Friday, November 17, 2006

Not sure where my head is, but I seem to have gotten both days and dates mixed up in the posters I put around school for the Book Fair. Here are the correct days and dates. (I hope!)

Thursday, Nov. 16: 3-6 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 17: 8:30-5 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 18: 10-Noon
MONDAY!!.& Tues., Nov. 20 & 21:
8:30-5
(More interesting posts to come soon I promise. I have a major rant building about all the "other" Charlotte's Web books being published in advance of the movie.)

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

A change to the Book Fair hours below.
We won't be open until 3 on Thursday.
Hope to see you then!!

Tuesday, November 14, 2006



The Bookfair is coming!

Yup, it's time for Seabury's fall Scholastic Bookfair. It starts Thursday and goes through Tuesday of Thanksgiving (and Parent-Teacher conference) week. See the poster above for hours.

This one comes at a perfect time for holiday shopping. Look for classroom wishlists near the cash register. It's a little like Christmas-Birthday-
Hanukah-Kwanzaa rolled into one for the teachers when they get a bag full of new books a couple of days after the fair. Those purchases are tax deductible.

Our reps at Scholastic always marvel at how many books Seabury families buy for the size of our school. I'm never surprised. That's why we make good use of a library that has more that 11,000 books. Our children and their families love books of many kinds. Come on out to the Book Fair. There will be some good ones there!

(And, since you asked, yes I could still use more volunteers to work at the Book Fair, especially on Thursday from starting at 10 a.m., when I'll have classes in the library.)

Talk to you soon.

Thursday, November 02, 2006


It's raining; it's pouring.

And I've got a suggestion for a family activity that will brighten your day: A visit to the most famous caterpillar in the world. (I checked; twice as many Google hits as Lewis Carroll's.)

The Tacoma Art Museum is hosting a wonderful exhibit - The Art of Eric Carle - through Jan. 21.

I went to the exhibit Tuesday, and also got to hear the creator of "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" in person on Oct. 22 during the museum's "Conversation with Eric Carle." Ladybugs teacher Susan Ennaro was there, too, with her daughter, a teacher at Tacoma's Bryant Elementary School.

The exhibit is a delight and so was the 77-year-old author.

The museum has hung the work low in deference to its young visitors. Museum director Stephanie Stebich said the museum has booked about 170 school visits during the exhibit, almost twice as many as during an entire normal year.

Carle began his art career in advertising. He said during his talk that he views each of his illustrations as "a small poster." Standing in front of his work, that comes across vividly. Each picture is complete in itself. His colors are rich and the compositions are wonderful. You can also understand his tissue paper collage process even more clearly than in the books.

My favorite was a pelican illustration from "Animals, Animals," a book of poetry.

Carle's first book on his own was "1,2,3 to the Zoo." When he first submitted it to his editor, she pointed out to him that it was nice, but just a counting book, he needed to add something special. He put a small train at the bottom of each page; as pages turn, each car on the train has one more zoo animal than the one before it.

From then on, all of Carle's books have something special: the holes in "Hungry Caterpillar," the raised web in "The Very Busy Spider," the squeak of a rubber duck in his latest: "10 Little Rubber Ducks."

The rubber duck story is based on true events. At 2 p.m. on Dec. 2, the art museum hosts this event: A special presentation by Seattle oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer. In 1992, a shipment of 29,000 rubber bathtub toys, including ducks, frogs, and turtles, fell overboard from a container ship into the waters off the coast of Alaska, inspiring Eric Carle to write 10 Little Rubber Ducks. Ebbesmeyer studies ocean currents by tracking the migration of random junk and has maintained a website and recently published a paper documenting the migration of the toy ducks for over 14 years.

Incidentally, that ship was bound for Tacoma.

A few last things from Carle's talk:

He said he's been criticized (especially in his native Germany) for portraying only secure childhoods in his work. But that's intentional, he says. "I want to make children feel safe."

His favorite color is yellow, he answered, in response to a question from a child. He didn't have a favorite, but he's become most fond of yellow because it is the most difficult to work with. You can add another color to red or blue and they remain red and blue, but if you add another color to yellow, it's not yellow anymore.

All those who got to ask questions were children.

What does he like to do? Besides work on his books, he likes to garden and read. And he's too fond of honey and chocolate, he said.

Favorite of his books? "Do You Want to Be My Friend?" Because friendship is so important to children.

The question that made him pause (and got the biggest laugh from the audience)?: A very tiny child asked, "What is the very quiet cricket's name?"

He finally answered: "Why it's Quiet Cricket, I suppose."

If you go, you can also spend time in the library upstairs reading Carle's books, or in the art room next to it doing projects. There's also a cool exhibit of work by Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson. Children will enjoy this exhibit, too. Her work is full of color, sparkles and buttons. She's also illustrated some children's books. We have "Elijah's Angel" in Seabury's Library.

Let me know if you go! Talk to you soon.

(I've added a link to Eric Carle's Web site at right. There's lots of good stuff there, including videos.)