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Opening Day Susan Bartlett Illustrated by Luanne Wrenn Publication Date: May 2007 9 x 10, 32 pages, color illustrations Children; Grades 36 |
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CHILDREN'S BOOKS:Always My BrotherNewBear-ly ThereNew Remember Me: Tomah Joseph's Gift to Franklin RooseveltNew Amadi's Snowman Carpet Boy's Gift, The Everybody's Somebody's Lunch Gift for Gita, A Give a Goat Goat Lady, The Healthy Foods from Healthy Soils Just for Elephants Keep Your Ear on the Ball Life Under Ice Lights for Gita Lucy's Family Tree Mushroom Man, The Muskrat Will Be Swimming Opening Day Our Friendship Rules Playing War Project Puffin Roses for Gita Saving Birds Say Something Sea Soup: Phytoplankton Sea Soup: Zooplankton Shelterwood Shy Mama's Halloween Spirit That Moves Us, The (Vol. I) Spirit That Moves Us, The (Vol. II) Spirit That Moves Us, The (Vol. III) Stone Wall Secrets Talking Walls Talking Walls: the Stories Continue Thanks to the Animals Travels with Tarra Under the Night Sky Very Best Bed, The Welcoming Babies When the Bees Fly Home Who Belongs Here? |
Susan Bartlett offers a sensitive story about friendship while also sharing accurate information about deer habits, tracking, and hunting. Opening Day celebrates the strength of a young man determined to be true to his feelings, as it acknowledges the generosity and kindness true friends share. Luanne Wrenn's oil paintings pull readers into the misty cold of the fall woods as Sam and Eric scout for deer sign. Under her brush, the boys' friendshipas it weathers disappointment, concern, relief, and joyis both tangible and beautiful. Susan Bartlett is a children's book editor who worked for publishing houses in Boston and New York. In Vermont, where she now lives, she has edited books for both children and adults and taught Writing Books for Children for many years at the University of Vermont. She is the author of Seal Island School, which won the Lupine Award in 2000 given by the Maine Libraries Association for the "best children's book about Maine," and The Seal Island Seven, both published by Viking. Susan volunteers as a reading teacher at her local elementary school, supports land conservation and environmental causes, and travels to interesting placesfrom South Africa to New Zealand. She and her husband have an 1875 farmhouse on 200 acres of woods and fields, which they manage for wildlife and where they have raised chickens, pigs, horses, and have many flower and vegetable gardens. Luanne Wrenn grew up in Michigan's cold and beautiful Upper Peninsula. In 1991 she moved to Wilton, Maine (also cold and beautiful), with her family. Luanne loved drawing and painting and nature as a child, and she pursued these interests through college, with degrees in Fine Arts and Science in Education. As an arts educator Luanne shares her love of the arts with children. She enjoys painting in oil and watercolor and is a commissioned portrait and mural artist, as well as an illustrator. Luanne asked many of her friends and neighbors in Wilton to pose for the illustrations in Opening Day and completed these paintings during hunting seasonwhen this story could easily have taken place in her hometown. Teachers Take Note Young people are sometimes swayed one way or the other by the opinions of folks around them. Not Sam. Sam makes his own decisions. He isn't going to be a vegetarian just because his mom is, and he's not going to hunt just because his best friend does. It's not that Sam is stubborn, he is instead interested in making his own decisions based on what is right for his own sensibility. Sam gathers information, experience and understanding of himself and his world before he reaches any conclusions. And when he does make a decision, he knows it is one that is true to himself. But Sam is sensitive to the fact that his decisions sometimes go counter to those of people he cares about, so diplomacy also plays a part in this story of friendship and self-discovery. Opening Day will help inspire classroom conversations about:
Wondering Here are some wondering questions to share with your class:
Randomly choose teams for a debate on the pros and cons of hunting. The kids can research their arguments or speak from their hearts, depending on their age-level. Author Susan Bartlett offers some food for thought with the following "For Hunting" and "Against Hunting" arguments: For Hunting: Deer populations grow too large when there are no natural predators, such as wolves or coyotes. When there is not enough food for all the deer, many starve. Hunting keeps the animal population under control. Human beings become the needed predator. Against Hunting: Nature keeps the number of animals under control. Starvation and disease are nature's way of making sure the strongest survive. The weak die or are eaten by natural predators, such as wolves and mountain lions. We need to help preserve the natural