CM
Editor
Duncan Thornton
e-mail: editor@mbnet.mb.ca
CM
Executive Assistant
Peter Tittenberger
e-mail: camera@mbnet.mb.ca
Woodland Christmas.
Frances Tyrrell.
Richmond Hill, ON: North Winds Press/Scholastic, 1995. 32pp, cloth,
$16.99.
ISBN 0-590-24430-2.
Grades Preschool - 4 / Ages 4 - 8.
Review by Diane Fitzgerald.
excerpt:
-- the prefaceThe animals in this book are:
one gray partridge,
two rock doves, three ruffled grouse,
four common loons, five river otters,
six Canada geese, seven whistling swans, eight raccoons,
nine red foxes, ten moose, eleven red squirrels
and twelve beavers.
The bird in the potted pear tree
is a California partridge,
and the courting couple are black bears.
Christmas books appear in number every year, and most fade away with the season. This one, Woodland Christmas, seems like nothing special in concept: the text is "The Twelve Days of Christmas"; the lovers of the song are anthropomorphized bears; and each day's gift is illustrated. But the animals (both those that are characters and those, like the singing birds, that are gifts) are indigenous to North American woodlands, and their costumes and habits (fur hats and tricorns; skating parties) recall 18th-century European settlements in the New World. And the illustrations also tell the story of an entire courtship and wedding over the twelve days.
Highly recommended.
Diane Fitzgerald is an elementary-school teacher in Saskatoon.
Christmas with Anne and Other Holiday Stories.
L.M. Montgomery. Edited by Rea Wilmshurst.
Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1995. 224pp, cloth, $19.95.
ISBN 0-7710-6199-4.
Grades 4 and Up / Ages 8 - Adult.
Review by A. Edwardsson.
excerpt:
"That's a Christmas present for you, Anne," said Matthew shyly. "Why -- why -- Anne, don't you like it? Well now -- well now." For Anne's eyes had suddenly filled with tears. "Like it! Oh Matthew!" Anne laid the dress over a chair and clasped her hands. "Matthew it's perfectly exquisite. Oh, I can never thank you enough. Look at those sleeves! Oh, it seems to me this must be a happy dream."
Just in time for the holidays, this new compilation of sixteen L.M. Montgomery stories will be welcomed by her many fans. Editor Rea Wilmshurst has a number of other Montgomery collections to her credit, the first being Akin to Ann: Tales of Other Orphans, and most recently, Across the Miles: Tales of Correspondence.
Then Katherine said slowly, "Why do you ask me? It isn't because you like me . . . Even you couldn't pretend that. "It's because I can't bear to think of any human being spending Christmas in a place like this,'' said Anne candidly.
After the merry dinner was over, the junior Osbornes brought in a Christmas tree, loaded with presents. They had bought them with the money that Mr. and Mrs. Osborne had meant for their own presents, and a splendid assortment they were. . . .
"This has been the jolliest Christmas I ever spent," said Frank, emphatically. "I thought we were just going to give the others a good time, but it was they who gave it to us," said Ida. . . . "You've learned the secret of happiness," said Cousin Myra gently. And the Osbornes understood what she meant.
Highly recommended.
A. Edwardsson is in charge of the Children's Department at a branch of the Winnipeg Public Library. She has a Bachelor of Education degree and a Child Care Worker III certification, and is a member of the Manitoba branch of the Canadian Authors' Association.
RanVan: A Worthy Opponent.
Diana Wieler.
Toronto: Groundwood, 1995. 192pp, paper, $7.95.
ISBN 0-88899-219-X.
Grades 7 - 11 / Ages 12 - 16.
Review by Elaine Seepish.
Rhan Van returns in this welcome sequel to RanVan the Defender. This time the setting is Thunder Bay, where sixteen-year-old Rhan has settled with his grandmother at her eccentric sister's run-down motel. Rhan's obsession with video action games provides much of the imagery and allegory as he meets a truly scary real-life adversary and, once again, a "damsel in distress."
Highly recommended.
Elaine Seepish is Information Specialist at Instructional Resources Unit, Manitoba Education and Training.
Truly Grim Tales.
Priscilla Galloway.
