The Trumpet of the Swan

The Trumpet of the Swan by E.B. White
The Trumpet of the Swan by E.B. White

So after reading Little Women, which was a challenge, I picked an easier book, one I knew my son would enjoy:  The Trumpet of the Swan by E.B. White.  Boy, was I glad I did!

We follow a young trumpeter swan named Louis who was born with a “defect”–no voice.  For trumpeter swans, this is serious indeed as swans court females with their voices.  So since Louis can’t speak he decides to learn to read and write.  Then he could communicate with other swans.  Here, he engages the help of his human friend, Sam Beaver.  Sam Beaver is a young boy of eleven who witnesses Louis’ birth on a small lake while he is camping with his father.  He becomes friends with Louis and his family.  So Louis goes with Sam to school.  When Louis returns, he falls for a young swan named Serena.  However, she ignores him because he cannot speak and she cannot read.

Concerned for Louis’s future and wanting to give him everything his heart desires, Louis’s father, known in the book as the cob which is the word for a male swan, steals a trumpet from a music store in Billings, Montana.  He gives it to Louis so that he may woo Serena.  However, knowing the trumpet has been stolen, Louis sets out to earn money to pay for it.  Once again he seeks out his friend, Sam Beaver.

Louis goes to camp with Sam where he works on playing the trumpet and learns songs to play to earn money.  He then goes to Boston and plays there for swan boats.  Then it’s off to the Philadelphia Zoo where Louis plays at a night club.  By the end of his gig, he has earned over $4600, more than enough to pay for the trumpet and the damage to the store when his father crashed through the window to steal the trumpet.  Louis gives the money to his father who takes the money to the store owner.

Now, Louis is debt free and is able to court Serena who falls in love with his trumpet playing.  Louis settles down to a private life, raising his cygnets (baby swans) and living quite happily.  He still sees Sam at the lake where they go camping and at the Philadelphia Zoo where Sam now works and where Louis visits.  Louis still plays his trumpet for his family.

The books ends with Louis settling in for the night, thinking of how “lucky he was to inhabit such a beautiful earth, how lucky he had been to solve his problems with music, and how pleasant it was to look forward to another night of sleep and another day tomorrow, and the fresh morning, and the light that returns with the day.”

Great story.  So many life lessons.  One, repaying debts owed.  Two, friendship.  Three, the simplicity of life.  Four, family obligations.  Five, keeping promises.  Six, following your dreams (Louis’s is to live in the wild, free–“we must all follow a dream”).  Seven, how defects or handicaps or disadvantages shouldn’t hold you back.  Eight, hard work pays off.

The cob tells Louis “There may even be some slight advantage in not being able to say anything.  It compels you to be a good listener.  The world is full of talkers, but it is rare to find anyone who listens.  And I assure you you can pick up more information when you are listening than when you are talking.”

Another life lesson from Louis:  “He needed money badly, and when you need money, you are willing to put up with difficulties and uncertainties.”  Great lesson often forgotten today, especially among our young people.

We finished this book in four days it was so good.  Fast paced.  Funny, especially the cob who talks and talks and talks and his wife, known as the swan, who always puts him back on the right track.  Feel good.  Great story about finding your voice in this world where voices are more often thrust upon us than discovered.

I could go on and on.  Another one:  Louis achieves great fame and is in demand for his talents and skills; yet, he rejects it all for the life he desires.  He only earns enough for his debts and his needs and no more.  The rest will take care of itself.  Great example for us.

This books is personification at its best–totally believable that a swan could learn to read and write and earn money in such a way.  I recommend this book highly.  Younger kids will love the story.  Older kids will get more of the life lessons.  And us writers will be inspired to write.  And adults who aren’t writers will be left with a flutter in their hearts and a sense that life can be just as sweet.

Little Women

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

Out of all of the books I have recommended for children thus far on this blog, this book tops the list.

I’d never read this classic by Louisa May Alcott when I was a child and we needed to read a Classic Novel for Homeschool so I chose this one.  And I’m glad I did.

We follow the lives of four girls named Margaret (Meg), Jo, Beth, and Amy as they grow up over the span of about 15 years.  When the novel starts, Meg is the oldest at 16 and Amy the youngest at 10.  Mr. March volunteered to be a chaplain in the Civil War so the girls and their mother, Mrs. March, are tending the house alone.  The girls befriend their next door neighbor, a lonesome boy named Laurie Lawrence, who lives with his rich grandfather as he has been orphaned.  He is 15 when the novel opens.

