APA Reference: Freeman, D. (1968). Corduroy. New York, NY: Scholastic Inc.
Impressions: I am not really sure when and where this book was picked up for my sons book collection but it is one of our most loved favorites. It is most definitely a good go to bed time story that both my son and I enjoy. Corduroy shows kids how important friends can be. It is so sweet how much the little girl loves the teddy bear with the missing button. She loves him so much that she fixes his overalls, gives him a home, and someone to call a friend. I really like how the little girl goes back and buys the bear with her own money. This shows kids the importance of buying things with their own money and how when they do it means so much more to them. The book is well illustrated with simple pictures that coordinate well with the story and help the reader understand the story.
Professional Review:
Top 100 Picture Books #22: Corduroy by Donald Freeman
JUNE 11, 2012 BY
#22 Corduroy by Donald Freeman (1976)
64 points
64 points
A classic that never grows old. – Jennifer Wharton
The kids want a puppy this summer. Selected name is Corduroy. Enough said. – Angela Gillette
I have a theory regarding this bear. Why do we all find him so cute? One word: Overalls. Overalls are adorable, and not just in a Dexy’s Midnight Runners kind of way.
The publisher’s description of the plot reads, “Corduroy has been on the department store shelf for a long time. Yet as soon as Lisa sees him, she knows that he’s the bear she’s always wanted. Her mother, though, thinks he’s a little shopworn-he’s even missing a button! Still, Corduroy knows that with a bit of work, he can tidy himself up and be just the bear for Lisa. And where better to start than with a quick search through the department store for a new button!”
If you want to know the background behind this story there’s a wonderful page on Freeman’s website. Said Freeman himself of the book, “Of course I can’t remember exactly how it started, but I do recall wanting to do a story about a department store in which a character wanders around at night after the doors close. Then I also wanted the story to show the vast difference between the luxury of a department store [and] the simple life [most people live].” I find that fascinating. An examination of class in a subtle fashion within the pages of a seemingly simple book.
One of the other things I love about Corduroy’s creator is how he came to become an artist in the first place. From the man’s biography on that same website: “Freeman supported himself by working as a dance band musician at night, playing the trumpet in nightclubs and at wedding receptions. One night, on his way home from work, Freeman lost his trumpet on the subway. After that incident he decided it was time to concentrate on making a living from his sketches.” How does one lose a trumpet on the subway, exactly? And is Freeman’s trumpet still squirreled away somewhere in the deep dark recesses of the New York Metro Transit’s lost and found?
By the way, remember our discussion of Kay Thompson who wrote the Eloise books? Don dida sketch of her once. Whoo boy.
One of the notable things about this book is that the little girl Corduroy ends up with isn’t white, a fact that doesn’t garner a lot of discussion. Originally written in 1976, this wasn’t necessarily groundbreaking, but it was rare enough to stand out in the field. It’s something I’ve always respected about this story, even if the both didn’t cross my path very often as a kid.
FYI, Don Freeman’s website? Awesome. Now there’s a site I wouldn’t mind emulating. The man is dead and he STILL has a blog! Okay, fine. His son Roy runs it. But it’s pretty darn amazing. You can also follow this link to a podcast Roy gave to Susan Raab at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair in March 2009 about Don, Corduroy, and various other Freeman-related matters.
Corduroy did get his own movie. There’s an old filmstrip my library would show every once in a while that was a terribly frightening combination of puppet and full-sized dude in Corduroy costume on a set built to make him look small. And yes, part of it at least is available on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4oQ6W_Tr6A&feature=embed
Was there an animated Saturday morning cartoon show? In a word: Duh.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29ExIdvXwY0&feature=embed
Bird, E. (2012, June 11). Top 100 Picture Books #22: Corduroy by Donald Freeman [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://blogs.slj.com/afuse8production/2012/06/11/top-100-picture-books-22-corduroy-by-donald-freeman/
Library Uses: This book could be used in a library as a part of a lesson about friendship. It could also be used as a lead into a sensory lesson that had to do with feel.
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