It’s time for another Coronavirus Creative
Mentor Text Author Study post!
In August 2018, I wrote a mentor
text author study featuring poet and author Nikki Grimes. Since then, Grimes has
released two new picture books this year. Let's look at those books.
Bedtime for Sweet Creatures, illustrated by Elizabeth Zunon, Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, January 14, 2020
is a whimsical bedtime story.
Opening Hook
Three
words increased in font size and a child in jammies is everything needed for
the opening hook. It shows this story is a universal truth about bedtime resistance
for any adult with the experience of putting a child to bed and for the
children themselves.
“No! No! No!"
Characters
From
the first double page spread, Grimes tells us this is a family story. It’s time
for bed but the child is ready to resist and imagines how creatures
would react to bedtime, too.
Your eyes swell, as
wide as owls.
“Let’s go,” I say.
“Who? Who?”
you ask
as if
you didn’t know.
Language
The language Grimes uses, filled with metaphors and imagery,
delights. The rhythm and flow make the text easy to read aloud, even act out.
Your bookshelf is noisy with stories.
“Which one?” I ask.
You point, frozen like a fawn
until you hear
“Once upon a time.”
The
fun patterns the illustrator used to draw the animals are a perfect fit to the
language and imagery painted by the text.
Southwest Sunrise, illustrated by Wendell Minor, Bloomsbury Children's Books, May 5, 2020, is a celebration of the natural world.
********
Southwest Sunrise, illustrated by Wendell Minor, Bloomsbury Children's Books, May 5, 2020, is a celebration of the natural world.
Opening hook
A boy sits on an airplane, baseball cap over
his eyes, arms folded and unhappy. This story taps into the emotions of any child who
has had the experience of moving. Too old to cry, he hides and pouts about
moving from New York to New Mexico, a place of shadows.
Characters
But the boy is curious and adventurous
and enjoys nature, so he finds the answers to his own question.
What’s so great about New Mexico?
Language
In a tribute to the desert, Grimes writes lyrically
about its beauty when we pay attention to what it offers. The first person
narrative gives readers a real time reveal as he discovers what’s so great
about New Mexico.
Wait! There’s the one
called wine-cup
spilling its burgundy beauty
for me to drink up.
And aren’t those yellow bells?
they wake up the desert
with their silent ring.
The art captures the splendor of the desert and its colorful surprises.
Nikki is amazing. I can't wait to see these two.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Keila, for sharing these mentor test with awesome lines :)
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to reading both of these books. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteGreat mentor texts! Thanks!
ReplyDelete