Sonderling Sunday – Momo – Imaginary Adventures

It’s time for Sonderling Sunday! That time of the week when I play with language by looking at the German translation of children’s books — or in this case, looking at the English translation of a German children’s book. Sort of a Very Silly Phrasebook for Travelers.

Momo1

Tonight I want to go back to one of my favorite children’s books of all, originally written in German, Momo, by Michael Ende. Last time I looked at Momo, we left off toward the end of Chapter 3, on Seite 36 auf Deutsch, page 22 in English.

[And before I get started, I’d like to give a shout-out to Alex Baugh, who was at KidLitCon this weekend. She blogs at Randomly Reading, and I learned that she was a German literature major and reads Sonderling Sunday! I didn’t know anyone did besides James Kennedy and me! 🙂 Glad to meet you this weekend, Alex!]

We were right in the middle of a dramatic (imaginary) ocean voyage:
Meter für Meter kämpfte sich die >Argo< , alle Maschinen auf Volldampf, gegen die Urgewalt dieses Taifuns vorwärts.
= “With all engines running full ahead, the Argo inched her way forward against the elemental might of the storm.”
(“Meter by meter battled itself the Argo, all engines on full steam, against the elemental power of the typhoon forward.”)

Machinisten und Heizer = “engineers and stokers”

Kesselräume = “boiler rooms”

Ăśbermenschliches = “superhuman efforts”

dicken Tauen = “stout ropes”

grausamen Schlingern und Stampfen des Schiffes
= “the ship’s violent pitching and tossing”

innerste Kern des Wirbelsturms = “innermost eye of the storm”
“innermost core of the cyclone [whirl-storm]”

Auf der Meeresoberfläche, die hier spiegelglatt war, weil alle Wellen einfach von der Gewalt des Sturmes flachgefegt wurden, tanzte ein riesenhaftes Wesen.
= “Gyrating on the surface of the sea, which had been ironed flat as a pancake by the sheer force of the sorm, was a huge figure.”
(“On the seas-over-surface, that here mirror-smooth was, because all waves simply from the violence of the storm flat-swept were, danced a gigantic being.”)

ein Brummkreisel von der Größe eines Berges
= “a mountainous humming top”
(“a humming top of the size of a mountain”)

This is better in German:
Ein Schum-Schum gummilastikum!
= “A Teetotum elasticum!”

allersten Zeiten der Erdentwicklung
= “the earliest phase of life on earth”

Es ist ein Jammer!
= “What a shame”

Das einzige Exemplar = “The sole surviving specimen”

Kontrafiktions-Kanone = “antifriction gun”
(Google: “Contraindications-Fiction Cannon” Is this a case where the translator changed the meaning to a similar-sounding word? It is, after all, an imaginary creature, so an Anti-Fiction Gun might work.)

Riesenkreisel = “giant spinning top”

Stichflamme = “tongue of flame”

Zwillingsrohr = “twin barrels”

leuchtende GeschoĂź = “flaming missiles”

Es ist zwecklos! = “It’s no use.” (“It is purposeless.”)

Erste Steuermann = “first mate”

Wandernden Taifun = “Traveling Tornado”

Ăśberlieferungen = “traditions”

wahrer Kern = “grain of truth”

bestimmte Tonschwingungen = “certain sonic vibrations”

Nice big words in this section! Appropriate since a child is pretending to be an important scientist.
Lebensbedingungen = “mode of existence”

höchst eigentĂĽmlichen Gesang = “most peculiar song”

Donnernd schlossen sich die Wassermassen ĂĽber ihm.
= “With a thunderous roar, the sea closed over it.”

patschnaĂź = “soaked” (“smack-wet”)

I’ll finish with the last sentence of chapter 3:
So wie bei Momo konnte man sonst nirgends spielen.
= “The games they played with Momo were more fun than any others.”
(“So as with Momo could one otherwise nowhere play.”)

That’s it for tonight! It’s good to be back! May you avoid any Whirl-storms before we come back to Momo!

My Probability Scarf

Probability_Scarf

I’ve started collecting my Mathematical Knitting posts at Sonderknitting, a Mathematical Knitting Gallery.

But I’d never done a post about my Probability Scarf.

This is not my idea. I don’t remember where I saw the instructions, but they are easy and a lot of fun.

1. Choose six colors of yarn that go together well. Assign them numbers from 1 to 6.

I chose leftovers from my Prime Factorization Sweater.

2. You’ll be knitting a scarf the long way, using the ends as fringe. Start by casting on to a circular needle however long you want your scarf to be. (Try to keep it loose!)

3. For each row, roll a die to decide which color to use. Flip a coin to decide whether to knit or purl.

4. Continue in this manner until you’ve run out of one of the colors.

You now have a scarf demonstrating the Uniform Distribution.

This scarf was fun to knit. It was hard to stop knitting, because I kept wondering what the next row would look like.

It occurs to me that it would be fun to do a Probability Scarf using a different probability distribution. You could find a generator based on another distribution (where the colors wouldn’t all be evenly distributed) and use that to decide which color to use. This would be fun if you wanted to use a second or third color just for highlights. Or maybe you didn’t have the same amount of each yarn. Maybe that will be a future project….

My posts on Mathematical Knitting and related topics are now gathered at Sonderknitting.

Review of Bug in a Vacuum, by MĂ©lanie Watt

bug_in_a_vacuum_largeBug in a Vacuum

by MĂ©lanie Watt

Tundra Books, 2015. 96 pages.

This book makes me laugh. The premise is simple: It’s the stages of grief as experienced by a fly caught in a vacuum cleaner.

