Friday, December 26, 2008

The Golden Mare, the Firebird, and the Magic Ring

Ruth Sanderson

Based on a Russian tale, Alexi must overcome many obstacles including making Yelena his bride and freeing the firebird from the Tsar.

My Many Colored Days

Dr. Seuss

Illustrated by Steve Johnson and Lou Fancher

Some days feel blue and others feel yellow, but you will always feel like you.

Monster Trucks

Mark Todd

Describes different types of heavy duty trucks people use.

Duck Soup

Jackie Urbanovic

Max likes to cook soups (most of his don't taste that great though), but when he goes into the garden to get some herbs, the other animals think he has turned into duck soup!

Monday, October 13, 2008

The Storytelling Princess

Rafe Martin

Illustrated by Kimberly Bulcken Root

A prince is set to marry a princess, a princess is set to marry the prince, but the prince will only marry someone who tells him a story he does not know the ending to.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

The Very Hungry Caterpillar

Eric Carle

A caterpillar was very hungry one week, but he needs lots of food if he is to become a beautiful butterfly.

Where's My Teddy?

Jez Alborough

Eddie lost his teddy in the woods, and it grew to be bigger than he is. Bear also lost his teddy, but it shrunk to really tiny size.

Cinderella Skeleton

Robert D. San Souci

Illustrated by David Catrow

Cinderella is a skeleton looking for a prince, but then she loses her foot at the ball.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Dog and Bear

Laura Vaccaro Seeger

Dog and bear are best friends and go through three stories together in this collection.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Glass Slipper, Gold Sandal: A Worldwide Cinderella

Paul Fleischman

Illustrated by Julie Paschkis

The story of Cinderella with different countries telling a different part.

Julius, The Baby of the World

Kevin Henkes

Lily's new brother Julius is taking all the attention away from her, the QUEEN of the WORLD! She thinks he is disgusting and a bother, until one day her cousin comes over and says the same things.

Tomorrow's Alphabet

George Shannon

Illustrated by Donald Crews

A is for Seed, tomorrow's Apple.

The Empty Pot

Demi

The Emperor sets out a challenge to find an heir; whomever grows the most beautiful plant from the seeds he provides will become the emperor. Ping tries to grow something wonderful, but ends up going to the palace with an empty pot.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Waking Beauty

Leah Wilcox

Illustrated by Lydia Monks

A fractured take on Sleeping Beauty, where the prince is a horrible listener.

Love You Forever

Robert Munsch

Illustrated by Sheila McGraw

Shows that a love between parent and child lasts for a lifetime.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Mei Li

Thomas Handforth

Mei Li is just a girl in China, so what can she do? She attends the New Years festival with her brother, and the fortune teller says she is princess of her kingdom, which turns out to be home all along.

Babies in the Bayou

Jim Arnosky

Goes through what type of babies may be in a bayou.

Mr. Putter and Tabby See the Stars

Cynthia Rylant

Illustrated by Arthur Howard

Mr. Putter ate too many jelly rolls, and his grumbling stomach is keeping him up at night, so he ad Tabby take a walk to look at the stars.

The Perfect Nest

Catherine Friend

Illustrated by John Manders

Jack the Cat wants to make an omelet, so he builds the perfect nest to attract a chicken. Instead he gets a chicken egg, a duck egg, and a goose egg, and they hatch before he can make an omelet out of them.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Chicka Chicka Boom Boom

Bill Martin Jr and John Archambault

Illustrated by Lois Ehlert

A told B and B told C, I'll meet you at the top of the coconut tree.

Bob and Otto

Robert O. Bruel

Illustrated by Nick Bruel

A worm and a caterpillar are best friends, and the Otto is sad that Bob grew wings while all he did was dig, but Otto finds out that digging is important too.

Imagine Harry

Kate and M. Sarah Klise

Little rabbit has an imaginary friend named Harry.

A Tree is Nice

Janice May Udry

Illustrated by Marc Simont

Talks about the many different uses of trees.

Chanticleer and the Fox

Barbara Cooney

Adapted from Canterbury Tales. Chanticleer was a rooster who would crow most beautifully, and he and his harem of 7 hens lived happily, until one day a fox comes and flatters Chanticleer.

