Showing posts with label restoration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restoration. Show all posts

Monday, April 2, 2018

Resurrection Turtles

Today I showcase 2 secular books about resurrection. (Well, they’re really about hibernation.) These 2 books are very similar so I’m offering them together. They are delightful but deep. Your audience might never look at turtles the same!
 
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Picture Book: Alfie (The Turtle That Disappeared)
Author & Illustrator: Thyra Heder
Hanna's Comments & Summary: My favorite aspect of this story is how it switches points of view in the middle. At a pet store on her 6th birthday, Nia falls for Alfie. Apparently, Alfie is 6 too so they are perfect for each other.  
Alfie is crazy about Nia but he's not so great at displaying enthusiasm for their relationship. This disappoints Nia who is very focused on Alfie at first. 
She introduces him to her friends. 
 
Decorating, dancing, stories, jokes, and presents are Nia's way of showing her love, but...  
Alfie doesn't do much until Nia's 7th birthday when Alfie's voice tells us how special Nia is
and describes her loving ways. 
She makes him a wonderful home. 
 He's so glad to know he's 6 too! And he loves dancing (inside his shell!). 
Apparently, Alfie laughs and laughs!
When Nia tells Alfie they are soon going to be 7 together, he gets excited! He must get her a gift.
The hidden puzzle piece is too fuzzy. 
Toby strongly suggest going outside where the best presents are.
Getting to the ground via a fire escape is quite a daring adventure that yields no obvious present. 
A fabulous blue cap is found, but it's too small for Nia. 
Discouraged, Alfie decides to rest. A nice pond is recommended by a snail. 
 Alfie naps while the seasons change...
 and change.
When he wakes, he finds the perfect present for Nia's 7th birthday, a turtle key chain. 
 Alfie "rushes" to Nia's party and is "right on time."  
He sees that Nia is surprised he's brought her such a perfect present now that they are 7 together!
This beautiful story is inspired by the author's real pet Alfie and a friend's pet turtle. From the Author's Note: The lucky thing about turtles is their lifespan is long enough for you to fall back in love with them.  
Original Publisher & Date: Abrams, 2017
Age & Grade Appropriateness: 4 and up, Pre and up
Formats other than Book: Tablet
Scripture Connections: Any scripture about resurrection, renewed relationships, gift giving, or misunderstanding. 
Idea(s) for Application: Read this book to a group of children or adults in a lesson about resurrection or misunderstanding in relationships. 

Picture Book: Turtle Spring
Author & Illustrator: Deborah Turney Zagwyn
Summary & Hanna's Comments: I love this initial illustration which gives you a hint that the there are several layers to this story of seasons and beginnings in particular. There is also a science lesson in these pages about the work and gifts of compost.   
When Clee's baby brother comes, she loves having extended family over but... 
not the attention they give the baby. 
 Fortunately, her uncle brings Clee a present. 
Clee enjoys the turtle and keeps it in a compost heap near the sandbox. The turtle is good company when Clee's father has to go away for work. 
When the cold comes, Clee's mother suggests she bring the turtle inside, but Clee resists. The house if full of baby brother! Then Clee forgets. 
A feeling of forgetting brings Clee outside where she remembers her turtle and feels so guilty that she didn't bring it inside. She finds the turtle shell and is heartbroken.   
Clee confesses to her mother and tells how she buried the turtle in a deep hole in the compost heap. 
Winter has Clee and mother missing their loved ones. The house "grew a shell of snow" with only the baby happy and lively. 
Clee's relationship with her brother transforms. You might say it comes alive!
As they play, Clee avoids the place of the turtle's burial. 
Spring comes with promises that her father will be home soon. 
Eventually, Clee must take her brother to the sandbox, but she is wary. 
She tries to avoid looking at the compost pile but sees movement... 
 Baby brother sees the turtle first.    
All are thrilled! A Note to the Reader at the end explains how the compost heap is a perfect place for turtle hibernation.
Original Publisher & Date: Tricycle Press, 2004
Age & Grade Appropriateness: 5 and up, K and up
Formats other than Book: None at present
Scripture Connections: Connect this book to scriptures about resurrection, seasons, surprises, absence, guilt, and transformation in relationship.
Idea(s) for Application: Read this book to a group of children or adults in a lesson about resurrection, waiting, seasonal changes, or transformation in relationships. 

