Posted in picture books

Holiday Shopping Suggestions!

Over the next few days, I’ll be working on a few holiday shopping ideas. To paraphrase one of the pillars of Library Science, there’s a book for every reader, right? If you need some books for some littles over the next couple of days, I got you.

For the kid who loves being outdoors:

On a Mushroom Day, by Chris Baker & Alexandra Finkeldey, (July 2024, Tundra Books), $18.99, ISBN: 9781774882580

Ages 3-7

Go on a lyrical exploration with a caregiver and child, discovering the different types of fungi. Baker and Finkeldey engage all five senses in this informational story that walks readers through a forest that “springs a little under your footsteps”; listening to birds and mosquitoes through the canopy; smelling delicious aromoas wafting up from the forest floor; seeing the different colors and shapes of various mushrooms – “like the fruit of a fungus, as a tomato that grows on a vine”, and finally, after a long day of exploring and gathering, tasting “something wonderful indeed”. Earthy-colored illustrations pair with fantasy images of mythical forest creatures to create truly delightful images for the readers. Back matter includes species of mushrooms featured in the story, fungi facts, resources for further reading, and tips for having one’s own mushroom day. A sweet and informative book for beginning mycologists and those with an interest in nature.

Have kids who want more mushroom info? You can’t go wrong with Elise Gravel’s Mushroom Fan Club.

 

For the kid who loves the Alphabet Song:

The Dictionary Story, by Oliver Jeffers & Sam Winston, (Aug. 2024, Candlewick Press), $18.99, ISBN: 9781536235500

Ages 3-7

Any Oliver Jeffers book is going to offer readers a great adventure. Here, Dictionary longs to create a story like other books, and brings her words to life: it’s cute at first, with Alligator in search of a tasty Donut, but things quickly escalate and things spin out of control! The Moon wonders what beings from the front of the library are doing over in her area; a Ghost appears and frightens everyone; a moody Tornado emerges and threatens to wreck everything! Dictionary is going to need some help from friend Alphabet to get things back in order. The delightful story and masterful illustration includes dictionary pages as the main backdrop; the illustrations run rampant over the dictionary entries, causing the dictionary’s organized layout to bend and snap out of shape under the weight of the characters. It all comes together to create a playful adventure that will easily become a storytime mainstay.

A Dictionary Story has starred reviews from Kirkus, Booklist, and Shelf Awareness; it was also an Indie Next selection.

 

For the adventurer:

The Spaceman, by Randy Cecil, (May 2024, Candlewick Press), $17.99, ISBN: 9781536226164

Ages 3-7

A diminutive spaceman arrives on the latest planet on his roster and sets about his usual, if a bit boring, tasks; collecting, labeling, and filing soil samples. This time is different, though: he discovers a beautiful red flower. While he’s gazing at the flower, his ship is stolen and he pursues the bird in question. While in pursuit, he discovers even more incredible sights: “a fantastical array of creatures… Some were wonderfully strange. Some were adorable. Some were beautiful”. He even meets a curious, furry friend to share time with. After spending a day with his new friend and realizing happiness, he has to make a decision: go back to his responsibilities, or… maybe not? With sweet and deadpan humor, Cecil’s storytelling and illustration makes for a story that readers will enjoy for multiple readings.

The Spaceman has starred reviews from BookPage, Kirkus, School Library Journal, and Booklist.

Posted in Fiction, Middle Grade, Tween Reads

Tales from the TBR: The Mutant Mushroom Takeover

The Mutant Mushroom Takeover, by Summer Rachel Short, (Sept. 2020, Simon & Schuster), $17.99, ISBN: 9781534468658

Ages 9-12

Science thriller meets low-level horror in this first-person narrated middle grade novel. Magnolia is an aspiring naturalist who lives in Shady Pines with her older brother and grandmother after their father loses his job and has to move to another state to find work. Her best friend, Nate, is an aspiring YouTuber conspiracy theorist. The two head to Old Bell’s farm to investigate possible paranormal activity, only to stumble on something far more insidious: giant, bio-luminescent mushrooms, and Old Man Bell, who collapses after catching the kids on his property. Old Bell’s mysterious last words are unsettling enough, but Maggie’s brother, his friends, and her Shady Pines neighbors start acting strangely, prompting Maggie to start doing some investigating into the possible mutant mushroom takeover. Maggie is a smart, fully realized character; Nate is largely played for laughs as her foil, but this is the first “Maggie and Nate Mystery”, and I’m looking forward to seeing both characters develop in future adventures. There’s delightfully creepy and gross moments, filled with freaky mushroom spores, giant spiders, and bat guano, for starters. An author’s note touches on the facts inspiring the fiction and makes for a great STEM discussion book.

Visit author Summer Rachel Short’s webpage for a Mutant Mushrom Takeover discussion guide, and to read about the next Maggie and Nate mystery coming next year!

 

Posted in Graphic Novels, Intermediate, Middle Grade, Non-fiction, Non-Fiction

Join Elise Gravel’s Mushroom Fan Club!

The Mushroom Fan Club, by Elise Gravel, (May 2018, Drawn & Quarterly), $17.95, ISBN: 978-1-77046-322-6

Recommended for readers 6-12

Artist and author Elise Gravel’s newest book, The Mushroom Fan Club, is its own little science comic! Elise Gravel and her family love going mushroom hunting, and The Mushroom Fan Club shares that sense of fun and adventure with readers. Beginning with an illustration of Gravel, her daughters, and cats heading out to explore, Gravel narrates why she’s fascinated with mushrooms: they look like aliens from outer space! They come in all different sizes and shapes! She proceeds to teach readers what she’s learned about mushrooms, from biology (parts, reproduction, environment) to the different types of mushrooms. She exercises caution, exhorting readers NOT TO EAT mushrooms they may encounter on their own, as many are poisonous; even illustrating mushrooms warning readers that they can “make you very, very sick! And even worse!” The Mushroom Fan Club is loaded with fun facts, bright illustrations in Elise Gravel’s immediately recognizable style, and fun mushroom-related art activities.

I’m a big Elise Gravel fan, so if she illustrated a box of cereal, I’d eat it and suggest it for literary honors. I love this fun twist on earth science nonfiction; she makes graphic nonfiction interesting and memorable. If you haven’t read her biography on The Great Antonio, I highly recommend it. Check out an excerpt of The Mushroom Fan Club on the Drawn and Quarterly website, and visit Elise Gravel’s author webpage for free printables of all sorts. Read The Mushroom Fan Club in a science program, read it at dinner time, just read it and have fun with it!