Bean Thirteen

Matthew McElligott

Ralph and Flora the bugs are picking beans for dinner, but they pick unlucky bean thirteen, and now they cannot separate the beans evenly so everyone can eat the same amount.

At Night

Jonathan Bean

At night when a child cannot sleep they venture to the rooftop to catch the breeze and maybe sleep.

Kid Tea

Elizabeth Ficocelli

Illustrated by Glin Dibley

Everyday the kids get into some mess, so every bath time is a different color kid tea.

Freckleface Strawberry

Julianne Moore

Illustrated by LeUyen Pham

Freckleface Strawberry has so many freckles everywhere, and there is no way to get rid of them. The only way is to wear a itchy ski mask all the time, but her friends don't care that she is freckly, so that is all that really matters.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Many Moons

James Thurber

Illustrated by Louis Slobodkin

The princess of the kingdom is ill, and the only way to get better is to bring her the moon, only no one can seem to do it.

White Snow Bright Snow

Alvin Tresselt

Illustrated by Roger Duvoisin

Telling about the first snow of the season and how a postman, farmer, policeman and his wife live through the cold snow.

Duffy and the Devil

Harve and Margot Zemach

A Cornish tale retold. A retelling of Rumpelstiltskin.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

A Story A Story

Gail E. Haley

Retold from an African tale. Ananse is a spider story from Africa, about those that are weaker winning over the stronger.

Sylvester and the Magic Pebble

William Steig

Sylvester loved to collect pebbles of all shapes and sizes, but when he finds a magic pebble and wishes to become a rock, he can't figure out how to wish himself back into a donkey.

The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship

Arthur Ransome

Illustrated by Uri Shulevitz

Retelling of a Russian tale. The fool of the world sets out to find a flying ship so he can marry the czar's daughter, meeting friends along the way. When he gets to the czar he is met with challenges that his new friends help him overcome.

Tough Boris

Mem Fox

Illustrated by Kathryn Brown

Boris is a mean pirate, all pirates are mean. But then his parrot dies and he cries, all pirates cry.

John, Paul, George and Ben

Lane Smith

A funny book about America's founding fathers.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Zany Zoo

William Wise

Illsutrated by Lynn Munsinger

Pun filled poems about animals.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Nine Days to Christmas

Marie Hall Ets and Aurora Labastida

Story of Ceci's first Christmas Posada, and how she picked put the pinata for it.

Madeline's Rescue

Ludwig Bemelmans

Madeline almost drowns in the river, if not for the heroism of a dog named Genevieve. Genevieve soon comes to live with the girls in the school.

Arrow To the Sun

Gerald McDermott

A retelling of a Pueblo Indian tale. Story about a boy who wants to find his father, and gets turned into an arrow and sent into the sun, only to fin his father is the sun.

Always Room For One More

Sorche Nic Leodhas

Illustrated by Nonny Hogrogian

A Scottish folksong about always having room for one more.

The Egg Tree

Katherine Milhous

There is an Easter egg hunt in Pennsylvania countryside, and when Katy finds eggs in the attic that are hollow but painted beautifully, the children make an Easter Egg Tree.

Time of Wonder

Robert McClosky

Goes through different activities on an island, including a hurricane.

One Fine Day

Nonny Hogrogian

One day a fox stole some milk from an old woman, and when she cuts off his tail, he must seek a way to repay her so she will sew it back on.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

The Little Island

Golden MacDonald and Leonard Weisgard

The story of a little island as it goes through the seasons.

Song and Dance Man

Karen Ackerman

Illustrated by Stephen Gammell

Some children get to see their grandpa doing some of the shows he did for Vaudeville.

Frog Went A-Courtin'

John Langstaff

Illustrated by Feodor Rojankovsky

The story of how Frog and Mouse were married. Originally a Scottish folk song.

The Little House

Virginia Lee Burton

A little house is built in the country, ad she dreams of what it might be like to live in the city that seems so far away. When the city finally builds up around her, she just wants to go back to the country.

I WIll Make Miracles

Susie Morgenstern

Illustrated by Jiang Hong Chen

A Boy tries to figure out what he wants to do when he grows up, and he want to create miracles to save the world.

Daddy's Roommate

Michael Willhoite

Daddy has a new roommate named Frank, and a little boy learns that gay is just another kind of love.