Friday, September 1, 2017

Healing

After re-posting on Monday a beautiful book about a flood, I thought I’d follow up with a profound book about healing. Aspects of healing are as varied and multifaceted as the people who must endure. Because the following book is child-like, you might assume it only appropriate for children. Instead, consider how this simple book can gently welcome conversations about healing in many contexts and for people of all ages. The story is mostly told through images so be sure to give ample time to show your audience the many illustrations. 
Picture Book: How to Heal a Broken Wing
Author & Illustrator: Bob Graham 
Summary: In a crowded city, 
no one sees a bird slam into a sky scraper and fall. 
It lands in the middle of a city square.
No one sees it lying near their rushing feet. 
But when Will and his mother enter from the subway 
and cross the square, Will sees the bird and immediately breaks away from the security of his mother’s hand 
to go to the hurt bird. 
He picks it up 
just as his mother comes for him.  
Seeing its broken wing, she wraps it in her scarf and places it in her purse, a makeshift nest. Meanwhile, Will retrieves a feather, just in case. 
They turn around and take the bird home, errand forgotten. 
Upon arrival, Will’s father is concerned. 
When Will gives him the feather, Will's father explains that “a loose feather can’t be put back…” 
“but a broken wing can sometimes heal.” 
The family finds a new bandage, a box, and a food dish. 
With tender, loving care they help the bird begin to heal. Both Will and bird rest well that night. 
The loving family gets a bird cage, and places it on the window sill so the bird doesn’t forget its possibilities and bird friends. 
Healing takes time so days are marked with a calendar and the moon’s phases. 
Time passes and eventually, the bandage is removed and flying practice begins. 
The first try doesn’t go well. 
But hope is not lost. 
After more healing (and likely flying practice) they decide to take the bird back to the place where Will found it, encouragement to fly high again. 
They travel back to the city square, but not before Will retrieves the lone feather, just in case. 
Will takes the bird, lifts and opens his hands,… 
and the bird is off! The family watches as it soars to heights 
and leaves them with a small reminder.
Hanna’s Comments: As I hear of the suffering in Texas, Louisiana, India, and Niger, I have thought often of my friend, Trudi Mullens, who lost her house and all its contents in Hurricane Katrina. So many veterans of storms are haunted by these present devastations. When you live through trauma, healing lasts a lifetime. Most of us are on a healing journey so a picture book about healing is for everyone. Trudi told me something profound about how tragedy always feels personal, even when it’s not, as in a natural disaster. I know this is true. Perhaps this tendency to take it personally explains why the healing journey is so long. Three weeks after the storm, when a group of strangers, a “mud out” crew, came to her home to drag away its contents and sheet rock, Trudi had a surprising rush of tears. She was no longer alone. This was a next healing step in Trudi’s long healing journey. She was to learn that healing is best done in community, community that realizes there are few quick fixes and long listening is crucial. Like in this picture book, time, tenderness, and attention are required. And like the family in this story who stands at the window with the bird, hope grounds healing for everyone involved. May it be so for all those who need healing today and all who love them.
Original Publisher & Date: Candlewick Press, 2008
Age & Grade Appropriateness: 3 and up, Pre and up
Formats other than Book: None at present
Scripture Connections: And now, O Lord, for what do I wait? My hope is in you. (Psalm 39:7); Those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength (Isaiah 40:11); I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous hand. (Isaiah 41:10) Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. (Hebrews 11:1)
Idea(s) for Application: Read this book to any group of people in your faith family and explore aspects of healing and hope.