The gates are open at the second Carnival of Children’s Literature! Looks like Susan at Chicken Spaghetti has put together a wild assortment of rides—I can’t wait to try them all. Huzzah, Susan!
Monthly Archives: March 2006
The Unicorn Tapestries
For this month’s picture study, we’re doing something a bit different. I thought it might be fun to take a close look at The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s famous Unicorn Tapestries. These spectacular late-fifteenth-century tapestries are on view at The Cloisters, the Met’s uptown collection of medieval European artwork. Designed in Paris and woven in Brussels and the Netherlands, the seven large wall hangings vividly depict the hunting of a white unicorn in a richly flowered wood. The gorgeous weavings are rich in symbolism and drama—there are at least three layers of meaning to explore here. In addition to the excitement of the hunt, complete with lanky greyhounds, odd-looking lions, and a smiling stag, there are the symbolic interpretations of the story:
“They can also be explained as a tale of courtly love, presenting the search and eventual capture of the lover-bridegroom by his adored lady. And there is the Christian interpretation as well, the symbolic retelling of Christ’s suffering, Crucifixion, and Resurrection.”
The Met’s Unicorn Tapestries website is loaded with information and pictures. If, like my family, you can’t venture to NYC to view these incredible weavings in person, a long exploration of the website will be the next best thing.
Related links:
• New Yorker article, “Capturing the Unicorn: How Two Mathematicians Came to the Aid of the Met.”
• Another set of tapestries known as The Lady and the Unicorn, on display at the Musée National du Moyen Âge in Paris.
• Wikipedia entry on unicorns
• Children’s books about weaving
• The Cloisters—field trip info (Go ahead, make us jealous!)
Unicorns in children’s literature:
The Last Battle by C. S. Lewis
A Swiftly Tilting Planet and Many Waters by Madeleine L’Engle
The Unicorn Treasury : Stories, Poems, and Unicorn Lore by Bruce Coville
The Game Guide
What a great new find! Two enterprising home-educated boys have launched a blog for video and computer game reviews. Well-written and comprehensive, their reviews provide some much-needed guidance for bewildered parents wandering in a wilderness of gaming options. I for one am delighted to know such a valuable resource exists. These guys know their stuff.
This post from their mother’s blog gives a behind-the-scenes look at the vision behind The Game Guide. Very cool.
Brouhaha over Books
The book blogs are abuzz over this California school board’s decision to delete 23 children’s books from a to-purchase list drawn up by parents and teachers. The reasons put forth by the school board trustees to explain why some titles were rejected range from stupid (they nixed certain fantasy titles because “We want books to be things that children would be able to relate to in real life”) to incomprehensible (“With this ever-changing society, we have to just stick back to the traditional thing of what kids are supposed to be learning”—Huh?). However, it’s important to note that this is not a case of outright book-banning. The rejected titles, which include Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Disney’s Christmas Storybook, and two Artemis Fowl books, are not being yanked from library shelves: they are simply not being purchased in the first place.
(This distinction jumped out at the Deputy Headmistress too.)
Like I said, I think some of the trustees’ reasons are ridiculous. The thing about rejecting fantasy because it isn’t something kids can “relate to in real life”—that’s just plain silly. Kids have been “relating to” characters like Winnie the Pooh, Charlotte (a spider who can read and write?), Pippi Longstocking (who can lift a horse and a couple of policemen without breaking a sweat), and Peter Pan—to name but a very few of the fantastic characters who enliven our bookshelves and enrich our lives—for centuries. Hercules, anyone? I suspect that the board member who gave that quote was trying not to articulate for the record her real reasons for not approving the purchase of a Harry Potter book. Of course that is mere supposition. I have no way of knowing whether she really meant what she said, or what she might have been hesitant to say to a reporter.
But I do think it’s important to be clear about what is actually happening before we sound the book-banning alarm. Listen, one of the reasons I undertook the responsibility of educating my own children was because I object to the idea of some group of elected officials having the power to decide what is and is not appropriate for my kids to read and to learn. In a public school district, as everywhere else, someone has to have authority over the budget. In this case, the folks who’ve been granted that authority are exercising their right to approve or deny the purchase of book titles on a list of possibilities. That doesn’t prevent kids from getting hold of the books elsewhere. Can individual teachers include these titles in their classroom libraries?
