NEW
All Aboard for Dreamland 

Shu-Li and Tamara 

The Heretic's Tomb 

Honey Cake 

The Eco-Diary of
Kiran Singer 


Baad Animals 

The Emerald Curse 

Abby's Birds 

Fairy Tale Feasts

Bamboo

What Happened This Summer 

Nannycatch Chronicles 

Crocodiles Say 

If I Had a Million Onions 

Zig Zag 

The Clone Conspiracy 

A Telling Time 

For Sure For Sure 

Floyd the Flamingo 

The Sorcerer's Letterbox 

The Bone Collector's Son

Rescuing Einstein's Compass

The Island of the Minotaur

The Alchemist's Portrait

The Sea King

The Jade Necklace 

My Animal Firends

Aziz: The Storyteller

Pacific Tree Frogs 

BACKLIST TITLES

Pigmalion

Strange Beginnings

Huevos Rancheros

Lucy and the Pirates

The Girl who Lost her Smile 

Mama God, Papa God

Mr. Belinsky's Bagels

Wherever Bears Be

Where are my Onions?

The Zoo at Night

Maudie and the Children


Reviews
The Eco-Diary of Kiran Singer
by Sue Ann Alderson, illustrated by Millie Ballance
Poetry Friday: An Eco-Diary!!!

THE ECO-DIARY OF KIRAN SINGER opens with letters between Kiran and her grandmother. Kiran’s grandmother invites her to spend time with her on a conservation crew that is working to restore a bog. Along with the invitation, Kiran’s grandmother sends her a birthday gift of a new journal. Kiran’s five-day visit is told through a series of thirty-five poems written in her journal. The collection is organized by daily entries and each day has several poems... Read complete review

Kiran is worried about the earth. She writes to her grandmother to ask if there is anything "a kid" can do. Luckily Grandma is a devoted environmentalist, and she invites Kiran to come to her work party on the weekend as "There's a bit of the planet right here ... it's a little bog" that needs saving. The bog to which she is referring is Camosun Bog in Vancouver's Pacific Spirit Park and the rest of the "eco-diary" contains poems about their experiences there.

There is a lot going on in a bog! "Sedges and rushes grow/from the mud at the edge/of the pond, wave in a /whisper of wind./ Their roots fold and hold/the wet earth together". "In fall you'll see/a gold or orange patch/come overnight and disappear the next:/a million cells together in a swarm--/no one knows why. It does no harm,/this bright splash of colour coming and going/to its own rhythms, its own song". A fellow bogger named Adam found 'velvet blueberry', "an oldtimer", folks thought had died out. "He took cuttings and nursed them/watched them and watered them/gave them good bog soil". "Denis found a berry unlike any other--". He "took their measure/To his pleasure, he discovered he had found/a brand new plant no one had seen before". By the end of the diary, Kiran can weed grass out of moss instead of the other way around, she receives her 'new bogger' badge made from a slice of pine and learns that "One plus one plus one and so on ... That's how we can save something/heal something, change something" and that "Everyone can be part of the song".

I included so many examples of the poetry in this dear little book because I wanted to show not just their quality (which I thought was pretty good) but also their level because I think this book is for a young audience. It is full of information about the interesting peculiarities of life in a bog as well some sweet and funny stories about the "crazy boggers" who take care of it. The diary format allows the insertion of simple, colourful illustrations of boggers of all ages and cultural backgrounds and the flora and fauna they strive to protect. It is also refreshing to find a book containing a multi cultural family--Kiran and her grandmother as well as an alternative one--the "crazy boggers!". Note too that the paper used is "100% ancient forest friendly".

Thematic Links: Environment; Biology; Family; Empowerment; Poetry; Bogs; Environmental Activism; Beauty in Small Things; Values; Global Responsibility/Citizenry

Good, even great at times, generally useful!--Resource Links

CM, Volume XIV Number 2, September 14, 2007

Kiran is worried about the earth. She writes to her grandmother to ask if there is anything a kid can do. Luckily Grandma is a devoted environmentalist, and she invites Kiran to come to her work party on the weekend as "There's a bit of the planet right here" it's a little bog that needs saving. The bog to which she is referring is Camosun Bog in Vancouver's Pacific Spirit Park and the rest of the "eco-diary" contains poems about their experiences there.

There is a lot going on in a bog! "Sedges and rushes grow/ from the mud at the edge/ of the pond, wave in a/ whisper of wind./ Their roots fold and hold/ the wet earth together". "In fall you'll see/ a gold or orange patch/ come overnight and disappear the next:/ a million cells together in a swarm--/ no one knows why./ It does no harm,/ this bright splash of colour coming and going/ to its own rhythms, its own song". A fellow bogger named Adam found "velvet blueberry", "½an oldtimer", folks thought had died out. "He took cuttings and nursed them/ watched them and watered them/ gave them good bog soil". "Denis found a berry unlike any other". He "took their measure/ To his pleasure, he discovered he had found/ a brand new plant no one had seen before". By the end of the diary, Kiran can weed grass out of moss instead of the other way around, she receives her "new bogger" badge made from a slice of pine and learns that "One plus one plus one and so on" That's how we can save something" and that "Everyone can be part of the song".

I included so many examples of the poetry in this dear little book because I wanted to show not just their quality (which I thought was pretty good) but also their level because I think this book is for a young audience. It is full of information about the interesting peculiarities of life in a bog as well some sweet and funny stories about the "crazy boggers" who take care of it. The diary format allows the insertion of simple, colourful illustrations of boggers of all ages and cultural backgrounds and the flora and fauna they strive to protect. It is also refreshing to find a book containing a multi cultural family - Kiran and her grandmother as well as an alternative one - the "crazy boggers!". Note too that the paper used is "100% ancient forest friendly".

Thematic Links: Environment; Biology; Family; Empowerment; Poetry; Bogs; Environmental Activism; Beauty in Small Things; Values; Global Responsibility/Citizenry Leslie L. Kennedy -- by Sue Ann Alderson, Resource Links, Vol. 13, No. 1 (October 2007)

Vancouver's Camosun Bog and full of lovely musing on nature. --Canadian Living , December 2007

CHILDREN'S BOOKS- by Susan Perren,globeandmail.com

"Miraculously, Sue Ann Alderson makes a living bog rise from the printed page. It's remarkable that her musical poems convey not only the sights and sounds of a nature preserve, but its textures and seasons, its plants and birds and animals. The book happily introduces children to the urgent concerns of saving the earth, by starting with a child's eye view of one cherished part of it."- X. J. Kennedy, winner of the National Council of Teachers of English Year 2000 Award for Excellence in Children's Poetry

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