Showing posts with label Linda Bailey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linda Bailey. Show all posts

November 22, 2023

The Three Little Mittens

Written by Linda Bailey
Illustrated by Natalia Shaloshvili
Tundra Books
978-1-77488-011-1
32 pp.
Ages 4-7
October 2023
 
This story may start with "Once there were two little mittens..." but I can assure you that this is not a story of "once" but of "often" or "always" as winter sets in and we scramble to find our mittens and gloves. This is a story that has played out many times and will continue to play out wherever hand coverings are needed. For this one time, there is a very happy and inclusive ending.
From The Three Little Mittens, written by Linda Bailey, illustrated by Natalia Shaloshvili
Dotty and Other Dotty are two fluffy, pink, cozy mittens with yellow dots, and they are identical. Stripes is another mitten, but Dotty and Other Dotty give her the cold shoulder for not matching anyone and reminding her that the Little Girl will never wear her. Stripes is devastated by her loneliness, trapped in a pocket, unable to touch a dog or make a snowball.
 
And then Other Dotty is abandoned in the snow. Suddenly Dotty and Stripes are forced to become partners when the Little Girl decides to wear them together.
And here's the surprise. As they got to know each other, they began to like each other. In fact, they almost became friends.

But then Other Stripes reappears after having been dragged under the couch by the dog.  Now together, the two Stripes reject Dotty since she doesn't match them. In a surprise, the Little Girl overhears their discussion and wonders why they have to match, because "There's always a mitten who doesn't match."

From The Three Little Mittens, written by Linda Bailey, illustrated by Natalia Shaloshvili
With that, she excavates the box of mittens and discovers a brilliant assortment of colours, patterns, sizes, and shapes, freeing everyone with the opportunity to be worn and get out. From then on, she wears unmatched mittens every day, giving all mittens a turn. Better than just getting out and about and serving a purpose again, the mittens find themselves making new friends and having fun.
From The Three Little Mittens, written by Linda Bailey, illustrated by Natalia Shaloshvili
But, like all great ideas, the Little Girl's equity in mitten-wearing is noticed and appreciated by her school mates and soon they too are wearing wonderful mixed-up mittens. Imagine what will happen when the socks hear about this! 
 
I love how Linda Bailey has taken a familiar circumstance i.e., missing mittens and having a collection of mismatched ones, and given us a heartfelt story of acceptance and inclusiveness. In The Three Little Mittens, what starts as animosity and discrimination, becomes friendship and support, with all the mittens belonging, and, even better, being welcomed as part of  a new configuration. 

England's Natalia Shaloshvili creates acrylic paintings that are as warm and fuzzy as the mittens and children she includes in The Three Little Mittens. The softness of the edges reflect the linty nature of the woollens and other fabrics, but Natalia Shaloshvili extends that to the kids' hair and even a wheelchair, giving the story the fluffiness of snowflakes.
From The Three Little Mittens, written by Linda Bailey, illustrated by Natalia Shaloshvili
Linda Bailey has given us so many wonderful picture books over the years, from her award-winning Stanley books (like Stanley's Party) to her recent picture biographies (like Arthur Who Wrote Sherlock), that it's impossible to label her stories in any way as anything but her own. And now she's given us one with an important life lesson. With The Three Little Mittens, Linda Bailey, with much graphic support from Natalia Shaloshvili, has now taken us to the global closet to see that all mittens belong and can get along with everyone else. Who knew we could learn so much from three (or thirteen) little mittens?

February 17, 2023

Arthur Who Wrote Sherlock

Written by Linda Bailey
Illustrated by Isabelle Follath
Tundra Books
978-0-7352-6925-5
56 pp.
Ages 5-9
2022

Many young readers will know the name Sherlock Holmes, probably from TV or movies, though perhaps more rarely from the books in which he stars, and I suspect fewer will know his creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Linda Bailey is sure to remedy that with her latest illustrated creative biography in Tundra's Who Wrote Classics series by shining a spotlight on the author and how Sherlock came to be.
From Arthur Who Wrote Sherlock by Linda Bailey, illus. by Isabelle Follath
From listening to stories told by his mother, learning to read and becoming a voracious reader, and then writing his first story at age 6, Arthur had a history of love for words and the magic they could create. That love of words would certainly help sustain him as his family dealt with poverty and a mentally ill father who turned to alcohol. When sent away to boarding school by his rich uncles, Arthur struggled with new challenges but could always rely on his storytelling to help him through. 
From Arthur Who Wrote Sherlock by Linda Bailey, illus. by Isabelle Follath
At 17, Arthur went to medical school where he became the assistant to the amazing Dr. Joseph Bell from whom he learned much about observation to aid in diagnosis. Throughout his studies he took on a variety of jobs to earn money. But these jobs, which included being a ship's medical officer, provided him with the adventures and anecdotes that would later feature in his stories. These would be important because, as Arthur struggled to establish a medical practice, he wrote. And, among all his writing endeavours, he created a detective based on his brilliant teacher, Dr. Bell. Though getting published was laborious, Arthur tweaked onto the idea of serializing Sherlock's stories and publishing them regularly in the same magazine to get readers excited and hooked. With that endeavour, Sherlock became a hit. 
From Arthur Who Wrote Sherlock by Linda Bailey, illus. by Isabelle Follath
Surprisingly, Sherlock was such a hit that readers were convinced he was real, and Arthur was left with no time for anything except Sherlock. Even when he resolved to kill off his detective, he was drawn back in by fans, and found a way to resurrect Sherlock and control what he chose to write, always with the aim of ensuring justice and fairness prevailed, whether in real life or in his stories.
 
Linda Bailey wanted to make Arthur the star of his story. Everyone knew and knows Sherlock Holmes, dubbed "the world's most famous man who never was" but Arthur Conan Doyle is a lesser character in his own story. Linda Bailey, though, makes him the lead in Arthur Who Wrote Sherlock, just as she did for Mary Shelley in her earlier book Mary Who Wrote Frankenstein (2018). Arthur is no longer the man behind the man. He is Arthur Conan Doyle and Sherlock comes from him; this is what Swiss illustrator Isabelle Follath depicts in the book's cover. But beyond highlighting the author of Sherlock, Linda Bailey tells us the story of Arthur Conan Doyle both around and beyond Sherlock. This is an illustrated biography and Linda Bailey makes sure to tell us everything of Conan Doyle's beginnings and trajectory to famous author. His story is full and what she doesn't tell us in the text she includes in an extensive "Author's Note" with references at the end of the book. There's lots to learn about the man and the writer and Linda Bailey makes sure that we know who wrote the stories of Sherlock Holmes.

Isabelle Follath's artwork, primarily in watercolour and pencil, play up the realism of a biography, though her depictions of the fancy of Conan Doyle's imagination allow for some whimsy and dramatic abandon from the tangible of a life of poverty, challenges, and work.

Young readers may learn a little bit more about Sherlock Holmes, but they will most definitely learn loads about Arthur Conan Doyle and understand better how he became the man who wrote Sherlock.