June23
My daughters and I take field trips to the Sulzer Regional library in Lincoln Square every week or so and we pick out a pile of new-to-us books—bedtime includes two each night, so we (my husband and I, mostly) crave the variety. It’s something we started doing recently because, while I love adding to our children’s library, I don’t have space to store much more! So we buy certain forever-keepers (“Where the Wild Things Are,” “The Cat in the Hat,” “Goodnight Moon”), but we’re loving our rotating selection of borrowed books just as much.
But I have a problem. I’m a historically indecisive person, and the library has so many darn books, it’s hard to sort the worthy from the “I could have written that better” books. I know a handful of children’s authors whose books we’ve loved, but one memorable read doesn’t necessarily lead to another (you know who you are, Laura Numeroff). So, I’ve embarked on a project to choose one book of the seven or eight we borrow each visit and award it with the Drake Top Tot Book Award (OK, we’re working on the name and taking suggestions). Our first time winner? “The Art Lesson” by Tomie dePaola.
Part of dePaola’s autobiographical works, the story reveals how all of his friends had certain talents, and “Tommy” loved to draw. He was psyched about having a real art teacher in school, but disappointed when she asked him to copy a picture—you see, real artists don’t copy—and tells him he has to use boring school-issued crayons instead of his cherished box of 64 from home. So Tommy works out a deal with his art teacher that if he copies the Pilgrim man and woman with the school crayons, if there’s still time, he can do his own picture with his own crayons. “And he did/And he still does.” Part of me sees my little Haley as a budding Tomie, so I sneakily picked this one on purpose. And she loved it. Especially the last page where the author/illustrator includes a drawing of Strega Nona, another of our keeper books. Haley thought that was pretty cool. At first she pointed to it hesitatingly, like she wasn’t sure about it, but after I confirmed, “Oh, that’s Strega Nona!” it became her favorite part of the book. Such a gently sweet book. It kind of has it all: heart, soul, a message, a little insider joke and, of course, fabulous art.
Tomie dePaola’s website has more about him and his work. He’s such an interesting guy, I was rather engrossed there for a little while. He even has artwork for sale.