HANSON – Like everything else today, if one seeks to develop a personal values system one can “Google it.” You can even short-cut it, by taking Google’s AI Overview’s step-by-step approach, which “involves self-reflection to identify core principles, prioritizing them, and aligning actions with those values, ultimately guiding decision-making and shaping your life’s direction.”
They have links.
And it sounds like a lot of work, as everything we should have learned in kindergarten does, when you grow up before realizing something may be missing in your world view. Children’s books on the other hand, have a way of teaching these difficult life lessons easily.
Educators have long known this, and – whether a lack of time because of everything else they have to do in a typical work day, from lesson plans and offering extra help, to behavior correction and correcting papers – one wonders why more of them don’t write children’s books.
One local educator, WHRHS Principal Dr. Christopher Jones has written a children’s book, titled, “Isabella and the Storm,” along with his wife Mary Aiello-Jones, who is a seventh-grade English teacher. Lush, full-page illustrations are by Megan Stratton.
“Education has to start at an early age and reading’s really important,” Jones said before a Saturday morning storytime at Hanson Public Library on March 22. “We want them to read early and be surrounded by books early, with stories about character and different lessons in life that we try to teach afterward, but sometimes we start a little too late or it’s more difficult when it’s late.”
“Isabella and the Storm.” is a story about embracing change and the unexpected bonds that guide us through life’s struggles. As the first book of the Coastal Chronicles series, it shows how, like the ocean after a storm, new treasures and friendships can wash ashore, bringing comfort and a renewed sense of belonging, strength, and hope.
Isabella sells seashells by the seashore and goes through the titular storm, worried that she’ll lose her seashell treasures. But amid her loneliness, she encounters a new friend, Jerimiah, who was training to be a knight, but felt out of place. Working together they saved Isabella’s shells and found joy in it – and in helping others and discovering a friendship blooming – and a sense of belonging and purpose.
“It’s really about difficulties we run across and that, oftentimes we uncover even better things,” Jones said.
Weaving this kind of tale comes naturally to Jones.
“It’s kind of tied to the genesis of the book and why the book came about anyway,” he said. “Before we were married, when we were dating, I used to just kind of rattle off some bedtime stories to [Mary] about a seashell girl who collected seashells.”
“Isabella and the Storm” was a Christmas gift to Mary.
“We’re almost done with book two, and that one’s all about gratitude,” Mary said. “And that means an attitude of gratitude, to carry throughout our lives.”
She said that fitting a life lesson in a book without losing the entertainment value can be tricky.
“This one is all about friendship and not being alone and the next one is about an attitude of gratitude,” she said. “It’s half educating, half entertainment.”
It being a craft and story hour, Mary had the children attending decorate craft-store “seashells.” While the day’s unusually bright weather may have worked against audience size, the children who came, enjoyed the story – and stayed for the craft.
“They can get as creative as they want to – I don’t care. They can make lady bugs or sharks – whatever works for them,” Mary said. “I love the [Duxbury] beach and when we were little, we always used to draw pictures.”
Fish and rainbows were the popular designs. With one cow.
Creativity is a life lesson, too.
The book is available on Amazon [Isabella and the Storm (Coastal Chronicles): Jones, Dr. Christopher S, Aiello-Jones, Mrs. Mary B: 9798897057931: Amazon.com: Books] Paperback $12.95/ Kindle $9.99.