The overarching story has its dramatic moments like when Mr. March gets sick and Mrs. March must leave the girls alone to tend to him in Washington.  During this time, Beth catches scarlet fever and all fear she will die.  She recovers but never fully.  She is left frail and in the end she loses her life at a young age, which she accepts.  Laurie goes off to college.  Meg gets married and has twins.  Jo spends some time in New York where she meets an elderly gentleman whom she eventually marries.  And Amy ends up marrying Laurie.  Jo inherits her rich aunt’s estate when she dies and turns it into a boys’ school.  All the family stays nearby and it concludes with a big family picnic.

This is all great stuff and great writing.  Ms. Alcott does a fabulous job of moving the story along and keeping us in suspense as to when Laurie will ask Jo to marry him (for Laurie fell for Jo first).  Then we wonder if Jo will ever marry or just remain at home in service to her parents.

But the heart of this novel is the tender moments between the girls, the faith they have for God, and the love that emanates through the characters for others and their family.  They all strive to be good “little women” and grow up to be like “Marmee” (Mrs. March) who is a strong woman with upstanding moral values and worldly advice.  They strive to be more thoughtful and less selfish.  They strive to overcome their faults such as a strong temper in Jo and a covetous nature in Meg.  They fight but they always make up.  Jo sells her hair for money for her mother to go and see Mr. March while he’s in the hospital.  While Beth slips away, they surround her in love.

There is so many good quotes in this book it’s unbelievable.  Great advice.  Great God stuff.  Here’s some of my favorites:

Mrs. March’s advice to Jo about controlling her temper:

“Watch and pray, dear; never get tired of trying; and never think it is impossible to conquer your fault.”

Mrs. March to Meg and Jo on marriage:

“I want my daughters to be beautiful, accomplished, and good; to be admired, loved, and respected, to have a happy youth, to be well and wisely married, and to lead useful, pleasant lives, with as little care and sorrow to try them as God sees fit to send.  To be loved and chosen by a good man is the best and sweetest thing which can happen to a woman.”

Mrs. March to all of her daughters on the value of work:

“Take up your little burdens again; for though they seem heavy sometimes, they are good for us, and lighten as we learn to carry them.  Work is wholesome, and there is plenty for every one; is good for health and spirits, and gives us a sense of power and independence better than money or fashion.”

Mrs. March on marriage:

“Each do our part alone in many things, but at home we work together, always.”

“Meg learned that a woman’s happiest kingdom is home, her highest honor the art of ruling it–not as a queen, but a wise wife and mother.”

“Jo recognized the beauty of her sister’s (Beth’s) life–uneventful, unambitious, yet full of the genuine virtues which ‘smell sweet, and blossom in the dust.”

At almost 500 pages, this took us 2 months to read, but it was so worth the time commitment.  Originally published in 1868, this book is timeless in its simple depiction of how a home life should be and you are sure to glean some nugget of wisdom to apply to your life.

Excellent book. Full of faith and God. Great, feel-good story. Will leave a smile on your face. Guaranteed.

Constance: A Story of Early Plymouth

Constance
Constance

Constance, what best could be described as historical romance for the middle-grade or young adult market, is a fabulous book about the hardships and times of early Colonial America. Here, we follow Constance Hopkins (a real passenger on the Mayflower) on her journey to the unknown New World. She has fears like everyone else of the unknown but she not only overcomes them but she thrives.

As one of the few girls/women to survive the first hard winter of Plymouth, MA, (where half the passengers died), she is very popular amongst the boys/men for a wife. She herself is unsure of what even love is. John Cooke is the first passenger to express an interest but she never really has one in him. She flirts with two men who are her father’s indentured servants who end up in a quarrel over her. But her heart doesn’t truly begin to feel until the arrival of the Fortune, the second ship to Plymouth, bringing a red-headed, strong-willed, nineteen-year-old Stephen Deane to shore. He stays with the Hopkins family for a spell while houses are being built and Constance likes him but is unsure–he is a flirt.

