Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Wild Blue: Taming a Big-Kid Bike, by Dashka Slater and Laura Hughes

Wild Blue, by Dashka Slater/Illustrated by Laura Hughes, (Feb. 2023, Candlewick Press), $18.99, ISBN: 9781536215670

Ages 3-7

A little girl named Kaya loves her pink pony – a pink tricycle – when Daddy tells her it’s time for a new bike. She’s outgrown pink pony, he tells her, as he takes her to the bike store to “wrangle a new one from the herd”. Told from Kayla’s point of view, bicycles become horses in a metaphor that’s expertly delivered in a combination of storytelling and illustration. Kayla names her new two-wheeler Wild Blue, and Wild Blue is a little ornery; she bucks Kayla off a few times, and despite Dad’s telling her to “show her who’s boss”, it’s not until Kayla and Wild Blue share a moment of calm together in the park, watching the other bikes zoom by, that girl and bike come together, united in purpose, and ride. Has Wild Blue been tamed? Nah: “She’s still wild… But so am I”. Slater beautifully pairs the experience of learning to ride a bigger bike and learning to ride a horse, seamlessly blending the two experiences into a story that readers will enjoy time and again. Hughes’s acrylic illustrations bring Slater’s words to life, with moments like Kayla seeing herself in the mirror, donning a cowgirl hat, as she puts on her bike helmet; visuals shift between a blue bike and a strong, determined blue horse. An open field shows Kayla in the forefront, hand on Wild Blue, as to her left, groups of bike riders ride a trail; to her right, a herd of riders and horses gallop. A great story to have in collections and great for readers tackling those big “firsts”.

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Jumper treats readers to a spider’s world

Jumper : A Day in the Life of a Backyard Jumping Spider, by Jessica Lanan, (Apr. 2023, Roaring Brook Press), $19.99, ISBN: 9781250810366

Ages 4-8

Have a look at a day in the life of a backyard jumping spider in this informative and playful story that is sure to capture readers’ hearts. Jumper is a spider in a community garden frequented by people and animals in the neighborhood. Driven by a thought-provoking narrative that asks questions – “What if you were very small?” “What if you could sense tiny vibrations through your elbows and knees?” “What if you could jump five times your body length?” – and responds with all the ways Jumper moves, feels, or jumps, giving readers the chance to think about how they experience their world and how Jumper experiences her world. Ink, watercolor, and gouache illustrations  use shifting perspectives to move from close-ups of Jumper as she hides from a wasp or avoids a chickadee, to aerial views that capture large spreads, including a fold-out in the middle of the book. Back matter includes noteson spider physiology and behavior, a glossary, and notes on finding and identifying spiders. Superbly illustrated and written to inform and delight an audience, Jumper is an essential for collections. Pair this with Bethany Barton’s I’m Trying to Love Spiders (2019) for a fun, spidery STEM storytime.

Jumper has starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, and School Library Journal.

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Farm Boots teaches kids about the seasons on the farm

Farm Boots, by Lisl H. Detlefsen/Illustrated by Renee Kurilla, (March 2023, Feeding Minds Press), $17.99, ISBN: 9781948898119

Ages 3-6

An enjoyable rhyming look at farming and the seasons using the different boots farmers and farm workers use for different tasks at different times of the year. Colorful pages show diverse families lacing up work boots, slipping on rubber boots, and getting ready for a day of work and play. Rhyming verse keeps the story fun and upbeat – “On rainy days, / use boots for puddles. / Feed newborn friends, / get cozy cuddles” – as the seasons progress. Young farmers help milk cows, show their prized animals at fairs and ride horses and muck out stables, harvest pumpkins and cranberries, all showing off the many different types of boots it takes to get the jobs done. Short sleeves give way to sweatshirts and flannel, then puffer jackets and hats, back to rolled-up jeans and t-shirts; farm chores go from outside chores to keeping sheep safe and warm in a barn, sipping cocoa, and harvesting a tree for the holidays. Back matter includes an illustrated glossary of the different types of boots appearing in the story, with descriptions to provide further context. A fun readaloud for all that pairs well with books like Clothesline Clues to the Jobs People Do (2012) by Kathryn Heling, Deborah Hembrook, and Andy Robert Davies and Julia Cook’s What Shoes Will You Wear? (2014).

