This wonderful and engaging 1st book in a trilogy that includes
Steps and Stones and Peace, and
Bugs and Understanding, gives children and caregivers a concrete practice for dealing with anger and other difficult emotions.
In
Anh's Anger, five-year-old Anh becomes enraged when his grandfather asks him to stop playing and come to the dinner table. The grandfather helps Anh fully experience all stages of anger by suggesting that he go to his room and, sit with his anger. The story unfolds when Anh discovers what it means to sit with his anger. He comes to know his anger in the first person as his anger comes to life in full color and personality. Anh and his anger work through feelings together with humor and honesty to find a way to constructively release their thoughts and emotions and to reach resolve with Anh's grandfather.
The story is beautifully illustrated with handmade collages by New York artist and childrens book illustrator Christiane Kromer. Each collage is a mix of paper, acrylic, and cardboard, and found materials. The materials reflect the connection between the characters and their environment and are indicative of the wide range of emotions that come together in the story.
Anh's Anger teaches children that it is okay to feel angry, and shows the technique, often used by child therapists, of externalizing the emotion. Through taking time to sit' with his anger, a young child is able to see his anger and talk to it and together they move through the journey of experiencing the different stages of anger until the feeling subsides and finally resolve.
Anh's Anger differs significantly from other books on anger resolution techniques in showing that the child is able to talk about what transpired and accept responsibility for hurtful things that he may have said or done.
The author's intention is to help parents understand that there is an alternative to time out's as a means of helping children to express themselves when feeling angry, while providing children with a mechanism for internal dialogue during a time out or when sitting with their anger.
Through reading the story, children will learn to acknowledge anger when it arises, understand the cause of their anger, and ultimately feel safe expressing themselves and accepting accountability for their actions when appropriate. By learning these skills, children, will grow comfortable with them and carry them into adulthood with ease and confidence.
Author: Gail Silver
Publisher: Plum Blossom
Published: 07/10/2009
Pages: 40
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.95lbs
Size: 11.00h x 8.60w x 0.40d
ISBN: 9781888375947
Audience: Ages 4-8
Accelerated Reader:Reading Level: 2.7
Point Value: 0.5
Interest Level: Lower Grade
Quiz #/Name: 151361 / Anh's Anger
Review Citation(s): New Yorker (The) 10/19/2009 pg. 82
School Library Journal 11/01/2009 pg. 88
Hornbook Guide to Children 01/01/2010 pg. 45 - Below Average, With Minor Flaw
School Library Journal 02/01/2017 pg. 31
About the Author
Gail Silver is a former Child Advocate attorney and founder of Yoga Child, a Philadelphia based yoga studio, where she teaches yoga classes, writes yoga music and meditations, and develops the Yoga Child school-based yoga and mindfulness curriculum. Gail has appeared on several news shows to discuss the benefits of yoga and was the recipient of a Parents' Choice Recommended Award in 2007 for the Yoga Child CD, A Peaceful Place Inside. She is a script consultant for the yoga segment of The Good Night Show on PBS Kids Sprout. Gail provides editorials on the benefits of yoga to the Expectant Mothers Guide and teaches birth preparation courses for couples through integration of the principles of mindfulness, birth education and yoga. She resides in Philadelphia with her husband and three children where she stumbles every day in her lifetime practice of mindfulness.
Christiane Krömer was born in 1963 in Germany. She studied toy design at the University of Art and Design in Halle and later Graphic Design in Kassel. She moved to Brooklyn, N.Y. in the early 90s where she received a BFA in Illustration from Parsons School of Design. She lives in Brooklyn working as a freelance as illustrator with a special interest in multicultural work, in recent years with an emphasis on Asian cultures. She previously illustrated
Flowergirl Butterflies (a Capitol Choices Noteworthy Book for Children 2004),
The Treehouse Children, (published by Simon & Schuster), and
God the Parent's Blessings.