Category Archives: Read To Me Dad

Review: Wolstencroft the Bear

Wolstencroft the BearBefore Eva was born I would read to her. When I was traveling I found it difficult to always remember to bring a book with me and read it over the phone to Allison and Eva. On one trip I had forgotten a book and so I did a search for children’s stories. What I found was a beautiful little story about Wolstencroft the bear. The story was written by Karen Lewis and illustrated by Michael S. Weber.

The Story
The story is of a teddy bear named Wolstencroft who finds himself left on the shelf in a toy store. All the other teddy bears found homes and so did some bunnies. Wolstencroft is persuaded by a stuffed rabbit to shorten his name to Woolly so that someone will buy him and take him home and love him. Wolstencroft loves his name but figures that his name is the reason that he is not being sold. So the rabbit writes Woolly under his name and still Wolstencroft is not sold. That is until…

The Illustrations
Michael’s illustrations are wonderful. They are colorful and detailed with a style that fits the story of Wolstencroft the bear very well.

The Message
While Wolstencroft does change his name and therefore a key part of himself he merely changes it to a nickname which in the end is something that shows the specialness of his true name. Being unique is not often easy and being lonely is hard I would say that Wolstencroft is about adapting as well as not giving up on oneself. However I feel the story message could have been stronger about being unique and true to oneself.

Final Thoughts
The story is a very nice read. Out of the stories I read on the Children’s Storybooks Online website i was by far the best. The story was long enough for parent’s attention spans and not too long for a child plus the repeating of the phrase “no hug is too big for a teddy bear” was very cute. I think Eva deserves a Build-A-Bear named Wolstencroft.

Read to Me Dad Ratings

  • Story – Good
  • Re-Readability – Excellent
  • Illustrations – Excellent
  • Message – Good – could be stronger
  • Plot – Good – message brings it down a bit
  • Characters – Excellent
  • Does Eva Like It – Yes she smiled and smiled as I read this to her. Yes I read it to her after she was born too.
  • Recommended Ages – for Young Children

Review: We Are Wolves

I picked up the book We Are Wolves by Molly Grooms when I was in the Minneapolis/Saint Paul airport. The book I have is the board book version and it has a nice puffy soft cover. I flipped through it and saw the beautiful illustrations by Lucia Guarnotta and fell in love. I am a fan of wolves and think that they are beautiful and majestic animals. Then I read the story and fell deeper in love with it, I knew I had to buy this book.

The Story
The story is about two wolf pups that learn what it is to be a wolf from their Uncle and the rest of the pack. Uncle Wolf watches over the two wolf pups for a day as he teaches them valuable lessons.

The Illustrations
I might be biased because I love wolves and how they are just so beautiful. These illustrations do seem to leap from the page an right into my heart as they are so well done. The colors and the detail are amazing.

The Message
The message of this book is what really drew me to picking it up for our kids (I bought this before Eva was even a thought on the horizon). Here is a story that shows how family nurtures each generation in their love and their lessons. Uncle Wolf takes the pups on a journey of discovery about who they are as wolves. Each lesson is reiterated at the end of the books in a series of statements about wolves. A very lovely story about what it means to be family and to have a strong identity to your past.

Final Thoughts
I love reading this book to Eva because there are four characters, Uncle Wolf, Mother Wolf, the Pups (all lines for the pups are said as one speaker) and the narrator. I can change my voice for each character and give them distinct sounds. And I like that there is a story here and plenty of things to read and not just pretty things to look at. I’m reading to my daughter to help improve her verbal skills and give her a head start in life. A well written story is going to be much better than one that is just full of pretty pictures. Luckily this book as plenty of both.

Read to Me Dad Ratings

  • Story – Excellent
  • Re-Readability – Excellent
  • Illustrations – Excellent
  • Message – Excellent
  • Plot – Excellent
  • Characters – Excellent
  • Does Eva Like It – Yes
  • Recommended Ages – 4 to 8