Acacia in the Desert

February 13, 2012

Miracles Book Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten – 1st Grade

Contents
A bunch of Christian picture books placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Explanation
This bag was introduced in the months leading up to Easter.  Although I didn’t plan it this way, I did end up with two books on the Feeding of the 5000 and two books on Jesus Healing the Paralytic.  That covers healing miracles and power over nature miracles, but I’d like to add one about the resurrection of the dead — perhaps the daughter of Jairus or Lazarus.  It’s pretty difficult to find children’s books about Christ casting out demons, which be another category of miracle.

The Christmas book is because I have so very many of them and if I put them all in the same bag it would get repetitive.  So right now I have one Christmas book each in the Life of Christ and Miracles bag.

January 18, 2012

Creation Book Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten

Contents
All items placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Could Also Add

Explanation
The books in this take-home bag run the gamut from a board book (Shiny Touchy) to a philosophical book about evolution (Yellow and Pink).  The book of poetry illustrated by Eric Carle celebrates the majesty of God’s creation.  The Norman Messenger book provides the backbone for this story bag, as it takes its text directly from the New Living Bible translation, with no additions.

One of my favorite bags, because the books complement each other perfectly by being so different stylistically.

January 11, 2012

Noah Book Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten

Contents
All items placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Explanation
I got the idea for a Bible book bag from the literacy bags that are sometimes used as homework by schools.  When selecting the books in this bag, a main concern was that illustrations of the ark were realistically proportional to the animals.  I didn’t want a cartoonish ark to give the idea that this was a fictitious story.

January 4, 2012

Abraham Book Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten-1st

Contents
All items placed in a 12″ x 12″ tote. I used a luggage tag saying “Abraham” on the handle. 

Explanation
These bags were designed to enhance the home church connection.  As I put together each story bag, my goal was to have them substantively different.  It would be easy, for example, to have an Arch book in each bag, felt pieces to act out the story, and a foam craft.  So I went further afield when looking for books.  If one of the books in the bag rhymes (Big Test), then the next one needs to be a point-of-view interpretation (Sarah Laughs), and so on and so forth.

This bag could be improved upon by adding a book specifically about Abram and Lot.

November 21, 2011

3 Books for Psalm 23 Take-Home Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten, but would probably work with early elementary ages

Contents
A bunch of Christian books for children placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Details
This is an easy bag.  It’s designed to be done all in one go on a Sunday afternoon, with zero crafts.

Originally I planned to have one bag that was completely David books, and another bag that was completely Psalm 23 books.  That plan has changed, for several reasons.

  1. The parents can read all the books aloud in one go, because the books aren’t too similar.
  2. The child checks out the David bag this week, the Psalm 23 bag next week, and the Good Shepherd bag the following week.  He hears the same text over an extended period of time, and without consciously realizing it, begins to memorize a psalm.  This wouldn’t happen if all the Psalm 23 books were consolidated into one bag.

The Little Golden book was moved to this bag instead of the Good Shepherd bag because I decided the illustrations were specific to David.  None of my other Psalm 23 books have the shepherd playing a harp, but this one does.

I love the way the Jean Marzollo book interweaves Psalm 23 with the story of David and Goliath.  As David goes down by the stream bed to fill his pouch with stones in preparation for fighting Goliath, he sings to himself about the valley of the shadow of death.  Quite fitting!

Helen Caswell’s drawings evoke a sense of peace and contentment.  In terms of sheer beauty, this books pictures are the best.

November 14, 2011

3 Books for David and Goliath Take-Home Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten, but would probably work with early elementary ages

Contents
A bunch of Christian books for children placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Details
This is a simple no-frills bag, with zero crafts.  It’s designed for the busy parent without much time (practically everybody!).  The Carine MacKenzie book is at a higher reading level, and contains some stories that aren’t usually covered, like David hiding in the same cave Saul was in, or David sneaking out a window to escape from Saul, and leaving a statue in his bed.  Little boys love those adventure stories.

The Sophie Piper book could also work for preschoolers, since it is a simplified retelling.  The last page contains a rewritten Psalm 23 in a rhyming form.

Originally I planned to have one bag that was completely David books, and another bag that was completely Psalm 23 books.  That plan has changed, for several reasons.

  1. The parents can read all the books aloud in one go, because the books aren’t too similar.
  2. The child checks out the David bag this week, the Psalm 23 bag next week, and the Good Shepherd bag the following week.  He hears the same text over an extended period of time, and without consciously realizing it, begins to memorize a psalm.  This wouldn’t happen if all the Psalm 23 books were consolidated into one bag.