The next ship, the Anne, brings a one Nicholas Snow whom she quarrels with right off the bat. Yet he intrigues her. Soon, both men become serious in her and begin courting her. Stephen is the first to ask for her hand and she accepts. She thinks she is happy but is unsure. Both men depart on a hunting expedition for two weeks, which is accompanied by powerful storms. Only then does she realize she loves Nicholas.

In the end, he confesses his love for her and vice-versa and all live happily ever after.

Good quotes from the book I liked:

P. 102 “I am beginning to learn that the things one fears rarely come to pass.”

P. 158 “Any man who owes money to another is a slave!” This references the debt the colonists owed their sponsors of the voyage.

P. 218 “There is much to be done in this new world, and a man and a wife working together are the best people to do it.” I liked this for its truth today as much as yesterday.

Written in 1968 by Patricia Clapp, this novel has withstood the test of time as it remains every bit the classic today as it was then.

This book goes beyond just the original passengers on the Mayflower and one begins to understand how the settlement and the population grew as we learn more and more ships arrived, bringing more and more colonists.  So often we just read about the first winter and the first Thanksgiving and it seems history stops there; but it doesn’t.  There is so much more to the growth of the original colonies and this book does an excellent job of showing that growth.  One truly begins to see how the Native Americans were pushed back and overwhelmed by the sheer numbers of immigrants arriving from the Old World.

Good historical accuracy. Great tidbits thrown in of the hardships and the sickness one had to endure. Great survival story and a story of thriving. Good emphasis on God and how important He was to the Pilgrims. Good portrayalship of the Native Americans. An overall good read and our favorite of the summer. Recommended for ages 10 and up but my son enjoyed the story as well and he’s six.

Alone Yet Not Alone

Alone Yet Not Alone
Alone Yet Not Alone

Alone Yet Not Alone is a young-adult historical fiction novel based on the true story of two sisters who were kidnapped by Native Americans during the French and Indian War in 1755 in Pennsylvania.  It chronicles their journey of being torn from their cabin, witnessing their brother and father murdered, and being forced on a 100 mile journey west into the forest away from their parents.

Eventually, twelve year old Barbara is separated from her nine year old sister, Regina, but Barbara tells her to never lose the song in her heart and never to forget that God is with her.  Before his death, their father told the girls “God knew the lessons I needed to learn before my faith was ready for this promised land.”

Barbara assimilates easily enough into her new way of life, but always she longs to be with her family and those who know the One, True God.  She endures three and a half years of captivity until the moment arrives for her escape. The Native American men of her tribe leave to help the French, leaving only two braves behind.  She and three other captives run and make the long eastward journey to the nearest fort, Fort Duquesne (later renamed Fort Pitt by the English).  She tracks down her mother and brother and is re-united with them.  She struggles to fit back into her old life but in the end she finds love.

Regina is finally re-united with the family after nearly five years in captivity as the captives are released following the end of the French and Indian War.  She remembers little English but she always remembers the hymns she sang as a child and the bible verses she memorized.

Both sisters credit their faith in God as helping them to survive and endure.  Barbara eventually has four children.  Regina never married but was a pillar of God’s light in the community.

Great, short read full of examples of young girls clinging to their faith in God’s goodness to survive horrible traumas.  Written by Tracy Leininger Craven, a descendent of the girls, this book is sure to leave you with a smile on your face and a prayer on your lips.

Dadblamed Union Army Cow

Dadblamed Union Army Cow
Dadblamed Union Army Cow

Dadblamed Union Army Cow is a delightful tale from Susan Fletcher that tells the true story of a cow in the Civil War.  A soldier tells his tale about his cow who followed him everywhere, including to enlist in the army. She wouldn’t go home.  So she went with him, rode on a train, and followed him all the way to war!

In the beginning, the cow was a pain.  He had to find fresh grass for her and she got stuck in the mud and had to be pulled out and she’d end up in the middle of a battle.  But that cow turned out to be useful.  She kept the flies away with her tale.  She kept him warm at night.  She supplied milk when they had little else to eat.  And when the soldier took a musket ball to the shoulder, the cow was there, staying by his side in the army hospital as he healed.  When the war ended, the cow was there, following him all the way home.

Their story made the newspaper and the cow made headlines.  She got visitors from miles around and got a new shed built.  She even received a medal!  In the end, the cow was his friend who always said “moo”.

