It's the worst snowstorm in 20 years. School is out early and its home for Teddy and his younger brother Ronnie--in from the cold and wind, with smells of cornbread and chili cooking. Then some stranded travelers arrive, and the evening really warms up around the old kitchen stove. Full-color illustrations.
Marc Harshman is the poet laureate of West Virginia, appointed by Governor Earl Ray Tomblin in May 2012. His poems have appeared in such publications as Shenandoah, The Georgia Review, The Progressive, Appalachian Heritage, Bateau, and Fourteen Hills. Other poems have been anthologized by Kent State University, the University of Iowa, University of Georgia, and the University of Arizona.
His eleven children's books include ONLY ONE, a Reading Rainbow review title on PBS TV and THE STORM, a Junior Library Guild selection and Smithsonian Notable Book Parent's Choice Award recipient. Booklist has called this same title "a knowing book that will speak to all children about self-image and hard-won success."
Mr. Harshman was honored in 1994 by receiving the Ezra Jack Keats/ Kerlan Collection Fellowship from the University of Minnesota for research of Scandinavian myth and folklore. He was also named the West Virginia State English Teacher of the Year by the West Virginia English Language Arts Council in 1995. More recently, he was named the recipient of the WV Arts Commission Fellowship in Poetry for the year 2000 and the Fellowship in Children's Literature for 2008. His children's titles have been published in Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Danish, and Swedish.
Marc is fondly known by many as a storyteller who served for over twenty years as a judge for the WV Liar's Contest held at the Vandalia Gathering in Charleston, WV. He has also served as an instructor for the historic Appalachian Writer's Workshop at the Hindman Settlement School in Hindman, KY.
Marc holds degrees from Bethany College, Yale Divinity School, and the University of Pittsburgh. He recently received an honorary doctorate from Bethany College in recognition of his life's work.
In honor of West Virginia's Sesquicentennial, Marc was commissioned by the Wheeling National Heritage Area to write a poem celebrating this event. This poem, "A Song for West Virginia," was presented in both Charleston and Wheeling as part of the day-long festivities held that day.
Who doesn't love the thought of being stranded somewhere in the snow? This book was a cozy look at how a snowstorm brought some unlikely people together for an evening, a classic storyline, but for kids!
Another book I've read for using in my intermediate elementary classroom --- how to use a picture book ideas.
Harshman is greatfor kids, especially in the breadth of what he's written. Snow days are a fact of life for many kids, and what happens during them are both similar and varied. When the blizzard arrives in the story, so do the visitors which lead to a wonderful childhood memory.
Classroom implications: springboard for writing--memories, writing about a relative's or older person's memory; vivid but concise language, etc.
When a snow storm hits the folks in Indiana, they huddle together! Memories are made of these expansive moments and possibilities in the middle of a disaster.