 

November 7, 2011

Choosing Awesome Picture Books, Part III: Other Considerations

Hello, my name is Acacia and I am a book addict.  I aim to have at least three picture book versions of every Bible story in my personal library, although five would be better.  When I buy different versions of a story, I consider the text of the book, the illustrations of the book, and some nebulous other considerations I can’t fit into a category.

See Part I: Text and Part II: Illustrations for the earlier posts in this series.

Story in Pictures

Without the pictures, this book would be nothing.  Either there are many small pictures illustrating a common theme (Love Is…), or the pictures form a clear narrative (Tim Ladwig’s The Lord’s Prayer), or both (Noah’s Ark by Peter Speir).  These books are often wordless, or contain only a couple of words per page.

Made You Think

Here, the illustrations are unusual, and break out of the mold for this story.

The Nativity, by Julie Vivas.  The juxtaposition of angels in combat boots and the verbatim KJV text is both startling and refreshing.

Psalm 23, by Tim Ladwig.  Instead of literal sheep, the illustrations are of children.  Instead of a wooden rod and staff, the artist drew a school crossing guard with a stop sign.

Interactive Book

Does the book have a flap to lift?  A mouse to find hiding on each page?  Can you sniff and smell?  Does a cartoon character in the corner make wry commentary?

Shiny Touchy Smelly: Creation Story, by Joanna Bicknell.  A board book, but four and five year olds still like it.

Noah’s Ark Pop Up, by Tim Dowley.  A pretty impressive pop-up, with flaps to open, boats to move back and forth, and yes, things that pop-up.

Best of All Worlds

This is often what I settle for when I can’t find anything awesome.  It tends to be a paraphrase that sticks reasonably close to Bible, with illustrations that are decent.

The Creation Story, illus. Norman Messenger.  This combines realistic drawings with word-of-God text.  Cool beans!  I’m not just settling for this, I love it!

The Christmas Story, by Jane Werner.  A Little Golden Book that sticks close to Bible.  I’m not a fan of the lady angels in pretty dresses, since all the angels in the Bible are unisex or male, but the text is all right.

October 26, 2011

Jonah and the Whale Take-Home Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten, but would probably work with preschoolers

Contents
A bunch of Christian books for children placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Explanation
The Peter Spier book was in my initial collection, and the rest of the Jonah books were bought specifically for this bag.  Sophie Piper’s book is the simplest retelling, as well as being the cutest.  (Sailors “play the choosing game” to discover who caused the storm.)  Marzollo provides good discussion starters for parents in the form of curious octopuses at the bottom of each page.  (Can God still hear Jonah when he’s under water?)

The other two books go along thematically.  Both Ping and Jonah tried to hide, and both ended up no better off.  Jonah still had to go to Tarshish, and Ping was still the last duck on the boat.  The Runway Bunny focuses on the mother’s love for her little bunny.  The bunny was unsuccessful when running away from its mother, and Jonah was unsuccessful when running away from God.  When Jonah ran away, God still loved him.

As for the craft…have I mentioned how much I love our library’s die cut machine?  I saw the whale shape one day, and thought “There’s got to be a way to use this.”

October 19, 2011

5 Books for Good Shepherd Take-Home Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten

Contents
A bunch of Christian books for children placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Green pasture underlay
1 blue felt for still waters
2 rocks for valley of shadow of death
1 wolf to stand next to valley of shadow of death
1 shepherd
3 sheep
4 sticks for sheep pen

Explanation
This Bible take-home bag was inspired by Young Children and Worship which combined the Parable of the Lost Sheep, Psalm 23, and the Good Shepherd of John 10 into one cohesive story.  Without the storytelling kit, this bag would be pretty bland — three of the books have the same text!  But I’m hopeful that being able to act out the story will up the fun quotient.

October 12, 2011

4 Books for Parables Take-Home Bag

Target Age
Kindergarten

Contents
A bunch of Christian books for kids placed in a 12 x 12 inch tote

Explanation
I got the idea for a Bible take-home bag from the literacy bags that are sometimes used as homework by schools.  This bag was one of the easiest to put together (there are plenty of parable books out there) but it lacks a certain something.  I can’t put my finger on what it is.  Maybe the problem is that it tries to cover too many parables, when it should have focused on one or two.  Or that I fear the Patricia St. John book won’t hold kids interest — too many words per page.

But the Nick Butterworth book is one of my favorite books, ever, so there is that.

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