Showing posts with label mechanics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mechanics. Show all posts

February 15, 2026

Sarabeth's Garage

Written by Melanie Florence
Illustrated by Nadia Alam
Tundra Books
978-1-774885956
40 pp.
Ages 3–7
February, 2026
 
Sarabeth loves cars. She loves everything about them, from their tires and motors to their carburetors, and engines. She loves the way they look, how they move, and the sounds they make. Her family knows how much she loves being around cars and spending time at her dad's garage. Well, almost all of them understand. Sarabeth's grandmother doesn't. She shakes her head and cringes, telling her what girls should do and what boys do.
From Sarabeth's Garage, written by Melanie Florence, illustrated by Nadia Alam
But Sarabeth doesn't let it bother her. She puts on her blue coveralls with her name stitched on the pocket and helps her dad with oil changes, with fixing flat tires, and by replacing fan belts and spark plugs. And when she gets home, she has to scrub her nails and hands, though some of the grease never goes away. Sadly, her grandmother has something to say about that too.
From Sarabeth's Garage, written by Melanie Florence, illustrated by Nadia Alam
However, when Grandma is leaving, her car sounds terrible, and it belches out smoke. Sarabeth gets to work, and this time when her grandmother tells her, "In my day, little girls didn't know how to fix cars" (pg. 33), Sarabeth has a polite but confident reply 
 
I like to think that we've moved on significantly from those days of telling girls and boys and everyone in between what they can and cannot do. When we impose expectations on people that they either can't or choose not to meet, there is disappointment and even conflict. As a child, Sarabeth doesn't deserve to have her dreams of working on cars negated. It actually wasn't even a dream. She was doing it and doing it well and with confidence and joy. Thankfully Melanie Florence makes Sarabeth a strong character who knows herself and has the support of most of her family. She doesn't let her grandmother take away her passion. And by letting young readers see a child interested in tinkering and making, Melanie Florence supports children, and particularly girls, participating in STEM activities.
From Sarabeth's Garage, written by Melanie Florence, illustrated by Nadia Alam
I may have shared an anecdote from my teaching career but let me tell it again. I remember a girl in Grade 5 telling me that she couldn't do science, and it just about broke my heart. But it also disappointed me that someone had told her that she was incapable of something. I delighted in proving that person wrong. I'm pleased that Sarabeth knew what she wanted to do, and at such a young age. Her passions may change over time, but, as long as she is true to herself, it will be fine.
 
I believe this is the first book illustrated by Toronto artist Nadia Alam that I have reviewed, though she has contributed the artwork for a number of picture books. Her art, rendered in pencil and Photoshop, has a lighthearted edge to it. It is colourful and playful, but it is also thoughtful and revealing. Nadia Alam uses great detail to give Sarabeth's activity an atmosphere of work and interest, while using expressive lines to depict Grandma's displeasure and Sarabeth's parents' support for their child and patience with Grandma's narrow-mindedness.
From Sarabeth's Garage, written by Melanie Florence, illustrated by Nadia Alam
I know that many readers may read Sarabeth's Garage as a far lighter story than some of Melanie Florence's other award-winning books (e.g., Missing Nimâmâ, 2015, and Stolen Words, 2017). But Sarabeth's Garage has an important message in its own right, reminding children to forget those who say what you should do or what you should like or what you should be. If you're not hurting anyone and you're following your passion, do and like and be what you want. Sarabeth did.

December 26, 2024

Hungry for Engineering: Poems to Gnaw On

Written by Kari-Lynn Winters and Lori Sherritt-Fleming
Illustrated by Dave Whamond
Fitzhenry & Whiteside
978-1-554556427
32 pp.
Ages 5-8
December 2024
 
For teachers and parents who love a blend of everything, the Hungry For series by Kari-Lynn Winters and Lori Sherritt-Fleming will always fit the bill. A blend of non-fiction STEM with poetry and humour and fabulous illustrations, Hungry for Engineering: Poems to Gnaw On is their fourth and latest addition to the series, introducing a variety of engineering concepts in bite-size poems that educate and entertain.
From Hungry for Engineering: Poems to Gnaw On by Kari-Lynn Winters and Lori Sherritt-Fleming, illustrated by Dave Whamond
In a series of eleven poems, some short and others than span several pages, Kari-Lynn Winter and Lori Sherritt-Fleming delve into all manner of the physical sciences. From the concept of fasteners ("Handy Luke Randy's Fit-It-Up Fasteners") to get power from the sun and wind ("Run by the Sun" and "Wind Tower Power"), and to the ubiquitous "Egg Drop" challenge, they cover a full range of engineering concepts. There's lots to learn about simple machines and forces at work and the mechanics of movement of different materials. Better yet, their poems show kids having fun trying things out, making things move, experimenting and observing, and persevering in their learning. I particularly enjoyed the poem "Clear As Mud?" which shows two children working at filtering muddy water to make it potable, and ends with....
It worked a little, I must admit...
I'll try some more. I will not quit!
From Hungry for Engineering: Poems to Gnaw On by Kari-Lynn Winters and Lori Sherritt-Fleming, illustrated by Dave Whamond
The concepts that Kari-Lynn Winters and Lori Sherritt-Fleming include, many described in the appended glossary, are a great sampler for the physical sciences and a great introduction for younger readers. Hungry for Engineering would be a fabulous hook to start a lesson or two or even a follow-up for children to identify all the concepts they've already learned. Best of all, the poems are funny rhymes with a host of wacky characters from Scary Miss Mary and Luke Randy to Liam O'Leary the inventor and Marianne the girl who uses wind power to blast her to Japan. And the forms these poems take are everything from a limerick and familiar quatrains, to visual poems, in which some words demonstrate their meanings like fall, drop, and downward. 