Toronto: Lester, 1995. 144pp, paper, $12.95.
ISBN 1-895555-67-1.
Grades 7 - 13 / Ages 12 - Adult.
Review by Harriet Zaidman.
excerpt:
Sard would never consent to let me die to save his life. I could get along without my left arm. But it wouldn't save his life. It would not even help him to live longer unless he can figure out a process that works. Maybe I can do more for him if I keep my arm. If he runs out of meal, I'll need two arms to nurse him.
I think sometimes of what will happen when the bonemeal is gone. In my thoughts, I can get through the illness. Painfully, with horror, but I know what that would be like. I can get to the Death Palace, with the casket closed and our wedding picture on the top. I cannot get past that. I cannot imagine life after Sard.
Can you figure out which fairy tale this grim story is based on? That's the challenge in each of the Truly Grim Tales. Each story is based on a well-known tale by the Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, or Charles Perrault. The sanitized, "happily-ever-after" Disney versions that have become standard fare in this part of the century are turned upside down. Galloway takes eight traditional stories and gives them unusual and macabre interpretations.
Recommended with reservations.
Harriet Zaidman is a Winnipeg teacher/librarian.
Dragons of Steel.
John F. Wallace, MC.
Burnstown, ON: General Store Publishing House, 1995. 267pp, paper, $19.95.
ISBN 1-896182-04-0.
Grades 10 - 13 / Ages 14 - Adult.
Review by J.R. Cordon.
excerpt:
For the next two days, the LSH, having remounted their tanks, supported 12 CIB crossing the Naviglio. 5 CAR also working out of its tanks took on patrolling activities as well as carrying out the occasional artillery type of tank shoot. To its south, tanks from 9 CAR were split between assisting the 2CIB and 11 CIB as they moved up to the Senio. The BCD contribution to 2 CIB had been instrumental in holding off enemy counter attacks and enlarging that brigade's bridgehead. 2 CAR, in tanks, continued supporting the 5th Armoured Division's two infantry brigade's advance towards the Senio.
Written by a decorated World War Two tank commander, Dragons of Steel is a highly detailed account of the history of Canadian tanks, from their early days in World War One, through the inter-war years, to their eventual triumph in the Second World War. The book contains a wealth of information, and many maps and photographs. The author has drawn upon his own personal experiences in the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps, and has an impressive background as an historian.
Recommended with reservations.
J.R. Cordon teaches history at D.A. Morrison School in Toronto.
NEWS:
Canada Council Announces Finalists
for 1995 Governor General's
Literary Awards
Ottawa, November 14, 1995
At a ceremony today at the Winter Garden Theatre in Toronto, the Canada Council awarded $140,000 to the winners of the 1995 Governor General's Literary Awards.
Tim Wynne-Jones creates a cast of characters that are dark, offbeat, or comic, but always believable. Through encounters with those characters -- his brutal father, the Maestro, a tough woman bush pilot -- Burl's search is made as compelling for the reader as it is for the young boy himself.
>From the opening sentence, Comme une peau de chagrin captivates readers with both its style and its content. Written in a lively style that is humorous and poetic, the novel takes an extremely intelligent approach to the subject of anorexia. Also, and just as important, it examine adolescent friendship. Thanks to her style, theme, and thoughtful treatment, Sarfatti has given us a work that will leave a deep and lasting impression.
A visual epic, Ludmilla Zeman's illustrations magnificently capture the rich and complex Gilgamesh tale. Her innovative technique creates a very dramatic atmosphere. Selective in her use of colour, Zeman has charged the illustrations with burning light and mysterious blue oceans that effectively describe this grand and mythical landscape. (This title will be reviewed in an upcoming edition of CM.)
This superb work conjures a contemplative state, allowing the reader to travel on the rhythms of the colours. The immense richness of the illustrations is such that each image can stand as a work on its own, filled with magic and splendour.
Tom Murray, the coordinator of the The Math Puzzle, has been kind enough to give CM permission to run the weekly Little Math Puzzle Contest (inspired by The Great Canadian Trivia Challenge.)
Royal West Academy (a high school) in Montreal, Quebec is sponsoring a little math puzzle contest.
