Archive | March 2006

The Sunne in Splendour by Sharon Kay Penman

Too much description of intimate details in and out of the marriage bed that I would rather not have known. Too much adultery described too salaciously. Quite a bit of violence, again with gory details. Melodrama. Justification of actions that cannot be justified. Way too long (882 pages).

However, I can forgive the author and recommend this novel, with those reservations, because this book about the lives of Edward IV and Richard III of England got the important stuff right. I could tell from the beginning of the book, page 1, that Richard would be the hero of the story, that he would be good, although imperfect. I knew that Ms. Penman’s Richard would never steal his brother’s crown because he was greedy for power. Nor would he ever murder his two boy nephews, his brother’s sons, after keeping them imprisoned in the Tower. Although Ms. Penman indicts a different villain in the murders than did Josephine Tey in her book Daughter of Time, the book that first convinced me that Richard III was innocent of the murders that history has accused him of perpetrating, Penman agrees with Tey on the main point: Richard wasn’t the villain. He was loyal, brave, and tragic. He was a good guy in spite of his blind spots.

The novel also gives a vivid picture of fifteenth century England, the political intrigue and the battles of the War of the Roses, and the lives of the Yorkist kings, Edward IV and his brother, Richard III. If some of the details would have been better omitted, other details about how people lived and how they thought and who was related to whom were fascinating. I read that Richard’s and Edward’s brother, Edmund, was killed while still a teenager in the same battle in which their father, Richard of York, died. I was reminded that Richard loved and married his cousin, Anne Neville, daughter of Warwick the Kingmaker and widow of the Lancastrian candidate for the throne Edward of Lancaster. Did you know that Richard III was accused, after Anne’s death, of desiring to marry his niece, Elizabeth Woodville, the daughter of his deceased bother, Edward IV, and that Elizabeth Woodville went on to marry Henry Tudor, the pretender who took the throne from Richard? All the switching sides, cross and double-cross, that went on during the War of the Roses and during the reigns of Edward IV and Richard III, is amazing to read about. I thought politics was a blood sport nowadays, but it’s nothing compared to fifteenth century intrigue and diplomacy and treachery.

And The Sunne in Splendor was a good book in spite of its faults.

Oh, yes, and Shakespeare was a better writer, but a poor historian, dependent on flawed sources.

And Richard was most likely not humpbacked either.

Favorite Children’s Books for the Whole Family


Sparrow tells a great story about a child’s book lust leading to theft and injury, and then she asks for a list of our favorite children’s books. I’m going to give you an abbreviated list here because I like lists and because I need to start a list of the 100 best children’s books ever. But I don’t really have time. So here are ten in no particular order.

1. Eight Cousins by Louisa May Alcott. As I said in my List of 100 Best Authors of Fiction, I like Eight Cousins even better than Little Women. It’s the story of an orphan girl, Rose, who comes to live with her bachelor uncle/guardian. She’s about 12 or 13 years old, and she has eight boy cousins who all live in the same neighborhood with her uncle, on a hill called by the family “Aunt Hill” for obvious reasons. The story tells how Rose grows up, how she gets to know her cousins, and how she guides theml and helps them to grow up, too.

2. Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White. So much has been said about this book. It’s just a perfectly balanced book about life and death and friendship and joy and sorrow and . . .

3. The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien. Bilbo Baggins goes on an adventure. Before the movies, before LOTR, came The Hobbit. More fun, less serious, still classic.

4. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by CS Lewis. I won’t let the popularity of Lewis spoil his books for me. I loved them when I was a kid of a girl, and I still do.

5. Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfield. Pauline, Petrova, and Pansy are the Fossil sisters. They work together to help provide for their upkeep and attend ballet school and decide how to grow into their own gifts and talents.

6. A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle. I know all the objections just as I know all the objections to Harry Potter. The difference is that I enjoy Madeleine L’Engle’s books immensely, while I can’t bring myself to read HP. I instinctively react negatively to bandwagons.

7. Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery. Anne is such a winsome character—strong, independent, yet feminine to the bone. I loved Anne’s adventures.