Based off of a true story of a cow that traveled with the Fifty-Ninth Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, this tale touched my heart.  Another story of how attached animals are to humans and how that bond is very powerful.  The cow did appear in the Greencastle, Indiana, newspaper in 1872 and retired to pasture upon returning home.  Just a wonderful picture book with great illustrations and simple text that will surely delight.  Highly recommended!!

The Witch of Blackbird Pond

The Witch of Blackbird Pond
The Witch of Blackbird Pond

The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare follows a sixteen year-old girl who leaves her native Barbados for the colony of Connecticut in 1687.  Her parents and grandfather have all died and she only has one aunt on her mother’s side.  She arrives unannounced and it is apparent from the beginning she does not fit in in this Puritan town.  She can swim for one thing and she is unused to hard labor and small towns having an aristocratic background.

She is immediately courted by the most eligible bachelor (and the richest) in town, William Ashby.  She helps her cousin, Mercy, with the school and teaches a girl named Prudence how to read when her mother refuses to send her to school.  She meets an elderly woman named Hannah who has been accused of witchcraft mainly because she lives alone and is a Quaker.

Kit is drawn to Hannah and they develop a secret friendship.  Hannah offers worldly wisdom, telling her “The answer is in thy heart.  Thee can always hear it if thee listens for it.”

Hannah’s magic cure for everything:  Blueberry cake and a kitten.

Prudence asks why people say she’s a witch.  Kit says cause people are afraid of things they don’t understand.

Hannah says there is no escape if love is not there.

Kit is attracted to Nat Eaton, a ship captain’s son, who helps Hannah as well.

A sickness develops and the Puritan colony blames Hannah the witch for cursing them.  They try to run her out of town but Kit along with Nat’s help warns her in time.  With Hannah gone to live in a neighboring town, the townspeople turn on Kit, claiming she is a witch as well.  No evidence exists and with Prudence’s help who proves she can read and write and has not been infected by witchcraft, Kit is set free.  Kit ends her courtship with William who did not come to her defense at her trial and plans to return to Barbados when winter ends.

She sees Nat in early spring who now has his own ketch, and he immediately asks her uncle for her hand in marriage.

A wonderful book with happy endings for all involved.  All the love stories end up fulfilled and justice does prevail along with stereotypes being broken down.  Great story of standing up for others when it’s the right thing to do even when your life is threatened.  Great historical depiction of life in the early American colonies and Puritan life.  Winner of the Newbery Medal in 1959.  A classic of literature not to be missed.

A Weave of Words

A Weave of Words
A Weave of Words

A Weave of Words by Robert D San Souci and illustrated by Raul Colon is honestly one of my favorite tales.  We meet a prince named Vachagan who only desires to hunt.  One day on a hunt he meets a girl named Anait who is an excellent weaver and a scholar.  Smitten, Vachagan asks for her hand but she refuses, saying she cannot marry someone who can’t read or write or earn a living by his own hands.

Vachagan left, disappointed by motivated.  He immediately applies himself to learning to weave and read and write.  When he learns, he marries Anait.  They eventually become King and Queen of the land.

One day Vachagan must see to trouble in the east.  He is captured by a dev, an evil ogre with three heads.  Vachagan is spared because he tells them he can weave.  He weaves a carpet with a secret message for Anait.  When she receives it she knows where Vachagan is.  She has learned to ride and use a sword so she could be prepared to rule as well.  She slays the dev who underestimates her because she is a woman, freeing Vachagan.

Because Vachagan learned a skill, he was saved and because Anait learned to fight she saved her beloved.

Great tale stressing the importance of learning, self-sacrifice, compromise, and not marrying for money.  Anait was not blinded by Vachagan’s wealth and stuck to her principles.  Vachagan loved Anait so much he did as she asked in order to win her hand.  Neither relied on their wealth.  Both were prepared for their roles in life.  Neither were complacent.  Both kept learning.

Robert D. San Souci is one of our favorite children’s authors.  He retells (as well as writes his own) a lot of tales with powerful messages.  Highly recommend this book and the author for future stories.

The First Tulips in Holland

The First Tulips in Holland
The First Tulips in Holland

In this charming story by Phyllis Krasilovsky and illustrated by S.D. Schindler, the reader learns how tulips first came to Holland.  In this fictionalized imagining (since no one knows for sure who first brought the bulbs to Holland), a Dutch merchant named Hendrik brought them back to Holland as a present for his daughter, Katrina.  She plants them in her window and when they bloom they attracted the whole town’s attention.