Download an educator guide and coloring sheets at Feeding Minds Press’s website. Add some farm coloring pictures from JustColor.net for a fun storytime extension activity.

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Holiday Reads: Eight Nights, Eight Lights by Natalie Barnes & Andrea Stegmaier

How was everyone’s Thanksgiving? I hope all who celebrate had a wonderful gathering. Now, it’s time for the winter holiday to kick into high gear! Here’s my first pick for holiday books this season: Eight Nights, Eight Lights.

Eight Nights, Eight Lights, by Natalie Barnes/Illustrated by Andrea Stegmaier, (March 2023, Kane Miller), $14.99, ISBN: 9781684644414

Ages 4-8

A thriving community celebrates Chanukah and readers enjoy each night through a new set of eyes in this story that explores the feeling of community, history, and embracing differences. A young boy named Max rushes home with his grandfather to light his family’s heirloom menorah; a young girl named Lara, alongside her father, shares homemade jelly donuts with neighbors. Families welcome visitors, share food and play games, give gifts, and gather at the synagogue for the story of Chanukah. Children think upon the Biblical king’s determination to force the Jewish people into giving up their religion in mature pondrance: “People can be scared when they see differences in other that they don’t understand. But we are all different… that’s what makes everyone special”. Songs and fireworks close out the last night of the celebration. Sharp-eyed readers may notice Christmas trees in the street scenes, a nod to two dovetailing holidays. Note the London Eye in the background on the final spread – Eight Nights, Eight Lights was first published in Great Britain in 2022. A helpful guide to the menorah on the verso gives readers more context, and endpapers feature menorahs on a background of blue. A great introduction to the holiday for readers.

 

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Manolo and the Unicorn embraces the magic

I’m pushing to get my review TBR read and posted by the end of the year. Stay with me! Today, I’ve got a gentle story about magic and our world through a child’s eyes: Manolo and the Unicorn.

Manolo & the Unicorn, by Jackie Azúa Kramer & Jonah Kramer/Illustrated by Zach Manbeck, (Apr. 2023, Cameron Kids), $18.99, ISBN: 9781951836528

Ages 5-7

Manolo is a young boy who dearly loves unicorns. His belief infuses his world with magic and wonder, communicated by Manbeck’s gentle, colorful illustration, using deep and soft color to create soft lighting around Manolo and his world, making unicorn shapes out of nature. A teacher announces a school project, where everyone will dress like their favorite animal in a Wild Animal Parade, and Manolo’s desire to be a unicorn brings laughter and derision, turning his world to sepia. The magic has been leeched from Manolo’s world until he encounters a unicorn after all, bringing deep greens and blues back to life. The unicorn inspires Manolo to share his magic with his friends, bringing color and magic to their worlds. A story that assures readers that there is magic left in our world, Manolo & the Unicorn brings surreal and beautiful illustration, paired with a narrative that reaches in and encourages the spark in each of us to endure. A gorgeous story for readalouds and picture book collections. Pair this with Bethanie Deeney Murguia’s Do You Believe in Unicorns? for a fun, unicorn-centric storytime. Don’t forget to print out unicorn masks for your storytime circle!

Manolo and the Unicorn was an Indie Next pick.

