Showing posts with label Books; Childrens Book Week; Maine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books; Childrens Book Week; Maine. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Heritage Days Are Coming!

It is hard to believe that Independence Day is just around the corner. It frightens me really as it means summer is well under way...and in my life it has barely gotten started.

But, anyhow....

I don't know of a town (though my dear friend Heidi would probably argue that Vinalhaven, Maine does it better) that celebrates Independence Day better than Bath, Maine. It is good old fashioned Americana at its finest, Maine-style. A four day festival that boasts:
  • Maine's largest parade (Better get there early to get a good spot!)
  • A boat parade--on the Kennebec River, of course!
  • A Carnival--the kind we all have a love/hate relationship with...games, rides and, yes, cotton candy and fried dough.
  • A Chili-Chowder Fest--a local competition between some of the area's finest restaurants)
  • Fireman's Muster--an event which pits teams from five states with antique fire pump rigs)
  • 5K Fun Run -- a fun run through the town's historic district
  • The Front Street Shuffle--more than 125 antique cars will line nationally acclaimed Front Street.
  • Strongman Competition--trolley pulling!
  • Arts & Crafts Fair--features more than 30 Maine artisans!
  • Fireworks over the Kennebec River.
  • Children's Activities--a day just for kids, includes face painting, arts and crafts activities, bounce houses and more.
  • Outdoor concerts--featuring Bath's Municipal Band (More on this another day...but this is one of my favorite Bath activities all summer long.) and good old fashioned American ballads on the lawn by the town's gazebo.
Find out more about Bath Heritage Days.

If you are within driving distance, I highly recommend checking this festival out. If not, well, I'll try to share some highlights (in photos, of course!) here.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Some of My Favorites-- Maine Style

Thank you to those of you who shared your favorite children's books with me (either here on Maine-ly Home or on Facebook). Seems we share some favorites in common -- and, yet, I now also (thanks to you!) have a few new ones to check out.

I love children's books. I have collected them for years. In fact, many years ago, I decided that wherever I travel (and there was a time in my life when I traveled a lot -- and far and wide!), I'd seek out a local children's books. It is a fun collection. (If you know how to read Tagalog -- the language in the Phillipines -- let me know. I have a book with lovely pictures that I've made up the words to.)

I'll let you in on a little secret...

I've also always dreamed of writing a children's book. I even purchased some books and took a class to teach me more about the children's book writing and publishing process. But, dream sidelined for now. Instead, I read children's books to my children everyday.

Despite the huge collection, I do have a few super favorites-- and, big surprise, they are either about Maine and/or written by Maine-rs. Here's my list:

  • Pretty much anything written and illustrated by Robert McCloskey. I especially love Blueberries for Sal and One Morning in Maine. My husband and I actually contemplated buying (we lived up in that area of Maine for a spell) the general store in the town where One Morning in Maine is set. McCloskey isn't from Maine originally, but spent summers there beginning in the 1940s and died in his Deer Isle home in 2003. I especially love Blueberries for Sal as the "kuplink, kuplank, kuplunk" of blueberries hitting the bottom of the pail is so a part of my childhood. I am pleased to report, however, that, unlike Sal, my bear encounters didn't happen until I was an adult.
  • Miss Rumphius, written and illustrated by Barbara Cooney. It is a wonderful story about the author's aunt who was told as a young child that she must do something to make the world more beautiful. Miss Rumphius travels the world looking for the answer. And, in her old age, she determines that spreading beauty seed-by-seed was the right approach. The illustrations are wonderful--and, if you live in (or have traveled to) Maine in early summer, it is pretty easy to believe that Miss Rumphius has been there. To this day, when we drive down a road with hills of lupine, my daughter says, "Looks like the Lupine Lady has been here." (On a side note: I just discovered that there is a blog called The Miss Rumphius Effect. The blog reviews poetry and nonfiction for young readers through the middle grades. Check it out!)
  •  Dahlov Ipcar's Lobsterman. It's the story of a day in the life of a lobsterman's son, working alongside his father. Ms. Ipcar is a local writer and illustrator (our local library boasts a glorious mural painted by her!) and has, in fact, just re-issued a number of her books in limited editions. A year ago I stood in line, many months pregnant, just to have the chance to meet her and have her sign a copy of her re-released edition of My Wonderful Christmas Tree (oh, how beautiful!). Interested in meeting Ms. Ipcar and having one of her new edition books signed? Here's a listing of some upcoming signings.
  •  E.B. White's Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little. Classics, really. My husband and I love to dine at the Inn which was once E.B. White's farmhouse in Brooklin, Maine.
If you can't find these books through your local bookstore, you'll see I've provided, in most cases, a link to Islandport Press, an independent publisher in Northern New England. They "strive to tell good, accessible stories that give authentic voice to real people."