Saturday, November 10, 2007

Too Many Mittens

Too Many Mittens
by Florence and Louis Slobodkin/ published 1958 by The Vanguard Press


Most known for the Caldecott Medal-winning illustrations in James Thurber's Many Moons (1944), Louis and his wife Florence did this book as a nod to their own twin grandsons. The story is about how the boys and their grandmother accumulate a load of missing red mittens. Simple yet enduringly precious, it is a tale filled with seasons and melancholy and what it means to be lost and found again.

They counted, "1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10...!"
There were now TEN RED MITTENS in the drawer!
And for the next few days, whenever anyone found a red mitten
anywhere, that person brought it over to the twins' house.


The dainty pictures are so delicate... the red of the boys cheeks seems rubbed on with just a hint of rouge. And the mittens just a few strokes of the pen but still iconic and evocative of an era. These sorts of books are the kind I love, an imaginative theme told without a great deal of drama. Simple storytelling.

Also by:
Many Moons
Millions and Millions and Millions!
Dinny and Danny

4 comments:

Amanda said...

Okay, I realize I'm leaving too many comments, but my heart stopped on this one. I know it's one we bought at a yard sale when I was a child, and I made my dad read it to me over and over and over.

Anonymous said...

I am curious -- is the illustrator on this the same one who illustrated James Thurber's "Many Moons"? From the image here, it looks to be the same person...

Thank you,
Jenny

Burgin Streetman said...

yup... http://vintagechildrensbooksmykidloves.blogspot.com/2008/02/many-moons.html

Anonymous said...

Slobodkin fans ... come visit us at www.slobodkin.org ... you won't be disappointed! :^)

Carol

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