
Storytelling Radio Program
KSVY-FM 91.3, Sonoma, CA
www.ksvy.org/home.htm
Sundays, 5-6 pm Pacific time (adjust for your time zone)
Live audio streaming: Go to the KSVY website above. In the upper right-hand corner, click on High or Low Speed and find yourself listening to the program in progress.
Archives: Go to the KSVY website above. Click on "Shows" in the left frame. Scroll down and click on "Story-Lovers World," then click on "Past Episodes" over my picture. Now you have your choice of all the programs available to date as archives.
Theme music: Special thanks to Petra Koch in Germany (she works with Storyteller Richard Martin), who performed the beautifully haunting alto recorder music of Como Podem from the 13th century collection Cantigas de Santa Maria (copy of Kynsecker, Mollenhauer & Co.). The different music at the end of the programs is also by Petra. Used on this program with her kind permission.
Engineer: Brodie Giles, KSVY radio station 91.3 FM
PROGRAM 27: April 1, 2007
The Feminine Spirit!
Featured storytellers:
Jackie Baldwin (California)
The Lute Player
Cathryn Fairlee (California)
Buryonka
Glenda Bonin (Arizona)
Motorcycle Mama
Cris Reidel (New York)
Clever Manka
Laurie Pines (California)
The Cat and Her Strong Friends
Connie Regan-Blake (North Carolina)
Rag Doll
Bob Reiser (New York)
An Insecure Flower
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Guest tellers...
• Jackie Baldwin — The Lute Player
More information:
Winner of the 2006 National Storytelling Network's Oracle Award for Distinguished National Service
Recipient of a 2006 NSN grant for scholarly research in the field of storytelling
Story-Lovers http://www.story-lovers.com
SOS: Searching Out Stories http://www.story-lovers.com/listsofstories.html
About Story-Lovers and Jackie: http://www.story-lovers.com/jackie.html
What Others Have to Say: http://www.story-lovers.com/testimonials.html
New Book: An Enchanted Garden of Seeds and Stories!
http://www.story-lovers.com/seedsandstories.html
New Collection of Public Domain Stories and Illustrations: Come Sit on Grandma's Knee!
http://www.story-lovers.com/grandmasknee.html
Board member of Storytelling Association of Alta, California (S.A.A.C.)
Board member of the Bay Area Independent Publishers Association (BAIPA)
Producer of Teller-to-Teller, S.F. Bay Area regional sharing events for professional storytellers
Producer and host of Story-Lovers World!, a weekly radio storytelling program on KSVY 91.3, Sonoma
Contact Jackie at:
P.O. Box 446, Sonoma, CA 95476
707-996-1996
jackie@story-lovers.com
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• Cathryn Fairlee — Buryonka
Once Upon a Story...
In the high and far off times...
There was a bard, a minstrel, a storyteller named Cathryn Fairlee.
She traveled the globe gathering myths, legends, folk & fairy tales directly from the folk.
For the past twenty years she has delighted and enlightened adults and children with these amazing tales.
Taste the wisdom treasured for hundreds and thousands of years, kept fresh by grandparent telling grandchild, storyteller telling village.
Cathryn is available to perform, speak or teach at festivals, libraries, conferences, schools, events, large or small.
"To speak is to sow. To listen is to reap." - Turkish Proverb
Once Upon a Biography...
Just the facts:
• Performed nationally and internationally as a storyteller since 1982
• Thirteen years as a Middle School Librarian
• Taught storytelling workshops to students and adults
• Founding member of The Storytellers Guild of Sonoma County
• Produced and hosted Story Swap on public radio for 3 years
• Wrote and recieved community grants for teaching storytelling
• Organized 2 years of free storytelling at Santa Rosa Farmers Market
• Board member of Storytelling Association of Alta California
• Guest editor of SAAC newsletter, Storyline
• Received Pegasus Award for her story recording, Cathryn Tells All
• Currently working on a Master's Degree in Oral History
• For a list of her recent performances, see her Tour Schedule page...
The Legend of Cathryn*Tells*All
Once upon a time, little Cathryn, a fifth generation Californian, was born. She was raised by her parents,the king and queen, in the mysterious foggy redwoods of Mendocino County. The king liked to sing and perform and the queen liked to write and found humor in everything. The whole family, including an annoying little sister, Princess Red, and a pesty little brother, Prince Blue, loved to travel and so Cathryn learned to enjoy these things too.
