One second is not a lot of time, but it was all that was needed. A new voice, the high shriek of a crone, came out of nowhere: “Run! Run, you ugly Leonardo Dubenski with your thieves and beasts! That baby you see there is a wonder baby, and his plan is to turn you all into daffodils!”


The Exquisite Corpse Adventure is available in hardcover, paperback, and audio. Ask for it at your local library and bookstore!
Read more about the author Natalie Babbitt and illustrator Timothy Basil Ering here!


Click on a title below for book recommendations; reading, writing, and art information and activities; and discussion questions.

• Of Crones and MisFortunes: An Annotated List of Suggested Read Alouds and Independent Reads
• Activities for the Classroom
• Discussion Questions
• For Parents, Teachers, Librarians—Talk Art!


Of Crones and MisFortunes: Annotated List of Suggested Read Alouds
and Independent Reads

by Janice Del Negro, PhD, Graduate School of Library and Information Science at Dominican University

Read Alouds:

Babbitt, Natalie, reteller, illustrated by Fred Marcellino. Ouch! A Tale from Grimm. 32p. Gr. K-4.
A fortuneteller predicts that a lowborn baby boy will grow up to marry a princess, and so he does--but that is only the beginning of his adventures! Fluid language and rich, gem-toned illustrations make this a winning piece of storytelling.

Hastings, Selina, reteller, illustrated by Juan Wijngaard. Sir Gawain and the Loathly Lady. 32p. Gr. 3-7.
Gallant knight Gawain agrees to marry a loathsome but wise old crone after her answer to a deadly riddle saves King Arthur’s life. This well-told tale is illuminated by Wijngaard’s richly detailed, stained glass-like paintings.

McKissack, Patricia, and Onawumi Jean Moss, illustrated by Kyrsten Brooker. Precious and the Boo Hag. 32p. Gr. K-3. Precious doesn’t believe her brother when he tells her about the wicked Boo Hag ("who tries to make you disobey yo' mama!") at least not until the Boo Hag shows up the front door. Never fear, Precious is too smart to be fooled by the old crone, even when she shows up in disguise. Lively mixed-media art and snappy dialogue make this a crowd-pleasing read-aloud.

Independent Reads:

Morris, Gerald. The Princess, the Crone, and the Dung-Cart Knight. 320p. Gr. 5-9.
Morris writes Arthurian lore with a derring-do that appeals to contemporary readers.  Thirteen-year-old Sarah seeks justice for the deaths of her loved ones, but is sidetracked by the quest to rescue the kidnapped Queen Guinevere. 

Spinelli, Jerry. Eggs. 220p. Gr. 4-7.
Nine-year-old David’s mother died in an accident; thirteen-year-old Primrose’s mother is so absorbed in the world of psychic phenomena that she barely notices her daughter. Boy and girl form an unlikely but devoted friendship as both children seek the family they need in one another. 

Wynne-Jones, Diana. Howl’s Moving Castle. 448p. Gr. 5-9.
Sophie Hatter, the eldest of three girls, sees herself as the failed third daughter of a traditional fairy tale--or she does until the Witch of the Waste turns Sophie into an old crone.  Sophie uses her new identity to spy on wicked (but handsome) wizard Howl, even while she searches for a way to break the spell that holds her.

© 2010 Janice Del Negro, PhD


Activities for the Classroom: Characterization

by Kimberly Gow

Characterization

While reading a literary work, it is important for the reader to interpret what each character is like and understand the choices they make. Characterization is the method used by a writer to develop a character. In The Exquisite Corpse Adventure, this method includes showing the character’s appearance, displaying the character’s actions, letting the character speak, and revealing the character’s thoughts. Through characterization, we learn about many unique characters along the adventure of Nancy and Joe as they attempt to find the Exquisite Corpse. Episode Eight of The Exquisite Corpse Adventure introduces the reader to a new character, Sybil Hunch, the misfortune-teller.

To demonstrate an interpretation of the characters developed throughout the episodes of The Exquisite Corpse Adventure, one can create a “Character Quilt.” Use the template below to develop a square about any chosen character. Complete multiple squares and attach to make a quilt representing each character of The Exquisite Corpse Adventure. After reading Episode Eight, the reader has been introduced to the following characters:

• Nancy Sloppy

• Joe Sloppy

• Boppo (the clown)

• Genius Kelly (the pig)

• Albert Einstein (the hologram)

• Baby Max

• Leonardo Dubenski

• Sybil Hunch (the misfortune-teller)

A list of character traits can be found using the following link:
http://cte.jhu.edu/techacademy/web/2000/kochan/charactertraits.html

 

Character Quilt Template


(Name of Character)

____________________________________

(Character Trait)

Hero    or      Villain

What is this character like?