8. Heidi by Johanna Spyri. Did you know that there are sequels to Heidi, Heidi Grows Up and Heidi’s Children? The last two are out of print, but available from used booksellers. I haven’t read the sequels in a long time, but I remember loving all three books.

9. Winnie the Pooh by A.A. Milne. Not Disney’s version, although it’s OK with me that Mr. Disney knew a good book when he saw one, but rather the stories about Pooh illustrated by Ernest Shepard are the real thing. Winnie the Pooh surely speaks to everyone–preschoolers, children, teenagers, young adults, and even us silly old bears.

10. The Saturdays by Elizabeth Enright The premise of this book, about four siblings who pool their money each week so that one of them can take his turn to go on a Saturday adventure, was intriguing to me as a girl. It would still be fun to go on a Saturday adventure all by myself.

I won’t say these are my ten favorites, but they are ten of my favorites. What a nice start for that list of 100.

Book-Spotting #8

Tootle’s Time surveys books on courtship and dating and recommends one of my favorites, Best Friends for Life by Michael and Judy Phillips.

Blest With Sons muses about being down in the valley with Bilbo Baggins.

Did you know that Harry Emerson Fosdick wrote some of the Landmark history books? Of course, this liberal preacher wrote the Landmark books on Jesus, Paul, and Martin Luther. Caveat emptor.

Ariel at Bittersweet Life really liked Annie Dillard’s Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. As I recall, so did Eldest Daughter. I tried to read something by Annie Dillard last summer, but I couldn’t get into it. Too much nature, as I’m remembering it. I probably should try again since I hear so many good things about her writing. I do sometimes misplace parts of my brain. Sometimes I even find them again

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born March 24th

Thomas Spencer Baynes, b. 1823. Philosopher, professor of English literature, Shakesperean scholar, editor of the 9th through the 11th editions of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Fanny Crosby, b. 1820.

Wiliam Morris, b. 1834. On Morris’s The Defence of Guenevere.

Olive Schreiner, b. 1855 in South Africa to missionary parents. She wrote the novel, Story of an African Farm, a story of life in South Africa. Has anyone read it?

Malcolm Muggeridge, b. 1903. “One of the peculiar sins of the twentieth century which we’ve developed to a very high level is the sin of credulity. It has been said that when human beings stop believing in God they believe in nothing. The truth is much worse: they believe in anything.”

Ian Hamilton, b. 1938. Poet, critic, editor, and biographer.

Bonus Questions on Books That Changed the World

Can you think of twelve American Books That Changed the World in the same sense in which Bragg’s British list did?

How about Twelve Novels That Changed the World?

I wrote this post last June: 10 Most Helpful Fiction Books of the Last Century. “[T]hese are not the BEST books of the last two centuries, although most of them are very well-written, and they’re not the most influential books, but only those fiction books that have had the most influence for GOOD.”

I think my ten would be candidates for Twelve Works of Fiction That Changed the World.

Life-Changing Books

Kimbofo titles her post “The World’s Best (nonfiction) Books;” however, the author of the book she’s commenting on doesn’t claim to have listed the twelve best books in the world. Instead, Melvin Bragg has written a book entitled Twelve Books That Changed the World.. Can you guess which twelve books he chose? Hint: there are no novels on the list. Oh, and you should also know that the author limited himself to books published in English by British authors.

Put your guesses in the comments section, and then read the Times article about the genesis of Bragg’s book, and then read Kimbofo’s comments.

Picture Book Preschool Book of the Week (12)


Today is the first official day of spring here in the Northern Hemisphere. To celebrate, all the books listed in my curriculum, Picture Book Preschool, for this week have something to do with springtime. One of the best of the best is Springtime for Jeanne-Marie by Francoise Seignobosc.

Z-baby loves this story. The little French girl, Jeanne-Marie, loses her pet duck, Madalon. Jeanne-Marie also has a pet sheep, Patapon, and she and Patapon set off down the river to look for Madalon. Of course, they ask everyone they meet whether or not they have seen a little white duck, but the answer is always “no.” Eventually, Jeanne-Marie and Patapon make a new friend, Jean Pierre, who helps them in their search. And finally, when they have almost given up hope, the children and Patapon find Madalon in a most unlikely place.

