by Mary Jane and Herm Auch
2010 / 32 pages
Henrietta the chicken can read and she wants to write. And though she can’t talk, she can cluck and “Buk, Buk Buk!” sounds enough like “Book, book, book!” to get the librarian to provide her with ample reading material. When she decides to write a book she finds a “how-to” guide on the library shelves, and sits down at her typewriter with book in hand, going one by one through eight important “writing rules.”
The first – “You need a main character” – has her fellow hens auditioning for the role, but when they find out from Rule Three that the main character has to confront some sort of problem, they all chicken out. So Henrietta invents an entirely original main character, and we follow Henrietta as she tells her tale, using each rule to add something to the story.
Each page has some humor, and kept the attention of both of my kids, ages 4 and 6. More importantly it got the oldest in a writing mood. This would be an absolutely fantastic resource for a Grade One class, or for any child who might have the writing itch.
I will add that I have a bit of a dispute with the final of the eight rules. Rule Eight says “the main character must solve her (or his) own problem” and while that is a good general rule, taken on an ultimate level it actually runs counter to a very fundamental truth. We don’t solve our own biggest problem (which is causes so many others)! Jesus had to come precisely because of our own inability to merit our own way back to God.
That said, many a Christian book is bad precisely because it crafts problems for characters and then has God step in to solve them in a way that is entirely unlike how God actually intervenes to save us from ourselves – miracles are far too commonplace in Christian books. Which shows that Christian would do well to consider Rule Eight, even though it isn’t ultimately true.
If your kids are anything like mine, once we’ve read a book about something they want to go do it. So whether you have an already budding writer, or just want to encourage a child to give it a try, here’s a picture books that could get ’em writing.