Eek! Halloween!
by Sandra Boynton
Illustrations by the author
Boynton Book Works
An imprint of Simon & Shuster
1025
24 pages
2025
Sandra Boynton is always a child's favoigel
Eek! Halloween!
by Sandra Boynton
Illustrations by the author
Boynton Book Works
An imprint of Simon & Shuster
1025
24 pages
2025
Sandra Boynton is always a child's favoigel
by Weshoyot Alvitre
Illustrations by the author
Kokila
an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
2025
32 pages
ISBN: 9780593531600
“[T]he celebration of a young boy who is deeply loved, valued, and respected, and how activism can come in many forms, including growing one’s hair out, are powerful messages that are presented with thoughtful care” —The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, recommended review
My Review:
Brave is the story of a young boy and his father who celebrate their traditions by growing their hair and wearing braids, something their grandfathers and fathers could not do as American schools and society forced them to cut their hair. Their ancestors wore their hair long as a sign of bravery and strength.
"Braids are brave," is the beginning line of the story, and the boy embraces growing his hair even though sometimes it hurts when his mother combs it and braids it. Having long hair is a sign that you are proud of your hair. Your hair represents strength to face your enemies.
When kids at school bully and tease, the boy remembers his father's words and tells the kids, "STOP!" He is proud he stood up to them and stood up for himself. He is brave.
His father teaches him to, "Be brave when they force you to sing, even though they won't let you speak your language on your own land."
Mostly pastel illustrations by the author were made using gouache (a tricky, often difficult type of watercolor), watercolor and ink depict the softness and sweetness of the father/son bond and deep love for each other.
Highly recommended for all collections grades K-5.
by Micha Archer
Illustrations by the author
Nancy Paulson Books
an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
2025
32 pages
ISBN: 9780593616550
Wind Watchers is a gloriously beautiful book, stunning in creativity and artistry. Illustrations by Micha Archer are in inks and collages made from layered tissue paper and her own homemade stamps. The layering effect creates shards and pinpricks of color peeking through and captures the subject of "wind" in each design.
Three young children call out to the wind. What will it do today?
The kids celebrate wind throughout the seasons. Wind is a catalyst for trees to shed their leaves or petals, blowing rain clouds in, helping kites take flight, and scattering seeds in the fall. The wind is always there even on hot, still summer days, it barely ripples the pond, but it's there: constant.
Wind Watchers is likely to score several awards this year and could win the Caldecott. It's that great. A must have, must read for every child and collection. An excellent gift for any artist or art lover.
Ages 2 and up. A masterclass in mixed media usage.
Barrington Irving's Record-Breaking Flight Around the World
by Barrington Irving and Chana Stiefel
Illustrations by Shamar Knight-Justice
Dial Books for Young Readers
an imprint of Penguin Random House, LLC
2025
40 pages
ISBN: 9780593532133
Aviation enthusiasts will be soaring over this new autobiography (written with co-writer Chana Stiefel) about Barrington Irving, a young black man who dared to dream big and broke barriers in flight, in life and continues to foster the dreams of kids from all over the world through sharing his travels and adventures online. The first black man to lly solo around the world, he was also the youngest to do so until 2012 when his record was broken, but he will always be the first black man to fly solo around the globe.
When young Barrington meets Captain Gary Robinson, a black pilot, in his parents' book store, a dream is born. Captain Gary takes Barrington to see his jet. Barrington was hooked. On his sixteenth birthday, Captain Gary gave the gift of flying lessons to Barrington. He inspired Barrington to pay it forward and do something to help others. Barrington's big idea is to fly around the world, but he does not have a plane. With donated parts and a lot of begging, companies helped Barrington build his plane that he christened "Inspiration." With children watching, he climbed into the cockpit and set out on his ninety-seven day flight journey.
He continues to inspire and teach aviation and dreaming to thousands of kids. He founded Experience Aviation which teaches STEM to after-school kids. Over 5,000 kids have now completed the course and most went into math and/or science fields.
Complete with charts, maps, fab facts, records, timeline and bibliography, Let's Fly is a must have, must read for every collection. This book is a great gift to inspire young people who dream of flying,
Highly, highly recommended.
Ages 2-up for entertainment; ages 4 and up for inspiration and fostering dreams of flying.
]
Dinosaur Roar!
