The Rooster Crows A Book of American Rhymes and Jingles

by Maud Petersham

Hardcover, 1964

Status

Available

Publication

Macmillan (1964)

Description

A collection of traditional American nursery rhymes, finger games, skipping rhymes, jingles, and counting-out rhymes.

User reviews

LibraryThing member klc400
This book is an older book, but has a lot of fun rhymes and jingles in it. They are about farms and children in farms so it would be a lot of variety in it. If a child loves the outside then they might really be interested in this book.
LibraryThing member conuly
You can find room for another book of nursery rhymes.

Especially this one. The artwork is interesting, and not all of the rhymes are going to be familiar to you and your child.

Anybody looking for another rhyme to bounce a kid to or to recite or sing to shut them up, you can't spend a better $10 than
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on this book.
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LibraryThing member ShortyK
This is an old fashioned nursery rhyme book, but a little different than what I grew up with it was kind of fun to look for the differences. I could read it many times and pick up more and more
LibraryThing member fatlamb
Jingles and rhymes simply are not for me... The book does include a wonderful collection of rhymes and jingles, some that I have heard before but for the most part rhymes I have never heard of (I thought of them being very odd and random). I am surprised by the success of mother goose over the
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years but I see how young children are drawn to the rhymes (being able to memorize versus). I have no idea how this book is a Caldecott winner, illustrations are plain, simple and on the boring side of things. The illustrations do accompany and complement the text very well. Another problem with the illustrations is that it has been done before, very ordinary and cliche ridden images throughout the book. I believe this book lacks unity throughout the book, it just seems as if there were versus compiled and thrown together, no sense of flow. Young children can be drawn to Mother Goose due to the participation and response through out the rhymes.
Ages 4 -6.
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LibraryThing member Treeseed
I recently became Nana to my first little grandson, Oscar, and so I've had reason to dust off the old lullabies and nursery rhymes. I started making lists of all the old rhymes and the children's songs that I remembered from my own childhood. I then made recordings, in the end, of over 400 folk
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songs and nursery songs, every one of which I knew and could sing by the age of seven, thanks to my own beloved Nana. Oscar is part of a blended family and I discovered that his five year old sister, Gigi, barely knew any of them. This got me to thinking about the Americana and folk heritage that modern day kids may be missing out on. It made me remember some anthologies of nursery rhymes and folk songs that I had also enjoyed in my childhood. The first to come to mind was this beautiful book which contains lively illustrations of characters in period costume and a broad cross-section of American nursery rhymes and jingles.

The Rooster Crows: A Book of American Rhymes and Jingles was compiled by Maud Petersham. Maud and her husband artist Miska Petersham illustrated it and won the Caldecott Medal for it in 1946. The entry about the Petershams in Encyclopædia Britannica Online says that when Miska was away serving out his duty in WWII Maud would lie awake at night worrying about him and to help pass the time and fall asleep she would think of all the old rhymes and jingles she knew. She wrote them down and when Miska came home safe and sound they put this wonderful book together.

The book is broken down into sections as follows:
Rhymes and Jingles
Finger Games
Rope Skipping Rhymes
Counting-out Rhymes
Games
Yankee Doodle

Rhymes and Jingles has 57 different rhymes. Some of them are very familiar like,

Lady bug, lady bug,
Fly away home.
Your house is on fire,
Your children are gone.
All but one and her name is Anne,
And she crept under the pudding pan.

(We always said "frying pan" but there are regional differences.)

Others are not so well known like,

I came to a river and I couldn't get across,
Paid five dollars for an old blind hoss.
Wouldn't go ahead, nor he wouldn't stand still,
So he went up and down like an old sawmill.

or

Wake up, Jacob,
Day's a breakin'
Peas in the pot
An' hoecake a bakin'

(Now if you're really lucky you know how to make hoecakes and this can be a fun activity for you to share with your little one.)

What I like about these silly, often plain old rhymes is that they have been spoken, enjoyed and repeated by the long thread of humanity that makes us who we are. They come from a time when we had to make our own entertainment. They're organic and honest and simple. Many of them go along with hand motions or have melodies or dance steps. What I like about this book is that it preserves them and does so out of a genuine love for them and a fundamental understanding of their great value. The art of the Petershams is perfect for these classics because they make an effort to take us back to the birthplaces and times of these rhymes and they show people acting out the images the rhymes bring to mind. The characters are wearing quaint period clothing and are involved in the everyday activities of the bygone era when these rhymes and jingles and songs were popular. Maud and Miska really have the knack of taking us back to our childhood and the country's childhood.

