Friday, February 29, 2008

Besty Byars Biography

Betsy Byars has written over sixty books for young people. Her first published in 1962 and since then she has published regularly. Her books have been translated into nineteen languages and she gets thousands of letters from readers in the United States and from all over the world.


She has won many awards. Among them are the Newbery Medal in 1971 for her novel The Summer of the Swans, the American Book Award in 1981 for The Night Swimmers, The Edgar (for the best mystery for young people) in 1992 for Wanted..Mud Blossom and the Regina Medal by the Catholic Library Association for the body of her work. She especially values her many state awards which were voted on by the readers of the state.


Betsy attended public schools in North Carolina and graduated from Queens College in Charlotte, NC with a major in English. She began her writing career five years after her graduation by publishing short magazine articles. As she began to read to her children, her interest in writing for young people began.

Betsy lives with her husband Ed on an air strip in South Carolina. They are both pilots, and the bottom floor of their house is a hangar so they can taxi out and take off, almost from their front yard. The top floor of the house? Betsy's studio!

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Hooray for the Golly Sisters

**This small chapter book is one laugh after another for a little kid while also teaching them how to read. Fun and learning are not two words a child normally hears in a sentence together. May-May and Rose, the singing dancing Golly Sisters, have adventures as they travel west in their covered wagon, entertaining people along the way.


First their wagon got stuck in a big river while crossing to a town waitng for them, then May-May's magic act with pigs got screwed up and they are boo-ed out of town. The Golly sister's day did not start out great as you can tell. As May-May and her sister, Rose, begin traveling again they come upon a swamp and are scared out of their wits. But instead of turning this into a frightening situation they take turns naming things in a swamp that are nice.



In another town, the sister's decide to do a high-wire waltz with Rose on the wire. After a failed attempt, May-May suggests they just draw a line and Rose can pretend to walk a high-wire. Later, May-May wishes for something and Rose has an idea. "Hooray for the Golly Sisters!"



After their show that night, the sisters excuse themselves from the stage and disappear behind the audience and begin to yell, "Hooray for the Golly Sisters!" As if on cue the whole audience started slapping louder and yelling "Hooray for the Golly Sisters!", too.



May-May and Rose's wish was that at least one time someone would yell, "Hooray for the Golly Sisters!" And with a little sneakery they got it.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Hans Christian Anderson biography


April 2nd 1805 - August 4th 1875


Hans Christian Andersen was born in Odense, Denmark, the son of a poor shoemaker and a washerwoman. As a young teenager, he became quite well known in Odense as a reciter of drama, and as a singer. When he was 14, he set off for the capital, Copenhagen, determined to become a national success on the stage. He failed miserably, but made some influential friends in the capital, who got him into school to remedy his lack of proper education. He hated school: aged 17, he was in a class of 12-year-olds and was constantly mocked by them and by the teachers.


In 1829 his first book - an account of a walking trip - was published. After that, books came out at regular intervals. At first, he considered his adult books more important than his fantasies. In later life, however, he began to see that these apparently trivial stories could vividly portray constant features of human life and character, in a charming manner. There were two consequences of this. First, he stopped regarding his stories as trifles written solely for children; second, he began to write more original stories, rather than retelling traditional tales.


He once said that ideas for stories 'lie in my mind like seeds and only need the kiss of a sunbeam or a drop of malice to flower'. He would often thinly disguise people he liked or disliked as characters in his stories: a woman who failed to return his love becomes the foolish prince in I 'The Little Mermaid'; his own ugliness and humiliation, or his father's daydream of being descended from a rich and powerful family, are reflected in 'The Ugly Duckling'.