The Tyrannosaurus rex
by Peter Curtis
Illustrations by the Dinosaur Roar Company Limited
Based on Dinosaur Roar! by Paul Strickland and Henrietta Strickland
In collaboration with The Smithsonian Enterprises
National Museum of Art
Simon Spotlight
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division
2025
26 pages
ISBN: 9781665972697
This sturdy board book is perfect for little hands. With fun, rhyming text, children will be introduced to the most fearsome dinosaur, the Tyrannosaurus rex which means "tyrant king lizard." It is indeed the strongest of any land animal that has ever lived with a roar louder than thunder. Dinosaur Roar has a softer side as shown through his friendship with Dinosaur Squeak, a small dinosaur called the Compsognathus.
Illustrations of each dinosaur along with pronunciation guide is located in the front of the book with Tyrannosaus rex facts following the story.
Dinosaur Roar! is a great first dinosaur book to get readers excited by dinosaurs (as if they need much nudging). Ages 18 months and up.
Bold Words From Black Men
curated by Dr. Tamara Pizzoli
Illustrated by Desire Cesar "El Cesart" Ngabo
A Denene Millner Book
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Simon & Schuster
2025
112 pages
ISBN: 9881665930642
Bold Words From Black Men is a treasure trove of quotable quotes from black actors, performers athletes, politicians, and other famous pubic figures.
From Shawn Carter, also known as Jay-Z, "You gotta be able to compete. Steel sharpens steel. You gotta get out there and earn your spot. It's not given," and from Lebron James, "Don't be afraid of failure. This is the way to succeed," wise words from two world famous black men who are at the top of their games respectively.
The reader will find words of wisdom, life lessons, introspective thoughts to ponder and true compassion, From baseball great Jackie Robinson, the first African-American to play in the major league, "A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives." Imagine the impact Robinson had and still has on generations of young black men and women. His life lives on.
From funny man Eddie Murphy, in a pensive moment for a comedian, I suppose, he offers, "Positivity, creativity, forward motion. Those three things pretty much cover everything. Whenever things get crazy, if you go back to that, you get grounded." Pretty smart advice from a man who spends his life getting laughs.
There are fifty quotes from fifty different black men gathered by the author Dr. Tamara Pizzoli. Powerful words in a powerful book and a great gift idea for any young tween, teen or new high school graduate, first year college student and yes, even adults will become a book the reader goes to find inspiration or healing.
Highly recommended grades 5 and up.
by Caroline Kusin Pritchard
Illustrated by Selina Alko
Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
an imprint Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division
2025
40 pages
ISBN: 9781665914970
Illustrations by Selina Alko capture the tragedy of a fire that consumed the Theological Seminary Library in 1966. For 130 years, the library was a work and study place which housed 200,000 books, newspapers and magazines, some dating back as far as the Middle Ages. Although thirty-five fire houses responded, the fire lasted nine hours and destroyed 70,000 books, but the neighborhood came together immediately to save the stories,
In a project known as "Operation Booklift," people, both Jewish and non-Jewish, it did not matter, volunteered to help with the damaged books, forming a human chain to pass books down the line into cartons and later onto carts. The people knew the stories and the words were worth saving for everyone. What a testament to humanity!
The water from the fire hoses had water logged most books, but thousands of hands dried book pages with paper towels and they even freeze dried books to save them.
Prithcard's prose hits at the heart with repeated lines, almost like a chorus, "Keep our stories alive" which gives the story rhythm. It MUST be read aloud to hear the beauty of the story, Exemplary design throughout the book changes the text placing in every two-page spread using the entire page drawing interest.
Photos and a page detailing the event follow along with an author's note and a list of sources. There is even a link to a full interview with the author and the library's head librarian of twenty years.
The Keeper of the Stories will be front and center come awards season. A must have for every collection. If your library is well-funded, you'll want to put one copy in history and another in picture books.
Grades 1-4. This would be an excellent book to teach about non-fiction versus fiction.
The story opens with, "A library is a keeper of stories. A keeper of memories. A keeper of hope," which is as true today as it was in 1966.
Mega Math Maze: A Multiplication Adventure
by Kjartan Poskitt
Illustrations by Seb Burnett
Workman Kids
An imprint of Workman Publishing
Hachette Book Group, Inc.
