After many years of juggling writing, raising her children, and
making a home with her now deceased husband, Hazel spends her days
writing full time. Winner of Writer's Guild of Alberta Award for
Children's Literature, she has written children's short fiction for
Chirp, Chickadee, and Cricket.
When answering where the inspiration for A Second is a Hiccup came
from, Hazel comments, "I decided to see if I could find other ways
to describe time. When the writing began to flow in poetic form --
and when I came up with the engaging title line A Second is a
Hiccup -- I knew I had begun a labor of love. The book went through
many incarnations....in one version I actually brought in centuries
and eons! Good grief! But it finally returned to exactly what it
should be...immediate, simple and close-to-home. It is my sincere
hope that children of all types will enjoy finding and celebrating,
among the pages, the many ways they spend their time."
Kady MacDonald Denton has illustrated more than forty picture
books, including the New York Times bestseller A VISITOR FOR BEAR
by Bonny Becker, and A SECOND IS A HICCUP by Hazel Hutchins. She
lives in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada. Please visit her website at
www.kadymacdonalddenton.ca.
"Hutchins explains the lengths of various time units in original, child-centered terms. A Second is how long it takes to hiccup or "to kiss your mom/ Or jump a rope/ Or turn around." A minute is not just 60 seconds, it's also time enough for 60 hiccups, 60 hops, or a little song including the chorus and verses. And so on, through an hour, a day, a week, a month, and a year. Ingenious explanations include a month as the time it takes for a scraped shin to grow new skin and a year how long it takes to outgrow a pair of shoes. Often falling in to rhymed couplets, the fluid text reads aloud well. Few contemporary illustrators depict children with such understanding, grace, and quirky charm as Denton, whose previous picture books include Claire Masurel's Two Homes (2001) and Nan Gregory's Amber Waiting (2002). Here the diverse cast of characters centers on three children who intersect with each other, their parents, and their siblings as they participate in a year's worth of activities. Washed with gentle colors, the sensitive drawings portray children who are secure, actively engaged, and sometimes even joyful within their community of family and friends. The first American edition of a Canadian picture book, this is a worthy companion to Zolotow's equally child-centered classic Over and Over (1957) and fresh new take on the passage of time." -- Booklist
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