
Ruth Paulsen
Author of Canoe Days
About the Author
Works by Ruth Paulsen
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- Birthdate
- 20th century
- Relationships
- Paulsen, Gary (spouse)
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“The sun is on my back like a golden friend on this perfect day.”
As the title announces, this is a picture book about a brief period in time, not even a day, really. Beautifully illustrated by Paulsen’s artist wife in an array of greens and blues, it appears to be a personal account of the author’s observations of the creatures on the periphery of a Minnesota lake. As he paddles his canoe about, he not only observes animals on the shore line—red-winged blackbirds, monarch show more butterflies, herons, a doe and her fawn, a fox, raccoon, frogs, and a snake—but also creatures on the lake’s still surface (a mallard hen and her ducklings “spread out like a spotted fan around her”) and in its depths—sunfish and “the cold slash of a hunting northern pike” moving “like an arrow through the [lily] pads.”
Paulsen’s prose is beautiful and poetic. The water, he tells us is “so quiet it becomes part of the sky”. He is part of the unity of elements, gliding through the “airwater,” moving peacefully on the “skylake.”
Ruth Wright Paulsen’s paintings are all double spreads, creating a sense of openness, spaciousness, limitlessness.
The only thing that puzzles me is Paulsen’s conclusion, in which he reviews some of the wildlife he’s observed. He mentions a badger, but there’s no badger here that I could detect, and I wonder how an editor could have missed that the word should’ve been “raccoon”.
Other than this, Canoe Days, though not my preferred type of picture book—because it lacks a plot, is a lovely enough text for its kind. show less
As the title announces, this is a picture book about a brief period in time, not even a day, really. Beautifully illustrated by Paulsen’s artist wife in an array of greens and blues, it appears to be a personal account of the author’s observations of the creatures on the periphery of a Minnesota lake. As he paddles his canoe about, he not only observes animals on the shore line—red-winged blackbirds, monarch show more butterflies, herons, a doe and her fawn, a fox, raccoon, frogs, and a snake—but also creatures on the lake’s still surface (a mallard hen and her ducklings “spread out like a spotted fan around her”) and in its depths—sunfish and “the cold slash of a hunting northern pike” moving “like an arrow through the [lily] pads.”
Paulsen’s prose is beautiful and poetic. The water, he tells us is “so quiet it becomes part of the sky”. He is part of the unity of elements, gliding through the “airwater,” moving peacefully on the “skylake.”
Ruth Wright Paulsen’s paintings are all double spreads, creating a sense of openness, spaciousness, limitlessness.
The only thing that puzzles me is Paulsen’s conclusion, in which he reviews some of the wildlife he’s observed. He mentions a badger, but there’s no badger here that I could detect, and I wonder how an editor could have missed that the word should’ve been “raccoon”.
Other than this, Canoe Days, though not my preferred type of picture book—because it lacks a plot, is a lovely enough text for its kind. show less
Yes, that's pretty much what I experienced, growing up in rural NW Wisconsin. One thing, though, to have made it feel more real to me the illustrator should have admitted that we pretty much know what's underwater by hearsay and deduction. Glare off the surface of the water means we spend a lot of time looking at clouds, hawks, contrails, and trees on the banks, too. I'm not sure how much children would enjoy this unless they have access to a quiet forested lake.
I think this is a precious time capsule....it was published in 2000.
Life was so, so different then. A year before 9/11. Before social media took over. I wonder what our work song would sound like now, 24 years later.
Life was so, so different then. A year before 9/11. Before social media took over. I wonder what our work song would sound like now, 24 years later.
The smooth-flowing text is just enough to highlight the beautiful oil paintings illustrating different jobs/occupations. There is equal representation of men and women throughout the book. Would like to have seen more cultures represented.
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Statistics
- Works
- 3
- Also by
- 4
- Members
- 405
- Popularity
- #60,013
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 9
- ISBNs
- 15