2025
48 pages
ISBN: 9781523530854
Learning and practicing multiplication tables is now fun! Kjartan Poskitt's creation of a fun adventure through connecting mazes will entertain and capture a reader's attention using questions, fun comic characters called numbugs who lead the way, dialog bubbles, a variety of settings and die-cut pages with possible correct answers.
There is no right or wrong order to complete the mazes. The reader has the choice to visit the adventure of their choice featuring the swamp, the jungle, Yeti Mountain, Termite Mound, or visit the crowd of penguins in Polar Pathways. There are fourteen different mazes to explore and enjoy.
Bonus pages are a treasure! Excellent "insider" tips include times table tricks that would have come in handy when I was in school, but now that I know the "Amazing Two Times Table" trick, I will be able to use it to multiply any two numbers as long as I can add and divide by two. Who knew there were tricks and patterns in math? Well, probably Einstein, but he was a genius. The average fourth grade math student probably does not see patterns or invent tricks to learn multiplication. If Mega Math Maze were used as a teaching tool, students would be able to easily master multiplication and use critical thinking and engage their brain the entire time. Learners would more likely stay on task and have fun doing it. Students might engage with other students as they go through the mazes, even making it a springboard for collaboration and dialog.
Captivating, colorful, comic illustrations by Seb Burnett capture the personalities of the numbugs, the beauty of the African animals, the silent stealth of the nocturnal animals in the forest and on Yeti Mountain, wolves look on with happy smiles as the blue Yeti emerges, bug-eyed and furry, seemingly ferocious but secretly playful as he has a snowball in his hand ready to launch at an unsuspecting someone. Gleeful and whimsical! This is math? Yes, please.
Highly, highly recommended for ALL learners, even if adult. You will pick up some fancy tricks that will amaze you.
Grades 4 and up, and yes, all adults. Excellent tool for use in home schools. A MUST HAVE, MUST EXPERIENCE book.
The ABCs of Women's History
by Rio Cortez
Illustrated by Lauren Semmer
Workman Kids
Workman Publishing
Hachette Book Group, Inc.
2025
64 pages
ISBN: 9781523523290
Remarkable women who came before us showed us the path to equality, justice, knowledge, freedom and using our hard work and voices to bring about change. This important book features women who questioned the status quo and joined movements to ensure civil rights and worker rights.
This gem of a book will motivate girls to stand up for what they believe and are passionate about. My favorite page reads, "We have the right to our bodies, to education, and free speech, and the right to work at whatever we please." A two-page spread shows a diverse group of girls who know that no means no. They will never go backward.
Among the famous women mentioned are Shirley Chisholm, Sally Ride, Kamala Harris, Gloria Steinem and many more. Pages in the back list terms used and famous figures mentioned under each letter of the alphabet. The only drawback is the publisher's choice in solid color endpapers instead of eye-catching illustrations.
Recommended for every history buff, every young girl who dreams, and every library. Grades 3 and up.
An Explorer's Guide to the World's Living Wonders
by Cara Giaimo and Joshua Foer
Hachette Book Group, Inc.
Workman Publishing
2464 pages
ISBN: 9781523514410
Atlas Obscura Wild Life is chock full of factoids, trivia, photos and full color illustrations of curious species of plants and animals from every corner of the world. Painstakingly indexed for ease of use and divided into seven catagories, this book is a treasure for the curious reader. From forests to grasslands to shallows and deeps to deserts, the authors have covered little known species most of us will only encounter in these pages.
Interesting animals fill the pages: the platypus, for example is probably the silliest looking animal and is indeed a strange creature. It lays eggs but nurses its offspring. It has fur yet swims underwater. It can pull in the webbing on its feet allowing it to walk on its claws on land. They are shy and only spotted in Australia and Tasmania. Another strange creature is the great Indian bustard, a giant of the bird which can reach up to four feet tall and weigh up to thirty-three pounds, it can actually fly. Fewer than one hundred bustards remain and are found near the border of India and Pakistan.
The ocean boasts its own array of different creatures: the peacock mantis shrimp lives in the Indian Ocean and can be found in the southwestern Pacific. The authors describe its appearance as, "...a jumbo prawn crossed with a birthday cake." This shrimp has eyes with twelve color receptors that allow it to see up to 100,000 colors. Scientists are still studying this unique ability. A bird who likes to fly (literally) is the airpot snowy owl which can be spotted at many airports in all kinds of weather and even in the day time. They are quite at home where there are flat runways and air fields which mimics their native tundra.
