Books of Information - Week 4
Farmer Will Allen and the Growing Table by Jacqueline Briggs Martin and Illustrator Eric-Shabazz Larkin. Ages 8-10, AR Level 3.5, Lexile AD620L
Author
Jacqueline Briggs Martin has written multiple nonfiction works about harvesting
farms to table foods from the ground up, literally. She herself grew up on a
dairy farm and knows the work involved in farming. Hence the love of farming in
odd places, like pots, buckets, small patches of ground and unlikely places
like cities (author note, p. 35). The perfect amount of information for a 3rd-4th
grade learner is presented in sequential format of Mr. Allen’s beginning trials
and triumphs that he experienced with success that took around 20 years to come
to fruition. The author notes her relation to farming and how she came to love
it as an adult, and she encourages children through her many books about food to
get involved with their parents, friends, and other family members to start
growing anywhere and to see a vision as Mr. Will Allen did. Children will not miss the message with a
writing style that involves enlarging words or phrases so that even if a reader
doesn’t read the full text, the main point will be expressed by just reading
the enlarged text that is dispersed throughout the pages. Chronological order is the sort of organization
of the life events of Will Allen from farming as a child, leaving the farm and
achieving other goals, then back to farming with more orderly detail in
between. Not only is a bibliography listed
on page 36, but the author provides websites for further information about Will
Allen, Ms. Martin herself, and the illustrator, Mr. Eric-Shabazz Larkin. The format of this work is appropriately done
with a mix of regular font text and enlarged font text, noting a “whimsical”
kind of narration, which identifies with this playful age group. Color is abundant in every page, captivating
the richness of farm produce, various shades of brown to give readers a sense of
being dirty and working on the farm, down to the bright, primary blue cut-off
shirt Mr. Allen wears when farming. Many
ages may enjoy this book and possibly be inspired to start planting something large
or small, especially if the readers are a foodie!
Jacqueline Briggs Martin. Farmer Will Allen and the Growing Table. Readers to Eaters, September 10, 2013. 32 pages. Tr $19.95 ISBN 9780983661535.
Duncan Tonatiuh, is an author illustrator of many
award-winning children’s informational books related to the images and stories
that honor the past, but are relevant to children especially today
(duncantonatiuh.com, copyright 2019). It
does not appear that the author experienced segregation or immigration issues
growing up, but Tonatiuh presents the Mendez family fight for desegregation
well with multiple formats of resources using interviews, transcripts, films,
books, websites, articles and reports, that are built into his
bibliography. The depth of the topic of
segregation is advanced in prose, due to conversations taken directly from
court transcripts, as Tonatiuh explains, were shortened and edited for clarity
in the resource section of the book. An index is also included for easy
reference for a class topic and discussion.
It helps that a glossary was included in the back for those readers who
want to know more about words, phrases, and organizations. After reading again, the writing style is
written for a more mature audience, i.e., a mature 4th grader and
up, with longer sentences and phrases or organization names that the reader may
be hearing about for the first time. The
writing style also examines the easy to follow chronological order of what the
Mendez family endured to successfully achieve desegregation in California
schools. The pattern is easy to follow
and allows the reader to flow from page to page. The illustrations are an eye-pleasing
addition that matches the words perfectly allowing to visualize what is
happening in the story. Readers
naturally want to get a close up view of the color digitally used to enhance
the drawings. Author, also Illustrator, is inspired by Pre-Columbian
art (duncantonatiuh.com, 2019), in particular the Mixtec codices resembling a
one-dimensional shape to images of people. Tonatiuh uses digital images of real
human hair as opposed to choosing a simple black or brown plain color. Interesting also, is the facial features are
all conforming to one another, no matter what color the skin, all facial images
have a “pouty” or “puckered” lip appearance, almost like a “kissing fish” face
and readers can get a visual of understanding the tone of what sort of
communication is occurring in the text based on the lips being closed, slightly
open, or coming across in a more direct, stern manner. Readers might enjoy this work as an audiobook
or a “movie” book in a read-a-long format from their local library as well.
Works
Cited
https://duncantonatiuh.com/,
copyright, 2019.
Tonatiuh, D. Separate is Never Equal : Sylvia Mendez & Her Family’s Fight for Desegregation. New York: Abrams Books For Young Readers, 2014. 40 pages. Tr $19.99. ISBN 9781419710544.
Nice selections and thoughtful observations. Look at ways you might condense some information to make for a smoother read (JBM's farming connection comes up in 2 places in the Will Allen review). This will also help with the overall work count. A trick I use when reviewing is to make notes while I read, then cross the notes off as I work things into the review draft. That way I know I've covered all the points I wanted without repeating anything.
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