Cathryn grew up and left her foggy kingdom to battle dragons at San Jose State University and went on a quest to China to study dragons close up. Then she returned to conquer a degree in the History of Art. One day, her magic carpet was whisked up by a tornado and after much twirling, Cathryn landed in the romantic wine country of Healdsburg, the town where she was born. "There is no place like home..."
One day, Cathryn said, "When I grow up, I want to be a storyteller." Then a Handsome Prince appeared and said, "You don't have to grow up, my dear. You can tell stories until you are 99 and never grow up!" Naturally, Cathryn fell in love with him. Together, they fly around the world on their magic carpet sharing stories.
Like all good legends, this one has a happy ending. Cathryn still collects and tells tales polished by centuries of telling. She performs at festivals, conferences, private parties, schools, libraries, senior centers and cemeteries and leaves her audiences listening happily ever after. And she still has no intention of growing up.
CD available (another coming soon!):
Cathryn Tells All
Traditional tales from around the world - for listeners age 7 to 107.
This recording won the Pegasus Award for inspiring student tellers!
Stories:
Ali Cogia (Arabian), a young boy judges a difficult case; Lion's Whisker (Ethiopian), a young stepmother learns patience; The Cave (Sioux), an old woman beads a buffalo robe; Perfect Dragon (Chinese), the emperor finds perfection; Hexed (Southern US), three boys brave the swamp; Wise Woman (Mexican), a greedy priest is foiled; Headly Koo (English), a cheerful old woman makes an unusual friend.
Order at:
http://www.sonic.net/~cfair/recordings.html
Contact Cathryn at:
http://www.sonic.net/~cfair/
cfair@monitor.net
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• Glenda Bonin - Motorcycle Mama
As a storyteller, story teacher, performer and workshop presenter for more than twenty-five years, I love what I do! My experience includes work with grades K through 12, college classes, library programs and community events. My storytelling includes puppetry, magic, theatre arts and creative writing activities. All programs are tailored to meet the needs and interests of each group. Fees vary and are determined on a per job basis, taking venue, anticipated audience size, program length and number of performances into consideration.
From 2006 through 2008, I will be expanding my touring schedule to include more western states, the Midwest and a few eastern areas of the country. This means that schools and libraries can enjoy a significant savings because travel expenses are never added to my program fees when I am on tour. You might want to check my schedule to see if the tour route will take me to or through your neck of the woods.
I am listed as a performer on the following rosters: Alaska Council on the Arts; Arizona Commission on the Arts; Nevada Council on the Arts; North Dakota Council on the Arts; San Diego City Elementary Schools Preferred Performer List; Tucson-Pima Arts Council/Southern Arizona Artist Directory; Western States Arts Federation (WESTAF) Arts Register.
This year, Glenda was honored to be selected as one of the "Western Showcase" Storytellers for the 17th annual TIMPANOGOS STORYTELLING FESTIVAL, August 31 - September 2.
For more information about this exciting, regional event:
http://www.timpfest.org/
Don't miss getting your copy of "Family Gazette." Stories about Life in the West by Glenda Bonin
A collection of tales about Norwegian homesteaders, a German fiddle player, a singing cowboy, and memories about growing up in Wyoming in the 1940s.
STORIES
• Setting Liberty Free
• Grandpa Al and Max
• My Father Was a Singing Cowboy
• Buddy and the Bear
• Motorcycle Momma
Available in CD and cassette formats.
What Folks Have to Say about Glenda's CD:
"On a recent long distance car trip, my daughters (9 year old twins) asked that we bring along the 'storytelling one' CD. Great idea. They are mesmerized whenever they listen to it. Forty-five minutes, and not a peep out of them. They, and I, want more."
Orthopedic Physician
Tucson, AZ
"She reminds me to look for the simple things for stories. . . . There is a 'quiet charm' that is very appealing. Also, the stories have a wide age range in interest."
Retired Librarian
Mesa Community College
Click here now to order a copy of Glenda’s CD.
The cost for the CD is just $15, and includes shipping and handling.
If you would like to have this collection of stories in cassette format, contact Glenda toll-free at 1-888-252-3033 to place your order. (The cassette is $10, and includes shipping and handling.)