This book would make a great gift for anyone who loves animals or adventure. Reluctant readers will find this book easy to devour as facts in bold type are set off to show the species range and species scientific name. Color photos of every plant and animal make it a great book for visual learners.
Highly, highly recommended grades 5 and up.
The One and Only Googoosh: Iran's Beloved Superstar
by Azadeh Westergaard
Viking
An impint of Penguin Random House, LLC
2024
40 pages
9780593114636
Mixed media art using block prints, collage pieces using paper and cardboard, colored pencils and brushes give this picture book biography a definitive texture allowing elements to appear almost in 3-D. Author illustator Azadeh Westergaard captures the sights of her homeland she remembers as a chld, "...snowcapped peaks of the Algorz Mountains," and the sounds of the streets as vendors sell pomegranate juice, and the aromas as bakers pull out fresh barbari bread. A tiny girl first appears with her father onstage and people are charmed. She gathers national attention as her fan base grows. Googoosh becomes Iran's favorite singer until war comes, the theaters are shut down, people flee, "the roar and thunder of a revolution... which turns Iran, "...into a typhoon of turmoil."
People flee their homeland to seek a new life somewhere safe, but they never forget the songs Googoosh sang. They hold them tight and remember a peaceful Iran. Time marches on, "...as the years slipped through our gingers lie the stringed prayer beads our grandfathers used to mark time." Googoosh is allowed to leave Iran in 2000 and she performs in Toronto, Canada. Generations of Iranians love her music which they hold in their, "collective history andt now exists only in the land of memories."
Beautiful prose and striking imagery evoke memories of Iran before the revolution. Googoosh is remembered as Iran's first superstar and is celebrated in this compelling picture book about a famous person in a country's culture. Non-Iranian people may not know Googoosh, but this children's book will change that.
Highly recommended for the biography section as well as the children's picture book section of every library. The One and Only Googoosh is too important a book to miss! A biography of a famous Iranian is important, but even more so here since Googoosh is a famous FEMALE Iranian.
Ages 4 to 8.
Girls on the Rise
by Amanda Gorman
Illustrated by Loveis Wise
Viking
An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
2025
32 pages
ISBN: 9780593624180
A much needed book for troubled times, Girls on the Rise celebrates the power of having a voice and speaking up for change. When girls get together, there is nothing they can not accomplish and even though they may have differences, Gorman writes, "we might have our own voices, but we're singing the same song." If they work together, they are too powerful to ignore.
Illustrations are inclusive and multicultural. Girls on the Rise embraces change and the spirit of a strong sisterhood. Girls, "are gutsy...gorgeous, gleaming, giving and gifted, glorious glitter and grit."
Artwork is digital using Adobe Photoshop and collage art. Highly recommended ages 2 and up.
Radiant
by Vaunda Micheaux Nelson
Dutton Children's Books
an impint of Penguin Random House LLC
2025
320 pages
ISBN: 9780593855782
The year is 1963 and Cooper Dale is in fifth grade, and she is not at all happy to be in Mrs. Keating, aka the Queen of Darkness's, class.
Set in history, this novel in verse tells the story of turbulent times: there's a bombing in the Baptist church in Alabama, and four little black girls are killed. Cooper is worried about the violence and afraid the KKK might come to her church or her neighborhood. She wonders why white people hate black people so much. She hears Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech and wonders when it will be that people are not judged by the color of their skin. She sometimes wishes she were white, "But sometimes I don't want to be black...but sometimes, sometimes, I just want to be white." In a poem called "If," Cooper says, "If I could--/I would/take my box of crayons/and color the world/the way I want."
Cooper's personal problems include growing apart from her now fourteen-year old sister and a mean boy named Wade in her class who calls her "Mud Face" and bullies her. What's worse is that Cooper's mother works as a maid for the mean boy's mother. Cooper is embarrassed her mother has to clean up after Wade and his family.
One problem is solved when Beatlemania (notice the album cover the girl is holding on the book cover art) takes over the country, both Cooper and her sister Maxine are crazed. They are brought back together in their shared love of the Fab Four.
