Showing posts sorted by relevance for query teckentrup. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query teckentrup. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2025

A Happy Place by Britta Teckentrup

"A little star shines brightly through the bedroom window. It shines down on a sleepless mind, spinning with restless thoughts. Follow me, whispers the star, 
and I will help you to find a happy place."

This book begs to be read aloud with words like tippy-toed squirrel, bushy-tailed fox, long-eared hare and starry-eyed stoats. Perfect for a preschool group or a young reading companion aged 4+.

In a few months I will be talking to a small group of local Teacher-Librarians. One of the things I want to share is the importance of sharing the BEST picture books from around the world both for their stories but even more for the way picture books give children of all ages (from youngest up to young adult) an experience of some of the best art in the world.


Nighttime is one of Teckentrup’s specialties, and this gently soothing tale is no exception; it’s sure to have little ones on their way to the sweetest of dreams in no time. Dreamlike, quiet, delightful. Kirkus

A Happy Place is another triumph by Britta Teckentrup and her artwork provides a perfect backdrop to the text. It is calm and comforting, full of nature and little details that can be pored over and explored. Just Imagine

Hopefully you have one or two books in your school library illustrated by Britta Teckentrup. Her art is simply incredible. A Happy Place has flaps and die-cut pages so I was amazed to discover it is not too expensive in paperback [9781838916596]. Pop the name Britta Teckentrup into my side bar or click the label on this post to see more of her books.




Tuesday, April 15, 2025

The House on the Canal by Thomas Harding illustrated by Britta Teckentrup





"The girl with the sweet smile hid in the house with her father and mother and sister and four others. The top floors of the annexe were now a hiding place. They had to be silent, otherwise the police and soliders would find them. So still. Not a sound. Each minute was a day. Each day was a year."

The House on the Canal begins in 1580 when the land a marshland:

"With some cows. A few herons. A family of fieldmice. And in the sky above, a flock of seagulls. It was a calm and happy place".

By 1600 workers begin to reclaim the land and create the canals we all associate with Amsterdam. In 1635 the first house is built by a newly arrived stonemason. 

"The stonemason wanted more space. So they added an annex behind the main house with a large attic."

Yes, just in case you haven't worked it out - this is the famous annexe and attic where Anne Frank and seven other people stayed in hiding until their arrest in August 1944. But before we get to that point so many other people lived in this house with large and small families, or they used it for their business including a company that made metal beds and stoves; a small business that made piano rolls; and it was for a while used as a sewing workshop and even a horse stable. 

After the war the only survivor of the Frank family was Anne's father Otto. He worked hard with other members of the community to save the house on Canal Street and at last, in 1960 the house was opened to the public. 

Perhaps you are wondering about the chestnut tree that gives Anne comfort during her long days in hiding. It began to grow in 1853 so that means by 1940 when the family moved into the attic the tree was 87 years old. 

The text in this book will be accessible to children aged 10+ but I would also add this book to a High School library so that students who study history, or architecture or who read The Diary of Anne Frank can discover more about this famous house. This book could also be a fabulous way to show the depth of research completed by an author or an historian. See inside the book here. Read more about the author Thomas Harding. And this book should also be shared with an art class because Britta Teckentrup is an outstanding illustrator. 

Readers will emerge simultaneously awed by the passage of time and personally affected by the stories told. Teckentrup overlays her bright, exquisitely detailed sepia-toned depictions of the house and its environs with a misty haze; the results are hauntingly beautiful. Deeply moving, powerful, and breathtaking. Kirkus Star review

Readers will notice that the Frank family are not the first residents of this house to have experienced religious persecution, or to have been confined to the house for extended periods of times. At other times, the freedom enjoyed by previous residents poignantly contrast with the restrictions faced by the Franks – freedoms which all families want and which can easily be taken for granted. Just Imagine

I first saw a mention of this book over a year ago. I am so happy this book has now arrived here in Australia. It is a book to cherish. In 1974 I visited Anne Frank's House in Amsterdam. I was quite young but the experience affected me deeply. Later, in my school library I read these books to my Grade 6 library groups and we talked about Anne Frank.









