A Time to Keep

Earlier this week, I posted a photo on social media of a page from my favorite picture books, Tasha Tudor’s “A Time to Keep: The Tasha Tudor Book of Holidays.” I’ve revisited this book more times than I can count and when I opened it earlier this week to look at the February section, I was immediately pulled back in.

Tasha Tudor takes readers through the year, month by month. She makes the ordinary beautiful, special, and memorable. As a small child, I dreamed of climbing inside those pages, helping to make maple syrup, playing with the corgis, putting on plays in the carriage house, making candles for the upcoming year.

What I didn’t realize when I read this book when I was small, is that I learned from these pages that there is beauty in our own special traditions. They don’t have to be fancy or expensive; they just have to be meaningful to us. Celebrating these things as a family make us look forward to them.

While my family’s traditions look different than the ones in Tasha Tudor’s beautiful illustrations, I realize how important those rituals are to my family. I realize now that the way we talk about the year ahead and what we look forward to, stems from that book. Not that we are imitating what we see in the book, but rather that we look forward to our own traditions and how we make them special. I learned the value of tradition from those pages.

While I wouldn’t trade our traditions for someone else’s, I would still love to climb into that book and experience Tasha Tudor’s world. If you haven’t read this beautiful picture book, please check it out. It is honestly the most beautiful illustrations of family tradition (and if someone can figure out how to make a lit birthday cake float down a river like it does in the book, please share because I think I need to add that tradition).

“Candle Island”

Lauren Wolk’s new book, “Candle Island,” came up on my suggested for you page on instagram. I saw the cover picture…New England island (always a favorite story setting) and that it was written by Wolk (Newbery Award winner), and immediately requested a copy at the library.

Lucretia Sanderson and her mother move to Candle Island, Maine to escape memories of the horrific car accident that took her father and to find privacy. Lucretia’s mother is a famous artist who does not give interviews and keeps everything about her art very private.

Candle Island, a summer vacation spot, is filled with an entertaining cast of characters from the very privileged summer visitors to a mysterious boy with a magical voice, a family who owns a bell making foundry and an assortment of interesting island residents.

Upon arriving at their new home, Lucretia finds a secret room that holds even more secrets and connects her to the previous residents in an unusual way. While finding her place on the island and finding that some enemies turn out to be really good friends, Lucretia realizes she needs to address her own secrets.

I’ve read a lot of books and while I was excited to read this book, I didn’t expect to find a new favorite. This is one of my top 10 books. I can’t recommend it enough. I would put Lauren Wolk’s “Candle Island” up there with all my favorite Kate DiCamillo books and E.B. White books. It is so well written with just the right amount of scene building, characters who change and develop through the story, and a beautiful depiction of the complicate web of relationships on a small island. Definitely check out this story and join Lucretia and her mother as they make Candle Island their new home.