As the British Invastion sweeps the nation and teens are brought to tears, the entire country comes to a complete stop on November 22, 1963, the day beloved President John F. Kennedy is assassinated. The adults watch the news and talk about politics, and, of course, Cooper hears what's transpiring around the country. Her mother and father debate the activism of Malcom X.
Wade's mother dies, and Cooper and her mother attend the funeral. Wade eventually comes back to school, but he's a changed person. Cooper empathizes with him even though he's been nothing but a terror to her all year. Cooper even changes her mind about Mrs. Keating. She's not the Queen of Darkness after all.
Perfect for reluctant readers, Radiant shines! It will likely be a contender for awards season this year. Vaunda Micheaux Nelson, the winner of the Coretta Scott King Award, may have to clear off more space on her mantle.
Highly recommended grades 4 and up. Radiant would be great for classroom reading. Savvy librarians will purchase a class set and a few other copies for circulation.
Dinosaurs In Space
PAWS: Hazel Has Her Hands Full
by Nathan Fairbairn
Illustrated by Michele Assarasakorn
G.P. Putnam's Sons
an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
2025
176 pages
Color Illustrations
ISBN: 9780593695807
Book Four in the PAWS series follows twelve-year old Hazel who has moved from Toronto to Vancouver. At first, she was worried she wouldn't be able to make friends or that some people might be mean to her, but she quickly makes friends with Gabby and Priya and later their friend Mindy. They happily welcome her to their PAWS group which stands for Pretty Awesome Walkers where the girls walk other people's dogs for pay. Even though Hazel uses a wheelchair, she can use her legs but only for short distances due to her spinal muscular atrophy.
With school almost out for the summer, the girls share their summer plans. Gabby is in too many camps to count, Mindy must visit her father for a month and Priya doesn't want to ride the bus twice a day to get to their clients' houses. Hazel is on her own: no one can help her with PAWS. Her mother has made it clear she is only to walk dogs with others, never alone. When a cat sitting job presents itself, Hazel takes the gig and lies to her mother telling her Gabby is helping her. Hazel worries her mom will find out, but she's too afraid to come clean.
Balancing walking the dogs while her friends are gone and cat sitting for her new clients, Hazel begins to get fatigued. She worries she got herself into a real mess. When the cats accidentally escape, Hazel turns to her friends and their families to help her search for them. One thing she knows for sure: In a crisis, people get together.
Highly recommended for fans of graphic novels and readers of the series. It is not necessary to read the first three books to understand book four; however, most readers may want to find the first three after reading Hazel Has Her Hands Full.
Grades 5 and up.
Fail-A-Bration
by Brad and Kristi Montague
Dial Books for Young Readers
An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC
2024
40 pages
ISBN: 9780593697146
Maybe things didn't turn out the way you wanted. Maybe the cake you baked turned out messed up. Maybe you failed at something important, but author Brad and Kristi Montague have a positive message for all the messers, missers, the late to the party, the ones who came in last place--everyone makes mistakes. The important thing is to realize that you learned from your mistake and tomorrow, you will "...fail better."
The concept of throwing a Fail-A-Bration is lovely. Everyone is invited to share and talk and learn from each other. Bring your messed up cake, show up in your shirt you spilled chocolate milk on earlier, share the time you fell down and got embarrassed, and talk about the time you tried so hard but failed. You learned!
What a simple, positive concept. Children need this book, libraries need this book, parents need this book. The positive message that failure happens to everyone and it is okay to feel sad or mad or cry, but you could throw a Fail-A-Bration to make your failure a positive experience for you and everyone else.
The rhyming text keeps the message light-hearted and positive. Illustrations are mixed media and include collage elements, string, cardboard, double sided tape, acrylic paint and even cookies! All the pieces were "rescued" from the authors' recycling bin, Use this picture book to teach about the concept mixed media art of reusing and repurposing common items from the recycling bin to create art.
Highly recommended for all. Ages 2 and up.
Have You Seen My Acorn?
by DK Ryland
illustrations by the author
Flamingo Books
an imprint of Penguin Random House, LLC
2024
32 pages
ISBN:9780593622421
A clueless squirrel is in a tizzy when he can't find his acorn. He runs to each of his friends in the woodland: Skunk, Raccoon, Deer and Fox but none of them can find it. Squirrel is in such a huge hurry, he never stays long enough to hear what each friend is trying to tell him. He rushes off in search of his elusive acorn all the while right under his nose! Finally Owl drops an acorn from his tree, and Squirrel is so happy to see his missing acorn, so he decides to bury it! Young readers will solve the mystery of the missing acorn long before Squirrel "finds" his new acorn.