The note at the back explains, “The five stages of grief, also known as the Kubler-Ross model, introduced in 1969, are a series of emotions commonly experienced when facing a life-changing event.”

Yes, this would be helpful for explaining the stages of grief to a child. But it’s also just plain fun. Although it’s long, there aren’t a lot of words on each page, and the lavish illustrations do most of the work of telling the story.

The fly, of course, has something to say at every stage:

Denial: “This is amazing! Doesn’t get much cozier than this … Can’t wait to tell my friends about this place!”

Bargaining: “My how the time flies! I must be on my way. Can I be vacuumed next Monday instead? Tonight’s bowling night with the dung beetles.”

Anger: “I WANT OUT NOW!!! NO MORE MR. NICE FLY!!!”

Despair: “I’ll never see the sky again. Let’s face it … I have no future!”

Acceptance: “I surrender! I’ll make the best of things …”

Now, the book is made less bleak in that the fly eventually does escape, as the vacuum is hauled to a dump and breaks open. There’s a parallel journey involving a dog and its stuffed toy – and the dog gets distracted while the toy ends up part of a bird’s nest, so we are given an alternate ending.

You might think that a lot of pictures of the inside of a vacuum would get old, but MĂ©lanie Watt knows how to add details to keep you occupied many times through the book.

This isn’t exactly a book for storytimes – but it is a book that could be used as bibliotherapy – but is also an engaging, brilliantly illustrated, and entertaining story totally apart from its teaching value. And since I consider few things worse than a didactic book that is not entertaining, as far as I’m concerned, that’s a big win.

penguinrandomhouse.ca

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Source: This review is based on a library book from Fairfax County Public Library.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but I maintain my website and blogs on my own time. The views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

What did you think of this book?

Review of Swan, by Laurel Snyder

swan_largeSwan

The Life and Dance of Anna Pavlova

by Laurel Snyder
illustrated by Julie Morstad

Chronicle Books, San Francisco, 2015. 48 pages.
Starred Review

This is an evocative, poetic, and beautiful picture book biography of the great ballerina, Anna Pavlova.

The actual text is short on details and long on atmosphere, but it gets the story across. A well-written, still mellifluous Author’s Note at the back fills things in.

Anna started out the daughter of a laundress. Here’s how Laurel Snyder puts it in her note:

It was a hard life, and Russia under the czars was generally a world where the poor stayed poor. Anna’s life should have been dismal.

But one night Anna’s mother told her, “You are going to enter fairyland,” as the two climbed into their sleigh and sped off to the Mariinsky Theatre. There, Anna heard Tchaikovsky’s music for the first time. She watched the dancers step out onto the stage, and her life was changed forever. Anna knew what she wanted to do with her life.

The main picture book text begins with this incident of Anna and her mother going through the snow to the ballet. Julie Morstad’s illustrations are perfect for this book, capturing the beauty of Anna’s grace as a little girl in a plain dress all the way through her triumphant performances as The Dying Swan.

Here’s the poetic way Laurel Snyder tells about the start of Anna’s career:

Until one night she takes the stage . . .

Anna becomes
a glimmer, a grace.
Everyone feels it,
and the lamps shine brighter.
The room holds its breath.

It shouldn’t be that she should be
this good.
Her legs too thin,
her feet all wrong –
and ooh, those toes!
She is only a girl –
so small – so frail –
but
see her face, her flutter?

Anna was born for this.

I didn’t know before reading this book that Anna Pavlova worked to bring ballet to everyone, where before it had been primarily an art form enjoyed by the rich. But ballet changed Anna’s life, and she wanted to bring its power to others and traveled around the world doing that.

laurelsnyder.com
juliemorstad.com
chroniclekids.com

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Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Childrens_Nonfiction/swan.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Source: This review is based on a library book from Fairfax County Public Library.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but I maintain my website and blogs on my own time. The views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

What did you think of this book?

Review of Rook, by Sharon Cameron

rook_largeRook

by Sharon Cameron

Scholastic Press, New York, 2015. 456 pages.
Starred Review

Like Across a Star Swept Sea, by Diana Peterfreund, Rook, by Sharon Cameron, is a science fiction retelling of Baroness Orczy’s The Scarlet Pimpernel. However, unlike Across a Star Swept Sea, Rook is not a scene-by-scene translation of the original, but more of a tribute, a situational equivalent. This meant that I did not know what was going to happen! The suspense and adventure and clever plotting (both on the part of the author and the characters) was all wonderfully done.

Now, neither of the tribute books keeps the identity of the Scarlet Pimpernel equivalent secret. In this book “The Red Rook” has been rescuing people from the Upper City of what once was Paris from prison in the Sunken City. She leaves behind a rook feather dipped in blood. She snatches people from execution by the Razor, as the Scarlet Pimpernel rescued victims from the guillotine, using disguises and cleverness.

But the Red Rook is a disguise that Sophia Bellamy of the Commonwealth begins to have difficulty maintaining. For the sake of money, she has become engaged to a Parisian who is cousin to the Ministre of Security, LeBlanc. LeBlanc comes to her engagement party and seems to be hot on her trail.

When her brother is arrested in her place and taken to the Sunken City for execution, Sophia must plan one last caper. And she needs to know: Can she trust her new fiancé? Or will he betray them all to save his own family’s fortunes?

This book is wonderfully written, with sizzling romantic tension, plots within plots, and plenty of narrow escapes. A fitting tribute to a great classic.

sharoncameronbooks.com
thisisteen.com
scholastic.com

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Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/rook.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Source: This review is based on a library book from Fairfax County Public Library.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but I maintain my website and blogs on my own time. The views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

What did you think of this book?