loose teeth

It's loose tooth season for us here as Avery is losing baby teeth left and right.  Here’s what we’ve been reading:

One Morning in Maine.  In this Caldecott Honor book by Robert McCloskey, little Sal experienced an important milestone—she loses a tooth, albeit in an unexpected way during a morning full of digging for clams and running errands with her father on the stunning and windblown Maine coast.

Throw Your Tooth on the Roof: Tooth Traditions from Around the World by Selby Beeler and G. Brian Karas.  Who knew children in so many countries threw their freshly fallen teeth onto their roof?  In the Philippines, “I hide my tooth in a special place and make a wish.  A year later, if I can still find my tooth, I can make another wish.”  Avery laughed a ton while learning what kids do with their lost teeth around the world.  Definitely a fascinating read!

Professor Astro Cat’s Frontiers of Space

“Our Universe is very complicated, and many scientists spend their entire lives trying to unravel its greatest secrets — in fact, many of these secrets are yet to be uncovered.  But don’t worry, Professor Astro is here to help, and I am just about the cleverest alley cat you’ll ever meet!  So batten down the hatches and buckle up, it’s time to blast off and discover Professor Astro Cat’s Frontiers of Space!"

Avery and Nate have fallen in love with the professor and his space-exploring ways.  Professor Astro Cat’s Frontiers of Space, by Dr. Dominic Walliman and Ben Newman, is an amazing beginning compendium of all things space, thoughtfully written and researched.  The illustrations are retro but new, and the content is super engaging.  Definitely a must for every library.  I appreciate the time it took to put together such an amazing reference on space, and look forward to reading it with Avery and Nate over and over as they begin to grasp what is beyond them and their planet.

the cable car and the dragon

“Cable cars are so human they can even speak.  One of them can, anyway.  San Francisco, with all that water around it, is very windy.  And sticking out into the ocean that way, it is also foggy.  When the city is all covered with fog, it’s like living inside a great gray pearl.  It was on such a night that I found I could talk to Charlie the Cable Car.  It was so foggy that you couldn’t even see the tops of the buildings.  And so windy that all the tourists had gone to bed early.”

Currently reading: The Cable Car and the Dragon by venerable San Francisco Chronicle columnist and journalist Herb Caen.  Illustrated by Barbara Nine Byfield.  I like how Caen starts off the book with a short history about cable cars.  One night, Charlie, the youngest cable car in the city (only sixty!), veers off his usual route on Nob Hill and makes a right onto Jackson Street into the middle of a Chinese New Year Parade.  He meets an amiable dragon named Chu Chin Chow and the two go on a lively but harrowing adventure through the city.  A good read for Lunar New Year.

The way Caen weaves this tale shows a clear love for the city and a deep knowledge of its unique denizens, quirks and landmarks.  This is someone who avidly walked its streets over and over again, but with the observant eye and wit of a writer.

how little lori visited times square

"This is a very funny book and should not be read while drinking orange juice, or you will spill it!"

This is a rerelease of How Little Lori Visited Times Square, written by Amos Vogel,  illustrated by Maurice Sendak and hand lettered by Morris Karol.  Little Lori decides that he wants to take a trip to see Times Square in New York City, but encounters many obstacles on the way.  He does get to see quite a bit of New York, though.  He also makes a new friend who helps him in an unexpected way.  Maurice Sendak's palette of earth tones is very reminiscent of the year this title was originally published, 1963.