Hans Andersen's stories began to be translated into English as early as 1846. Since then, numerous editions, and more recently Hollywood songs and a Disney cartoon, have helped to ensure the continuing popularity of the stories in the English-speaking world.


written 2002

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

The Brothers Grimm

Have you ever heard of the Brothers Grimm? Do you really know who they are? Well, according to their self-titled movie, starring Matt Damon and the late Heath Ledger as Will and Jake Grimm, they were a more complex version of travelling con-artists. They are called to "exorcise" the force at work. When this happens, Jake writes down every detail of their stories in his book of fairy tales. The brothers and their team set staged ghouls, ghosts and beasts to dupe townspeople out of their money in order to get rid of whatever it was that was bothering them. When they are arrested for this trickery they strike a bargain with a French general to find missing children, from a German town, they were mysteriously disappearing. This may sound like their normal con, but no, this is a real fairy tale. A mysterious force kidnapped 11 little girls for their youth and need one more, but once Angelicka, the woman Jake has fallen in love with, is grabbed to be the 12th they do everything possible to save them. All the while an evil witch from 5oo years ago is locked in a Rapunzel-type tower tricking men into doing her will waiting for the eclipse to bring her back to full beauty as "the fairest of them all".



Of course in the end all the girls are saved and as is the last line in the movie "they lived happily ever after ... maybe not". Even though I consider this movie a total disappointment and hard to follow, I have to give the creators props for giving it all the elements of a fairy tale. True love's kiss, evil queen locked in a tower, enchanted forest and girls in glass slippers getting locked in crypts.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Toad Flies High


This picture book has characters from Walt Disney's The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad which fist came out as a movie in 1949. That movie was adapted from Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows. In this book Toad almost hurts his friends Ratty, Badger and Mole each time he tried to drive something with a motor. The first time was a motorboat, which he sank. Then, he crashed his car into a tree. The last time happened when he almost flew into them with his airplane. Each time he missed them and each time he ruined their picnic. Toad then promised to stay away from anything with a motor for "a year and a day". On the fourth try for a picnic, they have a run in with a bull and were saved by Toad, who was in a hot air balloon. No matter how much you annoy your friends they know you'll always be there when they need you and vice-versa.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Dr. Seuss' life

Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known to the world as the beloved Dr. Seuss, was born in 1904 on Howard Street in Springfield, Massachusetts. Ted's father, Theodor Robert, and grandfather were brewmasters in the city. His mother, Henrietta Seuss Geisel, often soothed her children to sleep by "chanting" rhymes remembered from her youth. Ted credited his mother with both his ability and desire to create the rhymes for which he became so well known.


Although the Geisels enjoyed great financial success for many years, the onset of World War I and Prohibition presented both financial and social challenges for the German immigrants. Nonetheless, the family persevered and again prospered, providing Ted and his sister, Marnie, with happy childhoods.

The influence of Ted's memories of Springfield can be seen throughout his work. Drawings of Horton the Elephant meandering along streams in the Jungle of Nool, for example, mirror the watercourses in Springfield's Forest Park from the period. The fanciful truck driven by Sylvester McMonkey McBean in The Sneetches could well be the Knox tractor that young Ted saw on the streets of Springfield. In addition to its name, Ted's first children's book, And To Think That I Saw It On Mulberry Street, is filled with Springfield imagery, including a look-alike of Mayor Fordis Parker on the reviewing stand, and police officers riding red motorcycles, the traditional color of Springfield's famed Indian Motocycles.


Ted left Springfield as a teenager to attend Dartmouth College, where he became editor-in-chief of the Jack-O-Lantern, Dartmouth's humor magazine. Although his tenure as editor ended prematurely when Ted and his friends were caught throwing a drinking party, which was against the prohibition laws and school policy, he continued to contribute to the magazine, signing his work "Seuss." This is the first record of the "Seuss" pseudonym, which was both Ted's middle name and his mother's maiden name.


To please his father, who wanted him to be a college professor, Ted went on to Oxford University in England after graduation. However, his academic studies bored him, and he decided to tour Europe instead. Oxford did provide him the opportunity to meet a classmate, Helen Palmer, who not only became his first wife, but also a children's author and book editor.


After returning to the United States, Ted began to pursue a career as a cartoonist. The Saturday Evening Post and other publications published some of his early pieces, but the bulk of Ted's activity during his early career was devoted to creating advertising campaigns for Standard Oil, which he did for more than 15 years.


As World War II approached, Ted's focus shifted, and he began contributing weekly political cartoons to PM magazine, a liberal publication. Too old for the draft, but wanting to contribute to the war effort, Ted served with Frank Capra's Signal Corps (U.S. Army) making training movies. It was here that he was introduced to the art of animation and developed a series of animated training films featuring a trainee called Private Snafu.


