How the Moon Regained Her Shape Included in Guide for “Eco-Friendly Products for Kids and Babies”

Krystyn Hall has included my fiction picture book for children about bullying, How the Moon Regained Her Shape, in her guide for “Eco-Friendly Products for Kids and Babies.”  The link is below.

How the Moon Regained Her Shape (Arbordale, 2006; 4th edition 2014) is a story influenced by Native American legends that explains why the moon changes shape and helps children deal with bullies.  The sun insults the moon, and the moon feels so badly hurt that she shrinks and leaves the sky.  The moon turns to her comet friend and her many friends on earth to comfort her.  Her friends include rabbits and Native Americans. Then she regains her full shape, happiness, and self-esteem, and she returns to her orbit.  An educational appendix gives advice about bullying, scientific information about the moon, and ideas for related activities for children.

Illustrator Ben Hodson won a Benjamin Franklin Award for this book’s artwork in 2007.  How the Moon Regained Her Shape also won a Book Sense Pick (2006), a Children’s Choices award (2007), and a Gold Medal in the Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards (2007).  The book was also a finalist for the Oregon Reading Association’s 2009 Patricia Gallagher Picture Book Award.

Janet Ruth Heller

I am the past president of the Michigan College English Association. I have a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. I have published four poetry books: Nature's Olympics (Wipf and Stock, 2021), Exodus (WordTech Communications, 2014), Folk Concert: Changing Times (Anaphora Literary Press, 2012) and Traffic Stop (Finishing Line Press, 2011). My scholarly book, Coleridge, Lamb, Hazlitt, and the Reader of Drama, was published in 1990 by the University of Missouri Press. My fiction picture book about bullying for children, How the Moon Regained Her Shape (Arbordale, 2006; 7th edn. 2022), has won four national awards. My play The Cell Phone won fourth place in a national contest and was performed twice at the Fenton Village Players One-Act Play Festival on June 24-25, 2011 in Fenton, Michigan. Triton College produced another play, Pledging, as part of its Tritonysia Play Festival in May 2017. Choeofpleirn Press published Pledging in Rushing Through the Dark (2022).