Tag Archives: hospitality

Perfect Pairing Seeks Soup

It’s winter, here in North America, a season when I often cook soup for supper. But what do those without soup ingredients do? Perhaps, like creatures all over the world, they start with one simple ingredient.

Bone Button Borscht

Author: Aubrey Davis

Illustrator: Dušan Petričić

Publisher/Date: Kids Can Press/1995

Ages: 4-8

Themes: kindness, resourcefulness, Stone Soup, Judaism

Short Synopsis (from Goodreads):

On a dark winter’s night, a poor beggar arrives in town and wanders from house to house seeking food and shelter. But the townspeople–who don’t think they have anything to give–prove to be as cold as weather. Even the caretaker in the synagogue turns him away. Undaunted, the beggar removes five bone buttons from his threadbare coat and announces that he can make a delicious soup–enough to feed the whole town–with just one more button.

Read a review in The New York Times.

 

Quill Soup

Author: Alan Durant

Illustrator: Dale Blankenaar

Publisher/date: Tiny Owl Publishing/2019

Ages: 4-8

Themes: One Story Many Voices, animals, folk tale, generosity, hospitality

Short Synopsis (from Tiny Owl’s website):

Quill Soup is a witty tale about the benefits of sharing our resources, and opening our arms to strangers.

Noko, the porcupine, is very hungry. On arriving at a village, he asks the other animals for some food and shelter. But, despite their full bellies, all the animals say they have nothing to spare. Never mind: he’ll just have to make do and cook a pot of soup from the quills off his back – a soup so tasty even the king likes it. Once the villagers hear of his plan they offer just enough ingredients to make a soup worthy of them all…

This African version of Stone Soup celebrates generosity and kindness – and the message that we can all benefit if we share our resources. It’s part of our One Story, Many Voices series, which explores well-known tales told from different cultural perspectives.

Read my review.

I paired these books because they are both versions of the popular folktale, Stone Soup. Set in eastern Europe in winter, Bone Button Borscht features a beggar who needs one more bone button, a pot, and water to make soup in a village where none of the residents will feed him or bring him in from the cold and even the synagogue caretaker, the shamas, is wary of the stranger and unwilling to help, at first. Set somewhere in Africa, Quill Soup features a cast of animals who, like the villagers of Bone Button Borscht, are wary and unwilling to help a stranger, until he pulls a few quills from his own back to make soup fit for a king. I like how these stories differ in location and some particulars, but both further the message that kindness and sharing help everyone.

Looking for similar reads? Please share your favorite Stone Soup version in the comments.

 

PPBF – Quill Soup

Today for the last Perfect Picture Book post of 2019, I’m happy to share a new-in-2019 book that I picked up on a quick trip to London this fall. Enjoy & happy reading this holiday season! I look forward to sharing more Perfect Picture Books in 2020!

Title: Quill Soup

Written By: Alan Durant

Illustrated By: Dale Blankenaar

Publisher/Date: Tiny Owl Publishing/2019

Suitable for Ages: 4-8

Themes/Topics: #OneStoryManyVoices, animals, folk tales, generosity, hospitality

Opening:

Noko the porcupine was hungry and tired. He’d been travelling through the Valley of a Thousand Hills and hadn’t eaten for days. He saw a small village ahead and his spirits lifted.

“Food and shelter at last,” he thought.

Brief Synopsis:

When Noko the porcupine arrives tired and hungry in a village, none of the animals offer food to him, until he shows them how to share.

Links to Resources:

Why I Like this Book:

Set in a colorful, jungle-filled village in Africa and peopled with a variety of animals, Quill Soup is a delightful retelling of the classic tale of the stranger denied food who shows the villagers how everyone benefits when resources are pooled and shared.

With a brain “as sharp as the quills on his back”, hungry Noko, the porcupine, knew that the villagers had food they weren’t sharing. But how could he get some of it?

In the classic stone soup tale, of which Quill Soup is a variant, the stranger finds a stone to start a soup. Here, though, Noko gives of himself, literally pulling quills from his own back to start the soup. In addition, he tells the villagers that this quill soup is just like his Majesty the king likes it. Who could resist wanting to add to a soup that will be shared with the king? Certainly not these villagers!

You can probably guess how the soup, and the story, end. But I think you and your children will enjoy reading each page of the journey and discussing the issues raised, including what if feels like to be an outsider and a hungry stranger, and how by sharing everyone benefits.

Blankenaar’s colorful and highly-detailed illustrations are based on African art to complement the setting of the story. Young and old will enjoy searching for and counting the many animals within each spread.

A Note about Craft:

Quill Soup is part of Tiny Owl’s #OneStoryManyVoices series, that also includes Cinderella of the Nile.

Set in Africa, the main character, Noko the porcupine, is a stranger who gives of himself to show others how to share. By changing the characters to animals, Durant enables Noko to literally add part of himself to the soup. I love this added element to the basic “stone soup” story and the reminder of how newcomers enrich our society. I also love how Blankenaar highlights Noko’s otherness by portraying him in shades of gray and black, even as all of the other characters are so colorful.

Read an interview with Blankenaar and one with Durant to learn more about each of them and how they created this wonderful new retelling of a traditional African story.

This Perfect Picture Book entry is being added to Susanna Hill’s Perfect Picture Book list. Check out the other great picture books featured there!