Clever banter between the animals uses new and fun words for readers: chitchat, skedaddled, scurried, literally and morals. The use of onomatapeoia allows the adult, or older reader, the chance to embellish the word sounds including sounds animals make like "rat-tat-tat" and "whoo! whoo!" Words in bold and all caps direct the reader to make sure and put emphasis on them.
This is such a fun book! Any reader will giggle as Squirrel scampers all over the forest when the entire time, his acorn has been visible...except it's turning into a small plant that will grow to a giant oak.
Ages 3 and up. A must-have, must-read for every child and every library.
Stop That Mop!
Ready To Read Level One
by Jonathan Fenske
Illustrations by the author
Simon Spotlight
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division
2025
32 pages
ISBN: 9781665932721
An unhappy mop is sick and tired of having to mop and mop and mop all the slop and glop, so they decide to run away. They run away from the pig who's chasing them. A bunny joins in the chase followed by a pony and a fishy. The group of animals continues to chase the nimble mop until they all reach a stop sign, warning of a cliff drop off ahead.
The mop is not done yet. They fall the cliff and are saved by a bird, but the mop wins freedom as the flabbergasted and tired chasers look on.
The fun rhyming story will likely be your toddler's favorite book. The mop is winsome, silly, entertaining and speedy. Fenske captures each animal's personality using colorful, almost cartoon-like facial expressions and body language. This book is a rare gem and a must-read. Beginning readers will be captivated by the easy rhymes featuring easy words to sound out and it will help them with their first sight words.
This picture book is a Theodor Seeuss Geisel Honor Winner and a Junior Library Guild Selection and will be a popular pick for awards this year.
Highly, highly recommended ages 18 months and up.
by Richard T. Morris
Illustrated by Julie Rowan-Zoch
A Caitlain Dlouhy Book
Atheneum Books for Young Readers
2025
40 pages
ISBN: 9781482478021
This clever redux of Robert Frost's "Stopping By the Woods on a Snowy Evening" is witty, irreverent, and entertaining.
Frost's famous poem is set in a snowy wood on the "darkest evening of the year." In the poem, the narrator describes the setting as having "easy wind" and "downy flake" and the "woods are lovely, dark and deep." He halts his horse to watch the snow fall, enjoying the silence and darkness.
A young boy reimagines the poem. He sees the woods, but his ride is a hippopotamus with a jingle bell collar. Robert Frost appears at a window, correcting the boy, telling him it's not a hippo, it is in fact supposed to be a horse. The boy, not convinced, asks the man who he is. Frost defends his poem, "I wrote this poem." The boy says he only sees his hippo, no horse at all, and changes Frost's work to a jungle setting. Frost disagrees, saying it does not snow in the jungle. As Frost continues to pontificate, the boy says it's boring, so boring that the hippo has fallen asleep. The boy continues to add fun to the poem with a giant snake, a hippo that does karate, an incoming meteor, a tidal wave, and an alien invasion.
The surprise ending uses lines from another Frost poem and ties the new poem and its exciting story together. The Frost character ends up loving the redux and riding off with the boy atop the blue hippo.
At the beginning of the book, you can almost hear the disdain in Frost's voice as he points his finger and "schools" the young boy. When he says he wrote the poem, the word "wrote" is in bold font, directing the reader to give more emphasis, or inflection, to this word. Frost carries a notebook and pen, further showing him as a man of learning. He pulls out a podium to recite the last stanza of his poem, emphasizing the fact he is a writer/poet who recites his poems in the public. He's soon interrupted when the aliens show up and he must hop on the rhino with the boy as the boy shouts, "Run for your lives!"
This fun interpretation includes the original poem after the story. For younger kids, read the poem after the story. For older children, read the poem first so that they have a starting point. The humor will make much more sense if they are familiar with the poem. This is a great conversation opener for a unit on modern poetry (by modern, I am including the twentieth century to the present).
Highly, highly recommended ages 3 and up. It would be a fun creative writing lesson to have students choose a famous poem and rewrite it to "jazz it up a bit." Who knows? Maybe their outcome becomes a picture book!