While Ted was continuing to contribute to Life, Vanity Fair, Judge and other magazines, Viking Press offered him a contract to illustrate a collection of children's sayings called Boners. Although the book was not a commercial success, the illustrations received great reviews, providing Ted with his first "big break" into children's literature. Getting the first book that he both wrote and illustrated, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, published, however, required a great degree of persistence - it was rejected 27 times before being published by Vanguard Press.


The Cat in the Hat, perhaps the defining book of Ted's career, developed as part of a unique joint venture between Houghton Mifflin (Vanguard Press) and Random House. Houghton Mifflin asked Ted to write and illustrate a children's primer using only 225 "new-reader" vocabulary words. Because he was under contract to Random House, Random House obtained the trade publication rights, and Houghton Mifflin kept the school rights. With the release of The Cat in the Hat, Ted became the definitive children's book author and illustrator.


After Ted's first wife died in 1967, Ted married an old friend, Audrey Stone Geisel, who not only influenced his later books, but now guards his legacy as the president of Dr. Seuss Enterprises.


At the time of his death on September 24, 1991, Ted had written and illustrated 44 children's books, including such all-time favorites as Green Eggs and Ham, Oh, the Places You'll Go, Fox in Socks, and How the Grinch Stole Christmas. His books had been translated into more than 15 languages. Over 200 million copies had found their way into homes and hearts around the world.


Besides the books, his works have provided the source for eleven children's television specials, a Broadway musical and a feature-length motion picture. Other major motion pictures are on the way.


His honors included two Academy awards, two Emmy awards, a Peabody award and the Pulitzer Prize


TM & © 2002-2004 Dr. Seuss Enterprises, L.P. All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Ever After overview

Check out this link to a very well done music montage of Ever After:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=iRodNml83iM&feature=related



Ever After is not your typical fairytale, and Danielle De Barbarac is not your typical Cinderella. This movie is set in the Renaissance period of France and she brings the voice of humanism to that world. Danielle presents Prince Henry with a theory of people's worth. As in the gypsies, theives and servants and how the government turned them into what they are then tries to punish them for that.

At first, Henry doesn't want to be the future king and tries his hardest to run away, but Danielle, in essence teaches him how to be king. The only woman the prince was able to save in the movie was the Mona Lisa because Danielle was either saving herself or him. She saved him from the gypsies and her self from Pierre Le Pieu. She fights for what she wants and knows how to get out of any situation. Andy Tennant, the director, presents Danielle as more of a role model cinderella than a damsel-in-distress. He says that he wanted something for his 2 daughter to look at.

I think Henry fell in love with her passion first. She had a real passion for reading, in life, her world and enjoyed intellectual engagements. Danielle can read, write and enjoy life and that inspires Henry to go to his father with the idea for a university.

Leonardo Da Vinci should never have known Prince Henry because he died before he was born, but that didn't stop this driven director. Tennant shows Da Vinci in the fairy godmother role, well godfather. Leo uses his mind for science, logica and art to help poor Danielle when she needs it most. He made her wings for the ball and got her out of the cellar by unhinging the door.

There is also a real sense of family in this story. Henry fights with his father, but the king comes around when he finds his son is in no way going to marry the princess of Spain. They reconcile their difference and helps him find another bride. Danielle shares a strong bond with her father, Auguste, who unfortunately died in the very beginning just shortly after marrying the Baroness. He used to read to his daughter every night he was there and always brought her a new book. She looks after her step-family in the end keeping them from a horrible fate, except for the good sister, Jacqueline, who helped this Cinderella out after she was whipped.

Danielle also considers the servants that work around her as her family, which leads her to pretend to be a courtier to rescue Maurice from a ship bound for the Americas. That actually is what made the prince believe she was a courtier in the first place which I'm not at all sure whether that was a good or bad thing. He would never have met he if she was just a servant, but he fell in love with her as a courtier.

The end shows the great-great granddaughter, dying Queen of France, telling the Brothers Grimm that it wasn't that Danielle and Henry live happly ever after, but that they really lived. That this was the true story of Cinderella.