Hendrik is offered everything from gold to a harpsichord to sheep and goats to trade for them but he refuses.  Instead, he gives them to his daughter as her dowry when she marries a florist.  Her and her husband end up cultivating the tulips and selling them.  Hence, the proliferation of tulips all over Holland.

One king in history, Ahmet III, is known as “The Tulip King” for his love of tulips.  He was a Turkish ruler who imported hundreds of bulbs from the Netherlands and threw lavish parties every year when they bloomed.

For a time, tulips were coveted items and there was even a run on tulips in 1637 when one tulip was selling for the price of gold today.

Great book about a beautiful flower and its role in history.

Hans Brinker

Hans Brinker
Hans Brinker

I am reviewing the storybook version of Mary Mapes Dodge’s full-length novel of the same name or The Silver Skates that was published in 1865.  This version is retold by Bruce Coville.

In this adapted and greatly condensed version, Hans Brinker and his sister, Gretel, are eager to compete in an upcoming skating event.  However, they have no money.  Their father got in an accident at work where he worked on the dikes in Holland.  He has been incapacitated for 10 years now.  Through gifts of their friends they are given the money to buy new skates.

In Amsterdam, Hans happens upon a doctor, Dr. Boekman, who feels compassion for Hans and agrees to see his father.  Dr. Boekman is able to revive Hans’ father who suddenly remembers being given a watch for safe-keeping.  In a twist of fate, this watch belonged to Dr Boekman’s son who ran away 10 years ago in a misunderstanding.

With happy endings all around, Gretel wins the skating competition, Dr. Boekman is reunited with his son, Mr. Brinker is back to normal, and Hans is apprentices to Dr. Boekman and grows up to be a kind and compassionate doctor himself.

Great story about sacrificing for each other and for one another’s family and about helping others in need.  Hans himself is the epitome of a self-sacrificing, doting son and brother who always does things for other people.  A great role model to follow in today’s society of “me, me, me.”

The illustrations by Laurel Long make this book a stand-out.  Beautiful in scope and color, the historical details are fascinating and make this book pop.  Bruce Coville is an amazing children’s author who specializes in fantasy books for young readers.

This book has great family values, a thread of always doing what is right, and how things always work out in the end.  Although God is not mentioned, one cannot help but think only God could pull off such circumstances and events.  Highly recommended.

Seven at One Blow Revisited

Seven at One Blow by the Brothers Grimm is one of my all-time favorite fairy tales.  This is the story of a common tailor who one day kills seven flies with one swat of a towel.  Thinking this quite the accomplishment, the tailor makes himself a belt that reads “Seven at One Blow” and then he sets off to seek his fortune.

He first meets a not-all-that-smart giant who assumes seven at one blow means the tailor has killed seven giants at one blow.  The tailor is able to trick the giant into thinking he is very strong and gain all of his treasure.

Next, the tailor meets a king who has an ogre problem–they are ravishing his kingdom.  Again, through trickery, the tailor manages to kill both ogres.  The king however does not want to reward the tailor (which is his daughter in marriage and his kingdom upon death) so he sets him about taming a unicorn and capturing a wild boar, hoping the tailor won’t return.  Of course, the tailor does return.

Finally, the king plans to just kill the tailor while he sleeps at night.  Learning of the plan, the tailor once again defeats the king who runs off along with his daughter to never be heard from again.  The tailor is left with the kingdom to rule.

Seven at One Blow
Seven at One Blow

There are many, many adaptations of this story.  This one is retold by Eric Kimmel, a favorite children’s author of ours who specializes in re-telling tales from around the world.

My kids and I love this story.  It’s such a feel-good tale of how even the not-too-bright succeed in this world with determination, self-confidence, and a little bit of luck, fortune, or God.  These tales are what kids need to hear in this world full of hate–tales of where the good guy succeeds in the face of not-so-good guys who are out for themselves.  Very enriching and inspiring tale that all (even parents) should read.  Guaranteed to put a smile on your face.

I wrote on this tale almost 4 years ago and it’s amazing how a story can speak to you in different ways no matter where you are at in your life.  It’s the same with the Bible.  Yeah, they are the same stories over and over again.  But every time you read God’s Word, He speaks.  He speaks to you right where you are at and you are guaranteed to be enriched.  Original Post HERE