Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Hanging on by 3 Threads and a Band-aid - 'The Trumpet of the Swan' E.B. White

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I have taught in a co-op for homeschool students for about 5 years. One of my favorite groups to teach are late elementary through early middle school students. I love connecting students with the good and the greats- literature and other stories. One of the books I never read as a child is The Trumpet of the Swan by E.B. White. I have learned so much from reading these along with my students; I say these as I have read his other 2 well known books for children, Charlotte's Webb and Stuart Little  and a precious biography by Melissa Sweet, Some Writer;The Story of E.B. White.
Why should anyone read these? E.B. White was a simple writer, approachable by anyone, of any age. His stories connect living things from aspects of everyday life. Both human and animals, anthropomorphized, have challenges and experiences that draw us in to a hope for a slower and deeper existence. Especially now in our hectic, electrified world, we need books that bring our souls to their natural speed.
While these books seem like children's books, they are an excellent diversion for the adult reader for a bit of delight in our world. Not only does the reader experience the simple delights but we can see resilience and perseverance in a parent. With my own children, I am challenged with the balance of doing for and loving in the right ways. Watching 'the Cob', Louis's father go to great lengths to provide an unusual need for his son, he is also injured. I laughed yesterday on my walk as I enjoyed my own thoughts. Somehow I felt I was hanging on by 'three threads and a band-aid.' Yet it felt like enough. Why? Why a band-aid. Our thoughts will churn up what we've assimilated (vocabulary word from our class) if we quiet our souls, and turn off our phones(mine had died.) Louis's father had been given a band-aid for his gun-shot wound. There's the band-aid! I laughed out-loud when I realized why I was thinking that. And then I reflected on the father doing his best for his son, the son who had a speech impediment.
I never read this book when I was younger. We were already immersed in 'made for tv' and movie versions of great books. The 1973 version of 'Charlotte's Web,' is exceptional in its quality, but it's not like a slow read, where you imagine the farm of E.B. White's youth. All of his stories include interesting details from his childhood, like the music store to where his father flies. But reading it with new eyes in the last few years, incorporating IEW techniques, such as unit 5 'Writing from Pictures,' and the 3 paragraph format, including simple dress-ups has been wonderful. Writing across the curriculum need not be forced. I believe E.B. White's work will be part of our studies for quite some time. It's a perfect fit of details and simple writing.










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