December 29 – National Tick Tock Day

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About the Holiday

As the year winds down Tick Tock Day reminds us of the passage of time and encourages us to examine our life and find opportunities to accomplish the things we really want to. While a day only has 24 hours, a little creative scheduling, letting go of those tasks that aren’t so important, and even saying “no,” can help us achieve the things that matter.

Ticktock Banneker’s Clock

Written by Shana Keller | Illustrated by David C. Gardner

 

With winter approaching Benjamin Banneker has finished up his autumn chores and is looking forward to time to indulge his creative dreams. He finds his favorite spot under the chestnut tree—the place where during the summer he plays his violin and flute, “blending his soft music with the bird’s songs”—and pulls out a pocket watch he has borrowed from a gentleman. Benjamin is fascinated by the ticking and the movement of the small hands. He carefully opens the back of the watch and discovers “a world of wonderful whirls. There were gears of all shapes and sizes. Such a tiny maze!”

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Image copyright David C. Gardner, courtesy of flyingdogstudio.com

The miniature timepiece is mesmerizing, but Benjamin’s mind holds a challenge—a big challenge. He envisions a large clock, one that chimes to tell the time. Remembering his math skills, Benjamin mulls over the scale needed to turn “something small into something big.” As the snow falls, Benjamin goes to work. First, he dismantles the pocket watch and draws careful diagrams of the gears and workings. Then he begins transposing these into larger drawings.

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-ticktock-banneker's-clock-flute

Image copyright David C. Gardner, courtesy of flyingdogstudio.com

With the coming of spring and his drawings finished, Benjamin plans how he will build his clock. While the little pocket watch is made of metal, that material is much too expensive for a large version. As he ponders the problem under his favorite tree, Benjamin looks around him. Suddenly he knows! The answer is “right in front of him, even in his hands! The very instrument he played was made of wood!” There is a forest of trees on his farm, and this material is free.

During the summer between farm chores, Benjamin uses “every spare moment he had to find the perfect pieces of wood.” Once he has enough he begins to convert his drawings into carvings, whittling the gears and other pieces he will need. Soon, however, he becomes discouraged. The wood begins to split and come apart. Benjamin thinks about how his family cures tobacco leaves—drying them out until all the moisture evaporates. Perhaps, he thinks, he can do the same with wood to make it stronger. The process would take months, but Benjamin is patient.

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Image copyright David C. Gardner, courtesy of flyingdogstudio.com

Winter has come around again, and the wood is finally ready. In his warm house Benjamin sets about carving again. During the day he carves near the sunny window, and at night he works by candlelight. At last he has all the parts he needs to build his clock. Gears, wheels, tiny pins, and the boards that will become the case are scattered across Benjamin’s work table. There is only one piece missing. A piece that cannot be made of wood—the bell!

Benjamin buys a bell from a metalsmith, and back home begins to build his clock. With his drawings to guide him, he fits the gears together and then sets the hands to “match up perfectly with the second, minute, and hour of each day. It took more than one try, but Benjamin had learned to be patient.” Using the sun to determine the correct time, Benjamin positions the hands and steps back. His clock works! “The little iron bell chimed every hour, on the dot, for the next forty years.” Benjamin becomes famous, and neighbors from near and far come “to see his amazing invention.”  

An Author’s Note expanding on Benjamin Banneker’s life and work follows the text.

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-ticktock-banneker's-clock-winter

Image copyright David C. Gardner, courtesy of flyingdogstudio.com

With lyrical language that glides as smoothly as a well-oiled timepiece, Shana Keller reveals the remarkable story of Benjamin Banneker, born free during the time of slavery, who possessed exceptional math and scientific skills and used them to help his friends and neighbors and to make real his vision of a striking clock. Keller’s detailed and descriptive storytelling animates this life story, allowing readers to take the journey with Banneker as he experiences excitement, setbacks, and ultimately success. Banneker, embodying determination, persistence, and creativity, is an excellent role model for kids with big dreams of their own.

