children.  Even though she died at the young age of 42, at the peak of her career she had over 100 books in print.  She chose her illustrators carefully.  They included Clement Hurd, Garth Williams, Felicia Bond, and Leonard Weisgard.

HER GOODNIGHT BOOKS...

She is probably best known for her timeless classic, GOODNIGHT MOON (1947), illustrated by Clement Hurd.  Who can forget the rhythmic text that begins:
In the great green room
There was a telephone 
And a red balloon
And a picture of --
The cow jumping over the moon!

The whole story takes place in one room, as the baby bunny bids a ritual "goodnight" to all the objects in his room.  Have you ever noticed these little details...
-the hands on the two clocks progress from 7 PM to 8:10 PM.
-the young mouse and kittens wander around the room. The mouse is present in all pages showing the room.
-the red balloon hanging over the bed disappears in several of the color plates, then reappears at the end.
-the room lighting grows progressively darker.
-the moon rises in the left-hand window.
-the socks disappear from the drying rack.
-the open book in the bookshelf is The Runaway Bunny.
-the book on the nightstand is Goodnight Moon.
-in the painting of the cow jumping over the moon, the mailbox in the right-hand side of the painting occasionally disappears.
-in the painting of the three bears, the painting hanging in the bears' room is a painting of a cow jumping over the moon.
-the painting of the fly-fishing bunny, which appears only in two color plates, appears to be black and white (or otherwise devoid of color). It is very similar to a picture in the book The Runaway Bunny.
-the number of books in the bookshelf changes.
-the pendulum of the bedside clock disappears in the final room scene
-the stripes on the bunny's shirt change
-in the last page the word bunny is gone off the brush

A new (though even older never-before-published!) "goodnight book" by Margaret Wise Brown is THE FATHERS ARE COMING HOME (2010), pictures by talented illustrator Stephen Savage.
It is nighttime and the fathers are coming home... 

This book is a perfect bedtime story, and would also be a great read for Father's Day.  The original manuscript was written in 1943, as a tribute to WWII fathers, but it was never published.  Though lost for years with many other of Brown's writings, it was finally published in 2010. The story is about fathers returning to their children at the day's end - birds, bugs, bunnies, fish - and finally, a sailor dad coming home from sea to his child.  The bold and colorful illustrations and simple, lyrical text make a sweet book for 2-5 year olds.

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