Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Ramon Fellini… a detective who isn’t what he seems

Ramon Fellini: The Dog Detective, by Guilherme Karsten, (Feb. 2025, Eerdmans Books for Young Readers), $18.99, ISBN: 9780802856364

Ages 4-8

CRASH! A boy’s fish bowl is attacked! As soon as the boy gets his fish safely into a temporary bowl, a visitor appears: “Ramon Fellini, the Dog Detective, at your service”. Readers will be as confused as the boy, because Ramon looks suspiciously like a cat. But Ramon is a smooth talker, and easily talks his way into the gullible boy’s house, where he proceeds to ask strange questions, like “Are there any more fish in this house?”; he’s got some strange investigative methods, too: what kind of detective licks the fish’s shelter to discover clues? Readers will be shrieking at the boy, who really should be more critical of Ramon’s methods. A darkly funny mystery that readers who enjoyed Jon Klassen’s This is Not My Hat and I Want My Hat Back, Ramon Fellini: Dog Detective is also a great way to introduce readers to critical questioning and observation. Digital illustrations carry an amusing noir feel, with nighttime lighting and an expressive, distressed main character. Ramon’s facial expressions and body language telegraph his ulterior motives, making it easy for readers to figure out what he’s really up to. A good purchase for collections.

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Taste the rainbow with How Do You Eat Color?

How Do You Eat Color?, by Mabi David/Illustrated by Yas Doctor/Translated by Karen Llagas, (March 2025, Eerdmans Books for Young Readers), $18.99, ISBN: 9780802856388

Ages 4-8

Spend a day eating color: wake up and “sample sunshine in yellow, in a bite of pineapple”; by noon, brown like a banana. Enjoy and orange sunset as you see a melon moon rise, and tuck yourself in like a yam. Two kids and their chameleon wander through a rainbow of color, sampling food and enjoying their day. A nice twist on the “eat the rainbow” concept, David talks textures in a way that will bring a smile to readers and listeners: “Do you know how red tastes? / Does it tickle the tongue? / Is green sweet and cold like your / favorite sorbet?” As someone who grew up associating the flavor “green” with my favorite ice pop, I greatly appreciated this. Doctor deftly incorporates food into the landscapes, letting the group frolic among leafy greens and walk past carrot heads casting a shadow at dusk. Back matter includes some notes on additional colorful foods, why eating the rainbow is important, and tips on getting families to eat more colors together. Originally published in the Philippines, How Do You Eat Color is a good purchase to picture book collections and food storytimes. It will work really well with the Color Our World Summer Reading Theme (if you’re part of CSLP).

The Whole Kids Foundation has Eating the Rainbow printables available to share with families.

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

The Quiet One: Still waters run deep

The Quiet One, by Yiting Lee, (March 2025, Eerdmans Books for Young Readers), $18.99, ISBN: 9780802856418

Ages 4-8

In a busy, noisy classroom, Milly is the quiet one, not sure if she “[had nothing to say] or just didn’t know how to say it”. She’s dreading the upcoming Show & Tell, so she stays in her hideout where she constructs a robot from people’s forgotten castoffs. Milly connects with Arnold, the robot, who gives her space to speak and the courage to speak at Show & Tell. When she freezes up, Arnold is there to support her and her passion for tinkering and talking about Arnold gets Milly past her fear of talking and makes her Show & Tell a hit! Milly, glad to be seen and heard, is part of the class and so is Arnold. The story gently addresses social anxiety and being an introvert in a sea of extroverts. Small illustrative details give readers clues: Milly sits in her classroom library, an open umbrella shielding her from her class; her secret place is “filled with things that people had forgotten”, as if Milly wishes to disappear from view, left among the overlooked toys, equipment, and… stuff. But it’s from this forgotten stuff that Milly creates, tinkering and playing, “making good use” of what she finds to make a ferris wheel for mice and a roller skate train. A diverse and inclusive group of kids make up the class. Watercolor and pencil illustration make for soft colors; endpapers are littered with a plethora of goodies one may find in Milly’s secret hideout. A good storytime read that will pair well with Ashley Spires’s The Most Magnificent Thing.