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-ticktock-banneker's-clock-studying-fall-chores

Image copyright David C. Gardner, courtesy of flyingdogstudio.com

David C. Gardner’s lovely full-page and two-page-spread illustrations gloriously portray Benjamin Banneker’s farm and home as well as his dedicated commitment to building a striking clock despite—or perhaps spurred on by—the challenges he faced. Gardner’s detailed images set the biography firmly in its time period, letting children experience farm and home life in the 1750s. Banneker carries wooden buckets to feed the animals, tobacco leaves hang in a dry shed, a fire blazes in a large, open fireplace, and a candle flickers as Banneker whittles wheels and gears with his pocket knife. The realistic paintings that depict Banneker’s emotions as he imagines creating a large clock, overcomes obstacles, and studiously works on his drawings and carvings will inspire readers to attempt their own inventions—whatever they may be.

For any would-be inventors, history lovers, tinkerers, and science buffs, Ticktock Banneker’s Clock is a stirring biography that would make an inspirational addition to home, school and public libraries.

Ages 6 – 10

Sleeping Bear Press, 2016 | ISBN 978-1585369560

Learn more about Shana Keller and her work on her website!

Discover a portfolio of picture book art, fine art, animation, and videos by David C. Gardner on his website!

Tick Tock Day Activity

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-cuckoo-clock-coloring-page

Cuckoo Clock Coloring Page

 

The chirp of a cuckoo clock keeps you on time—or at least aware of the passing of time! If you like coloring, you’ll enjoy spending time with this printable Cuckoo Clock Coloring Page!

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-ticktock-banneker's-clock-cover

You can find Ticktock Banneker’s Clock at these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Books-a-Million

To support your local independent bookstore, order from

Bookshop | IndieBound

Picture Book Review

December 29 – National Tick Tock Day

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-the-noisy-click-shop-cover

About the Holiday

Tick tock. Tick tock. Do you hear it—that steady march of time counting down the hours until 2018 is just a memory? Are there things that you wanted to do this year that you just haven’t gotten to? No worries! There are three days left to finish that project, call that friend, get more organized, or whatever is niggling at the back of your mind. So get moving—but remember, there’s a whole new year coming up to fill with joy.

The Noisy Clock Shop

Written by Jean Horton Berg | Illustrated by Art Seiden

 

“Mr. Winky mended clocks. He took care of shabby clocks with dirty faces, poor old clocks with broken hands, and lazy clocks that wouldn’t run.” When the clocks were fixed, Mr. Winky wound them and waited for their owners to come back for them. Mr. Winky’s shop was alive with tickety-ticks, tick-tocks, cuckoo-cuckoos and even a tinkly song from the Swiss clock.

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Image copyright Art Seiden, 1950, text copyright Jean Horton Berg, 1950. Courtesy of Grosset & Dunlap/G&D Vintage, 2015.

One day when Mr. Winky was enjoying all the sounds in his shop, Mr. Glum dropped by to chat. But when he heard all ticks, tocks, bongs, and cuckoos of the various clocks, he stuck his fingers in his ears and said, “‘How can you stand this awful noise? I was going to visit with you awhile, but I can’t hear myself think!’” And he left the shop, “slamming the door behind him.”

Mr. Winky’s feelings were hurt and he tried to think of a clever comeback to say the next time he ran into Mr. Glum. But suddenly, amid all the ticks and tocks, bongs, and cuckoos, Mr. Winky couldn’t hear himself think either. He ran out of the shop. Outside on the sidewalk things seemed quieter. But as soon as he stepped off the curb, he heard the “squoonk” of a taxi cab, the “squeech” of brakes and the “clang-clang-clang” of the trolley.

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Image copyright Art Seiden, 1950, text copyright Jean Horton Berg, 1950. Courtesy of Grosset & Dunlap/G&D Vintage, 2015.