Heather Has Two Mommies

Leslea Newman

Illustrated by Diana Souza

Heather has two mommies and no daddies. Story of how Heather was born and why being in a different family is normal.

Friday, August 29, 2008

May I Bring a Friend?

Beatrice Schenk De Regniers

Illustrated by Beni Montresor

When the king and queen asks you to tea, it only seems natural to want to bring a friend.

Push, Pull, Empty, Full

Tana Hoban

Pictures of opposites

Abraham Lincoln

Ingri & Edgar Parin d'Aulaire

Biography of Abraham Lincoln.

The Talking Eggs

Robert D. San Souci

Illustrated by Jerry Pinkney

Adapted from a Creole folktale, and similar to Cinderella. A poor girl is kind to old aunty and listens to what she has to say without complaint, but her sister does not.

Goodnight Moon

Margaret Wise Brown

Saying goodnight to everything in the room.

Mysteries of Harris Burdick

Chris Van Allsburg

Harris Burdick left pictures, titles, and captions at a publishing house, but did not tell the rest of the stories. Contained in this book is all 14 pictures, waiting for their stories.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Animals of the Bible

Helen Dean Fish

Illustrated by Dorothy P. Lathrop

Goes through some of the bible stories that features animals.

Drummer Hoff

Barbara Emberley

Illustrated by Ed Emberley

A verse about the making of a cannon.

The Funny Little Woman

Arlene Mosel

Illustrated by Blair Lent

An old Japanese woman loses a dumpling down a hillside one day, and it leads her into the land of the oni.

Prayer For a Child

Rachel Field

Illustrated by Elizabeth Orton Jones

A prayer written for children of the world.

Sam, Bangs & Moonshine

Evaline Ness

Sam (which is short for Samantha) is known for saying moonshine, but she needs to learn the difference between moonshine and real.

Once a Mouse...

Marcia Brown

A story about big and little, when a hermit finds a mouse in trouble who he turns into a tiger, who gets airs about him, so the hermit changes him back into mouse again.

The Snowy Day

Ezra Jack Keats

Young Peter jumps into his snowsuit and goes outside to play in newly fallen snow.

Baboushka and the Three Kings

Ruth Robbins

Illustrated by Nicolas Sidjakov

Baboushka finds the three kings from Christmas myth at her doorstep, and she decides to follow them to see the birth of the child. Based on a Russian folk tale.

Cinderella

Marcia Brown

Retelling of Cinderella

They Were Strong and Good

Robert Lawson

The story of the authors father and mother and fathers mother and father and mothers father and mother. Celebrates different heritages in America around the time of the Civil War.

Earth to Stella

Simon Puttock

Illustrated by Philip Hopman

Stella goes in for bed, but blasts off into outer space instead.

The Brave Little Seamstress

Mary Pope Osbourne

Illustrated by Giselle Potter

A retelling of the Brave Little Tailor, this is a seamstress who starts by killing seven flies, but then her adventure gets crazier.

Sheep Fairy: When Wishes Have Wings

Ruth Louise Symes

Illustrated by David Sim

Wendy the sheep saves a fairy, and is granted her wish to fly.

Fluffy and Baron

Laura Rankin

Fluffy the Duck and Baron the dog are best friends, but Fluffy starts spending a lot of time with other ducks, which leads to ducklings!

The Master Swordsman & The Magic Doorway

Alice Provensen

Two legends from China retold.

Mary Had a Little Ham

Margie Palatin

Illustrated by Guy Francis

Mary had a little pig that had a lot of talent, so she sent him off to Broadway to try and make it big.

Fables

Arnold Lobel

A set of fables that each have a moral.

Ashanti to Zulu: African Traditions

Margaret Musgrove

Illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon

An alphabet book that depicts some different tribes in Africa.

Saint George and the Dragon

Margaret Hodges

Illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman

Retelling of the story of Saint George and the Dragon.

Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People's Ears

Verna Aardema

Illustrated by Leo and Diane Dillon

When mosquito tells a tale to iguana, it starts a chain reaction that ends with one owlet being killed and owl refusing to raise the sun. So mosquito gives up telling tall tales, but develops a worse habit, buzzing in people's ears.

Owl Moon

Jane Yolen

Illustrated by John Schoenherr

A little girl and her father go owling in the woods one night, hoping to spot an owl.