Freedom Braids
by Robin Newman
Illustrated by Deborah Zemke
Creston Books, LLC
2024
32 pages
ISBN: 9781954354296
A brilliant take on "The Three Little Pigs" features an author who is writing the story and the characters, the three little pigs, who step in and take over! What happens to a writer when the characters steer the ship?
Comic-book like illustrations by Deborah Zemke will enthrall as young readers laugh their way through the pages as the silly antics of the three little pigs unfold. Even the Big Bad Wolf has his own "take" on the story. He's tired of being the bad guy and wants to be the good guy, the protagonist. He wants friends. As each character steps up, the writer changes the setting and the story, but she takes a stand on the five elements of a story: plot, setting, characters, conflict and resolution. The pigs and the wolf disagree and, "...wrote the writer right out of their story."
Creative and funny, Who's Writing This Story is a standout among all other picture books. It's likely both the author and illustrator will earn awards for this one. Anyone teaching any writing class or English class needs this book. Every writer needs this book to remind them of the basics while entertaining them with a new twist to an old story. Never as "The Three Little Pigs" been both winsome, necessary and funny.
Highly, highly recommended. You NEED this book for every collection and writer's desk. A fantastic gift for any budding writer; furthermore, even a seasoned author like David Baldacci or Stephen King will enjoy the storytelling.
Ages 7 and up and recommended as a gift for everyone who is writing.
Awards:
Award Winner, CBC Kids Reads, 2024
Commended, Best Books for Kids and Teens, Canadian Children's Book Centrre, 2024
Nominated, OLA Blue Spruce Award, 2025
My Review:
Still My Tessa
by Sylv Chiang
Illustrated by Mathias Ball
North Winds Press
Scholastic Canada Ltd.
2024
32 pages
9781443196239
Younger sister Evelyn misses her older sister Tessa, but Tessa doesn't want to play or talk. She stays in her room or wears her headphones everywhere. When Tessa confronts her older sis, Tessa tells her that she is not her sister anymore. Tessa instructs Evelyn to refer to her as her sibling, not sister nor brother.
Tessa explains that pronouns are important, and she uses "they" or "them." It takes about a week, but Evelyn learns the correct pronouns, and Tessa seems happier. When the family goes on a bike ride and gets ice cream, their parents warn the siblings that it's not necessary to tell everyone Tessa's gender. Evelyn disagrees, knowing it is important. Later, Mom uses "non-binary" as she refers to Tessa and Tessa smiles. Readers see the personal growth of the entire family of four: Tessa is much happier when people use her pronouns and understand that she is neither a boy nor a girl, Evelyn becomes her sibling's ally and instructs others about how important pronouns are, the parents use the correct pronouns and introduce Tesssa as "non-binary."
Included in the book are pages defining the terms: non-binary, ally and pronouns as it refers to gender and tips to become a "pronoun ally."
Still My Tessa is a powerful story about a family learning to use pronouns and understand how important being an ally is for any person, young or old.
This picture book is a must-have for all library collections. Ages 3 and up.
by Ciera Burch
Margaret K. McElderry Books
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division
2024
256 pages
ISBN: 9781665930574
Camp Twisted Pine is a spooky middle grade read with just the right amount of the elements kids love about summer camp. The author dedicates the book to, "...all the kids who wanted to go to summer camp but weren't allowed to...," and those readers will visit Camp Twisted pine through the eyes of eleven-year old Naomi.
Although she doesn't want to go to camp, she finds out that she and her twin younger brothers are being shipped off for the summer while her parents sort out their separation and impending divorce. While Naomi was ready to hate camp, once she's there, it's not so bad. The counselors are okay, the cabin is decent and she gets along with the other campers and becomes friends with Jackie. Jackie is hard of hearing and teaches Naomi ASL (American Sign Language) as the girls become closer.
There's something amiss in the woods, and the scary stories told at the campfire has Naomi on edge. When a kid goes missing, Naomi convinces Jackie that they better solve the mystery of just what is out there in the woods. Could the Jersey Devil be real?
Readers will cheer for Naomi as she unravels the mystery: she's fearless, smart and driven. For all those readers who have never been to camp, Camp Twisted Pine is the answer.
Recommended grades 5 and up. A little spooky, but no gore.