April 28, 2015

Picture Books of Rain

It has been a cloudy, rainy, grey spring so far. 

So some cheerful books about rain and storms. 

First a poem. 


A Poem from Marchette Chute illustrated by Eloise Wilkins

Spring Rain

The storm came up so very quick, 
It couldn't have been quicker.
I should have brought my hat along, 
I should have brought my slicker.

My hair is wet, my feet are wet.
I couldn't be much wetter.
I fell into a river once, 
But this is even better.

A Drop of Water by Gordon Morrison


This book is about water and all the different habitats a drop of water can get to, focusing on a farm in the mountains. Not a very exciting book, but I love it, for all the nature-y things in it. 



A Time of Wonder by Robert McCloskey


This book is about an island in Maine, following it through spring, summer, and into the fall. There is spring rain, but also a violent fall storm, tail-end of a hurricane. The words are calm, sort of slow, so this is more for older kids. Gilbert and Elsie get impatient for the next page. But I love the words. Describing standing on the island, watching the rain cloud roll across the bay, until 

"Now you even see the drops on the water...on the age-old rocky point...on the bayberry...on the grass... Now take a deep breath--It's raining on you!"


I love Robert McCloskey's illustrations too.


Completely unrelated to rain, but spring!


The storm in fall. During this storm, the family battens down the hatches, struggles with closing the door, and then, to take their minds off the storm, they sing Glory, Glory Hallejuah, as loud as they can to block out the storm. When Cheyenne was little, she liked that page, where we would start singing, loudly. 

Listen to the Rain by Bill Martin Jr. and John Archambault

These are the guys who wrote Chicka, Chicka, Boom Boom!. And the words do not disappoint. 

"Listen to the rain, the whisper of the rain, the slow soft sprinkle, the drip-drop tinkle, the first wet whisper of the rain."

But the pictures....! Oh, that this could be re-illustrated. I really dislike the pictures. 


I can't see how anyone could conceive how these illustrations add to the words


All the pages have this rosy hue, which makes it look very....dire and awful. 

The Storm Book by Charlotte Zolotow

This is another book that is a little slow for kids, but that I love. It has words, but no pictures on one two page spread, then a two page spread of only picture, no words. The words are lyrical and descriptive of a hot summer afternoon thunder storm, the illustrations, sweet, but I do wish you could enjoy both at the same time. 





"A little cool wind suddenly races through the trees, sways the rambler roses, bends the daisies and buttercups and Queen Anne's lace and the long grass until they make a great silver sighing stretch down the hill. Then it happens! Shooting through the sky like a streak of starlight comes a flash so beautiful, so fast.."

Love.



Thundercake by Patricia Polacco


This is the story of a grandmother who helps her granddaughter discover her bravery in a thunderstorm. The little girl is terrified of the thunder, but she loves and trusts her grandmother, who calls her out from under the bed to collect the ingredients for stirring up a thundercake. (Which is a chocolate cake with tomato puree. Recipe included.)
After gathering all the ingredients, the grandmother tells the little girl that she is very brave, since only a brave person could have come out from the bed and gone out into the approaching storm to gather the eggs from the chickens, milk from the cow, and a tomato from the garden.  
A very sweet story about what bravery means and the love a grandmother and grandchild have for each other.  


I am on the fence about Patricia Polacco's illustrations. Sometimes I think them darling, but not always. 


Another thing I love about this story, beyond the whole grandmother/granddaughter baking thing is that the grandmother teaches her granddaughter to count seconds between the lightening flash and the thunder crack, to tell how far away the storm is. I always do this, so I approve of teaching this to kids. 



Waiting out the Storm by Joann Early Macken




A little girl and her mother are caught outside in the rain. They discuss all the animals and what they do when it rains, before going inside their warm house. Oh so sweet!






"So come darling buttercup, 
here where its warm. 
Like chickadee babies, 
we're safe from the storm.
 While winds blow and rains fall, 
we'll wait out the weather. 

Cozy as bunnies!
Yes, snuggling together.



Miss Twiggley's Tree by Dorthea Warren Fox



This is the story of Miss Twiggley, the villiage eccentric, who everyone disparages who comes in handy when it rains for a month and one day, flooding the town until they are all afloat at the base of Miss Twigley's tree, where she has her house. And they all became good friends. I loved this book when I was a kid. 


Such good, damp pictures.


Raindrops Roll by April Pulley Sayre

This is a book of photographs of rain. Lush and lovely with lots of onomatopoeia. (That is an ironic word, since it doesn't sound like how it is written. My first attempt at spelling it, google suggested correcting it to sellotape. Haha!) 

I want to make my own rain picture book. 







And at last, my very favorite

Peter Spier's Rain


This is a wordless book, following a brother and sister through a rainy day and night. Peter Spier does wordless picture books so well. 


I adore his illustrations. See the darkening sky in the upper left corner? 


And then, the deluge.


One of my favorite pictures in the whole book



The kids, armed with boots and umbrellas head out to see the rain.  


And then come home to a steaming bath and cocoa with Mum. 


So evocative of a rainy, childhood day. 

And now, I am off to enjoy another grey day, that has occasional peeps of sunshine!

1 comment:

Geri Douglas said...

that is a wonderful collection of books, love all the cute pictures, makes me feel very nostalgic!! Would love to sit and read all these books to my kids or maybe now it would have to be to my grandchildren! Thanks for posting.