A Bean by Any Other Name Would Be as Sweet

Beanie’s hair is like an eighth member of the family. (Oh my goodness. We are a family of seven now. I am still getting used to saying that.) This time of year, it embraces the humidity and exhibits more personality than ever. In certain weather, the child looks ready for a Welcome Back Kotter reunion. It is glorious hair, the kind you can’t keep your hands off, the kind no passing stranger can resist commenting about.

Today we were headed home from the pool, depressingly dry. Thunder and lightning had commenced just as the kids kicked off their flip-flops, and the life guard somberly shook her head. We turned to trudge home, the rising wind whipping Beanie’s curls into a frenzy.

Our friend Lisa met us in the parking lot. “Hey, Fuzzhead,” she greeted Beanie affectionately.

Beanie (who seldom glowers) glowered. “I don’t like being called Fuzzhead,” she said quietly.

“Oh, I’m sorry!” said Lisa. “What do you like to be called?”

Beanie pondered. Her eyes brightened and she nodded with satisfaction.

“Monkey!”

Well, of course. Monkey is ever so much more dignified than Fuzzhead.

Glad You Asked

Stephanie asked:

Do you take specific book recommendation requests? If so, sign me up! I’d like to read a bit about the American Revolution with my 6 & 8 year olds prior to a trip to Williamsburg/Yorktown/ Jamestown this summer. I’d especially love to share a couple great historical-fiction read alouds with them to bring this area/time period alive. I’d like to avoid books that have a young adult romance in the story line. Anything come to mind?

Yes! I’ll add to this list tomorrow, but for now let me recommend a couple of books we’ve really enjoyed:

0064403335101_aa_scmzzzzzzz__1A Lion to Guard Us by Clyde Robert Bulla. This short chapter book would be perfect to read before your Jamestown visit. It’s about three young English children whose father has gone to Jamestown to make a home for the family. When their mother dies, they must find a way to cross the ocean and join their father. The story of their journey to Virginia (with a detour to Bermuda) is based on a true story and features real historical figures like John Rolfe. I read this book to Rose and Beanie (7 and 5) recently and they hung on every word. Your kids are the perfect age to enjoy it. After reading it, I’m itching to take my gang to Jamestown too. (But I don’t think Rilla is quite up for it yet.)

You’re probably aware of this already, but the American Girls Felicity series is set in colonial Williamsburg. (I have a soft spot for the Felicity books because they are illustrated by the same artist as my Charlotte books, the wonderful Dan Andreasen.) When my family visited Williamsburg last fall, my girls were excited to recognize some of the places featured in Felicity’s adventures, like the Powder Magazine.

Girlshorses_2(Oh, and a tip for making your Williamsburg trip even more fun: splurge for the costume rental for your kids. They get to dress up like colonists and are given a list of items to collect from the various shopkeepers, as if they’re running errands for an elderly relative. They’ll have a ball.)

Two of our favorite Revolutionary War-era novels are Robert Lawson’s Ben and Me : An Astonishing Life of Benjamin Franklin by His Good Mouse Amos and Mr. Revere and I.

More to come…In the meantime, don’t miss the excellent collection of titles at Reading Your Way Through History. And of course reader suggestions are always welcome!

Anyone else looking for read-alouds to go along with summer travels?

Poetry Friday: Seamus Heaney

For a real treat, click the link* to hear the poem read aloud by the Mr. Heaney himself.

Personal Helicon
by Seamus Heaney

As a child, they could not keep me from wells
And old pumps with buckets and windlasses.
I loved the dark drop, the trapped sky, the smells
Of waterweed, fungus and dank moss.

One, in a brickyard, with a rotted board top.
I savoured the rich crash when a bucket
Plummeted down at the end of a rope.
So deep you saw no reflection in it.

A shallow one under a dry stone ditch
Fructified like any aquarium.
When you dragged out long roots from the soft mulch
A white face hovered over the bottom.

Others had echoes, gave back your own call
With a clean new music in it. And one
Was scaresome, for there, out of ferns and tall
Foxgloves, a rat slapped across my reflection.

Now, to pry into roots, to finger slime,
To stare, big-eyed Narcissus, into some spring
Is beneath all adult dignity. I rhyme
To see myself, to set the darkness echoing.


This poem always makes me want to talk to other writers. Helicon is the mountain where the Muses made their home. Mr. Heaney speaks of finding his inspiration by probing the deep, dank places in the same way that he, as a child, explored the inky depths of forgotten wells. Sometimes, peering down into the darkness, he discovers his own reflection. Sometimes his voice comes back to him with a “clean new music” in it—that is the part that gets me. My own muse seldom lurks in the dark places (though I think my best book is the one in which certain experiences of loss and suffering informed my understanding of how Martha, as a mother, could experience terrible loss and not be crushed by it); for me, the “clean new music” rings from the eager faces of my children, my husband’s wry grin, the toes of a newborn, the cloud-shadows on our green hills.

Where is your personal Helicon?


*About the Internet Poetry Archive: “The University of North Carolina Press joins the UNC Office of Information Technology in publishing the Internet Poetry Archive. The archive makes available over a worldwide computer network selected poems from a number of contemporary poets. The goal of the project is to make poetry accessible to new audiences (at little or no cost) and to give teachers and students of poetry new ways of presenting and studying these poets and their texts.”