Posted in picture books

Better late than never blog tour & giveaway: Chimpansneeze by Aaron Zenz

Bear with  me on the title of this post: I missed a blog tour date, which I’ve been fighting hard against doing since I’ve been rededicating to my blog. But life happens, and sure enough, the 13th came and went with nary a post about this adorable book. I couldn’t let that go, so please, enjoy this hilarious rhyming, cumulative tale of consequences. I give you…

The Chimpansneeze, by Aaron Zenz, (Nov. 2023, Two Lions), $15.99, ISBN: 9781662518225

Ages 6-8

Two friends go for a walk in the beginning of this zany story of cumulative disaster: “A chimpanzee and a kinkajou / took a walk one day through the wild. / The kinkajou spotted buttercups, / so he plucked them up and smiled.” Sounds like a sweet friendship story, right? Hold on: those buttercups that Kinkajou is holding sets off an allergy attack for poor Chimpanzee, who lets loose with a thunderous chimpansneeze that sends poor Kinkajou flying… and then the fun really begins! Filled with rhyming animal disasters that get progressively funnier and wackier, this is a first-class readaloud choice that will keep readers in stitches. Colored pencil illustrations show cartoony animals in various stages of chaotic distress, with flying loaves of bread, poodles slipping in mustard, and so much more. Brilliant wordplay and a catchy rhyme scheme will keep this book in high demand at storytime. A great add to collections and a heck of a feel-good book. The Chimpansneeze is a companion book to Aaron Zenz’s Hiccupotamus (2012).

Aaron Zenz used up forty-nine colored pencils and broke eighty-one pencil tips during the making of The Chimpansneeze. He is the author and illustrator of more than forty-five children’s books. He wrote and illustrated the Amazon bestseller The Hiccupotamus, as well as Chuckling Ducklings, Monsters Go Night-Night, and Little Iffy Learns to Fly. He has also illustrated books written by other authors, including The Spaghetti-Slurping Sewer Serpent by Laura Ripes and Orangutangled by Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen. He lives with his large family in a small town in West Michigan. Learn more about him at http://www.aaronzenz.com, and follow him on Instagram @AaronZenz.

‘Tis the season, right? This time, I’ve got a TWO BOOK giveaway: One lucky winner will receive a copy of The Chimpansneeze along with its companion The Hiccupotamus, courtesy of Two Lions (U.S. and Canada addresses). Enter the Rafflecopter giveaway here!

Posted in picture books

It’s that time of year: I’m Trying to Love Germs

I’m Trying to Love Germs, by Bethany Barton, (Nov. 2023, Viking Books for Young Readers), $18.99, ISBN: 9780593326725

Ages 4-8

As I sit here riding out the first head cold of the season, I’ve got a good read for your STEM and health collections: I’m Trying to Love Germs. The newest book in Bethany Barton’s I’m Trying to Love…series, I’m Trying to Love Germs is all about understanding germs: they’re not all bad! Sure, there are the germs that give us runny noses, bellyaches, and fevers, but there are germs that help us, too! If you like cheese and yogurt, or mushrooms, or use antibiotics when you get sick, you’ve experienced the good kinds of germs. Written in accessible terms with loads of fun, anthropormorphic microbes, Barton uses comic book art, word bubbles, and paneling to teach younger readers about staying healthy, safe, and smart. An excellent first purchase for collections. If you have a science club, consider adding some coloring sheets or worksheets as an extension activity; there are some good ones on Education.com.

I’m Trying to Love Germs has a starred review from School Library Journal.

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week and Molly’s Miracle

Molly’s Miracle: A Chosen Dog, Not a Broken Dog, by w.b. Murph/Illustrated by Luca Mendieta, (Nov. 2023, Wonderbeagmurph Press), $18.99, ISBN: 979-8988246213

Ages 4-7

In honor of National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week, I’m grateful to former veterinarian nurse W.B. Murph for sharing a copy of Molly’s Miracle with me. The story of a sweet beagle who escapes her abusive family is one of those stories that rips my heart out because it’s based on a true story, but it also makes me feel better to know that people like Murph are out there taking care of these pets. In Molly’s Miracle, Molly endures the insults and the physical abuse from her family until she sees her chance to get away; she’s injured in the process, but she’s out. The only problem is, she has nowhere to go and no one to turn to. Living on the street with an injury that won’t heal, she’s discovered by a kind lady who takes Molly to a shelter where she works. Sadly, Molly’s leg can’t be saved, but Molly is – she is adopted by a blind woman who tells Molly that ““My hands tell me all I need I know.” Cartoon artwork is kid-friendly. Back matter includes some questions for thought and a reminder that having a pet is a big responsibility.  A cute additional purchase where pet books are popular. Consider reading and displaying with Belly Rubbins for Bubbins by Jason Kraus and Emma Jackson’s A Home for Dixie for a shelter pet display.