Hey, Al

Arthur Yorinks

Illustrated by Richard Egielski

Al the janitor and his dog Eddie want something more to life than just mopping floors, but when bird take them to paradise and they start turning into birds, they realize they miss their old life.

Jumanji

Chris Van Allsburg

It looked like an ordinary board game, but it lead into the world of Jumanji!

Saturday, August 23, 2008

The Glorious Flight: Across the Channel with Louis Bleriot

Alice and Martin Provensen

The story of how aviation pioneer Louis Bleriot flew across the English channel in thirty six minutes in 1909.

Lon Po Po

Ed Young

A Chinese Red-Riding Hood story, telling of a wolf dressed up a some childrens Po Po (grandmother).

Black and White

David Macaulay

A book about four stories that may or may not be inter-connected, it's up to the reader.

Story 1: Boy on a train to see parents
Story 2: Weird Parents
Story 3: Train platform
Story 4: Cows

Grandfather's Journey

Allen Say

Tells the story of the Japanese authors grandfather, and how he loved both Japan and America, but was always homesick for one or the other.

Mirette On the High Wire

Emily Arnold McCully

Tells how Mirette became a tight rope walker under the tutelage of the Great Bellini.

Smoky Night

Eve Bunting

Illustrated by David Diaz

A riot breaks out in Daniel's neighborhood, and soon his apartment building is on fire. Amidst all the chaos, he loses his cat. But his cat teaches everyone about making friends and caring for others.

Tuesday

David Wiesner

There is something strange about Tuesdays, like flying frogs in the night!

Snowflake Bentley

Jacqueline Briggs Martin

Illustrated by Mary Azarian

Tells the story of William Bentley, a man obsessed with snow and moisture and wanted to document it for the world to see.

Rapunzel

Paul O. Zelinsky

The story of Rapunzel, told with gorgeous pictures.

The Three Pigs

David Wiesner

Tells the story of the three little pigs, except these pigs figured out how to escape from their story.

So You Want to Be President?

Judith St. George

Illustrated by David Small

A history of the presidents, with fun facts describing what it takes to be president of the United States.

Noah's Ark

Peter Spier

An Illustrated version of the story of Noah's Ark.

Shadow

Marcia Brown (Original Text in French by Blaise Cendrars)

Goes through the African experience of shadows in poetry form.

Joseph Had a Little Overcoat

Simms Taback

Joseph had a little overcoat, but it was getting old, so he turned it into a jacket! And so fort until it became a button he lost. But then he wrote a book about his overcoats journey, and proved you can make something out of nothing!

The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses

Paul Goble

A Native American girl has a great love of horses, and when she becomes lost with her tribes herd, she becomes a member of a group of free horses, who welcome her into their own tribe.

The Ox-Cart Man

Donald Hall

Illustrated by Barbara Cooney

Following the life of a New England farmer and his family, the book documents the seasons that the family goes through and the things they would make on an early 19th century farm.

Golem

David Wisniewski

The Jews of Prague were being tormented by a lie set out by their enemies. The chief rabbi of Prague Loew brought to life a golem - a giant man made of clay - to protect the Jews of the city.

Friday, August 22, 2008

My Friend Rabbit

Eric Rohmann

Rabbit is a good friend, even if where ever he goes and what ever he does trouble seems to follow.

The Man Who Walked Between the Towers

Mordicai Gerstein

In 1974 a french street performer named Philippe Petit decided he had to cross the World Trade Center towers on a tightrope. Also briefly discusses the fall of the towers.

The Hello, Goodbye Window

Norton Juster

Illustrated by Chris Raschka

At Nanny and Poppy's house there is a special window in the kitchen. It is the window closest to the door, so you can say hello there before entering the house and goodbye after leaving it. It is the magic portal to Nanny and Poppy's house.

Pierre in Love

Sara Pennypacker

Illustrated by Petra Mathers

The story of a fisherman in love with a ballet/art teacher, and them thinking their love would never be.

Maybe a Bear Ate It

Robie H. Harris

Illustrated by Michael Emberley

What happens when you can't find your favorite book? Did a bear eat it? Did an elephant fall asleep on it? Who cares, you just want your book back!