The Finger Games section has only five little games of the type most of us might best remember from the one that starts out,

Here is the church, Here is the steeple.

Each little finger game shows small drawings of a hand forming the shapes that match with the lines of the rhyme.

The Rope Skipping Rhymes section only has four rhymes and since I was a big rope-skipper back in the day I was disappointed not to find more in this section but it does include the beloved

Teddy bear, teddy bear turn around.
Teddy bear, teddy bear touch the ground...etcetera...that I remember from the playgrounds of my past.

There are several rhyming games including one that has all the verses to the folk song Oats, Peas, Beans and Barley Grow. The last section contains all the verses of Yankee Doodle most of which aren't well known and it can be appreciated for the slice of American history that it truly is. It is a part of their heritage that American children in particular ought to be taught as their emotional due, their entitlement for being born a part of this cultural crazy quilt.

The illustrations are so wonderful they practically stand alone. They convey such activity and interest and life! The Petershams worked together easily on their projects because one was right handed and one was left handed and they could draw on the same piece without conflicting with each other. Their personal chemistry surely worked because their vision is always true and apt and takes us where they want us to go along the path of Memory Lane. Their style conveys hints of art nouveau with curvilinear designs from nature but this is a subtle underpinning and it is really characterized by folksy detail and humor and action. There are many full color illustrations but most are two color or three color prints. This book was published in 1945 but it features mostly characters from Colonial, Revolutionary War Era and Frontier America.

I love this book because of the memories it rekindles. The children to whom I have read it seem to love it as much as I ever did, but the rhymes have to be sung and acted out for them the way they were when they were originally experienced or they might not be as much fun. This book is designed to be utilized rather than simply read to a child. The illustrations are wonderful to pour over with a child and they can be a nice bridge to history.

I urge you to find a copy of this book which is available in hard cover and paperback and treat yourself to some sweet nostalgia. Read it to a child and preserve a legacy.

Don't miss other books illustrated by Maud and Miska Petersham. Here are a few of the many still available. The Internet is full of lots more that are out of print.

Carl Sandburg's Rootabaga Stories
Margery Clark's The Poppy Seed Cakes
The Christ Child (a gorgeous retelling of the Christmas Story)
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LibraryThing member scote23
This is the other of the Caldecott Medal books that I've read so far that I didn't really enjoy. The rhymes are very old-fashioned, and some of them don't even make sense any more.
LibraryThing member Phill242
Caldecott winner, 1946.
short poems, rhymes, jingles about historical american life.
LibraryThing member scote23
This is the other of the Caldecott Medal books that I've read so far that I didn't really enjoy. The rhymes are very old-fashioned, and some of them don't even make sense any more.
LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
It'll be interesting to see what I think, compared to other reviewers' reactions. I'm especially intrigued by the fact that some readers focus on it being cute, while others say that some selections are weird, creepy, or nonsensical. Well, hmm. Isn't a lot of traditional folklore weird, creepy, or
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nonsensical?

Rock-a-bye baby... Hansel and Gretel... Santa delivering billions of presents in one night... I've never seen a Purple Cow... I see London; I see France.... feel free to add verses and chants from your own childhood memories....

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Ok, now I've read it. And thoroughly enjoyed it. I didn't find it weird or creepy at all. Well, at least compared to many of the rhymes of Mother Goose or the stories from Grimm. I found it, simply put, a wonderful collection to add to an infant's library. Most children are gifted at least one collection of nursery rhymes, but more often than not they're very English. This is American, thank you.

Many of these rhymes are familiar, some I knew but have forgotten. And some were brand-new to me and I wish I'd known them when my sons were little. We would have loved, for example, this finger-game:

Here is the bee-hive,
Where are the bees?
Hiding away where nobody sees.
They are coming out now,
They are all alive.
One! Two! Three! Four! Five!

This rhyme is illustrated so the reader understands to start with a fist, end with a fully open hand. Unfortunately, not all games are explained, so the book is not as valuable as it could be. Still highly recommended, especially to young families. Perhaps one could use the internet to find the instructions for some of the games.
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LibraryThing member BookConcierge
The subtitle is: A Book of American Rhymes and Jingles. And that’s what it is, a collection of rhymes and jingles. Most were familiar to me from my childhood. There really is no story arc, though there is some effort to group them by categories, e.g. jokes/riddles. I’m not sure I would have sat
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still to have this read to me even as a young child.

The illustrations are wonderful, however. Very detailed and clearly support the rhymes and jingles. So 2 stars for that.
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Awards

Caldecott Medal (Medal Winner — 1946)

Original publication date

1945

Barcode

106

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