Contact Glenda at:
glenda@storyworksgroup.com
http://www.storyworksgroup.com/
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• Cris Reidel — Clever Manka
When Cris Riedel tells stories, folks love to listen.
She says, "Everyone wants to hear stories. Stories make us - and keep us - human. It's more and more important for us to understand and appreciate others. Stories connect all people to each other, and to the past, and to future people, relationships all coming from the shared experience of a story."
About Cris
"She should be in every school in the state."—Kevin Eberle, principal, West Seneca High School, West Seneca, New York
Cris tells stories everywhere she can: schools, libraries, museums, festivals, for instance:
• Burchfield Penney Art Gallery in Buffalo, NY;
• Borders Books and Records (Amherst, NY);
• Rainbow Junction Day Care (Penn Yan, NY);
• Buffalo Museum of Science;
• schools and public libraries all over western New York.
Her workshops have been offered at:
• the Chautauqua Institution,
• Sharing the Fire 2005 (League for the Advancement of North East Storytelling)
• the Fredonia Storytelling Festival;
• the New York State Association for the Education of Young Children,
• Library Development Day for Genesee Valley BOCES School Library System.
She is also a guest speaker for children's literature classes at Genesee Community College.
Cris has been telling stories professionally for more than ten years. She performs for audiences of all ages, sharing her enthusiasm for story. Listeners explore with imagination and find the joy in this ancient art form. Her workshops allow new tellers to begin performing easily, and encourage experienced tellers to expand their abilities and skills. The material is aligned to each group's particular needs and concerns.
Cris holds an MFA in acting, and spent ten years in New York City pursuing that profession. Three tours in children's theater lead easily to storytelling. She also holds an MLS, and currently is an elementary school librarian. She received a Special Opportunities Stipend from the New York State Council on the Arts in 2002.
"Cris' presence is very strong… Her sense of timing is excellent."—Janice Booth, former executive director, Young Audiences of Western New York
Programs
"How wonderfully the story comes alive when you tell it!"—Ann Klos, First Baptist Church of Penfield
Round the World on a Story
Travel around the globe to eight spots, stopping in for a tale.
Women Can!
A folkloric response to 18th century male beliefs of women's shortcomings.
Native Northeast
Stories from the Native American nations in the northeast woodlands area: Seneca, Anishinabe, Abenaki.
New York Folk
New York State is full of stories.
Tsalgi Celebration
A collection of stories from Cris's own folks, the Cherokee.
PERSON to PEOPLE Cris's program of stories from around the world is now available on CD. To order your copy for $17.00, email me. Check, money order, or PayPal are all accepted.
Cris will tailor a program to your special request. Please allow eight weeks' notice.
Also offered each year are programs relating to the New York State Summer Reading theme 2005: Tune in @ Your Library!
"I wish you could come and tell us stories for the rest of the year… "
—Amy, grade 3
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Contact Cris at:
cris@storiesconnect.com
http://www.storiesconnect.com/index.html
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• Laurie Pines — The Cat and Her Strong Friends
Laurie has been telling stories to seniors, adults, juniors, sophomores and freshmen throughout the San Francisco Bay and Washington, DC areas for over 10 years. Her stories often transport her audiences to foreign lands, through near-by histories, and along winding roads that twist and turn.
Laurie has a BA in Mathematics (junior year Florence, Italy), MA in Mathematical Education and supplemental teaching certification in drama. She went directly from university into the Peace Corps, where she served two terms, the first in the Philippines and the second in Tanzania, East Africa.
Upon returning to the US, Laurie was tricked, by her mother, to enter the quickly emerging computer science industry where she worked for 24 years for computer manufactures on both coasts. It was at the end of this career that she discovered the art of storytelling…and became a high school teacher of mathematics, where she found an enthusiastic and ready audience both for her love of mathematics and her love of stories.
During the academic year, 2002-2003, Laurie was awarded an Albert Einstein Distinguished EducatorsFellowship. As an Einstein Fellow she worked full-time in the US Senate on education legislation and part-time in storytelling and theater set design. Currently, Laurie is teaching mathematics at Homestead High School in Cupertino, CA.
Laurie is currently the Chair of the Storytelling Association of Alta California, SAAC, an organization with the mission to support and spread the art of storytelling within northern California and beyond.