Mr. Winky decided he had to leave the city, so he went to the train station and boarded a train to the country. But even here he heard the crunch, crunch of the peanuts he was snacking on, the who-oooo-oooo of the train whistle, the clickety-clack of the wheels on the track and the “pickety-pick, pocket-pock” of the conductor punching tickets. This was just too much, so Mr. Winky got off at the next stop.

He found himself on a country road. There he found a farmhouse where he could spend the night. Before dinner he went out to the water pump, which squeaked as he washed his hands, and while the dinner was delicious, the clinking of utensils and clanking of plates made him run up to his room as soon as he was finished.

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Image copyright Art Seiden, 1950, text copyright Jean Horton Berg, 1950. Courtesy of Grosset & Dunlap/G&D Vintage, 2015.

The next morning, he took off for the woods and at first it was quiet, but then a squirrel began chattering, a crow caw-cawed, leaves and twigs rustled and snapped underneath his feet, and he even “ran smack into a big brown bear.” Mr. Winky turned around and ran out of the forest, past the farmhouse, and all the way to the train station, where he bought a return ticket to the city.

He hurried through the city,  where the “clang-clang” of the trolley, the “eeee-eeee-eeee” of the firetruck siren, the “squoonk” of the taxi horn filled the air, and rushed through the door of his shop. It was so good to be back. But something was wrong. Mr. Winky checked his workbench, opened the cash register, and felt for his eyeglasses, but everything was as it should be. Then he realized it was too quiet in the shop.

The clocks had all stopped ticking and tocking, cuckooing and tinkling because they hadn’t been wound. Mr. Winky couldn’t stand the silence. He set to work winding each clock. “Soon all the clocks began to talk,” and Mr. Winky was happy. “‘I dearly love a cheerful shop,’” he said. “‘And who wants to hear themselves think, anyhow?’”

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-the-noisy-click-shop-mr-glum

Image copyright Art Seiden, 1950, text copyright Jean Horton Berg, 1950. Courtesy of Grosset & Dunlap/G&D Vintage, 2015.

Jean Horton Berg’s classic tale has lost none of its power to enchant young readers even in this day of digital timepieces. Her story of discovering or rediscovering those things that make us happiest will resonate with kids and adults and awaken awareness of the people, objects, and work that bring the most joy. Berg’s fast-paced, humorous storytelling is filled with onomatopoeia that kids will love to echo, and Mr. Winky’s return to his beloved clock shop mirror’s a child’s happiness to come home after a day at school or out in the world.

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Image copyright Art Seiden, 1950, text copyright Jean Horton Berg, 1950. Courtesy of Grosset & Dunlap/G&D Vintage, 2015.

Children who may be unfamiliar with the intricate beauty and even quirky personalities of old-style clocks will be charmed and intrigued by Art Seiden’s spirited and detailed illustrations of Mr. Winky’s shop. As Mr. Winky escapes into the city and country, kids will discover plenty of familiar sights as well as some treasures of the past, such as a hand water pump and an electric trolley car. But the clocks are the stars and may inspire kids to learn more about these objects that needed their workings wound and hands turned and once stood in places of honor in nearly every home. The story may even spur a visit to a clock-repair shop—if one still exists in your neighborhood.

A timeless story that generates giggles as well as thought, this G & D Vintage reissue of the 1950’s favorite The Noisy Clock Shop makes for a fun story time at home or at school.

Ages 3 – 6

Grosset & Dunlap, G&D Vintage Edition, 2015 | ISBN 978-0448482163

National Tick Tock Day Activity

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-cuckoo-clock-coloring-page

Cuckoo Clock Coloring Page

 

The chirp of a cuckoo clock keeps you on time—or at least aware of the passing of time! Here’s a printable Cuckoo Clock Coloring Page for you to enjoy!

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-the-noisy-click-shop-cover

You can find The Noisy Clock Shop at these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Books-a-Million | IndieBound

Picture Book Review