Showing posts with label J. R. R. Tolkien. Show all posts
Showing posts with label J. R. R. Tolkien. Show all posts

Saturday, September 23, 2017

2017 Hobbit Feast

Sorry I can't give you the recipe because
I can't remember where I copied it down from. 
For our Hobbit Day feast I planned eggs and hash for breakfast.

Second breakfast was bacon and potatoes.

We had freshly baked blueberry scones and lady fingers for Elevensies.

Luncheon was honey ham on bakery rolls with carrots, celery, tomatoes, and hummus.

I bought Fancy Yancy cheeses for our afternoon snack along with a selection of crackers.

Sam was an expert at cooking rabbit stew and PoTayToes! So I opted for Welsh Rabbit, smashed potatoes, and roasted vegetables (from Farmer Maggot's, of course.)

I laid out lady fingers and cream, apple cider, and fig newtons for a light dessert.

Mike Hendry’s ultimate Welsh Rarebit recipe
Courtesy Llansantffraed Court Hotel
Delicious!
Man was never built to eat like a hobbit. Today I plan to spend the day hiking to Mordor to work off the excess calories.

Eating was interspersed with sketching and reading, games, and our youngest son's first viewing of The Fellowship of the Ring, 2001.
Themed Monopoly by Hasbro and 
Ravensburger's LOTR version
of King's Gate
Prancing Pony dartboard made by
 the Noble Collection

“If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.”

Friday, September 22, 2017

PPBF: I Like Old Clothes

Happy Hobbit Day!
Tune in tomorrow for the gastronomical triumphs from our Middle Earthly feast.

And now on to today's Perfect Picture Book Friday pick

newly illustrated I Like Old Clothes,
by Mary Ann Hoberman and Patrice Barton
I Like Old Clothes

Written Mary Ann Hoberman
Illustrated by Patrice Barton

Alfred A. Knopf
originally published 1976, New illustrations 2012
Ages 5-8, 32 pp


Themes:
Childhood, Differences, Individuality


Opening:
I like old clothes,
Hand-me-down clothes,
Worn-outgrown clothes,
Not-my-own clothes.


This book was originally published with illustrations by Jacqueline Chwast

Synopsis:
The main character tells how she loves receiving used clothes even though other people might not like old clothes. This is more of a concept book. The MC likes to imagine where the clothes have come from and in the beautifully circular ending, where they are going to next. She likes hand-me-downs because she can play without messing them up, or dress up, or remake them into something new.


What I Love:
This sweet circular "story" by Mary Ann Hoberman has been reissued with new illustrations. I love how Patrice Barton introduces a gentle, vintage vibe into her illustrations without being sentimental.
I love the creative ways the MC uses her clothes. I appreciate the book's ability to deflect embarassment over consignments shopping and an upcycled life-style. The book is perfectly suited to today's environmentally-conscious parents who take advantage of the used clothing that comes their way. The illustrator uses a nice variety of collage-style back grounds and vignettes with plenty of character appeal.

I generally flinch when a past illustrator's work is cast aside, but this new edition is worthy of the timeless text. It's so cute!


Bonus: 
Ingenious cookie packages from Cake Central
1. Reading Rockets never fails to disappoint with their author interviews in text or video format.

2. View a delightful sketch interview with illustrator Patrice Barton on the Texas: Austin SCBWI blog, or the traditional kind with Kathy Temean's indepth Q&A with lots of pictures!

3. Take kids on a shopping spree to the local consignment shop for school clothes, play clothes, dress up costumes, and clothes for crafting. Use the time to review making change and budgeting.

4. Blogger Marilyn Rodrigues posts about the ups and downs of the hand-me-down lifestyle while Recycle Now has suggestions for less-than-quality donations.

5. Teach kids about charity by donating to actual charities like Salvation Army and World Wear Project. Note that Goodwill is a for-profit business and Boxes like Planet Aid can be highly suspect. Do your research.

6. Check out these and more Perfect Picture Books at your local library.

Reviewed by Jennifer
Reviewed by Erik




Reviewed by Joanne
Reviewed by Rhythm

Reviewed by Maria
Reviewed by Julie

Have you reviewed a Perfect Picture Book along this theme? Please leave the link in the comments below. Thanks!

Check out all the recommended titles for Perfect Picture Book Friday
for Friday, September 22, 2017 available on Susanna Leonard Hill's blog.

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Hobbit Day 2017

Wouldn't it be fun to do this 3D Middle Earth Map puzzle together?





Celebrate Bilbo's 174th birthday (and Frodo's 96th). Give gifts. Have a party. Eat a lot. Enjoy life because September 22 is officially Hobbit Day.

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt compiled a Merry list of ideas for the occasion including a Dwarvish rune alphabet and an event hashtag.

Hobbits traditionally give gifts to others on their birthdays. Stock up on the One Ring from ThinkGeek, that is, if you have the willpower to give them away freely.