I imagine there are some school library purchasing committees out there who have chosen not to include my books on the to-buy list. Am I happy about that? Of course not. I’ve worked hard to write books that are engaging, moving, and historically accurate, and I’m darned proud of them. I’d be thrilled to see them in every library in the country. But I don’t dispute the rights of the folks who’ve been invested power over fund-dispersal to decide whether or not my books make the cut. And if they don’t, I wouldn’t say “my books have been banned.” They just haven’t been bought.
What I’d really like to know is: What would the trustees do if parents or teachers were to donate the rejected books to the school library? If donations are regularly accepted, but these titles were refused, then perhaps it would be time to sound the censorship alarms.
More About Missey
This post from Missey‘s blog, written in December, cut straight to my heart, and I wanted to share it with those of you who did not know her either in real life or from homeschooling discussion lists.
“Life has been so laid-back and relaxed that I don’t know how we’ll ever get back on track come January, but I’m not going to think about that right now. I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it. For now, I’m enjoying making memories with my family and letting all the worries and stresses roll right off my back. They’ll be there for another day. But for today I’m going to get my Love Bank filled back up with kisses and hugs and quiet conversations (while making those same kinds of deposits into each of my loved one’s Love Banks) and regain the strength to face all those worries and stresses that will still be waiting for me come January. I think that by then they won’t seem so big anymore anyway.”
I need to go hug my children now.
PSA for Sonlight Forum Users
Recent abrupt and bizarrely executed changes at the Sonlight forum have left a great many longtime forum users stranded and cut off from communicating with one another. An open-access alternative temporarily named “Sonlight Refugees” has been created by the kindhearted Bryce. Just doing my bit to pass the word along.
Of course, the Real Learning message boards are another warm and wonderful place to find homeschooling encouragement, ideas, and advice!
Illustrator Interview
Cynthia Leitich Smitch‘s blog features an interview with illustrator Sara Rojo Pérez today. I enjoyed reading about Pérez’s favorite books and artists.
Read-Aloud Spotlight: A Lion to Guard Us
A Lion to Guard Us by Clyde Robert Bulla. This short middle-grade nove has scored high on the “Please, Mommy, just one more chapter” meter for Rose (7 1/2) and Beanie (5). (Jane read it herself a couple of years ago.) It’s the story of three very young English children whose father is far away in Jamestown, making a home for the family in the New World. Their mother dies, leaving them penniless, stranded, and desperately anxious to make their way across the sea to join their father. The suspenseful account of their adventures, told in Bulla’s typically spare and straightforward prose, has kept my younguns trembling on the edge of their seats. (Okay, “on the arm of the couch” or “the precarious edge of the windowsill” would be more accurate, especially for Beanie.) Excellent living book for early American history studies, or (as is the case with us) just for fun.
Prayers for Missey
This morning I learned the terrible news of the death of a homeschooling mom after an emergency c-section yesterday. Missey was a member of the Ambleside Online list, where I have been a lurker for years. She also maintained a lovely blog called Heartschooling. Her last post was just yesterday, a cheery account of taking her son to the doctor.
Please keep Missey’s family in your prayers. She leaves behind a devastated husband and five children ages 11 to newborn.
UPDATE: The following was posted by Loa on Missey’s “BasicallyBeechik” list yesterday:
I have spoken to Missey’s family and they are touched by the outpouring of love and support from everyone. They are devastated by the loss but dealing with it as best they can.
For those who want to make financial donations, it would be greatly appreciated by the family. We have set up a memorial fund at Paypal. (Click here to contribute.) They did not have life insurance for Missey and I know this would be a blessing to help cover the funeral and other expenses. Krystal is a long time friend of Missey’s and mine and I can assure you that each and every penny will reach the Gray family.
Last Call!
The deadline for submissions to the second Carnival of Children’s Literature, hosted by Susan of Chicken Spaghetti, is fast approaching—get your submissions in by Friday. I can’t wait to see what Susan has in store for us!