I am also very keen to read this book from 2019 but sadly it is way too expensive here in Australia:




If you want to read another book that traces the history of a house try to find this one with scrumptious illustrations by Roberto Innocenti:



Thomas Harding and Britta Teckentrup have created two other books about the history of a specific house:


On the outskirts of Berlin, a wooden cottage stands on the shore of a lake. Over the course of a century, this little house played host to a loving Jewish family, a renowned Nazi composer, wartime refugees and a Stasi informant; in that time, a world war came and went, and the Berlin Wall was built a stone's throw from the cottage's back door. With words that read like a haunting fairy tale, and magnificent illustrations by Britta Teckentrup, this is the astonishing true story of the house by the lake.


In the northeast corner of the USA, near the city of Auburn, stands a red brick house. It was built 130 years ago and served as a farmhouse, old people's home, museum and a refuge for enslaved women, men and children. It was the scene of an extraordinary story: the American Revolutionary War, the Underground Railroad, the American Civil War, the fight for women's suffrage, and a safe place for Harriet Tubman, her family, and many others. This is the exciting story of a remarkable house.


Tuesday, January 4, 2022

When I see Red by Britta Teckentrup


"I'm blinded by fury. I'm furiously mad. But I can see clearly that change is ahead!"

When I see Red is such a brave exploration of the emotion of anger. As you turn the pages of this book the colour change from violent red through to calm pink and the words change from furious wild anger through to a beautiful moment of peace.

This book is sure to appear on lots of award lists over the coming year. Here is an interview with Britta where she talks about this book. 

Publisher blurb Penguin Random House: The heroine of this beautifully illustrated story feels her anger like a storm in a dark forest. It sweeps her away, and she thunders and howls. She pours down her emotions like sheets of rain; rage surges like a wind whipping angry waves. Her anger takes her on a wild ride.  Appropriate for a wide variety of ages, this book illustrates many aspects of anger that are often hard to articulate — how overwhelming it is, how isolating, even scary. But it also shows anger to be a source of power and an agent for change. Teckentrup’s impactful, boldly coloured paintings skilfully evoke the way intense anger can take us on an emotional journey, one that can be both exhausting and affirming. This beautiful tribute to one girl’s experience of anger offers readers the opportunity to make sense of, and talk about their own feelings of rage in a time when that kind of understanding is more important than ever.

This might not be a book you had to your home book collection but I think it is one you should add to your school library - Primary School and High School. This book might also be one to share with your school welfare team or school counsellor. With older students you could link this book with a discussion about the power of protests and the importance of speaking out.

"My rage gives me power. My rage keeps me safe. My rage makes me stronger. My rage makes me brave!"

Here are some of the wonderful and powerful words : howling; roaring; gushing; pouring; twistng; twirling; untamed; furious; bellowing; booming; hurtling; blazing; flashing.

Through her dramatic paintings, and words relating to earth and the elements, Britta portrays an emotional journey that offers youngsters both an affirmation of, and an opening to talk about their own feelings of anger. Red Reading Hub - you can see some art from this book in this review

The transition from the child’s red anger and rage to letting it go is, fabulously, depicted first as crashing waves and then as a panther the child rides astride. The ever smaller type used reiterates this new calm alongside puffy clouds in a blue sky. Kirkus

Although we never know exactly what it is that enrages our young protagonist, Teckentrup provides them with words and a backdrop of visual, visceral red-hot imaginings as they become a ‘furious dragon you cannot ignore’, and a ‘hurricane, whirlwind, twister, typhoon’: a perfect storm that results in a sense of long-awaited freedom after having ‘been silent too long’. Books for Keeps

About Britta: Britta Teckentrup grew up in a town called Wuppertal. She moved to London in 1988 to study illustration and fine art at St Martin’s College and the Royal College of Art and ended up staying in England for 17 years. Britta has created over 30 books, translated into 20 different languages. Britta’s illustrations have appeared in magazines, on homewares, clothes and packaging. Britta now lives and works in Berlin with her artist husband, young son, Vincent, and their cat. Nosy Crow





Here is a list you could explore with other books that focus on the emotion of anger. 

