Inkheart Trailer

 

You can take a look at the newly released Inkheart trailer here at Moviefone.  Comingsoon also offered links to it and quite a conversation erupted about originality and quality.  I’m not completely sold on the casting of the film.  People certainly don’t look the way I thought they would.

I also have some reservations about a book this literary and verbose being made into what looks like an action film.  Yes, there was plenty of action in the novel, but I remember the stillness in some passages, the tension, the waiting breathlessly.  And I don’t see that here.

How about you?  Are you looking forward to the film?

The Black Book of Colors

The Black Book of Colors by Menena Cottin, illustrated by Rosana Faria.

This is a remarkable book.  One that offers insight into what it’s like to be blind.  It is a book about colors that contains only the color black.  Each color has a separate page with glossy raised pictures that are meant to be touched, not seen.  White text accompanies these images, describing what you are touching. 

Here’s an example of the text from the "green" page:

He says that green tastes like lemon ice cream and smells like grass that’s just been cut. 

Lovely, isn’t it?  Each page is like that, offering different ways to sense color and experience it. 

I applaud Faria, the illustrator, for not only taking on a colorless project, but creating images that when touched as just as evocative as when seen.  When we finished reading this book, my sons started trying to read the braille alphabet and traded back and forth going over the dark images again and again.  There is something wondrous in this book.

Highly recommended for art classes, diversity units, and just for the amazement of the book itself.  Sure to start discussions and interest, this could be nicely paired with Helen Keller’s biography.  Appropriate for a wide range of ages because of the fascination inherent in the book.  This could be used with even middle school students successfully.

The Worry Tree

The Worry Tree by Marianne Musgrove.

Juliet is a born worrier.  She worries about lots of things: her grandmother falling, her little sister driving her batty, hygiene, her parents arguing and especially her two best friends fighting over her.  After things with her little sister finally come to a head, she gets to move into her father’s old junk room.  There she discovers a mural on the wall, hidden behind the wallpaper.  It shows a tree filled with animals, designed to take your worries and watch over them for you.  Exactly what Juliet (and her grandmother as a little girl) needs. 

This is a lovely timeless story perfect for those children who find themselves victims of their own worries.  Juliet is nicely portrayed as a worrier, not a whiner.  She feels responsible for so many things, just as many children do.  Her family is seen as busy but still involved: a true modern family.  Additionally, the process of telling your concerns to someone or something else is sound advice. 

This book would work as a read aloud for classes as well.  A nicely done, Australian import, it is appropriate for ages 7-9.