Posted in Fiction, Intermediate, picture books

Blog Tour: Jhupli’s Honey Bee Box by Achintyarup Ray and Shivan Choudhary

Amazon Crossing Kids has a list that gets stronger with every book release! This time around, we have a story originally released in India in 2022:

Jhupli’s Honey Bee Box, by Achintyarup Ray/Illustrated by Shivan Choudhary,
(Oct. 2023, Amazon Crossing Kids), $17.99, ISBN: 9781662514678
Ages 6-9

Jhupli is a child living in India, where she waits and worries about her father when he goes into the jungle to gather honey. There are dangers in the forest, and not everyone who walks in comes out. Why does Baba have to go to the jungle, she asks? He needs to gather honey, he tells her: “We get money by selling all that, and with that money, we buy rice, we buy dal. That’s how we have something to cook”. Jhupli, desperate to keep her father safe, starts looking into a way to keep her father safe, and has an idea: can’t the forest department give people honey bee boxes? She brings her idea to a teacher, who brings it to the honey gathering families and the forest department. Jhupli and the Honey Bee Box is about the love of a child for their father, about resourcefulness, and about the sometimes harsh realities of life in the jungle. Digital illustrations present gorgeous, honey- and grass-colored landscapes. Poignant moments run throughout the book, as when Jhupli stands at the riverbank, waiting for her father’s return, her shadow stretching long behind her. Tender moments show the love between parent and child: Jhupli’s father’s hand holds a piece of honeycomb to her upturned, eager face. A good purchase for picture book collections and for collections where there is an international focus.

“The tender tone and softly smudged illustrations lend the tale a gentle, dreamlike quality sure to delight young readers. A sweet story about harsh realities, laced with hope.” ―Kirkus Reviews

Achintyarup Ray lives in Calcutta, a large city in India, but his mind lies in the village where he spent many early years of his life. He works as a journalist. His passions are reading, writing, and translating the books he loves. He has a special interest in people and the environment. Jhupli’s Honey Bee Box is his first book for children. Follow him on Instagram @achintyarup.

Shivam Choudhary is a visual artist who lives in Chhattisgarh, in Central India. He can mostly be found sitting under a tree, painting pictures; pondering ideas; and chasing sunsets. He tries to observe and absorb the mundaneness of his surroundings and take pleasure in the little joys of life. Follow him on Instagram @bhukkkad.

Posted in Early Reader, Non-Fiction, picture books

Lives to learn about: Picture Book Biographies

Chef Edna, by Melvina Noel/Illustrated by Cozbi A. Cabrera, (Apr. 2023, Abrams), $18.99, ISBN: 9781951836399

Ages 5-8

Have you ever heard of Chef Edna Lewis? You will now. Raised in Freetown, Virginia, in a town founded by her grandfather and other freed slaves, Chef Edna grew up on a farm and cooked with her mother, Mama Daisy, learning to measure out ingredients with coins: “A quarter’s worth of baking powder. A dime’s worth of salt”. She eyeballed, listened, and watched as her meals took shape; as her community gathered ’round to enjoy food together. But her parents passed, and Edna headed to New York to find work to help support her family; she took jobs answering phones and as a seamstress, making beautiful clothes for movie stars, but her real talent lay in creating food to bring people together, just like her life in Freetown. Eventually, that is exactly what she did: beginning with dinner parties and catered events, word spread and Edna’s Southern meals generated buzz and gained popularity, and Miss Edna eventually became Chef Edna, co-owner of an Upper East Side restaurant in Manhattan, where luminaries of all stripes came to eat Southern food. Caldecott and Coretta Scott King Honoree Cabrera creates gorgeous spreads with deep colors to evoke the clean feeling of a country kitchen and the warmth of a family gathering. A spread showing Chef Edna’s Manhattan clientele reveals some familiar faces, including Salvador Dalí and Eleanor Roosevelt; older readers who recognize certain celebrities will enjoy the secret reveal and can clue younger readers in. Back matter includes an author’s note, a biscuit recipe, and further sources for more reading. The cover is a beautiful illustration of Chef Ednea holding a table full of people in her arms, illustrating the connection between food and community. Endpapers bookend her life, showing a farm  and a woman wearing a colorful floral dress, holding a bag of fresh food and flowers, crossing a street in the city. A wonderful celebration of a life well-lived, Chef Edna is an excellent add to picture book biographies.

