Valarie Budayr's Blog, page 111
February 2, 2013
The Great and Incredible Unicorn Book List Part II
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
February 1, 2013
FREE eBook Friday- Middle School-Get Me Out of HERE by James Patterson
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
January 30, 2013
The February Family Book Festival: Read*Play*Learn
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
January 29, 2013
Newbery, Caldecott, Coretta Scott King, and more: Award Winning Children’s Authors of 2013
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
January 28, 2013
The Great and Incredible Unicorn Book List Part I
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
January 25, 2013
App-Y Hour Book Apps for Kids: What Does It Mean To Be Green (Little Pickle Press)
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
January 23, 2013
From the Good Mountain: How Gutenberg Changed the World
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
January 18, 2013
Celebrating a Very Special Birthday-Audrey Press Turns TWO
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
January 16, 2013
Accelerated Reader-Help or Hindrance?
We’re chasing away the doldrums of winter by jumping into the favorite books of our author, illustrator, blogger friends.
Today I’m happy to introduce you to one of my first Kid Lit blogger friends Zoe Toft.
Zoe and I share a passion about bring books alive for our children. Living in the UK, Zoe blogs at Playing by the Book. As well as creating wonderful book adventures Zoe is also a champion for global literacy. Every year she puts out an incredible list of charitable book and literacy projects, letting us know where our support is most needed. Currently she serves as the National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groups in the UK.
Our Family Book Festival has been a great opportunity for me to get to know more about Zoe and some similar things we share in common like our love of Laura Ingalls Wilder as children and that both of our families are OPOL. Read more to find out what that means .
What was your favorite book(s) growing up?
I was not a voracious reader as a child. I did read, and one of my earliest book memories is saving up enough pocket money to buy each successive Laura Ingalls Wilder book. But if I’m totally honest, the books I remember giving me the greatest, delicious and illicit escape were trashy novels I read as a teenager when I needed a break from studying.
These books, by a disgraced former UK Member of Parliament, Jeffrey Archer, make me cringe with embarrassment now, but I tell this story for two reasons. For a start, just because your kid is not a bookworm now, it doesn’t meant they won’t become passionate about books later on in life.
And if your child is reading, even if the books she chooses cause you to despair, please let her continue to read what she chooses. Maybe it isn’t high literature, maybe it’s about topics that make you feel uneasy as a parent, but if your child has chosen it, it has meaning for your child. All reading, in my book, is good reading.
Does your family have a favorite book everyone likes to read together?
As an OPOL bilingual family (where One Parent speaks One Language, and the other speaks a second language nearly all the time), we don’t often share books as a family at the same time. What happens quite a lot is a book is read by one parent to the children in one language, and then the other parent reads it in translation. Books read in this way, that have become part of our family fabric include Ronia the Robber’s Daughter, and all the Pippi Longstocking books by Astrid Lindgren, Momo, and Krabat by Ottfried Preussler, Crusade in Jeans by Thea Beckman and Children on the Oregon Trail by A Rutgers van der Loeff.
Zoe’s Family Book Festival Choice:
A series of books that we all adore, that both parents read as children and that we now both read to our kids, are the Barbapapa books by Annette Tison and Talus Taylor. These are firm family favourites because they are such fun, and also because they express values that matter a great deal to us; the importance of being environmentally aware, and the need and joy which comes from being creative and working together as a community.
In the past we’ve made a Barbapapa dollshouse and set of dolls out of modelling clay (http://www.playingbythebook.net/2010/03/25/barbapapa/) but in some ways the activity that goes best with these wonderful books is making a set of Barbapapas out of playdough. Afterall, Barbabpapas can change their form into anything, and this is exactly what playdough is good for .
Here’s our recipe for homemade playdough, to create enough for an entire Barbabpapa family.
In a large bowl mix the following together:
4 cups flour,
2 cups salt,
4 tablespoons vegetable oil,
4 tablespoons cream of tartar
Now boil the kettle and pour 4 cups of the water into your mixture and stir to combine. Finally, knead the dough to a smooth consistency.
I suggest making one big uncoloured batch, and then dividing it into 9 balls. Each ball can then be dyed by kneading in food colouring to match the colours of the various Barbapapas. I recommend using gel (rather than liquid) food colouring so that the dough doesn’t become any stickier when you add the food colouring.
Here are our Barbapapas enjoying reading about themselves.
Enjoy your reading and play fun!
Zoe loves bringing books to life through play as documented at her bloghttp://www.playingbythebook.net/. She get particularly excited by edible books and books in translation. She runs regular story+craft activities at two local schools and sits on the board of UK charity which promotes reading for pleasure for children. Her two favourite books so far in 2013 are The Snow Merchant by Sam Gayton and Findus Moves Out by Sven Nordqvist. When she’s not doing something related to books she’s learning how to play the accordion.
http://www.playingbythebook.net/, @playbythebook
National Executive, Federation of Children’s Book Groupshttp://www.fcbg.org.uk/
Connect with Zoe on Twitter
Related Articles:
If you enjoyed this adventure, make sure never to miss one by subscribing to receive new post updates in your inbox.
The post Family Book Festival: Zoe Toft and the Barbapapa Books appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
December 31, 2012
A Look Back @ 2012
Where did this year go ? I can't believe I'm reviewing 2012 but what a great year it's been. I think as time moves forward and I look back on 2012, it will be one of those years that will stand out as a turning point, thresholds crossed, and dreams fulfilled.
This past year had a lot of travel involved. We started the year in Montreal where we spent the holidays with family and friends.
In March we went to Paris and met up with my good friend Emily to celebrate the final conclusion of a little book known to insiders as "Charlie".
Celebrating with our eldest daughter Zaina as she graduated university.
My annual pilgrimage to New York City to participate in Book Expo America and meeting several of my favorite authors.
Spending some lovely weeks in Sweden on the island of Gotland.
Spending August with visiting family.
It was good we rested while we were in Sweden because when we got back I can sum up the rest of the year in one word "Charlie."
Our newest release The Ultimate Guide to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory consumed the late summer and autumn months as it released to great acclaim.
It won the QED award for innovation and design. It's the e-book version of The Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval.
Charlie made a huge blog tour meeting friends old and new.
It was chosen as part of Apple's cyber-week promotion.
But the biggest and most epic news was that Charlie went all the way to #1 on iTunes on the iBookstore and stayed there for awhile. It's been on the charts eversince. Needless to say there was more hooping and hollering than a rodeo over here ......for weeks now. I just can't stop screaming. I'm sure you can understand that it's quite something.
Though this year has seen many, many, happy ocassions, it sadly has seen less of me in this space. I've missed it greatly and look forward to coming back and resuming my beloved blogging habit and reconnecting with friends. I'm so glad many of you are on Facebook as it allows me to see you daily.
Here's wishing you a wonderful close to the year.
Best Wishes,
Valarie