Anno's Counting Book

Anno

The book teaches counting by using watercolors and images to simulate mathematical situations. Also has a section in back describing numbers.

The Ghost-Eye Tree

Bill Martin Jr and John Archambault

Illustrated by Ted Rand

Mama asks her son and daughter to go get some milk from the end of the road on a very spooky night, and they have to pass by the spooky ghost-eye tree.

Frog Goes to Dinner

Mercer Mayer

The family is gong to a fancy dinner, but the boy brings the frog to the restaurant. Only pictures, no words.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Dear Ichiro

Jean Davies Okimoto

Illustrated by Doug Keith

Henry gets into a fight with his friend Oliver, and never wants to talk to him again. Then his great-grandpa takes him to a Mariners game and talks about how much he did not like the Japanese but was glad that we were no longer enemies so Ichiro could play on the team.

Wild & Wooly

Mary Jessie Parker

Illustrated by Shannon McNeill

Wild is a bighorn sheep, while Wooly is a fluffy sheep. Both are very different but both are sheep. Can these two become friends?

Zen Ties

Jon J Muth

Stillwater's nephew Koo was coming to visit during the summer. During his stay, Stillwater, Koo and the children from the neighborhood go to help out mean Ms. Whitaker, who turns out not to be so bad after all.

Sweet Dream Pie

Audrey Wood and Mark Teague

Ma makes Pa and all the neighbors of Willobee St a sweet dream pie, but they eat too much and have crazy dreams instead.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

First the Egg

Laura Vaccaro Seeger

Goes through the story of what came first...the chicken or the egg?

Friday, August 15, 2008

The Recess Queen

Alexis O'Neill

Illustrated by Laura Huliska-Beith

Mean Jean was the Recess Queen, and nobody played until she said it was okay, other wise she would stomp and push. Then one day a new kid came to school.

Tanka Tanka Skunk

Steve Webb

Tanka and Skunk are friends, and they love to play the drums. Goes through animals and explores beats and syllables.

Broom Mates

Margie Palatini

Illustrated by Howard Fine

Gritch the Witch is preparing for her big howliday party, but her sister Mag the Hag came a day early, and now they are broom mates for the night.

Mommy Mine

Tim Warnes

Illustrated by Jane Chapman

Moms come in all shapes and sizes and make all different noises. Explores animals and their habits.

Pigs Rock!

Melanie Davis Jones

Illustrated by Bob Staake

Tells the story of the Pig Rock Band. Pigs Rock! Pigs Roll! Pigs sing with heart and soul!

Bedhead

Margie Palatini

Illustrated by Jack E. Davis

Oliver has the worst case of bedhead ever!

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Dirty Joe The Pirate

Bill Harley

Illustrated by Jack E. Davis

Dirty Joe is a pirate that plunders dirty socks from other ships. One day he meets his match in the pirate Smelly Annie, who steal underwear!

A good story about how older sisters always get what they want.

Chester

Melanie Watt

Chester the cat keeps getting in the way of Melanie telling her story!

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Can You Growl Like A Bear?

John Butler

Goes through the various noises animals make

The Rainbow Fish

Marcus Pfister

Rainbow fish is the most beautiful fish in the sea, but beauty doesn't make you happy.

The Rowdy Rooster

Janine Scott

Illustrated by Ian Forss

The rooster can't get to sleep, so he wakes everyone else up really early. Book is full of fun trivia about farm animals

Moose Tracks

Karma Wilson

Illustrated by Jack E. Davis

Moose tracks are all around the house, but who could have put them there.

Rainbow Fish A, B, C

Marcus Pfister

Rainbow fish reads the ABCs

Gwango's Lonesome Trail

Justin Parpan

Gwango is a dinosaur that travels around the Southwest looking for a friend.

If Roast Beef Could Fly

Jay Leno

Illustrated by S.B. Whitehead

Jay's dad likes projects, and so his latest project is a rottesserie for the backyard.

Where the Wild Things Are

Maurice Sendak

Max was a wild thing, so when he gets sent to bed early with no supper, he sails away to the land where the wild things are.

The Barn Owl

Tony Johnston

Illustrated by Deborah Kogan Ray

Goes through the day of a barn owl, from waking up to hunting on the farm.

