Written by Rudolfo Anaya
Illustrated by El Moisés
Translated by Enrique R.
Lamadrid
- Age Range: 6 - 8 years
- Hardcover: 44 pages
- Publisher: Museum of New Mexico Press (September 15, 2017)
- Language: English, Spanish
- ISBN-10: 0890136300
This masterfully written children’s book by New Mexico’s
favorite storyteller is a delightful tale about a young owl named Ollie who
lives in an orchard with his parents in northern New Mexico. Ollie is supposed
to attend school but prefers to hang out with his friends Raven and Crow
instead. Ollie’s parents discover he cannot read and they send Ollie off to see
his grandmother, Nana, a teacher and farmer in Chimayó. Along the way, Ollie’s
illiteracy causes mischief as he meets up with some shady characters on the
path including Gloria La Zorra (a fox), Trickster Coyote, and a hungry wolf
named Luis Lobo who has sold some bad house plans to the Three Little Pigs.
When Ollie finally arrives at Nana’s, his cousin Randy Roadrunner drives up in
his lowrider and asks Ollie why he’s so blue. “I’m starting school, and there’s
too much to learn, and I can’t read,” Ollie says. “I can’t do it.” Randy
explains that he didn’t think he could learn to read either, but he persevered,
earned a business degree, and now owns the best lowrider shop in Española!
Ollie finally decides he is ready to learn to read. The characters and the
northern New Mexico landscape in Owl in a Straw Hat come to life
wonderfully in original illustrations by New Mexico artist El Moisés.
Rudolfo Anaya, considered the father of Chicano
literature, is the author of the beloved classic Bless
Me, Ultima, which was adapted into a major feature film in 2013. In 2016,
Anaya received the National Medal of Arts presented by President Barack Obama.
His children’s books include Rudolfo Anaya's The
Farolitos of Christmas, The First Tortilla, Roadrunner’s Dance, The Santero’s
Miracle, and Serafina’s Stories.
Anaya is professor emeritus of English at the University of New Mexico where he
taught for thirty years. He lives in Albuquerque.
El Moisés
is leaving his mark as a modern-day artist who brings the essence of urban
culture and barrio flavor to mainstream fine art. His work is influenced by the
Chicano, American, Native American, and Mexican cultures that are reflected in
his arte, which has been exhibited or featured around the world.
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