Kick back and reread your favorite Tolkien passages. Set the mood with soy candles from Frostbeard Studio in The Shire or Oxford Library scents. After all, Tolkien spent a lot of time in both places.

Check back Saturday for photos of our Tolkien marathon for which I've planned hobbit-themed food and games.

Tenna' san'
Aa' menealle nauva calen ar' malta*


*Thanks to the Grey Company

Monday, March 27, 2017

MMGM: The Hobbit

Today's Marvelous Middle Grade Monday pick:


The Hobbit, Cover art by J. R. R. Tolkien
The Hobbit,
Or There and Back Again
Written by J. R. R. Tolkien

Allen & Unwin, 1937
Ages 12+, 1000L
300 pages, 95000 words


Themes:
Fantasy


Opening:
       In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole, with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort.
       It had a perfectly round door like a porthole, painted green, with a shiny yellow brass knob in the exact middle. The door opened onto a tube-shaped hall like a tunnel: a very comfortable hole without smoke, with paneled walls, and floors tiled and carpeted, provided with polished chairs, and lots and lots of pegs for hats and coats—the hobbit was fond of visitors. The tunnel wound on and on, going fairly but not quite straight into the side of the hill —The Hill, as all the people for many miles round called it—and many little round doors opened out of it, first on one side and then on the other. No going upstairs for the hobbit: bedrooms, bathrooms, cellars, pantries (lots of these), wardrobes (he had whole rooms devoted to clothes), kitchens, dining-rooms, all were on the same floor, and indeed on the same passage. The best rooms were all on the left-hand side (going in), for these were the only ones to have windows, deep-set round windows looking over his garden, and meadows beyond, sloping down to the river.


Thoughts:
I first heard this portion of The Hobbit in second grade. I remember the experience well, and the drawing I did afterward, of a neat and tidy hobbit hole. My next encounter with Tolkien was The Lord of the Rings film released when I was in elementary school. I immediately undertook the reading of the trilogy, though it was more than a year before I finished it.  While my classmates were lip-synching a production of Grease, I was sitting in a corner of the playground pouring over my book. My obsession with all things Tolkien earned me a hobbitish nickname and spurred many class projects.

Hobbit Interior by Vangelo-18 via Deviant Art

At a recent school book fair, I was appalled at the varying advice of fellow parents and teachers' aids. Several children were scolded for reading books either above or below their grade level. Time and again, classes were admonished to only check out books in a certain section of shelves. This was a book fair, not a class assignment! Where would I be if I hadn't heard Tolkien's words six years before anyone would have expected me to read them? Or later, when my brilliant teacher encouraged me to persevere in a book two grades or more above my reading level?

Bonus: 
 1. If you haven't read the Hobbit, I can't think of a better time. Nothing, in my opinion, can beat The Lord of the Rings trilogy: The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King. Don't be afraid to try Tolkien's other works, his histories, poetry, and even a children's story are available in multiple editions. And please, please, read them to the young people in your life. There's no knowing where they might be swept off to.



My copies of the books carry the Tolkien watercolor illustrations. Simply gorgeous.


2. How often do I recommend the movie version? Not often. But I sometimes forget how, in my childhood, films made me run to the bookshelf to see what really happened or to prolong the experience.
This was the movie that started it all for me.


3. Other MMGM reviewers recommend these fantasy reads:

The Fellowship of the Ring, reviewed by Marsh on A Monster Ate My Book Report
The Dark Is Rising, reviewed by Kim on Dead Houseplants
The Princess and the Goblin, reviewed by Myrna on Night Writer
The Chronicles of Prydain, reviewed by Joanne here on Bookish Ambition

and don't miss the epic fantasy mystery series, Keeper of the Lost Cities, penned by our Marvelous Middle Grade Monday host Shannon Messenger

4. Saturday was Tolkien Reading Day. Check out the details on my weekend post.





Have you reviewed a Marvelous Middle Grade Book along this theme? Please leave the link in the comments below. Thanks!

Check out all the Marvelous Middle Grade Monday recommendations for March 27, 2017.

MMGM started way back in 2010 by Shannon Messenger, author of Keeper of Lost Cities. Each week, participating bloggers review our favorite books for ages 8-12. Why not join us?

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Tolkien Reading Day 2017

This year's theme is Poetry and Songs

Share your favorite quote and which of Tolkien's works you'll be reading today using #TolkienReadingDay


The Guardian reported last year that two more poems from Tolkien's college days were discovered: one new and one early draft. Why not use today's celebration as the impetus to seek them out?

Enjoy this clop from Peter Jackson's An Unexpected Journey, featuring the haunting musical rendition of "Misty Mountains."





Thanks to the Tolkien Society for creating and perpetuating this event.


"Farewell...May the stars shine upon your faces"