My World of Color

Margaret Wise Brown

Illustrated by Loretta Krupinski

Go through the world of color with the mice from the world of Margaret Wise Brown.

Picky Mrs. Pickle

Christine M. Schneider

Mrs. Pickle is very picky, and won't change her ways; but one day she tries eggplant ice cream and everything changes.

A Duck So Small

A.H. Benjamin

Illustrated by Elisabeth Holstien

Duffle was smaller than all the other ducks, but there must be somethings he can do despite his size.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Punk Wig

Lori Ries

Illustrated by Erin Eitter Kono

Mom is being attacked by alien blobs, also known as cancer. When she loses her hair after getting sick, she goes out to buy a wig.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Red Butterfly: How a Princess Smuggled the Secret of Silk Out of China

Deborah Noyes

Illustrated by Sophie Blackall

A princess has to leave her homeland in China, but she takes with her the secret of silk.

Me Hungry!

Jeremy Tankard

A prehistoric boy goes in search of dinner.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Toot & Puddle The New Friend

Holly Hobbie

Opal's new friend Daphne seems perfect, but Opal is good at things too.

Punxsutawney Phyllis

Susanna Leonard Hill

Illustrated by Jeffrey Ebbeler

Phyllis is a groundhog who loves the weather no matter what season, but does she have what it takes to become the next Punxsutawney Phil, groundhog day groundhog?

Chester's Way

Kevin Henkes

Chester had his own way of doing things, then Wilson moved in and they were like two peas in a pod. Soon after, Lilly moved in and they thought her ways were strange, but soon they became friends.

Owen

Kevin Henkes

Owen has a blanket named fuzzy, but some people think he is too old to carry it around.

The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales

Jon Scieszka

Illustrated by Lane Smith

Fractured Fairy Tales!

The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs!

Jon Scieszka

Illustrated by Lane Smith

The story of the three little pigs, as told by the wolf involved.

Officer Buckle and Gloria

Peggy Rathmann

Officer Buckle and Gloria are the dynamic safety duo, spreading safety tips throughout schools together.

The Golden Mare, the Firebird, and the Magic Ring

Ruth Sanderson

Alexi leaves home in search of adventure, and he finds it when the tsar sends him on impossible tasks or else face death.
Beautiful pictures.

Diary of a Spider

Doreen Cronin

Illustrated by Harry Bliss

Goes through the diary of spider.

The Wizard

Jack Prelutsky

Illustrations by Brandon Dorman

The wizard is up to no good.

Shamoo: A Whale of a Cow

Ros Hill

Shamoo is a whale that wants to belong to the sea.

Zen Shorts

Jon J Muth

This books puts proverbs into a story about three siblings and their neighbor, a panda named Stillwater.

Moses: When Harriet Tubman lead her people to freedom

Carole Boston Weatherford

Illustrated by Kadir Nelson

A story based on Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad.

Gone Wild

David McLimans

The alphabet goes through animals that are vulnerable, endangered, and critically endangered. Gives information about each animal, such as where they are located and why they are in danger.

The Frog Prince Continued

Jon Scieszka

Illustrated by Lane Smith

What happens to the Frog Prince after the kiss.

Wemberly Worried

Kevin Henkes

Wemberly worried about everything, but then she had even more to worry about when it was time to start school. What if no one else brings a doll? What if they make fun of her name? Will she be able to make friends?

Science Verse

Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith

One day in science class the teacher says science is your life. This puts some poor kid in a science curse!

Flotsam

David Wiesner

Flotsam is something that floats in from the ocean. In a wordless book, a boy finds a camera on the beach

Saturday, June 28, 2008

The Blabber Report

True Kelley

Blabber is a mouse that likes to talk, unless it is in front of a large audience, plus he likes to put off doing assignments. How will he get his oral book report done?

Good Morning China

Hu Yong Yi

Tells what some people like to do on a normal day in China.

Sheep Blast Off

Nancy Shaw

Illustrated by Margot Apple

The sheep find a spaceship and take it for a spin.

The Sweetest Kiss

Maranke Rinck and Martijn van der Linden

A Frog Prince has to find the sweetest girl to kiss. In the end it turns out he can't decide and he chooses them all.

The Jellybeans and the Big Dance

Laura Numeroff and Nate Evans

Illustrated by Lynn Munsinger

Emily loves to dance, but her dance class is not much fun until the girls find something in common...their love of Jellybeans!

