Cousins of Clouds

Cousins of Clouds
Tracie's NEW BOOK!
Showing posts with label Freeman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freeman. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2010

A Wild Cowboy

A Wild Cowboy
by Danna Kessimakis Smith
Illustrated by Laura Freeman


About the book:
Grandma’s baby-sitting today, and the frontier’s best cowboy gathers his things for the long journey there, where his blanket, his jump rope, and make-believe will help his cowboy dreams come true.
This darling drover tells his fantastic tale in a mellow rhyme that’s fun to repeat and reads with ease. So pack your bags to go on an imaginative ride with the cutest buckaroo in the wild, wild West!


About the guide:
This guide includes discussion questions and projects appropriate for book clubs, literature circles, and classroom discussions. It is intended to provoke thought and insight into the subject and themes of this book, including imagination, routines, family, and the wild, wild west.

Author Interview:
1.      What inspired this darling book?  Believe it or not, I had a dream I was writing a story…this story!  I wrote the first two lines in my dream “I am a boy, a wild cowboy.  A real live buckaroo”.  When I woke up I took those two lines and created the story around them. 
2.      Do you like working in rhyme best? Why?   Yes!  I love writing in rhyme best.  I was introduced to rhyme at an early age when my uncle used to make up funny rhymes about any ordinary situation.  I started writing rhyming poetry when I was about eight years old.  It’s how I expressed myself.  Writing in rhyme challenges me too, it’s sort of like a word puzzle.    

3.      How, do you think, kids develop a keen imagination? Were you an imaginative kid?  For most children “pretending” at a young age is a great way to exercise their imagination. Role playing is a great example. Children play “school”, they “go to work” with Dad’s briefcase, they make menus and “serve” their parents, etc.  It’s great fun and lets them experience new things.    Yes, I was very imaginative as I child. I was always pretending, doing crafts and inventing things.

4.      What’s the best part of being a children’s author? It’s much more than seeing my ideas and words in print.  It’s a good feeling to think I am contributing to a child’s life, even in a small way.  As a children’s author, I get to meet children everywhere and share my love for books with them…that’s very rewarding.
5.      Did you always want to be a cowboy too?   I’ve always liked to read about the history of the Wild West but since I was never around a real cowboy or a real heard of cattle, I had to imagine what it would be like.  I grew up with lots of animals but I never had a horse, I did have a cowboy hat once. 

Questions for your buckaroo:
1.      Who is the boy’s “pardner?” Who is his horse? Do you ride piggy back on anyone’s shoulders?
2.      Where do the boy’s go? What do they play there? How do you know?
3.      What is a stray? How do you round one up? Have you ever seen a stray in your neighborhood?
4.      Who are the coyotes? How many are there?
5.      Which picture is your favorite? Why?



Projects:

Art:
Create glow in the dark stars for your little cowpoke to sleep under. Cut out stars from strong cardboard or paper plates and use neon colored paint. Consider adding glitter around the edges so it shimmers during the day too.

Horizon:
Cut out shapes that are typically western motif’s (pronged cactus, boots, horseshoes, stars, etc.) and then have children make a western sunset using an orange semi-circle construction paper and water-based markers. After the children make horizontal lines they use water to smear the colors together. Then, add the shapes to the scene!

Cowpoke art:
Cut out the shape of a cowboy boot from brown paper grocery bags. Then use brown paint (or for an authentic look use garden variety mud mix) to break in these old boots!