Visit the Edna Lewis Foundation for more information about Chef Edna, her books, and a scholarship in her name that funds study for young, upcoming Black chefs.

 

The Fire of Stars : The Life and Brilliance of the Woman Who Discovered What Stars Are Made Of, by Kirsten W. Larson/Illustrated by Katherine Roy, (Feb. 2023, Chronicle Books), $18.99, ISBN: 9781452172873

Ages 6-9

This picture book biography on astronomer and astrophycsicist Cecelia Payne charts the birth of a star with Payne’s rise – also the birth of a star, albeit in the astrophysics and astronomy fields. Born in the English countryside and moved to London at an early age, Cecelia Payne is fascinated with nature and science. Pencil and ink illustrations, digitally colored, show Payne as she grows from curious child to focused, science-mined young woman, alongside the celestial creation of a star; the descriptive text mapping to moments in Payne’s life. After graduating Cambridge, Payne traveled to America, where she ultimately discovered that stars are composed mostly of hydrogen and helium. Back matter includes more about Payne and being a woman in the sciences and a deeper dive into the panels illustrating a star’s creation. There is also a timeline of Payne’s life and a bibliography. It’s a beautifully illustrated book that marries its subject with the phenomenon she helped further define. An excellent selection for STEAM and STEM collections and biography collections.

The Fire of Stars has starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, School Library Journal, and Kirkus. Learn more about Cecelia Payne at Physics World, the American Museum of Natural History, and Britannica.com.

 

The Queen of Chess : How Judit Polgár Changed the Game, by Laurie Wallmark/Illustrated by Stevie Lewis, (July 2023, Little Bee Books), $18.99, ISBN: 9781499813067

Ages 6-9

As a child, Judit Polgár watched her parents teach her older siblings to play chess; at the age of five, it was her turn to learn. The Queen of Chess, the picture book biography of chess prodigy Polgár, chronicles her rise and dedication to the game. Stevie Lewis beautifully communicates Polgár’s intensity, beginning with the cover illustration, where Polgár stares intensely at a chessboard – and possibly, the reader? – hands folded in concentration. The Queen of Chess is a love letter to chess without necessitating knowledge of the game. Wallmark tells the story of Polgár’s passion for the game and determination to attain the rank of grandmaster; Lewis creates illustrations that communicate both Polgár’s intensity and her joy: she smiles as she and her sister go over patterns and play “blind chess”, where they sat back to back, announcing their moves to one another. Wallmark writes of Polgár’s “ferocious” and “fearless” game while noting that checkmating her opponents made her giggle and smile. Lewis captures a moment where Polgár lies on her bed, holding a book on chess positions, smiling with her eyes closed. Polgár wrote copious notes on her opponents and is well aware of the mental game involved in chess. Her determination won her medals and championships and made her the youngest grandmaster in history at the age of 15. The Queen of Chess will inspire and excite readers, possibly introducing another generation to the game. Back matter includes a timeline of Polgár’s life and a note on the mathematics of chess. An excellent choice for biography collections.

Visit the Judit Polgár Chess Foundation for more information on supporting chess programs for children. Judit Polgár’s website includes fun facts, photos, and appearances. ChessKid is a site that includes teaching materials for children who want to learn chess.