give thanks!
thanksgiving day! what a month of delicious reads.
and i haven’t even scratched the surface of my violent and crazy love of books. if you asked, i wouldn’t admit to a favorite book. i wouldn’t want any of my other books to get jealous: for crime and punishment to crawl off its shelf or for death is a lonely business to wait for me by the jar of mayonnaise in my refrigerator. but when it’s dark and the lights are out and i’m by myself i might whisper “you’re my favorite” under the covers to leo lionni’s frederick.
it’s a small story about a tiny mouse. over the summer and fall all the other mice are busy busy busy gathering nuts and seeds and berries to store up for the winter. they think frederick is a nutcase. he sits instead of hurrying from one bush to the next.
fie on him, you might say, he isn’t getting any of my christmas pudding, the lazy lump. but, then when the sun pulls behind the clouds and winter descends, it turns out that frederick was busy gathering something else. he saved words and colors and stories and songs for those long winter months and pulls them out one by one, drawing a hush over all the mice who scolded him.
i won’t argue that the pantry needs filling, but there are needs that go deeper than maslow’s bare bones hierarchy. i think frederick got something right. we are built of something more than food. we come from stories. and words. and memories.
so be thankful, my friends, and store up the harvest around you. remember the single sharp laugh, the taste of friendship, the smell of bathwater, the feel of an afternoon, the texture of puzzles, the silk of pumpkin, the down of hair, the deepness of a voice.
store it up.
give thanks for life by remembering it and passing it on.
Filed under children's lit, life, thankfulness |2 Responses to “give thanks!”
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I needed something witty and thoughtful to make me feel intelligent today. I turned to you for your latest insights. I will share Fredrick with Madeline and let them get acquainted this afternoon at our newly opened library.
Oh, what a great, great post.
The smell of a good book…the comfortable hum of a library or bookstore - like the hum of a bee hive. This was better than any work break I could have taken all day.