Sunday, March 18, 2007

5 of Denise Fleming's Books

1. award: Charlotte Zolotow Highly Commended Book 2004
title: Buster
author/illustrator:Denise Fleming
publisher:Henry Holt
copyright date:2003
# pages: 33
genre:picture book
summary:Buster is a pampered dog with everything he could possibly want when one day his owner brings home a box. It is not filled with any of the goodies Buster hopes for, it is a cat who interferes with everything Buster enjoys. Buster escapes to a park where he is happy again until he realizes he is lost.
reactions:This is a great book for any child who has experienced having a new sibling or who has become part of a blended family. It is difficult to go from being the center of the universe just happily existing to learning to share and get along with someone you didn’t necessarily invite into your home. This book shows that you can learn not only to exist together but love each other as well.

2.
title:Count!
author/illustrator:Denise Fleming
publisher:Henry Holt
copyright date:1992
genre:picture book
summary:A counting book featuring active animals.
reactions:Typical counting book, but the illustrations are so beautiful they make this one stand out. I like the very active language describing each animal. I also like that it includes counting by 10s up to fifty, which is not typical in a counting book. I love the technique Denise Fleming uses in her illustrations. It reminds me of batik printing, but it is a process which involves dyed paper pulp pressed through handmade stencils.

3. title:Where Once There Was a Wood
author/illustrator:Denise Fleming
publisher:Henry Holt
copyright date:1996
# pages: 32
genre:picture book
summary:A description of the wildlife that once lived in a wood before a housing development took over and people replaced the animals.
reactions:As with all of Denise Fleming’s books, I particularly love the illustrations. Some of the wildlife pictures almost have a quality of pastel chalk, but they are all done using the dyed paper pulp technique. The colors are incredibly vibrant and she achieves amazing realism with such a rustic material. The book is very simple, but the point made is very powerful, and may be a child’s first confrontation with the idea that people impact the environment. But the book is not a gloom and doom story. At the end of the book the author tells what animals need to survive and describes in detail how children and parents can create backyard habitats, including suggestions for specific types of plants. In our family we deliberately left large areas on the border of our yard wild, and have added additional native shrubs and plants. We enjoy seeing all of the little critters even if they do sometimes cause a nuisance now and then.

4. title:In the Small, Small Pond
author/illustrator:Denise Fleming
publisher:Henry Holt
copyright date:1993
# pages: 29
genre:picture book
summary:Rhyming book about life in a small pond.
reactions:This book won a Caldecott Honor for illustrations. It is a simple and fun book, great for introducing young kids to rhyming. It is just playful language that is fun to read or listen to. It is also a good discussion starter about pond habitats and what happens to animals and fish in the wintertime.

5. title:In the Tall, Tall Grass
author/illustrator:Denise Fleming
publisher:Henry Holt
copyright date:1991
# pages: 29
genre:picture book
summary:Rhyming book about life in the tall grass.
reactions: Similar to in the Small Small Pond. (Actually it was written prior.) Shows the envioronment all around us from a kids’ eye view.

Hoping Denise will post!

I just sent Denise an e-mail and I am hoping she will consider leaving some comments. If you are not Denise, but would like to respond to these questions, that is great too!

I'd like to know:
1. How is your favorite way to spend a day?
2. Where was your favorite vacation?
3. Where would you love to travel?
4. What is your best memory from childhood?
5. What age do you think is the best age to be?
6. What are some things that have caught your eye recently that you'd like to paint?
7. Which color is the most difficult to work with in your paintings?

My answers (not that many people will care!):
1. Summertime, doing something that is a semi-lazy activity, such as playing at the beach or park with my kids.
2. I'd have to say Playa del Carmen in April 2000. Great hotel, great beach, great food, Michigan State were NCAA Basketball Champs and we watched the championship game in a little hotel bar with a bunch of other MSU fans!
3. I'd love to go to Italy and also Argentina. So many great places I'd love to go to!
4. My dad rocking me every night before bed when I was little and also dressing up my cats and forcing them to ride in my bicycle basket.
5. So far, I have enjoyed every age. Life gets better each year. Wouldn't want to go back, just enjoying the present and looking forward to the future.
6 and 7. As much as I'd love to be more artistic, I am not a painter (except walls and fingernails!).

Family Literacy Night


Family Literacy Night
Originally uploaded by Mrs. Byrd Fort.
This is a flickr photo from a school that focused on a different author for each grade last month. The kindergarten author was Denise Fleming.

Click on the link to the right to listen to podcasts from these students!

Have you read Denise's books?

Denise Fleming is a fabulous children's author and illustrator. Are you a fan too? Here is some more information about her!

Denise Fleming is 57 years old, married to her college sweetheart and has one daughter, Indigo. She was born in Toledo, OH, and attended Kendall College of Art and Design in Grand Rapids!

Denise was encouraged to be an artist from a young age, and has experimented with a variety of painting techniques. However, once she discovered papermaking she never went back to using a paintbrush again.

She decided to become a children’s author after her daughter was born in 1979. Her first book was published in 1991. She won a Caldecott Honor Medal in 1994 for In the Small, Small Pond. She has since published 13 books and has more in the works.