Laurie has produced 2 CDs: Stories for All Occasions and Ancient Tales in Modern Times. They are both available by emailing Laurie at:
lpines@att.net.
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• Connie Regan-Blake — Rag Doll
Connie is a nationally acclaimed storyteller, keynote presenter, workshop leader, recording artist, featured festival performer and consultant.
"Storytelling is alive and well, primarily because of Connie Regan-Blake." -ABC's Good Morning America.
One of America's most celebrated storytellers, Connie has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people around the globe with her powerful performances and workshops. Entertaining audiences in 47 states and 14 countries, she brings the wisdom, humor and drama of stories to main stage, schools, libraries and into the corporate world.
Both as a solo artist and a member of the acclaimed Folktellers duo, Connie has been featured on seven award-winning recordings, five audio and two videos produced by PBS. New Age Magazine, School Library Journal, and Southern Living have praised her work. She has been a guest on NPR's All Things Considered, ABC Good Morning America and CNN. Find out more. . .
http://www.storywindow.com/bio.htm
PERFORMANCES:
Connie tours nationally with her storytelling, performing for schools and libraries, corporate events, main stage, festivals and conferences. She also tours and performs for classical music venues with the famed Kandinski Trio.
To arrange for her to come to your community and for information on fees and availability: contact
http://www.storywindow.com/contact.htm
Also check out Connie's calendar for upcoming tours to your area.
http://www.storywindow.com/calendar.htm
WORKSHOPS:
As a storytelling workshop leader, Connie welcomes participants from all walks of life - teachers, attorneys, poets, ministers, marketing executives, librarians - all those who would like to enrich their professional and personal lives by telling stories.
From a one hour seminar for teachers & librarians to a weekend storytelling workshop.
RECORDINGS:
Connie has 6 award-winning audio and video recordings, including her groundbreaking collaboration with storytelling and classical music.
Her newest CD has just been released!
Dive Into Stories: A Telling Performance
It is a live performance, for family listening, of true-life stories & traditional tales with humor & heart. Included are two bonus tracks from the National Storytelling Festival. Listen to an audio clip of The Foolish Bet (Just click on 'Audio Clip' at the top of this page.)
Connie has also recently released
Stories for the Road & to Grow On. It is a classic Folkteller collection of Appalachian Mountain tales & more with Barbara Freeman who was Connie's storytelling partner for 20 years. The recording is perfect for a rainy afternoon or family travels in the car. It is for all ages to enjoy.
SELECTED PERFORMANCES:
Glistening Waters Festival - New Zealand
Altoona (PA) City Schools
Piccolo Spoleto
Hoosier Storytelling Festival
American Bar Association
International Water Environment Federation
Oviedo (FL) Elementary Schools
Lucent Technologies
Smithsonian Institute
Louisiana Arts Council
Boston Public Library
Colorado Academy
Sidmouth International Folklore Festival - England
Philadelphia Free Library
Sandburg Children's Literature Institute
National Council of Teachers of English
Old Orchard Junior High School
Vanderbilt University
Conference of Southern College Health Care Professionals
AWARDS & ACHIEVEMENTS:
Lifetime Achievement Award
Connie Regan-Blake is receiving the illustrious Lifetime Achievement Award for dedicating her life to the art of storytelling and for demonstrating meritorious service to the National Storytelling Network, as well as to the community of storytellers at large. One of the first to bring storytelling to the national stage, Connie is recognized for raising public awareness of storytelling, preserving traditional art forms and for the significant originality of her life's work. National Storytelling Network 2006-2007
She has been recognized by The North Carolina Arts Council as a designee in 2006 for The Southern Artistry, an adjudicated, online registry of outstanding artists, performers and writers.
Connie has been uniquely honored at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, TN, as the only storyteller to be on main stage as a featured teller or emcee each year for its more than 30-year history.
She was one of the first to be inducted to the Circle of Excellence, a prestigious award honoring storytelling artists. She was also presented with the Distinguished National Service - Oracle Award for exemplary service and significant contributions to America's storytelling community.
Connie was named Performer of the Year, by the nation's oldest continuously operating folk festival and is Storyteller of the Year by the North Carolina Storytelling Guild.
Her recordings have been honored numerous times with the American Library Association Notable Recording Award, Parent's Choice Award and the Storytelling World Gold Award.