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

What quote or phrase from the story best describes this character?

“_______________________________________________

_______________________________________________”

What do they look like?

 

 


(Name of Character)

____________________________________

(Character Trait)

Hero    or      Villain

What is this character like?

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

What quote or phrase from the story best describes this character?

“_______________________________________________

_______________________________________________”

What do they look like?


(Name of Character)

____________________________________

(Character Trait)

Hero    or      Villain

What is this character like?

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

What quote or phrase from the story best describes this character?

“_______________________________________________

_______________________________________________”

What do they look like?

 

 


(Name of Character)

____________________________________

(Character Trait)

Hero    or      Villain

What is this character like?

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

What quote or phrase from the story best describes this character?

“_______________________________________________

_______________________________________________”

What do they look like?

 

References

The Character Quilt was adapted from the Folktale Quilt located under the English Language Arts Classroom Assessments that are aligned to the Illinois Learning Standards.

“Character Traits.” http://cte.jhu.edu/techacademy/web/2000/kochan/charactertraits.html
“Characterization.” http://www.tnellen.com/cybereng/lit_terms/characterization.html
Illinois State Board of Education. www.isbe.net

© 2010 Kimberly Gow


Discussion Questions

by Geri Zabela Eddins, NCBLA

Episode Seven ends as a cliffhanger with Nancy, Joe, Baby Max, and Genius Kelly being lowered into the beast pit. Were you worried about the foursome? Could you imagine a way they could escape?

Episode Eight introduces a new character, Sybil Hunch, who uses the power of words to thwart Dubenski and his gang. What do you think about this rescue by Sybil Hunch? Were you surprised that she was able to chase off the villains using only words?

Do you think words can be powerful enough to prevent difficult and dangerous situations? Why or why not? Have you ever faced a bully? Were you able to diffuse the situation using words?

Sybil Hunch calls herself the local misfortune-teller and explains that she is “a reporter of possible things to come.” What do you think about her job? How might the job of misfortune-teller differ from that of fortune-teller? Do you think Sybil assists all people she encounters in the woods—both good and bad? Do you think Sybil would read her crystal ball for Leonardo Dubenski or Boppo if they asked? Why or why not? Tell or write a short story about another day in the woods in which Sybil assists a villain. You could choose to write about Dubenski or Boppo or another villain you would like to introduce to the story. What is the villain’s trouble? How does Sybil help—through words or actions or both? Does she enjoy helping the villain, or does she do it because it is part of her job description? Can you think of jobs people perform that require them to assist all people, whether they like them or not? Would you enjoy such a job?

© 2010 Geri Zabela Eddins


For Parents, Teachers, Librarians—Talk Art!

Timothy Basil Ering’s Illustration for Episode Eight

by Mary Brigid Barrett

“Painting isn’t just the visual thing that reaches your retina, it’s what’s behind it. I’m not interested in ‘abstracting’ or taking things out or reducing painting to design, form, line, and color. I paint this way because I can keep putting more and more things in — drama, anger, pain, love, a figure, a horse, my ideas about space. Through your eyes it again becomes an emotion or an idea. It doesn’t matter if it’s different from mine as long as it comes from the painting which has its own integrity and intensity.”  Willem De Kooning, American painter.

Timothy Basil Ering’s illustration for “A Possible Solution,” Episode Eight of The Exquisite Corpse Adventure by Natalie Babbitt, is highly expressionistic; his loose charcoal and paint strokes creating a mood both evocative and eerie. His composition is circular in nature, leading our eye around and around the picture space in spiral-like motion, moving out and in, and out and in. He has literally captured our attention. His characters’ expressions also capture our attention, each expression revealing a range of emotions from anxiousness, to wonder, to anger, to surprise.

Looking at this illustration, you sense that Mr. Ering loves his work. The illustration, for all its “eeriness” has a tremendous vitality. When I first saw this illustration it brought to mind the paintings of Willem De Kooning, an American Abstract Expressionist and “action” painter, whose work, like Mr. Ering’s, is vivid and vital, mixing the figurative with the expressive strokes of line and paint.

Tim Ering in his studio.
Bill De Kooning in his studio.
Examples of Timothy Basil Ering’s work:
Examples of Willem De Koonings’s work:

Replacing Kid Art Anxiety with Joy!

