Disposable Plates and Cups Do Not a Good Parent Make
Gag me with a (disposable) spoon.
Gag me with a (disposable) spoon.
Children's literature is big business these days. Just go to any mega-chain bookstore and check out the square footage devoted to the kids. It's fantastic that there are so many options for young readers, but the popularity of children's literature is hardly a new phenomenon.
The bookn3rd blog, which focuses on book history, has some great links and commentary for rare children's book scans from the early 20th century. My favorite is Nathaniel Hawthorne's A Wonder Book For Girls & Boys, from 1893. The color plates (see the thumbnail to the right) by noted illustrator Walter Crane are absolutely amazing.
Rare Children's Books at the Library of Congress (from bookn3rd.com)
Also see: Children's Book Online: The Rosetta Project
Cross-posted from Geekdad
My wife just finished listening to Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere on audiobook. She's been gushing all month about how fantastic of a reader Mr. Gaiman is--he narrated the book himself--and how he gets all the accents just right. This is something very important to the two of us, as we both love stories read aloud, but we hate when they aren't narrated well.
To prepare for our own upcoming adventures in delivering memorable storytimes--our boy is nearing the age where he'll soon appreciate such things--I thought it would be wise to gather together some resources on reading to children and getting them interested in books.
Cross-posted from Geekdad
Lenore Skenazy, who wrote a controversial piece in last week's New York Sun about letting her 9-year-old use the NYC subway, has a new blog called Free Range Kids, all about giving kids the same types of freedoms that we all experienced when we were younger:
"Do you ever... ..let your kid ride a bike to the library? Walk alone to school? Take a bus, solo? Or are you thinking about it? If so, you are raising a Free Range Kid! At Free Range, we believe in safe kids. We believe in helmets, car seats and safety belts. We do NOT believe that every time school age children go outside, they need a security detail. Most of us grew up Free Range and lived to tell the tale. Our kids deserve no less. This site dedicated to sane parenting. Share your stories, tell your tips and maybe one day I will try to collect them in a book. Meantime, let's try to help our kids embrace life! (And maybe even clear the table.)"
It's easy to get caught up in the media blitz and to constantly worry about your wee ones. We're always being told that the world is a harsher, more unforgiving place than it was when we were all kids. Is that true? I think it takes a lot of guts to let go of media-generated overprotective tendencies and let children discover the world around them, warts and all.
Cross posted at Geekdad, via BoingBoing
This is very cool! I just posted it to Geekdad, but it's worth mentioning here, too. In advance of their new kids' album, Here Come the 123s, perennial geek music favorite They Might Be Giants have a new weekly podcast for kids. I just got the notice from the latest edition of their email newsletter (sign up and you get a bunch of free MP3s!):
TMBGs FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEO PODCAST FOR KIDS IS HERE!
See the brand new video "High Five" and then forward the link to your friends with kids!
The new generation of TMBG-lovin'/Barney-not-needin' kids are counting on you!
TMBG's "Birdhouse In Your Soul" was the one and only song that would put our geeklet to sleep when he was a newborn, and my wife and I have been listening to them since we were teenagers. We're all looking forward to the new album, and I can't say that about some of the other kids' music that we have to endure.
While we wait, it looks like we'll have some fun videos to put in the iPod. "High Five," hosted by puppet versions of the two Johns, is fun and quirky, with a cute song that my kid is already bopping around to. The podcast should be updated on a weekly basis in January.
Click here to subscribe to the podcast in iTunes, or just download the "High Five" video.
Bring up your geeklets right! With Baby's First Mythos, written by C.J. Henderson and illustrated by Erica Henderson, you can teach them to rightfully fear the Outer Gods, all while learning their 123s and ABCs! From the review at Geekparenting.com:
"Though it isn't bound in flesh or inked with human blood, Baby's First Mythos does come in a nice hardback that reminds me of Golden Books. You know, if Golden Books pushed you to the brink of madness."
Cross-posted at Geekdad, via Boing Boing.
I stumbled across Flickaday way back in June, and, off and on, I've been taking daily webcam photographs of myself.
I'm not really sure why I've been doing this. I guess I saw Noah K Everyday and thought it might be interesting to see how my face changes, how my hair changes, etc. Is that vain, or is it just curiosity?
But it got me thinking... I'm an adult, my face will change very gradually. But Liam, he changes every day. We went to California for a week, and when we got back, I swear he was taller, bigger, older. This little web app has the potential to replace the door jamb measurement system that my parents put in place for me (apply child to door frame, measure their height, rinse and repeat over the years, then get sentimental and sad when you have to move and paint over the whole thing).
I'm gonna give this a go, probably post it on Geekdad.
Anyway, I've set up my own Flickaday gadget over to the right in the sidebar. See me in all my bed-headed glory.
Update: I did post this to Geekdad.
Second Update: Ross Lucivero at Flickaday saw my post on Geekdad and mentions it on the Flickaday blog. The Internets are awesome.