Connie was a Founding Member of the National Storytelling Association in 1973. She served for 10 years on the Board of Directors and was Artistic Director of the National Storytelling Festival.Regan-Blake has been designated as an ambassador for storytelling and a Teller In Residence at the International Storytelling Center, Jonesborough, TN.
Her most recent national accomplishment is co-writing and performing Tales of Appalachia: For Piano Trio and Storyteller. She collaborated with the Kandinsky Trio and composer Mike Reid to create 'The Cantankerous Blacksmith,' an original classical work, that continues to tour nationwide.
Contact Connie at:
connie@storywindow.com
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• Bob Reiser — An Insecure Flower
Bob is an expansive and joyous storyteller, teacher, and an award-winning author of books for children and adults. Accompanying himself with flute and drum, Bob brings warmth and wit to traditional and original stories. Recently his performing has been featured at New York's Clearwater Hudson River Festival, Rhode Island's Johnnycake Festival, and the annual National Storytelling Network Conference. McFarland Press listed him among the "120 best contemporary English-speaking Storytellers." Dr. Morgan Hill (Brother Blue) calls him a "force of nature."
My Story
Grandpa Abe: The First Family Raconteur
Born in April 1941, in Brooklyn, New York, I just missed being a baby-boomer. My parents were radicals while the rest of the country tiptoed through the conservative 1950s; I grew up Jewish while everyone on TV celebrated Christmas. I was too young to be a beatnik and too old to be a hippie. It was my perch from the outside that made the world look like a story.
Born to tell stories.
Mom and dad wanted me to be a doctor. But it was not to be. The world of stories beckoned! An M. A. in theater from NYU Drama School, a stint at Chicago's Second City Improvisational group, and comedy sketches for some forgotten TV shows finished my education. I even toured with my own comedy troupe, The Portable Radio Circus. In 1976, I settled into full-time writing, including collaboration on two books with folk singer and community-organizer Pete Seeger.
The turn to storytelling came in Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. Wandering around the square, I saw a hand-made "dream catcher" almost ten feet tall standing in front of a shop. Inside, the counter was covered with little clay figures of seated grandfathers and grandmothers with laps full of grandchildren; "storytellers" the proprietor called them. Then she told me how each winter, the elders come into homes with their stories. "Each day they sit with the family, close their eyes and dream the stories of long ago -- Stories of the sky and the earth and the spirits and the animals. The children grow quiet and listen; even the adults who have heard the stories listen." I ran outside and told my wife, "Sandy, when I grow old, I want to be a storyteller!" "Why wait until you are old?" she said - a sensible answer.
I began collecting stories; I began writing them. Finally I got up my courage and I began telling them, and fell in love with audiences as well. That was nine years ago. The love affair continues.
Excerpts from an interview with Bob:
Q. Bob, tell me a little bit about just your storyteller path, how you became a storyteller and what you do now as a storyteller.
A. Oh, great. That’s a question I love to answer because it’s a story. About 12 years ago, my wife and I were out west in Taos, NM, which is really a beautiful, beautiful area, and we were in the town of Taos, which is a traditional Native American place... The Indians live there and they don’t have electricity. They try to keep it very traditional for people who want to live that kind of a life. But they’ve got lots of shops there and boutiques, so I had seen from the sidewalk this enormous dreamcatcher. It must have been about 10 feet across. And it was like a beacon and pulled me into the store.
It was a little shop, it had no lights in it, and it was hard to see. And I started talking to the woman there about her dreamcatcher and she said that her husband had been working on it for years and it wasn’t for sale... I said, don’t worry, I didn’t want to buy it—there would be no way to get it home—and then I noticed that she had these little dolls, little play dolls, men or women seated with little children around them. I had been seeing them all over town, I saw them everywhere. And she said those were storytellers.
Now, I couldn’t imagine how that could be a storyteller because to me storytellers were people who entertained at children’s parties and they wore funny hats, so they just didn’t look like storytellers. But she said, 'No...in the winter, it’s very cold here and you don’t want the grandparents to freeze so we invite them into our houses to spend time with us and they’ll sleep on the sofa or we put out a bed for them in the dining room and they’re safe there, but they don’t want to just stay and do nothing for their keep, so they’ll spend the winter—or as long as they stay there—telling stories. And they’ll tell stories about where we came from, where the animals came from. They’ll tell stories for the children, and every evening the family will sit around as they tell all the old stories, and when they feel they have no more stories to tell, they’ll move on and stay with another family.'