One of the treasures made available at this site is a recording and transcript of Seamus Heaney’s 1995 Nobel Lecture, “Crediting Poetry.” An excerpt:

To begin with, I wanted that truth to life to possess a concrete reliability, and rejoiced most when the poem seemed most direct, an upfront representation of the world it stood in for or stood up for or stood its ground against. Even as a schoolboy, I loved John Keats’s ode “To Autumn” for being an ark of the covenant between language and sensation; as an adolescent, I loved Gerard Manley Hopkins for the intensity of his exclamations which were also equations for a rapture and an ache I didn’t fully know I knew until I read him; I loved Robert Frost for his farmer’s accuracy and his wily down-to-earthness; and Chaucer too for much the same reasons. Later on I would find a different kind of accuracy, a moral down-to-earthness to which I responded deeply and always will, in the war poetry of Wilfred Owen, a poetry where a New Testament sensibility suffers and absorbs the shock of the new century’s barbarism. Then later again, in the pure consequence of Elizabeth Bishop’s style, in the sheer obduracy of Robert Lowell’s and in the barefaced confrontation of Patrick Kavanagh’s, I encountered further reasons for believing in poetry’s ability – and responsibility – to say what happens, to “pity the planet,” to be “not concerned with Poetry.”


More Poetry Friday contributions:
Big A little a
Chicken Spaghetti
Book Buds
Scholar’s Blog
Fuse #8 Productions
The Simple and the Ordinary
bookshelves of doom
Jen Robinson’s Books Page—a poem by Emily of New Moon!
Farm School
A Chair, A Fireplace, and a Tea Cozy
Gotta Book
Once upon a time there was a girl who wanted to write
So Glad I’m Here
Mungo’s Mathoms
Blog from the Windowsill—I really enjoyed this review of two books about poetic form.

Did I miss anyone?

Lunchtime Link

Okay, this is pretty cool. I can’t wait to show my kids. It’s called The Human Clock: “A clock photo for every minute of the day.” People from all around the world have sent in pictures displaying the time in creative ways. I wonder if there are any in ASL? Maybe we’ll take a picture.

HT: Jinkies! <-- I cannot stop saying "Jinkies." Scott is writing a lot of Scooby-Doo these days, and that's Velma's favorite word. And it will—not—get—out—of—my—head. Help. (At least rrit's rretter rran Rrooby rralk.)

There’s a New Book Blog in Town

I just noticed that Anne-Marie Nichols has a new blog over at ClubMom. It’s called “A Readable Feast” and promises to feature posts about children’s books and cooking. If those are her main interests, I’m thinking she’d be a great neighbor to have—since, you know, among my main interests are children’s books and eating.

The Lilting House: Not Just for Homeschoolers

In the comments, Katie, who is not a homeschooler, said:

In fact I find [homeschooling moms], as well as several blogs and books, to be very helpful in the way we raise our kids. Because we don’t believe education should stop when they get home at the end of the day. Or mid-June. We read, we discuss, we learn from each other. And unfortunately too many parents, regardless of their involvement with the PTA, etc., don’t take an interest past the school day. So I need you guys! You inspire me and help me to see the possibilities.

I’m glad she brought this up. I’d been meaning to say something along the same lines. One of the purposes of this blog is resource-sharing. As Katie points out, homeschooling parents aren’t the only ones wanting to help their kids learn and grow. The success of “get your educational toys here” stores like Noodle Kidoodle and Imaginarium (not to mention the dozens of mail-order companies whose catalogs haunt my mailbox) points to the desire parents have to make learning fun for their children.

Then there are the homeschooling catalogs. If your child goes to school, you aren’t likely to come across these, and I have to tell you, you’re missing out. With over two million American children now being educated at home, publishers have recognized the need for appealing curricula and learning resources, and there is some great stuff out there. For years I’ve been saying someone should put together a “secrets of the homeschoolers” catalog. Hadn’t really occurred to me to do it myself (and the whole shipping-and-accounting thing has no appeal—I write books, not sell ’em), but in some respects, that’s what I’m doing here, minus the inventory aspect.

A few years ago, a friend of mine mentioned that her daughter, a fourth-grader at the local public school, was really struggling in math. The clock was her Waterloo—she simply could not master time-telling. Immediately I began to gush about the math program we were using. (I have a habit of doing that.) Its “How to Tell Time” lesson, I raved, was the best I’d ever seen, and my five-year-old had mastered the concept in, I kid you not, five minutes, thanks to the way the program’s creator explained it. My neighbor borrowed the video tape, and the next day she called me.

“I can’t believe it,” she said. “She totally gets it now. It was just like you said—she watched the video once and said, ‘Oh! That makes sense!’ “

I, dignified soul that I am, responded, “See! See! I told you!”

Well, that’s part of what I intend to do here: the raving and the gushing and the sharing. Especially the sharing of booklists. I love booklists. Picture-book booklists and historical-fiction booklists and beginning-reader booklists and “help, my kid’s a rabid book junkie and I’ve run out of stuff to give her” booklists.

So: searching for something to get your kid jazzed about science, history, geography? Give me a holler. Got a great resource to share? Drop me a line! Looking at summer stretching out before you and wondering how to keep the gang busy without plugging in? I can help. Need the recipe for a killer BBQ ribs rub? Um, that’s Becki’s department. You definitely don’t want cooking advice from me. Cooking is not so much my thing. Fun learning stuff, that’s my thing.

And did I mention the booklists?