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The Day It Snowed Tortillas / El día que nevó tortilla
The Day It Snowed Tortillas / El día que nevó tortilla: Folk Tales Retold by Joe Hayes | Joe Hayes
4 posts | 1 read | 3 to read
Kids of all ages are always asking Joe Hayes, "How can it snow tortillas?" Well, now they’ll know where to find the answer—at long last, Joe’s signature book The Day It Snowed Tortillas is appearing in this new bilingual edition. Bloomsbury Review listed the original English-only edition as one of their fifteen all-time favorite children’s books. Our bilingual edition has all the original stories as they have evolved in the last twenty years of Joe’s storytelling. It also has new illustrations by award-winning artist Antonio Castro. Storytellers have been telling these stories in the villages of New Mexico since the Spanish first came to the New World over four hundred years ago, but Joe always adds his own nuances for modern audiences. The tales are full of magic and fun. In the title story, for instance, a very clever woman saves her silly husband from a band of robbers. She makes the old man believe it snowed tortillas during the night! In another story, a young boy gladly gives up all of his wages for good advice. His parents think he is a fool, but the good advice leads to wealth and a royal marriage. The enchantment continues in story after story—a clever thief tricks a king for his kingdom and a prince finds his beloved in a house full of wicked step-sisters. And of course, we listen again to the ancient tale of the weeping woman, La Llorona, who still searches for her drowned children along the riverbanks. Joe Hayes is one of America’s premier storytellers. He is especially recognized for his bilingual telling of stories from the Hispanic culture of northern New Mexico. Joe lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico and travels extensively throughout the United States, visiting schools and storytelling festivals.
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LibrarianJen
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I have a great fondness for all storytellers. I have an Uncle who is a storyteller and I‘ve always loved listening to his stories. Joe Hayes is amazing and arguably the best one in New Mexico. This compilation has both the English and Spanish versions of some of the more popular local folktales. In the back is a brief summary of the history of each tale, and how Hayes adapted the stories into his own versions.

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LibrarianJen
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#bookanddinner homemade chicken noodle soup from my mother-in-law since baby Charlotte shared her cold with me and beer cures everything. This chapter is La Llorona. I still legit to this day do not go near the arroyos or river if it‘s even close to dark. That woman freaks me out. 🙅ðŸ½â€â™€ï¸
#booksandbrews

OrangeMooseReads The story of La Llorona is about the only folk take / legend that legit scares me. 7y
LibrarianJen @OrangeMooseReads same! Although El Chupacabra is pretty freaky. I don‘t have goats though, so it‘s not as relatable as a crying ghost woman snatching children off the ditch banks! 7y
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LibrarianJen
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My current read is super dense, even though it‘s written by Douglas Adams, so as a reward, for every 8 pages I read, I get to read one folktale from my childhood favorite. The end goal though is I get through Adams and I can read one of the books I got for Christmas. I‘m thinking Jackaby.

Annl I am going to get the Tortilla book! It looks amazing and I need to practice my Spanish! 7y
LibrarianJen @Annl I love this version! I grew up on these stories and it‘s nice to have them compiled all together and in English and in Spanish. 7y
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LibrarianJen
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I'm trying to collect all the stories from my childhood. This book has many of them and it's bilingual so an extra bonus! Featured here is La Llorona aka the weeping woman. Her husband left her and she drowned her children in the river and then died. It is said she haunts the arroyos to find more children to drown. It's more of a cautionary tail because so many people play in the arroyos and then flash floods happen and people drown. #diversereads

saguarosally I never remember the story, just that La Llorona scared the bejeebers out of me even when I was like twelve. 7y
LibrarianJen @saguarosally she still scares me and I'm 32! 7y
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