There's learning that will happen and rhyming joy with the read-aloud but Dave Whamond's illustrations take the poems from entertaining to vigorously animated. There are Godzilla-like creatures munching skyscrapers, a dragon using a stapler, several ingenious Rube Goldberg machines, and a fully-occupied bug hotel created of a variety of materials. His art is colourful and wacky, inclusive and bustling. There's much to see in the details, and the learning will go beyond the text into the illustrations as they search for simple machines and fasteners and more.
From Hungry for Engineering: Poems to Gnaw On by Kari-Lynn Winters and Lori Sherritt-Fleming, illustrated by Dave Whamond
Whether your little ones are building or taking apart, investigating or observing, Hungry for Engineering: Poems to Gnaw On will inspire them to see the magnitude of engineering in their lives and in the world around them. They'll be learning while they're laughing, and rhyming their way through the nuts and bolts of engineering, courtesy of Kari-Lynn Winters, Lori Sherritt-Fleming and Dave Whamond.
 
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Hungry for Engineering: Poems to Gnaw On (2024)
 

February 18, 2017

Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses

Written by Caroline Stellings
Peanut Butter Press
978-1-927735-14-5
32 pp.
Ages 5-8
2017

It may be about trucks and cars and mechanics, but Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses is truly a love story. And Caroline Stellings slips in that bit of romance so subtly that, except for the inevitable "Aw" at the end, young readers will still think it's a story about mechanics fixing up vehicles.

From Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses 
by Caroline Stellings
Matt works at Ben’s garage and his only dream is to own an eighteen wheeler.  But, from his meagre room at the back of the garage, it’s evident that Matt does not have the money for such a purchase. But Ben has an idea of fixing up an old car.  He finds a wreck missing most of its parts but it is free. So the two work all spring until it is drivable.  But when his cat friend Harry is desperate for transportation, Matt gives away the newly refurbished yellow car.


Next Ben finds an old clunker of a station wagon that the two repair, only to have Matt give it to Mrs. Potter, the rabbit, who is struggling to take her ten children to school in the pouring rain.

From Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses 
by Caroline Stellings

Their next project is an old pick up truck that takes them all autumn to fix. When a customer at the hardware store  overhears Matt talking about his truck, identical to one in  a calendar posted at the store, you know it’s going to change hands again.  Showing Matt an old photo of his wife on their wedding day beside such a truck, Tom had been searching everywhere for one just like it.  So on Christmas Eve, with a dozen roses, Tom picks up the Neptune Green truck to surprise his wife.  But, in a twist of fate, the surprise don’t end there and Matt’s dream comes true after all.

In a true tale of kindness and kismet, Caroline Stellings portrays a generosity rarely experienced in our world today, and demonstrates that “what goes around, comes around” in a charming plot of dogs, a cat, rabbits and cars and trucks.  It’s a story about an ordinary Joe (or rather Matt) who just keeps plugging along at life, dreaming of an eighteen wheeler and working just to survive.  But his heart is bigger than his dream and, though no one takes advantage of him, Matt gives away far more he gets. Or so it seems.  In that turn of destiny or fate or karma, Matt gets what he wants without having to compromise himself or his work ethic, still able to help many along the way.  With an understated story of kindness repaid, Caroline Stellings’s watercolour and pen and ink illustrations convey that softness and subtlety.  (By the way, if you’re a dog lover, Matt and Ben are based on the author’s own Schipperkes, Matt and Ben, to whom she dedicates the book, along with her mother “who treasured them.”) 

In Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses, Caroline Stellings gives an alternative explanation for the country song of the same name.  I think I prefer this one, as it carries a profound sentiment about good works and karma and important lessons worthy of sharing with young readers.

From Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses 
by Caroline Stellings