Category Archives: Books

The Christmas Treasure Hunt

I haven’t quite managed a post a day in Advent as I planned.  We read this lovely book yesterday, but then I went out in the evening and got back too late to write anything.

The Christmas Treasure Hunt

The Christmas Treasure Hunt, Ag Jatkowska, Macmillan, £9.99

The story is sweet and simple, and the illustrations are beautiful and detailed.  The children enjoyed lifting the flaps and they loved the giant pop-up tree at the end.  I’m too tired to write anything that will really do this book justice, but it is wonderful and it would make a perfect Christmas present.  Thank you to the lovely people at Macmillan for sending it to us!

 

The Christmas Show

This evening’s bedtime story was The Christmas Show and we all loved it.  I read it first to Tiddler, then to Rabbit and then the big boys took it in turns to read it in bed.

the christmas show

The Christmas Show by Rebecca Patterson, Macmillan, Paperback, £5.99.

This very funny book tells the familiar story of a child who has a small part in the nativity play – “… in this show I think I am almost nothing.”  A few small mishaps occur, but the show goes on and the little boy is happy in the end, because not everyone cares if he sings at the wrong time or dances the wrong way.

Tiddler is, of course, an expert on the subject of nativity plays, having recently played an angel in his preschool show last week.

my angel

He also played a king in our Home Education group nativity from scratch yesterday, then went to a carol service at Granny’s (Paul’s mum’s) church afterwards and gatecrashed their nativity too, as did Rabbit, who was an angel.  Monkey (who was Joseph in our play) and Owl (the narrator) were more restrained at the church, though Owl (with a bit of help from Rabbit and Tiddler) sang “I’m a Little Christmas Cracker”, accompanied by Granny on the piano.

We enjoyed the book, and the conversations it prompted.  Tiddler particularly liked talking about the shows he has been in, and the parts he has played.  I now have the tricky job of persuading him to consider being something else for the nativity at the church near his other Granny’s house next weekend.  He’s been given the choice of being a shepherd or an animal, but he won’t be parted from his king costume.  We might have to adapt it!

 

A Single Star

We had another busy day today.  Church this morning, and then our Home Education Group party with Nativity Play from scratch!  Straight after that, we went to Granny’s church for a carol service, and then back to her house for supper.  By the time we were home it was after 9pm, and the children needed to go straight to bed.  I decided that a shared story time might wake them up too much, so I read some Christmas poems to them when they were in bed, first to the little ones and then to the big boys.  The poems were from A Single Star, a collection of poems that I have had since I was a child.

a single star

This is a varied collection of songs, carols and poems, some well known and some less so.  A lot of the poems are more suitable for older children, but there are some that are simple enough for the little ones to understand too.  I particularly enjoyed reading one of my childhood favourites to all of the children – “How Far to Bethlehem?” by Frances Chesterton.

How far is it to Bethlehem?

Not very far.

Shall we find the stable-room

Lit by a star?

Can we see the little child,

Is He within?

If we lift the wooden latch

May we go in?

May we stroke the creatures there,

Ox, ass and sheep?

May we peep like them and see

Jesus asleep?

If we touch His Tiny hand

Will He awake?

Will He know we’ve come so far

Just for his sake?

Great kings have precious gifts,

And we have naught;

Little smiles and little tears

Are all we brought.

For all weary children

Mary must weep.

Here on His bed of straw

Sleep, children, sleep.

God in His mother’s arms,

Babes in the byre

Sleep as they sleep who find

Their heart’s desire.

The Usborne Christmas Treasury

This evening Paul and I sang in our carol concert, and Owl and Monkey came with Granny to watch.  We were very pleased that some good friends came  too (a home education group family), as we haven’t seen them for a while.  By the time we got home, it was late and the little ones were asleep.  While Paul took the babysitter and our friends home, I read to the big boys.  We were very tired, and it didn’t feel like time for something new, so we got out our Usborne Christmas Treasury, an old favourite, and read the story of the Nutcracker.

usborne christmas treasury

This is a lovely illustrated collection of Christmas stories, carols, songs and activities and it is suitable for children of all ages.

Millie Shares

Millie Shares is a new book which is due to be published by Egmont on 30th January 2014.

millie shares 1

Millie Shares by Claire Alexander, Egmont, Hardback £10.99, Paperback £6.99

Millie loves her toy Monkey very much, and when her best friend Lily wants to play with him, Millie gets very cross.  She won’t share Monkey and she won’t share the other toys at nursery either.  The other children don’t want to play with her in case she takes their toys away.  Will Millie learn that sharing can be fun?