Keeper of Soles

Teresa Bateman

Illustrated by Yayo

Colin the shoemaker is visited by death one night, but he talks death into giving him more time to live by giving him shoe and shoe.

Snowboard Twist

Jean Craighead George

Illustrated by Wendell Minor

Axel and his dog Grits love snowboarding. The book teaches how people prepare to snowboard after the first snow of the season, and the science behind the perfect snow.

Lucille Lost: A True Adventure

Margaret George and Christopher J. Murphy

Illustrated by Debra Bandelin and Bob Dacey

Lucille the tortoise goes on an adventure when she leaves the land of humans. Book is filled with tortoise facts on each page.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs

Judi Barrett

Illustrated by Ron Barrett

There once was a town named Chewandswallow that had strange weather patterns: food!

Josephina Javelina: A Hairy Tale

Susan Lowell

Illustrated by Bruce MacPherson

Josephina is a Javelina who leaves home to go to Pasadena with dreams of becoming a famous ballerina!

Princess Penelope Takes Charge

Todd Mack

Illustrated by Julia Gran

Penelope the Princess could not wait to be a big sister and have a little sister to play with. Only problem is her parents gave her a little brother.

I Can Draw a Weeposaur and Other Dinosaurs

Poems by Eloise Greenfield

Illustrated by Jan Spivey Gilchrist

Poems about funny dinosaurs.


Not that good.

Is Grandpa Wearing a Suit?

Amelie Fried

Illustrated by Jacky Gleich

A young child tries to understand what death is at his grandfather's funeral.

Meerkat Mail

Emily Gravett

Sunny the Meerkat gets sick of living at home, so he ventures out on the world, sending postcards home to let his family know how he is doing. At the end of his trip he realizes there is no place like home.

The Little Book of Not So

Charise Mericle Harper

A Not So typical book of opposites.

The Cow That Laid an Egg

Andy Cutbill

Illustrated by Russell Ayto

Marjorie the cow feels rather ordinary when compared to the other cows, but one day the chickens decide to boost her self esteem and give her an egg, which Marjorie thinks she laid!

Pirate Treasure Map: A Fairy Tale Adventure

Colin and Jacqui Hawkins

Jack Hubbard goes on a pirate adventure through many fairy tales.

Muti's Necklace: The Oldest Story in the World

Louise Hawes

Illustrated by Rebecca Guay

Muti is a girl in Egypt who has a necklace made by her father, that also hold memories from her family life. She goes against the wishes of the pharaoh when she loses it though.

Jenny Found a Penny

Trudy Harris

Illustrated by John Hovell

Jenny is trying to collect change to buy herself something from the dollar store. Is a good way to show kids how to count money, also includes tax!

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Oliver

Syd Hoff

Oliver accidentally gets sent in the circus shipment, and when the circus turns him away, he tries to find a place to stay.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Olivia Forms a Band

Ian Falconer

Olivia the pig finds out that the fireworks show doesn't have a band, and she decides she will be the entire band for the show.

Fix-It Duck

Jez Alborough

Duck tries to fix his leaky roof, but only causes trouble for his neighbors.

The Snow Princess

Ruth Sanderson

The daughter of Father Frost and Mother Spring, the Snow Princess, longs to see the world. Her father leaves her with one warning "Do not fall in love or you will die" Despite the warning she falls in love with Sergei the shepherd, and she winds up mortal.

Beautiful pictures

Chrysanthemum

Kevin Henkes

Chrysanthemum thinks she has the most fantastic name in the world, until she goes to school and gets made fun of for it. Then the music teacher everyone likes shares a secret, her name is really long and also the name of a flower, just like Chrysanthemum!

Lilly's Big Day

Kevin Henkes

Mr. Slinger is getting married, and Lilly is excited to be his flower girl. Only problem is he asked his niece Ginger to be the flower girl, not Lilly.

Pet of a Pet

Marsha Hayles

Illustrated by Scott Nash

Tabitha lives on a farm, and she has a pet horse. The pet horse has a pet cow, etc.

Math Curse

Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith

A girl is stuck in a Math Curse where everything in her life becomes a math problem. It finally breaks when she realizes she can solve any problem using math.