The watercolor illustrations in this picture book are beautifully Old World European. There’s also some counting practice involved in reading the story, and the book is just right for three or four or even five year olds who are just beginning to appreciate a simple plot with some repetition and a little surprise at the end. The children, Jeanne-Marie and Jean Pierre, are delightfully innocent and seem to come from the French countryside of about the 1940’s or 50’s, maybe even earlier. The Jeanne-Marie books, of which there are several, were actually published in France in the 1950’s.

I couldn’t find any information on the internet or in my home reference books about Francoise Seignobosc. Does anyone else have any information about this French author/illustrator?

Picture Book Preschool is a preschool/kindergarten curriculum which consists of a list of picture books to read aloud for each week of the year and a character trait, a memory verse, and activities, all tied to the theme for the week. You can purchase a downloadable version (pdf file) of Picture Book Preschool by Sherry Early at Biblioguides.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born March 20th

William Barnes, b.1801. Dorset poet. You can read read some of his poems here if you can cut through the dialect.

Thomas Cooper, b. 1805. He was the son of a dyer, educated himself at home, and then opened his own primary school. A Wesleyan Methodist, then later a Baptist itinerant preacher, he was involved politically with the Chartists in protesting the poor working conditions for factory workers at that time in England. When he was in his sixties, he wrote his autobiography, The Life of Thomas Cooper.

Henrik Ibsen, b. 1828. Norwegian playwright. “There can be no freedom or beauty about a home life that depends on borrowing and debt.” —A Doll’s House.

Mitsumasa Anno, b. 1926. Author and illustrator of children’s books, born in Tsuwano, Japan. He was a teacher of mathematics for ten years before he began to write and illustrate children’s books. His books show both a love of mathematics and puzzles and a love of travel.
Try Anno’s USA or Anno’s Mysterious Multiplying Jar.

I was once asked at a symposium, “Why do you draw?” I knew what they would have liked for an answer, “I draw for the children of Japan who represent our future, blah, blah, blah”. But what I actually wound up saying was, “I draw because that’s my work. I made it my work because it’s what I like to do”. Michael Ende then said, “The same goes for me. I’m just like Anno-san”, while Tasha Tudor said, “I do my work so that I can buy lots of flower bulbs”. From a 2004 interview with Mitsumasa Anno

I like Tasha Tudor’s answer.

Fred Rogers, b. 1928. I still say to my urchins, “Right as usual, King Friday.” The younger ones don’t even know where the phrase comes from, but I used to watch MisterRogers’ Neighborhood with Eldest Daughter about sixteen years ago. I thought then, and I still think, that it was much better than Sesame Street or most of the other PBS children’s shows. It was slower, of course, more reminiscent of Captain Kangaroo, the TV show I remember watching as a preschooler.

The Third Carnival of Children’s Literature

. . . is coming up in April here at Semicolon. You may submit any post related to children’s literature; however, since April is National Poetry Month, the theme for the carnival is children’s poetry, developing an appreciation for poetry, enjoying poetry with children—you get the idea. Think Poetically.

Since I’m a rather prosaic sort of person, here are the prosaic details:

Email all submissions to me at sherryDOTearlyATgmailDOTcom by 6 PM, Saturday, April 1st. You should include the URL of your post, the title of the post, the URL of your blog, and a short description or teaser telling about the post you’ve submitted. Please include the words “third carnival of children’s literature” in the subject line of your email. Everyone is invited, so get those posts in now and beat the deadline.

I should have the carnival posted by Monday morning, April 3rd.

Past Carnivals of Children’s Literature:

First Carnival of Children’s Literature at Here in the Bonnie Glen by Melissa Wiley, our initiator and fearless leader. Email Melissa if you’re interested in hosting the carnival in future months.

Second Carnival of Children’s Literature at Chicken Spaghetti by Susan.