We have been enjoying this book and Tiddler especially likes it.  It’s a gentle story, with simple, appealing illustrations, and a clear message about the benefits of sharing.

millie shares 2

The Child’s Christmas

This was a great charity shop find.  First published in 1906, (though this is a revised edition from 1988), The Child’s Christmas is an anthology of stories and poems, with original illustrations by Charles Robinson.

child's christmas

I read one of the stories with Owl this evening – the others were distracted as Granny was here.  Getting all of them together to read is still proving elusive as every day has been so busy recently, with everyone in and out at different times, but as I read to the other three yesterday and Owl today it seems to even out.

I’m looking forward to reading more of it, with all the children when they are in the right mood.  There are stories and poems by Eleanor Farjeon, Enid Blyton, Charles Dickens, Susan Coolidge, Tolkein, Alison Uttley, Laura Ingalls Wilder and Hans Christian Anderson, among many others.  I hope that it will become a part of our Christmas tradition every year to dip in and out of this wonderful collection – a glimpse into Christmas past.

Suzy Goose and the Christmas Star

Tonight I read one of our Library books, Suzy Goose and the Christmas Star to the three younger children while Owl was at Cubs.  We chose it because we have Silly Suzy Goose at home, which Rabbit likes, and I think she is going to find it hard to give this one back to the Library.

suzy goose christmas star

Suzy Goose and her friends are gathered around the tree on Christmas Eve, and they decide that it is missing something.  “It needs a star on top,” honked Suzy.  “Just like the one in the sky.  I’ll get it.”  So she dives off the top of the hill, slides down and flies up into the sky.  When that doesn’t work, she tries everything else she can think of to get to the star but to no avail.  Lost and far from her friends, she is lonely till she hears their voices and finds her way back to them, and the star ends up above the tree after all.

Having read this story, we finally got round to decorating our tree, which we have had for nearly a week.  It doesn’t have a star on the top yet though!

tree

Maisy’s Snowy Christmas Eve

This afternoon we went to the Library with our Home Education group, and we borrowed some more Christmas books for our Advent collection (along with books about Star Wars, Iron Man, Superman and Wonder Woman of course!)  The book we chose to read this evening was Maisy’s Snowy Christmas Eve.

maisy snowy christmas eve

The story contains a lot of repetition: “Snow fell on Maisy’s house.  Snow fell on Charley’s house.  Snow fell on Cyril’s house.”  This makes it fun for Tiddler, who loves to learn his favourite stories off by heart, and encouraging for Rabbit who is learning to read.

Maisy’s friends are coming to her house for Christmas, but on the way Eddie the elephant gets stuck in the snow.  The others go out to look for him.  There is more repeated text:  “They found a shed covered in snow.  They found a bush covered in snow.  They found snow covered in snow…”  That is our favourite line!

When they find Eddie, first they try to pull him out.  Next they try to push him out.  Then Maisy has a good idea…

We love Maisy books, and have quite a few of them at home.  The stories are very simple, and the text is written in a child-friendly font, so they are good practice for early readers.  The illustrations are bright and colourful, and quite easy to copy so I think we might make a few Maisy-themed Christmas cards tomorrow!

 

 

 

The Best Christmas Present in the World

This evening, Paul was out and we were running late, and suddenly the little ones were tired and grumpy needed to be fast-tracked to bed so I didn’t remind them about our Christmas story routine.  We just read two books that they chose, in their bedroom, and then I went back down to read to the big boys and light our Advent candle.  I felt a bit bad that the little ones were missing out, but I had a book saved for just such a situation, one that was more suitable for the older children.

best christmas present in the world

The Best Christmas Present in the World, by Michael Morpurgo, is a short story which centres around a letter written by a soldier in the trenches in 1914.  The Christmas truce, and the football match in No Man’s Land between the English and the Germans, are brought to life in the letter, discovered in a roll-top desk which the narrator buys in a junk shop.  This leads him on a quest to find Connie, to whom the letter is written.

It was just right for Owl, who has been reading a lot about the World Wars recently, and Monkey found it interesting too.  I enjoyed the time with just my two big boys, though I hope we’ll be back to reading a Christmas story together as a family tomorrow.

Father Christmas

I read Father Christmas by Raymond Briggs to the little ones when we went to the Library with our Home Education group recently, and they liked it, so I was pleased to find a copy in our local charity shop last week.

Briggs Father Christmas

This evening I read it to all the children and it was a great success.  It’s the story of Father Christmas getting ready and going out for his night’s work on Christmas Eve, written in comic book style.  He complains about the cold, the snow and houses which don’t have chimneys (an igloo, a lighthouse and a caravan all prove difficult to get into) and by the time he gets back home, he doesn’t want to look at another present.  He has had enough of “Bloomin’ Christmas” and is glad that it’s over for another year.

The book was published 40 years ago, and has remained popular ever since.  It was one of my childhood favourites, so it was fun to share it with the children.  I don’t know why I’ve never thought to get a copy before, but I’m glad we found one.  Definitely a Christmas classic!