This contest is open to all participants but is designed for students in grades five through ten. English will be the language used for all problems and if their solutions relate to a language, the language will be English.
Each week a new puzzle will be presented and the answers and winners from two weeks earlier will be posted. Answers are to be received by 8:00 a.m. eastern time the following Friday.
The answers will then be judged, and a correct answer along with the winners' names, will be posted with the puzzle two weeks later.
Both individual students and entire classes are welcome to participate.
Do not to send your answers to CM. Instead, please send all answers to Andrea Pollock and Alex Nazarov at the following address:
With your solution please include your names, school, grade, and e-mail address, and your city.
What are the next two integers?
This week's Question #11 is the following:
What are the next two numbers?
Please remember to send your response by 8:00 a.m., Friday, November 24th to:
math_puzzle@rwa.psbgm.qc.ca
Andrea Pollock and Alex Nazarov
Steve Caldwell, the coordinator of the Trivia Contest, has been kind
enough to give CM permission to run his weekly Great
Canadian Trivia Contest, a great way to motivate students to
spend some time in the Library.
Therefore we might have missed some correct answers this week and
they will be
recognized when we receive them. In light of this could respondents
please use
the
Steve_Caldwell@colby.on.infoshare.ca
address.
We apologize to those who use The Village to receive the weekly
question for
any inconvenience.
ANSWER:
Arthur Currie commanded the First Canadian Division at Vimy Ridge
and in June, 1917 replaced British general Sir Julian Byng as the
commander of
the four division Canadian Corps. The Canadian Corps along with the Anzacs
(Austalian New Zealand Army Corps) became the storm troopers of the
British
Army. From 1917 on the Canadian Corps under Byng and Currie "never lost
a gun,
never lost ground and never failed in an assignment." In August, 1918 the
Supreme Allied Commander General Foch chose Currie's Canadian Corps to
spearhead the Allied advance which resulted in the surrender of Germany
three
months later. British author, Denis Winter, states that Currie's
"capture of
the Drocourt-Queant Switch in autumn 1918 remains the British Army's
single
greatest achievement on the Western Front."
WINNERS:
Not a lot of winners for this question probably because of network
problems.
What were the French names for Cape Breton and Prince Edward Islands when
they
were part of the French colony of Acadia?
DUE DATE FOR THIS ANSWER: 25 November, 1995
Steve_Caldwell@colby.on.
infoshare.ca
In addition to your e-mail address, please send your school's
name and the grade and/or class that you are in, as well as your
postal address.
Copyright © 1995 the Manitoba Library Association. Reproduction for personal use is permitted only if this copyright notice is maintained. Any other reproduction is prohibited without permission.
Published by
Welcome
math_puzzle@rwa.psbgm.qc.ca
Royal West Academy, Montreal West, Quebec.
Feature
The Great Canadian Trivia Contest
IMPORTANT NOTE FOR USERS OF THE VILLAGE
For those of you access us by way of The Village in Ontario please
note that
we're having a lot of difficulty with The Village. We have been able
to only
intermittently receive the Village and cannot send or reply to it. IMPORTANT NOTE FOR USERS OF SCHOOLNET
Apparently Schoolnet was offline for a time recently and as a result
some
participants had difficulty finding last week's question. Hopefully
everything
will be back on line this week. If you ever do not receive the
question by
Thursday then please contact me.
November 3rd's Question:
On November 11, Canada will commemorate Remembrance Day.
Name the Canadian general, arguably the most able Allied general of World
War
I, who commanded the First Canadian Division at Vimy Ridge and the
entire
Canadian Corps from then until the end of the War.
THIS
WEEK'S QUESTION:
SEND IN YOUR ANSWERS:
Remember, don't post your answers to CM. Instead, send your
answers to Steve Caldwell at the following e-mail address:
about THE GREAT CANADIAN TRIVIA CONTEST:
IT'S BACK!
Welcome to the second year of The Great Canadian Trivia
Contest.INFORMATION:
Each week a new question will be presented. Students
participating in the contest will, in all likelihood, have to do
some research to find the correct answer to our weekly question.
The Manitoba Library Association
ISSN 1201-9364
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