Cowboy charades:
Add slips of paper with these words and have your cowpokes figure out what western activity is going on:
riding, cooking, setting up camp, lassoing, branding, singing

Cowboy Music:
Sing some cowboy songs:
“Home on the Range”

Sing this tune to “Mary Had a Little Lamb”

Cowboy took his buckaroo, buckaroo, buckaroo,
Cowboy took his buckaroo,
on his way to Grandma’s

Other verses:
Cowboy crossed a canyon
where bandits hide at night

Cowboy sets up his camp
and eats some cowboy grub

Cowboy sleeps beneath the moon
and rides a horse in dreams.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

A Brave Spaceboy


A Brave Spaceboy
by Danna Kessimakis Smith
Illustrated by Laura Freeman


About the book:
On moving day, an enterprising little boy bids farewell to his fears. By playing pretend, he turns the scary unknown into an out-of-this-world adventure! In his handcrafted rocket ship, the astronaut boldly sets a course for Mars, but as soon as he touches down in the unfamiliar terrain, he has a close encounter with a new life form! Never fear, for this brave Mars walker knows how to deal with the stranger in his midst… He lets his imagination soar!


About the guide:
This guide includes discussion questions and projects appropriate for book clubs, literature circles, and classroom discussions. It is intended to provoke thought and insight into the subject and themes of this book, including imagination, fear, play, family, and moving.

Author Interview:
1.      Would you go to space if you could? Why or why not?  No way!  I would like to say I am that adventurous, but to tell you the truth traveling through space sounds a bit scary to me.  I’ve read stories about astronauts who go to space…what brave and amazing people they are!
2.      Kids love boxes. What do writers love?  Office supplies of course!  I can never get enough pens and notebooks!
3.      Do you like to start a new piece of writing or revise more? Why? I like to start with a new piece of writing. After working on the same story for months, it’s fun and refreshing to work on another idea.  Most of the time though, I’m working on four or five stories at the same time.  This way, when I sit down to write, I have several stories to choose from.  I choose the one I feel I can contribute to the most that day.   I grin and bear revisions though, because re-writing is part of writing and has proven to make my story so much better.
4.      If you had an afternoon to play what would you do with it? I would play in the dirt!  I love to be out in my garden in the sunshine.
5.      What can your fans look forward to next?  My next book “WHAT BEST FRIENDS DO” is due out in 2007.  It’s a picture book about a loving (and sometimes wacky) relationship between a child and his/her dog.  Also, “MY DADDY’S A GRIZZLY BEAR” will be illustrated by Lynn Munsinger and is due out in 2008.  In this picture book a young child and his/her father use their imaginations “turning into” different kinds of bears.


Questions for your little explorer:

1.      Is it an important day for the family? How do you know?
2.      What do they use to create a spaceship? What shapes can you find in the pages of the story?
3.      What does a pilot do? Would you rather be a pilot or the commander in chief? Why?
4.      Who do they meet? How do they meet her?
5.      What do they see on their journey? What would you most like to see in space?


Projects:

Art:
Cardboard box art (of course!)
Locate a large appliance box if possible and then brainstorm all the different objects that it could become. Paint the outside and let it dry if you want a professional look or just go to it with a box of markers. Your imagination is the limit! Consider adding smaller boxes to the larger one with duck tape to add dimension to your project (cereal boxes are ideal because they are so light). Take a picture of your creation.

cardboard box art II
Collect a wide variety of boxes (cereal, pasta, laundry, etc.) and then create a whole city block using the boxes. Decorate them with paint, fabric, wallpaper samples, newspaper, contact paper, or any other product you think adds dimension.

UFO art:
Use two paper plates to create a UFO spaceship. Glue or tape the edges closed and then decorate with scraps of construction paper or other bright fabrics, glues or paints. Hang from the ceiling for a fun look!

Soda Rocketship:
Use a plastic soda bottle (individual size or 2-liters for large ships) and permanent markers and construction paper to create a one of a kind ship for your explorer.

Cooking:
Starship cookies:
Cut out the center of traditional star-shaped sugar cookies and add a hard candy to melt inside the negative space. Devour inside spaceship for nutrition on long journeys to mars and beyond.

Music:

Sing to the song “Farmer in the Dell”

We’re flying to the stars
We’re flying to the stars
Blast off from the living room
We’re flying to the stars!

Other verses:
We’re orbiting the earth
We’re landing on Mars
We’re traveling back home