Thursday, April 30, 2020

We are Together by Britta Teckentrup




"When life is confusing,
and our way seems unclear,
The horizon is distant
but our friends will stay near."

We are Together seems like the perfect for our times right now (COVID-19).  Each page celebrates our humanity.

As you can see in the example above each page has four lines of text following the format of alone then together. Here are some of the other lines that resonated with me:

"If storm clouds gather,
and we'e caught in the rain,
Let's splash through the puddles
till the sun shines again."

"Hear the song we sing
to encourage and inspire.
If we all sing together,
one voice becomes a choir."

The pages of this book are die cut so each one reveals sets of children peeping into the scene culminating on the final spread where we see all the children together. 



This is a book to treasure in a library and on your family book shelves.


If you don't know the work of Britta Teckentrup from Germany I recommend you add her name to your list of illustrators to explore. Her work is enchanting. Taking a look at her body of work I have discovered Britta did the covers for books I have read in the past and loved such as Dog by Daniel Pennac and Love Ruby Lavender by Deborah Wiles along with a page the new book Kind. Here are some picture books and non fiction titles previously mentioned on this blog:








Tuesday, November 9, 2021

A Song Full of Sky by Ruth Doyle illustrated by Britta Teckentrup


"Smell the sun on soft petals, taste berries warm and sweet ... 

Feel the tickles of tadpoles as the stream cools your feet."



Image Source: Amazon UK


If I was still working in a school library I think I might try to purchase every book illustrated by Britta Teckentrup. I adore her art and if often accompanies a beautifully crafted text. Here is another sample from this book:

"See the owl surfing sky like a moon-dappled kite ...

Horses racing the clouds with their manes catching light."

About BrittaBritta Teckentrup is an illustrator, fine artist and writer. She was born in Hamburg, Germany, and went on to study at St. Martin's College and the Royal College of Art in London. Britta has created over 40 books, translated in 20 languages worldwide, and her artwork has been shown at exhibitions all over the world. She lives and works in Berlin with her artist husband and their son.









I have previously talked about:

Little Mouse and the Red Wall

How big is the World?

We are Together

Birds and their Feathers

Bee

I have also mentioned a previous book by Ruth Doyle - Dreams for our Daughters.

Saturday, September 22, 2018

Little Mouse and the Red Wall by Britta Teckentrup

"There will be many walls in your life, Little Mouse. 
Some will be made by others but most will be made by you.  
But if you open your mind and your heart, those walls will
disappear one by one, and you'll discover how beautiful 
the world truly is."




Little Mouse and the Red Wall is one of those wonderful books that seems to take a very simple premise but presents it in a way that will encourage so much discussion and deep thought. I love picture books like this that work on so many levels - from the youngest children right up to our senior primary students.

Little Mouse is curious. It is true that the wall has always been there but he wants to know what lies beyond. Following a familiar format just like the one used in Are you my Mother by PD Eastman, the mouse asks each animal in turn,

Scaredy Cat
"The wall is there so nobody can come in ... it protects us ... it's dangerous on the other side."
Old Bear
"I don't remember ... the wall has been here for so long that it has become a part of me, a part of life."
Laughing Fox
"I don't care what's behind the wall ... you ask too many questions. Accept things the way they are and you'll be happy like me."
Lion Who had Lost his Roar
"There is nothing behind the wall, just a big black nothing."