I was so—tears were running down my face by the time she finished, because it was such a beautiful idea of what stories meant, and about a society where nobody was wasted, nobody was thrown away. And I walked out and my wife had been walking on the street. I said, 'You know, when I get old, I’m going to be a storyteller.' She said 'Well, you don’t have to wait until you’re old.' She doesn’t remember saying that, but I’m sure she did. And I said, 'Oh, no, I guess I don’t,' but it took about a year and a half after that that I finally got up the nerve to tell a story.
Q. How did you know what to do?
A Well, I didn’t, actually... I joined a local guild of storytellers—actually, what let me know that there was a whole world of storytellers out there was Storytelling Magazine that was available then at all the big book stores—and I said...there’s a whole lot of people doing this, and I found out there was a guild that met not too far from where we lived. But about a year later I was at an event, and I had still not told a story. Somebody said, 'Well, Bob, you keep telling us you’re a storyteller, so why don’t you tell a story? Well, I had been trying to get up nerve enough to do this for a long time, so I sat there and I...
The only thing I knew about telling stories was what the woman in the store had told me. She said, 'If you’ll notice on the dolls, their eyes are closed. That’s because they’re dreaming the story.' So I said to myself, okay, I’m going to close my eyes and I’m going to dream the story. So I closed my eyes and I started to tell the story of Jumping Mouse. And as I was telling the story, I heard it got very quiet and I still didn’t have the nerve to open my eyes and I kept watching the story with my closed eyes and telling what I saw, and then I opened my eyes about halfway through the story—I finally got my nerve—and people were staring and listening with an intensity... I’d never seen that and nobody ever listens to me that closely. What I was doing was—the main thing a storyteller has to do is to visualize the story, to see the story as you’re telling it. So I didn’t know any better, but I did the right thing.
Q. The story you’re going to tell us today is one you wrote yourself, so tell us about that. It’s called The Pumpkin’s Tale.
A. I had gotten a little program I was reviewing for a local newspaper, a little computer program for writing... to teach children how to write, creative writing, and so in this program there would be pictures instead of words. So instead of spelling out "apple" and typing it out, there would be a picture of an apple and they could just plug it into their story. So I started typing and I typed out, "There once was an…" and I looked over all the different pictures and saw a pumpkin and I plugged in the pumpkin and I kept writing... "who was in love with a…" and I looked over there and saw a carrot, so I plugged that in, "a pumpkin in love with a carrot" and from there on, I just let my imagination go and the story came out. It took about a year and several retellings of it and fooling around with it to polish it enough. You never know where you a story is going to come from….#####
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Bob's CDs and Books:
Foibles and Fiddlesticks
Whimsy and fun are not just for the under-nine-year-old set; oldsters over eleven years have a right to giggle too. The seven stories include Bob's signature pieces like The Pumpkin's Tale and The Swan Tenor as well as new stories like Petey and Delilah (told with Andrea Lovett). It is dedicated to Storytelling's Prince of Fables, Brother Blue.
Chopped Herring and Other Brooklyn Tales
A storytelling version of an old photo album, includes six stories that conjure up the smells, sounds and indigestible foods of growing up in 1940s Brooklyn . Bob invites listeners to join Captain Midnight, Superman and Izzie the appetizing king to share his Child's Garden of Flatbush .
Children's Books
David Get His Drum
Published by Marshall Cavendish Co. Co-written with Jazz Great, the late Panama Francis and illustrated by award-winning artist, Eric Velasquez. This is a story about a child learning to understand the magic that flows from his heart and hands - The magic of music.
As Panama Francis said, "I am a drummer man. For seventy years I have beat out that dancing sound for people to hear... Every time I see folks smile and tap their feet to the rhythm, I feel as happy as I did on the day I first beat a pair of sticks on an old tin can."
http://bobtales.com/catalog/
Contact:
http://bobtales.com/
bob@bobtales.com
Phone: 914-422-1156
Bob Reiser
15 Oak Ave.
Tarrytown, NY 10591
You may also reach Bob via:
The Westchester Arts Council
914-428-4220 (ask for Jonatha Mann or Ayeshah Wiltshire)
New York Arts Connection
Joanna Hefferen - 212-302-7433 x 486
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(Page created 6/17/07)