predators. Against Hunting: Scientists are experimenting with ways to neuter the does or female deer, so they cannot have fawns. This is a kinder way to prevent the deer population from growing too big. For Hunting: Neutering female deer will not solve the overpopulation problem. It is expensive and there are too many deer. For Hunting: A food source. Some people need the venison, moose, duck or other meat to feed their families. Against Hunting: Today people do not need to hunt to get food like the Native Americans and the early settlers did long ago. It is wrong to kill for sport. It is cruel. For Hunting: Hunting is a natural part of the food chain. Against Hunting: People with their high-powered rifles, binoculars, all-terrain vehicles, imitation bird calls, and scents to hide their human smell have an unfair advantage. Hunting this way does not make man a "natural" part of the food chain. For Hunting: All animals, including humans, depend on one another— the fox on the rabbit, the coyote on the wild turkey, the hawk on the mouse. Why not man on deer and moose and bear? (Please see Tilbury House book, Everybody is Somebody's Lunch.) Against Hunting: Some people think that the killing of any animal is wrong. They do not eat meat or fish. They call themselves vegetarians. For Hunting: Many hunters are conservationists. They support public and private wildlife refuges where land stays wild, so animals have a place to live in a crowded world. They have helped preserve millions of acres from suburban and mall sprawl, which steadily eats up forests and wetlands. Money from hunting licenses goes to state and federal government agencies that protect wildlife. So do taxes from the sale of guns and ammunition. Against Hunting: The money collected from hunting license sales and taxes from gun sales does not always help animals. Some helps what the hunter wants instead — more land set aside for hunting, for example. Too much money is spent on making hunting easier for the hunter instead of on saving wildlife. For Hunting: Many hunters like to be out in the woods and mountains with their families and friends. They like to learn about wildlife, how to track animals, and how to read animal signs. It is fun to learn to handle guns responsibly and to become a skilled shot. Against Hunting: People can enjoy nature without hunting. They can hike, camp, snowmobile, watch birds without harming wildlife. They can hunt with binoculars and cameras. For Hunting: Most hunters support hunter education programs, safety locks on guns, and bans on automatic weapons. They say that guns used responsibly are not dangerous. Against Hunting: Hunting encourages people to buy guns. Guns are dangerous. Every year people are killed by mistake during hunting season. Says author Susan Bartlett: "The hunting debate is complicated and people feel strongly about both sides. Find out everything you can about it and make up your own mind." Observation Game Children are naturally curious when you point out that there are signs of animals passing all around them if they look. Spend some time with a pile of books on animal tracking, animal tracks and wildlife habitats, then go outside. You can either walk and search for signs or sit down and wait to see what might come to you. (If you do choose to sit, see if you can stay completely quiet and still for a period of time, maybe even an hour. What do you see?) Miming Game After reading about deer behavior at
For information on deer behavior, please see For activities on animal tracks and how to keep an animal track journal, please see For searching for animal sign, explore For an investigative activity involving tracks try this Nova site The Predator Project: This website offers useful "predator" information. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: The "Kids/Educators" section offers lots of photographs and information. World Wildlife Fund: Offers information about activities all over the world. Click on "United States" and "Fun and Games" for a sampling. Recommended Books: Everybody's Somebody's Lunch. Cherie Mason (Tilbury House, Publishers: Gardiner, 1998) A children's picture book by Cherie Mason, illustrated by Gustav Moore, published by Tilbury House. When a young girl's cat disappears, she suspects it's been eaten by a predator. But as she starts to learn about predators, she learns that there are no "bad" animals and realizes that "everybody's somebody's lunch." Teacher's guide available. Click on this title in the sidebar to the left for more information. Hunting. Joan Lewis (Get Going! Hobbies series: Heinneman: Chicago, 2006). This book on hunting includes great information on safety and ethics as well as equipment and regulations. On a checklist titled "Before you shoot," the author asks "Check your partners. Are you certain where they are?" and "Check your feelings. Do you feel right about taking this animal at this time."
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