Take a closer look at these responses. Cat is scared so his answer reflects his fears. Bear is old and has lost his memory. Fox lives for the here and now with happiness as his only life goal. Lion is defeated. His roar is gone. He is depressed. He can see no hope.

Luckily a Bluebird flies over the wall and mouse is small enough to climb onto his back and finally see the other side for himself. Readers will gasp on turning the page. The new scene is wonderful. Mouse now wants to share this with his friends but Bluebird cautions him "they may not be ready."

You could use this book with a younger child to discuss the answers by each animal. With older children you could discuss how these link to each character perhaps even talk about archetypes. You could also talk about the existence and non existence of the wall and what this means, the power of our thoughts/perceptions, facing our fears and even some themes of philosophy. Take another look at the text I quoted above.

Here is a set of teachers notes. Take a look at my comments about two other titles by Britta Teckentrup.  Britta has an impressive body of work which you can see here.

I would pair Little Mouse and the Red Wall with Suri's Wall.

Take a look at my reviews of some other wonderful picture books which would be perfect to use with senior students.


Despite the simplicity of her telling, Britta Teckentrup’s beautifully illustrated story is profound and would be an ideal starting point for a community of enquiry style philosophical discussion ... its timely themes of discovering freedom and embracing change, both personal and in the world, will resonate with both children and adults. Red Reading Hub

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Birds and Feathers by Britta Teckentrup

Feathers are among the most remarkable things ever made by nature. They are delicate, complex, extravagant, beautiful and strong - all at the same time. All birds have feathers which make them unique in the animal kingdom.




There are forty double spreads in this very special book covering everything you need to know, or have been curious to discover, about feathers such as types, colours, sizes, flapping, gliding and hovering, feathers for protection and human use of feathers. 

Source Twitter https://twitter.com/bteckentrup/status/976947051119480835

You can see inside this book here. Did you know there is a feather on the moon?  It is a falcon feather. Here are a few things I discovered:


  • Owl feathers form large discs around their eyes and these help channel sounds into their ears - hence owls have brilliant hearing and can locate prey.
  • Arctic birds such as the ptarmigan have feet feather which work just like snowshoes.
  • Birds that live in cold climates have fifty percent more feathers in winter. The tundra swan can have up to 25,000 feathers and penguins have the most feathers - about 100 per square inch.


Many of our classes spend time on the topic of Animals but oddly, until recently, the teachers did not specifically include birds into their planning. A few years ago I convinced one grade to look at all the amazing bird books in our school library and I was thrilled when they totally embraced the idea of spending a few weeks exploring everything about birds including their feathers.  Now we have this brilliant book - Birds and Feathers by the very talented illustrator Britta Teckentrup.

If you want to focus on specific aspects of birds take a look at The Best Beak in Boonaroo Bay by Narelle Oliver (Beaks), Circle by Jeannie Baker (Bird Migration), Fox and Fine Feathers by Narelle Oliver (Camouflage) and Mama built a little Nest (Nest building). My friend at Kinderbookboard has a terrific collection of other titles for young students.











In this quietly introspective volume featuring evocative, earth-toned prints, German author-illustrator Teckentrup explores bird life, behavior, and anatomy through the topic of feathers. Pubishers Weekly

An exquisite information rich, visually sumptuous collection of carefully curated snippets of information about everything relating to feathers. The Book Sniffer

An exquisitely rendered fusion of art and science, this marvelous book satisfies young readers' natural curiosity about the world around them. Chat with Vera


Long ago I read A nest for Celeste.  The work of Audubon fascinates me and I hope to spend time exploring the hundreds of images on the Audubon web site.  Birds are such wonders of nature. Do you have a favourite bird?  I love puffins, loons, budgerigars and our Australian kookaburra.

Image source: https://tinyurl.com/y9fpllq6

I absolutely loved Birds and their Feathers and in my view this book should be a "must purchase" for every school library. Considering the beautiful art work, wonderful end papers and wealth of information this is not an expensive book at AUS$25.  I now need to read the companion volume The Egg.


