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Alvin Tresselt (1916–2000)

Author of White Snow, Bright Snow

44+ Works 7,745 Members 99 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Works by Alvin Tresselt

White Snow, Bright Snow (1947) — Author — 2,911 copies, 41 reviews
The Mitten: An Old Ukrainian Folktale (1964) 1,480 copies, 19 reviews
Rain Drop Splash (1946) 722 copies, 7 reviews
Hide and Seek Fog (1965) 542 copies, 9 reviews
The Beaver Pond (1970) 277 copies, 5 reviews
The Dead Tree (1972) 215 copies, 2 reviews
The Gift of the Tree (1992) 213 copies, 8 reviews
Wake Up, City! (1990) 154 copies, 1 review
The Rabbit Story (1989) 122 copies
Autumn Harvest (1951) 114 copies, 3 reviews
How far is far? (2000) 77 copies
Wake Up, Farm! (1955) 71 copies, 1 review
Sun Up (1949) 61 copies

Associated Works

The Crane Maiden (1966) — Translator, some editions — 186 copies, 3 reviews
Ma Lien and the Magic Brush (1966) — Translator, some editions — 110 copies, 3 reviews
The Witch's Magic Cloth (1980) — Translator, some editions — 17 copies
The rolling rice ball; (1969) — Translator, some editions — 15 copies
Across Wide Fields (1982) — Translator — 12 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1916-09-30
Date of death
2000-07-24
Gender
male
Occupations
defense plant worker
children's book author
managing editor
executive editor
dean of faculty
Organizations
Authors' Guild
Humpty Dumpty
Parent's Magazine Press
Institute of Children's Literature
Awards and honors
Caldecott Medal (1948)
Short biography

Alvin Tresselt Wake Up, Farm!

White Snow Bright Snow Hide and Seek Fog

Born in Passaic, New Jerysey on September 30, 1916, Alvin Tresselt was a pioneer in children's books. With his poetic prose style, he created the "mood" picturebook, which relied not on plot and character but on setting and description. Many of his books were popular with teachers who wished to teach about the environment. From 1946 to 1952, Mr. Tresselt worked in advertising and display graphics. During this time, he began writing children's books. His book, White Snow, Bright Snow, illustrated by Roger Duvoisin, was awarded the Newbery Medal in 1948. In 1952, he became editor of Humpty Dumpty magazine. Later, he was executive editor at Parent's Magazine Press, as well as chief editor of their book imprint. In 1974, he became an instructor and then Dean of Faculty at the Institute of Children's Literature in Redding, Connecticut. He married Blossom Budney, another children's book writer, and they had two daughters.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Passaic, New Jersey, USA
Places of residence
Passaic, New Jersey, USA (birthplace)
Redding Ridge, Connecticut, USA
Burlington, Vermont, USA
Place of death
Burlington, Vermont, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

107 reviews
Now, let me say from the start that, having read Jan Brett's version first, I prefer it. And unless your home library is enormous, you probably don't need both books. However, as the comments here show, many people prefer this version, which predates Brett's version by quite a while. If you can get your hands on both, do so - keep one for yourself and donate the other to a local school!

This story is a great classic. A boy loses his mitten in the woods, a series of progressively larger show more animals climb in, culminating in a bear. When one teeny animal tries to be the last to just squeeeeeze in (in this version, a cricket), that proves too much for the old mitten and it bursts all over the place.

In contrast to Jan Brett's signature style of very intricate pictures, the artwork in this book is very simple... and like many books of that time period, it alternates between full-color spreads and one-color spreads. (In this case, that one color is turquoise, as you can see on the cover.) I like the detail more, but there's a real charm in the simpler pictures of this edition.

Jan Brett has the animals looking and acting like animals. They don't wear clothes, and they don't explicitly talk to each other... and the prey animals move over for the predators only because they're intimidated by the talons, claws, and teeth (this detail is skipped in the board book version of Brett's book). In this edition, the animals speak politely to each other and act generally like humans. Some people prefer the lack of outright intimidation in this book.

