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Reading Rockets' children's literature expert, Maria Salvadore, brings you into her world as she explores the best ways to use kids' books both inside — and outside — of the classroom.

The real deal?

August 23, 2007

Great drama is often created by the emotional tug of an engaging character, with a bit of conflict and tension added to the mix.

But a polar bear and a walrus?

A recent G-rated film called Arctic Tale (Paramount/National Geographic) filmed animals over a period of time and put them together to present a polar bear and a walrus family. Fact has been manipulated — with a powerful and breathtaking result.

That seems to bother some critics who don't like the fact that the film's stars and their relatives are really composites. But for me, this doesn't diminish the drama of the animals' saga.

Just like the companion book of the same title, stunning photographs and a lucid text are ideal to share with younger children either before or after or even without the movie. It's not just the book's photographs that tell the story, but a strong narrative from which drama emerges.

For purists who want a totally real as well as totally engaging and quite dramatic book about the furry Arctic behemoths, try Face to Face with Polar Bears by Norbert Rosing (National Geographic). The photographer and his wife share their experiences while in the Arctic, again with riveting narration and stunning photographs.

Maybe drama is drama, whether it's all "real" or fictionalized or a combination. Maybe that's what stays after the book is closed or the screen is dark: the vicarious experience of places and feelings otherwise unreachable.

Who knows? One day, the emotional impact of the "imagined" may lead to experiences that are very real.

 

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About Maria

Maria Salvadore
Washington, DC
Maria is an adjunct faculty member at the University of Maryland, reviewer for School Library Journal and Capitol Choices, and former member of the American Library Association's Notable Children's Book Committee.
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