Saturday, April 5, 2025

100 Outstanding Picture Books 2025 Bologna Children's Book fair

 

Nearly all of the books on this list are not yet translated into English and many most probably will not make our Australian market but I found all the different covers, titles and subjects fascinating and in some cases these were books I wish I could read right now! Visitors at the recent Bologna Children's Book Fair are sure to have seen many of these books. Here is the link to the list of 100.  I have put a few examples below. I stumbled across this list because Britta Teckentrup posted photos from Bologna where she was proudly showing her book written by the Hans Christian Andersen award winning author Cao Wenxuan from China. 

Skimming through the100 Outstanding Picture Books page (luckily the titles are presented in English) you will see some BIG names - Julie Flett; Eva Lindstrom; Armin Greder; and Serge Bloch. Do you see any other names you recognise?






Here are four of the books that I hope I can see some time in the future. I asked Britta Teckentrup (on Instagram) about this book and she said the rights were being negotiated. The world of book rights in a mystery to me.


The Little Cicada and the Old Ox (China)
by Cao Wenxuan and illustrated by Britta Teckentrup


Publisher blurb (German site): When a cicada saves the life of an old, stubborn ox, a lifelong friendship takes its beginning, as from that day on, the two are inseparable. Often, the cicada rests on an apple tree but even more often, it lands on one of the horns of the old ox or on his back and accompanies him to the meadow on the bank of the river. They spend all of their time together until the cicada has to leave this world … The old ox promises to watch over the cicada’s children. After the larva’s have gone underground (like cicadas are known to do), the old ox stands guard by the apple tree, day and night, year after year. And one night, the little cicadas finally emerge from the earth and climb up the apple tree, one by one. The old ox watches them and marvels and can’t get enough of them. But at some point, his eyes close. Perhaps he has fallen asleep. Or maybe he is already on his way to heaven, looking for his little cicada …



For a Thousand Blouses a Day (Italy)
Text: Serena Ballista
Illustrations: Sonia Maria Luce Possentini

The jury said: Deeply emotional and personal historical account of New York’s worst ever industrial accident. Evocative storytelling using the garment as a narrative voice to guide the reader through themes of migration, workers’ rights, the oppression of women and the exploitation of human capital. The highly emotive cover image, combined with a poignant title draws the reader in, the artwork combines witness statements, archive references and exploits a graphic novel/picture book format. The expressive, black and white imagery articulates the tragic and painful subject matter, evolving into a beautiful dedication to our heroine Rose.



Nobody but Me (Sweden)
Text and illustrations: Sara Lundberg

The jury said: Lyrical, magical, fantastical, dreamlike and at the same time intimate, symbolic, sentimental and universal, this book bewitched the judges. Thick with tributes to the greats of literature and art, from Matisse to Sendak, from the painting of Rousseau to contemporary illustration, Sara Lundberg’s book combines a perfect use of different compositional registers with a rich and varied page layout. The images describe an imaginative and poignant educational journey that crosses realistic and imaginary places and landscapes, encountering dangers as well as magical helpers. Floating on the surface of the river, condensing a great adventure into a short space of time, expanding the space of their own autonomy through adventure, the central character and the author invite us to witness the magic of a perfect childhood novel.


The Walk of the Field Mouse
by Nadine Robert illustrated by Valerio Vidali

Bookseller blurb: One morning, out for one of its usual walks, a field mouse discovers something rather unusual: a mysterious blue object sitting at the foot of a big rock. As a group of animals gather to carefully inspect the object, they realize that a robin's egg has rolled down from its nest all the way at the top. Wondering who will roll it back up, the field mouse quickly volunteers, only to be met with laughter and mockery from its fellow animals. The field mouse, spurred on by a determination to prove them wrong, musters all of its strength to take on the Sisyphean task-but will it succeed?