![]() ![]() The dump was a 300 year old plantation house that is listed in the National Registry that I remodeled. The kids were all on their own at that point. I figured if I was going to go through trauma let it be all at one time. Several years ago I left Ballantine Books, parted company with my agent, sold my house in New Jersey that I had lived in all my married life and in 1993 moved to South Carolina. Guess what else! I wrote 99 books, most of them New York Times Best Sellers. Guess what, I don’t have that husband any more. ![]() As my husband said at the time, stupid is as stupid does. For some reason that didn’t intimidate me. Rather than face the outside world with no skills, I decided to write a book. I was also a voracious reader having cut my teeth on The Bobbsey Twins, Nancy Drew, The Hardy Boys, Cherry Ames and the like. I didn’t know how to do anything except be a wife and mother. When my youngest went off to Kindergarten, my husband told me to get off my ass and get a job. I grew up, got a job, got married, had five kids. However, I answer to Fern since people are more comfortable with a name they can pronounce.Īs they say, the past is prologue. To this day, family and friends call me Dink, a name my father gave me when I was born because according to him I was ‘a dinky little thing’ weighing in at four and a half pounds. I became Mary when I entered the business world where first names were the order of the day. Growing up in Hastings, Pennsylvania, I was called Ruth. I’m not sure she’s an entity either since an entity is something with separate existence. Interested in some other snow literacy ideas? Head to my snow Pinterest page.Fern Michaels isn’t a person. You could also give your snowman a name and create a character description of him followed up by an oral or written story about him. One idea (pictured below) would be to use it for a labeling activity. There are so many literacy things that you could do with your snowman if you decided not to use it for a bookmark. My picture doesn’t show the bookmark laminated, but I highly suggest doing so for durability purposes. Glue the pieces onto the paint strip sample. Simply cut a hat, eyes, nose, mouth, scarf and buttons from a magazine. Here are the materials you need for one snowman bookmark: one white paint strip sample, an old magazine, pair of scissors and a glue stick. I love this activity because the bookmark is made with recycled materials. To keep your place in all of your new snow books, you will need a snowman bookmark. The beautiful woodcut illustrations help to tell the story of the first scientist who captured pictures of snowflakes which led to the discovery that no two snowflakes are alike. Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin is a Caldecott winner from 1999. (P.S.- Stay tuned for an author profile on Gail Gibbons on Growing Book By Book soon.) There are even tips for preparing for a snowstorm. Learn what happens when it snows and the different forms snow can take. It’s Snowing by Gail Gibbons gives all the facts you wanted to know about the white stuff. Snowballs by Lois Ehlert is a beautiful book that shows that your imagination + found objects + packed snow= a whole snow family. Watch and listen to the book being read in this clip from YouTube. Peter explores a fresh snow packed outdoor world and even tries to keep a snowball in his pocket for another day. This story is celebrating it’s 50th anniversary this year. The Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats is a classic wintertime story. These changes include melting and turning to fog only to return as snow again the next winter just in time to build a new snowman friend. Making a Friend by Alison McGhee tells of the changes a snowman deals with as the weather warms. I love when the pictures and your imagination have to create the story. A sled is left outside a cabin where some creatures borrow it to go exploring in the snow. Red Sled by Lita Judge is such a cute almost wordless book. By the way, did you see that you can now follow me on Pinterest? Just click the little red button on the right side of my home page. Oh, and a bonus snowman bookmark idea that I originally saw on Pinterest. ![]() Some are classics and some are new-found reads. Here are a few of my favorite fiction and non-fiction snow titles. I guess I’ll just have to read some books about snow to tide me over and help me dream of a winter wonderland. ![]() Ah, it’s January and here in our part of the Midwest we have yet to see a significant snow. ![]()
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