Posted in picture books, Preschool Reads

Here and There brings connection

Here and There, by Thea Lu, (Apr. 2024, Eerdman Books for Young Readers), $19.99, ISBN: 9780802856234

Ages 5-8

Two people live very different lives, but happenstance brings them together for a moment. Dan owns a cafe on a coastal town, and Aki is a sailor, always on the go. Dan is a homebody who draws comfort from his routine, but every now and then, he wonders what more there is “out there”. Aki  “lives life like a nomadic gull, always on the wing”; he loves the color of his world, with all different sights to see, but sometimes he wonders what it might be like to have a place to call home. Each, in his own way, feels distanced from the world. They each find joy in the connections they make: Dan, with the travelers who visit his cafe, and Aki, from the people he encounters when he goes ashore. As each man looks over their keepsakes, readers will discover that Dan and Aki have crossed paths once, and that it is a special memory for both. Here and There is about connection and life: Dan’s keepsakes are like “little windows, each opening a piece of the world to him” and Aki’s photos are like “little houses, each bringing a sense of home”. Dan looks out, while Aki looks in, and the one time they met, they felt less alone. Dan’s illustrations are rendered largely in shades of brown, for his homebound-land living existence, and Aki’s are shaded mainly in blue, noting his oceanic life. The spare text reads beautifully, yet with an aching loneliness as each character goes about his solitary existence, warming as the two interact with others. A lovely story about yearning connection and a great addition to picture book collections. Here and There has a starred review from Foreword Reviews.

Visit Thea Lu’s website for some exciting ideas for kids’ crafts.

Posted in Intermediate, Middle Grade, Non-fiction, Non-Fiction, picture books

More Earth Day Reading!

There’s more Earth Day reading to be discovered!

Water : Discovering the Precious Resource All Around Us, by Olga Fadeeva, Translated by Lena Traer, (April 2024, Eerdmans Books for Young Readers), $18.99, ISBN: 9780802856227

Ages 8-13

Never let it be said that beautiful picture books are only for younger readers. This informative book about water has beautiful illustrations and is loaded with information about water: how much of it is on Earth; why it rains; why it’s so powerful, even how we get the water for our tea (or coffee!). Touching on the scientific and historical, Fadeeva answers questions with direct, easy-to-read factual text and backs it up with numbers that will put things into context: for instance, letting a faucet run while you’re brushing your teeth? That wastes about 2.6 gallons (10 liters) of water per minute! Jellyfish are composed mostly of water: 99%, to be exact, while a watermelon is 96% water. Fadeeva takes great care to make readers aware that we need to protect this amazing resource for our future: only 3% of the world’s water is fresh, unsalted water; of that, 1% of the world’s fresh water is accessible for human use. Fadeeva offers tips for conserving water and discusses issues impacting our world’s water supply, like microplastics and climate change. Colorful acrylic illustration accompanies the text and keeps readers tuned into the pages. Water is a companion book to Wind: Discovering Air in Motion (2023) and includes characters from the book.

Home, by Isabelle Simler, Translated by Vineet Lal, (March 2024, Eerdmans Books for Young Readers), $18.99, ISBN: 9780802856203Ages 5-9

Visit the homes of 27 different animals in this gorgeous book. From the comet moth’s silky apartment to the common tailbird’s haute couture bedchamber, Simler adds wit and playfulness to her subjects, each animal describing their dwelling in verse. The red ovenbird says, of their Mud Bungalow, “I sculpt it, layer by layer, like a potter. / And hidden under its clay dome you’ll find its distinctive feature”, while the carrier snail delights in its shell-covered shelter: “The exhibition’s taking place on the outside. / My cabinet of curiosities can be visited at any time”. Lush digital illustrations have deep natural colors and incredible texture, and back matter includes a glossary and recommended resources. This is the Architectural Digest of the animal world, complete with endpapers boasting blueprints of companion human dwellings. This one is a delightful choice for nonfiction collections.

Home has starred reviews from Booklist and Shelf Awareness.

 

 

Lola Meets the Bees, by Anna McQuinn/Illustrated by Rosalind Beardshaw, (Apr. 2024, Charlesbridge), $16.99, ISBN: 9781623543839

Ages 3-6

A new Lola book in time for Earth Day! This time, Lola and her mom are off to meet Zora, a friend of Lola’s mother, who is also a beekeeper! The three have lunch together as Lola watches the bees go from flower to flower, and then it’s time for Lola to don a special suit so that Zora can give her an up-close look at the hive. Beardshaw’s cheerful illustrations pair with McQuinn’s simple and engaging narrative, giving readers an introduction to beekeeping and bee colonies; as Zora gives Lola seeds to plant and create a “small wild place” for bees of her own, McQuinn raises awareness of a major problem facing bee colonies: the growing lack of wild spaces where they can live and proliferate. Lola Meets the Bees is another wonderful Lola story and a terrific Earth Day selection.

Anna McQuinn’s website has a section dedicated to Lola’s activities with flowers, if you need extension ideas for Earth Day or Lola storytimes.