Like many families, we have been taking our kids to art museums since they were babies nestled in our arms. One of my favorite memories is of our daughters, four and two years old at the time, coming upon a large Morris Louis painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. The painting was bright and intense, with flowing washes of color gliding across an expanse of bright whiteness. Without speaking to each other, our girls began an impromptu dance, twirling and whirling from one end of the canvas to the other, creating their own joy-filled ballet. Young children often have visceral reactions to contemporary art. They seem to have more fun with it, unencumbered by adult preconceptions and philosophical worries about what art is or is not. Unfortunately as kids grow older, many lose that joy and spontaneity, drawing and painting in group situations in school settings, judging their work against others in the class, worrying that it does not look real, or “good.” 


Painting Party activity for adults and young people alike

Abstract Expressionists painted on very large canvasses; they painted not only with their hands and eyes, but with their arms, their whole bodies. That physical interaction with paint and canvass invigorates their work. It is freeing, and fun, to paint that way and most kids and adults, trapped behind desks inside classrooms and offices never have that experience. Why not try it??!!At home or in school—Have a painting party!

Here’s how—

1. First gather supplies; you will need:

Tarps, plastic sheeting, or old fabric sheets to protect floors and walls

Large sheets or rolls of thicker paper, huge pieces of cardboard, or old cotton sheets: rolls of brown mailing
   paper; sides from large cardboard refrigerator boxes; thick solid colored rolls of wrapping paper; large roll of
   white paper available through craft supply stores—any large, cheap flat solid colored surface—perhaps a wall!!!

Big and/or long paintbrushes with a variety of tip styles—flat, rounded, pointy, etc.

Old brooms and mops, car brushes, cleaning brushes, sponges, different thickness of rope for
   experimental painting

Plastic plates, spoons, bowls, or painting trays and buckets for mixing and dripping paints

Old or new latex house paint in primary colors plus black and white

Buckets of water to clean paint and brushes

Paper towels and rags for clean up

Clothes line and clothes pins to hang paintings up on to dry.

Pizza, cookies, soda, juice, great fruits, and snacks!!

Your favorite music.

2.  Find a big, open indoor or outdoor space

3. Dress in really old clothes or in the summer wear an old bathing suit—so you don’t worry about getting covered in paint.

4. Decide if you want to paint on the floor or ground, or on a wall of fence and cover the surrounding designated area with tarps, plastic sheeting, or old sheets.

5. Lay painting surface on protective cover on ground or wall. Make sure the paper, canvas, fabric, or cardboard is as big a piece as you can find—you may want to tape the surfaces together on the back to create a huge painting surface.

6. Mix the colors you want to use in plastic cups, bowls, and paint trays – mix a lot of the colors you would like to use! Experiment with paint thicknesses, adding water to make the paint thinner and more transparent. 

7. Paint with your hand, arms, and whole body—don’t overthink—just paint. Paint in large, sweeping movements, drip paint, dribble paint, layer color upon color—let layers dry sometimes, other times mix the paint on the surface while wet. Use a variety of painting utensils. Try painting with an old broom or sponge mop; try dipping a piece of rope in the paint and pressing or dragging the rope across your painting surface. Paint using your bare hands!

8. Have fun!!!

9. When you think your painting is finished—hang it up to dry—or if you don’t want drips–pull it somewhere others will not step on it while it dries on the floor.

10. Get out your favorite music and the pizza and snacks and have a great time while the paint dries!!

If you, or your kids, need some visual inspiration, take a look at the work of Willem De Kooing, Joan Mitchell, Franz Kline, Mark Rothko, Morris Louis, Helen Frankenthaler, and Jackson Pollock—at any of the Absract Expressionists and Action painters—and you will find enough inspiration for a football field’s worth of paintings!


"The attitude that nature is chaotic and that the artist puts order into it is a very absurd point of view, I think. All that we can hope for is to put some order into ourselves."
Willem de Kooning  (Born Apr 24, 1904, Rotterdam, Netherlands; died March 19, 1997, Long Island, USA.)  

To find out more about Willem De Kooning, his life and his work, look for these books at your local library: 

Willem De Kooning: Paintings 1960-1980
by Ralph Ubl, Klaus Kertess, Bernhard Mendes Burgi, and Willem de Kooning.

Willem de Kooning: Paintings by David Sylvester, Richard Shiff, and Martha Prather.

And take a look at these De Kooning websites:

www.theartstory.org/artist-de-kooning-willem.htm

www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/artist_bio_36.html

www.willem-de-kooning.de/e/index.shtml

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willem_de_Kooning

www.interiors.intendo.net/dekooning.html

www.artst.org/abstract-expressionism/willem_de_kooning/

© 2009 Mary Brigid Barrett