I'm going to donate this book to my niece's school. They probably do have a copy of Brett's edition, but this would be a good thing for them to compare and contrast - and really, it stands on its own as a lovely book. It's just SO similar to the other, more well-known version (or, I should say, Brett's version is so similar to this one!) that I don't see the point in keeping both editions.
show less
A small town experiences a heavy snowfall in this Caldecott Medal-winning picture book from 1947. As a number of different townsfolk—the postman and farmer, policeman and his wife—prepare and react in their own ways, a beautiful snowy day dawns, and the local children and rabbits have great fun playing outdoors. The book concludes with the eventual melting of the snow, and the first signs of spring...

White Snow, Bright Snow is only the second book I have read from author Alvin Tresselt, show more following upon his 1964 The Mitten: An Old Ukrainian Folktale, and the third from illustrator Roger Duvoisin, following upon Easter Treat (1966) and Wobble, the Witch Cat (1958). I thought it was quite lovely, and although it isn't destined to become a personal favorite, I did enjoy both story and artwork. The initial poem was probably my favorite thing about it, as it had such a lovely cadence, and so perfectly captured the peaceful feeling of softly falling snow. It begins: "Softly, gently in the secret night, / Down from the North came the quiet white. / Drifting, sifting, silent flight, / Softly, gently in the secret night." The narrative continues in prose, after the three-stanza poem, and has a charming quality of its own. The accompanying illustrations from Duvoisin, who won the 1948 Caldecott Medal for them, have a vintage, 1940s appeal to them. I was reminded of certain childhood favorites, like Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel. Recommended to anyone who appreciates vintage picture books, and to those seeking engaging wintry stories for children. show less
½
This classic book published in 1947 wraps me in a soft fuzzy blanket of nostalgia and makes me crave the good ol' days of clean white snow and sledding, rubber boots and all the neighborhood children playing together in the huge drifts. It takes me back to being snowed-in, warm fire in the fireplace, hot cocoa and the Postman whose name I knew bringing armloads of Christmas cards. The world depicted in this book does not include the sound of a snow-blower or a snow-mobile. It does not have show more Doppler radar to let me know it's going to snow. In this book we rely upon the ache in a woman's big toe and the fact that a farmer says it smells like snow. The rabbits know it and the kids search the grey sky waiting for the first snowflakes. This book takes us from those first feathery flakes through a really deep snowfall. We're there as the townspeople shovel themselves out. We're there as the grown-ups contend with the winter snow and the children revel in it. Eventually Spring comes and is greeted with as much gladness as the first snowflakes. The simple four color watercolor illustrations are just wonderful and made me yearn for the days when we didn't hurry from climate controlled houses to climate controlled cars to shopping malls with trees and fountains, for the days when we were on speaking terms with the weather. The writing in this book is so lyrical and gentle that it makes a perfect bedtime story and it is sure to warm the heart of the adult who's doing the reading. For example, "Then without a sound, just when everybody was asleep, the snow stopped, and bright stars filled the night. In the morning a clear blue sky was overhead and blue shadows hid in all the corners." show less
White Snow Bright Snow is a poetry, picture book, about the coming of winter and snow. Everyone braces themselves for snow and then endures the cold weather and inches and inches of snow. Soon comes the dripping of water and melting of the snow. In the end the sun in shining, the trees are bare, and the children wait for for the first robin to tell them spring has come.
The book uses poetry to teach about winter and snow. As someone from New Orleans who plans to teach in New Orleans I would show more love to use this book to teach my students about poetry, but more importantly seasons, a true winter, and snow- things we do not experience often. show less

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Statistics

Works
44
Also by
6
Members
7,745
Popularity
#3,147
Rating
3.8
Reviews
99
ISBNs
128
Languages
5
Favorited
2

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