Sergio Makes a Splash!

Edel Rodriguez

Sergio is a penguin who loves soccer, fishes, and water, any water that is but the deep kind. On the first day of school the penguins go on a field trip to the ocean, and Sergio is willing to swim, but only with his floaties on!

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The Giraffe Who Was Afraid of Heights

Davd A Ufer

Illustrated by Kirsten Carlson

Giraffe was scared to put his head up, so he was sent to te doctor. Along the way he meets a monkey who is also afraid of heights and a hippo that is afraid of water. When they meet a crocodile they realize they can get over their fears without the help of the doctor.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Bad News! I'm in Charge!

Bruce Ingman

When looking for treasure with a medal detector, a kid finds a suit that makes him the leader of the land.

"Let's Get a Pup!" said Kate

Bob Graham

Kate wants a puppy, so her and her parents go to the animal shelter, but is their home big enough for two dogs?

Tacky and the Winter Games

Helen Lester

Illustrated by Lynn Munsinger

Tacky and the rest of the penguins are training for the Winter Games, but will Tacky's antics keep them from winning a medal?

Diary of a Spider

Doreen Cronin

Pictures by Harry Bliss

This is the diary of a spider that is very much like human kids.

Kitten's First Full Moon

Kevin Henkes

Kitten sees her first full moon and thinks it is a large bowl of milk, and she really wants it, but getting to it turns out to be unlucky for her.

Big Red Tub

Julia Jarman

Illustrated by Adrian Reynolds

Stan and Stella are taking a bath, and all of their friends want to join them in their big red tub.

Barn Dance!

Pat Hutchins

Horse, pig, and sheep want to dance, but their children are fast asleep...or are they?

I Saw an Ant of the Railroad Track

Joshua Price

Illustrated by Macky Pamintuan

An ant is walking down a railroad track, just as a train is coming tickety-tack. Can Jack save the ant before there is a smack?

I Saw an Ant in a Parking Lot

Joshua Price

Illustrated by Macky Pamintuan

An ant is going across a parking lot, but a mini-van is coming straight for it. Can Dot save the ant and park the van?

Toot & Puddle Wish You Were Here

Holly Hobbie

Toot goes off to Wildest Borneo, and returns home a nice shade of blue.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Duck, Duck, Goose

Tad Hills

Duck and Goose are the best of friends, until Thistle Duck comes around. And Thistle is good at everything (and is not afraid to tell you she is).

The Princess and the Pea

Retold by John Cech

Illustrated by Bernhard Oberdieck

Retelling of the Princess and the Pea

Bubble Bath Pirates

Jarrett J. Krosoczka

Two kids who think they are pirates take their bath.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Pirates

C.Drew Lamm

Illustrated by Stacey Schuett

Max wanted to read a nice bedtime story, something with cats, but his sister chose a book about pirates instead.

The Pirate Queen

Emily Arnold McCully

Tells the story of the Irish pirate woman named Grania O'Malley. During her time the English came into Ireland, and the story tells of Grania's dealings with Queen Elizabeth.

Clorinda

Robert Kinerk

Illustrated by Steven Kellogg

Clorinda the cow wants to be a ballerina, but is can she really do it?

Toot & Puddle Puddle's ABC

Holly Hobbie

Puddle wants to teach his friend Otto how to write his name, but first he has to teach him about the alphabet.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Big Plans

Bob Shea

Illustrated by Lane Smith

A little boy sits in the corner of his classroom, but he has plans, big plans!

No! That's Wrong!

Zhaohua Ji and Cui Xu

Rabbit finds a pair of underwear...or is it a hat?

Where's My Sock?

Joyce Dunbar

Illustrated by Sanja Rescek

Pippin wants his yellow socks with the clocks on it, but can't find the matching one. Journey to find the pairs of socks in Pippins house.

The Great Math Tattle Battle

Anne Bowen

Illustrated by Jaime Zollars

Harley was good at math but also a tattle. What happens when someone comes into class who is also good at math, but a bigger tattle then Harley.

Will You Read To Me?

Denys Cazet

Hamlet the pig wants to read to someone, but no one in his pig family will listen.

Grump Groan Growl

Bell Hooks

Illustrated by Chris Raschka

If you are in a bad mood, try to keep the feelings inside and let them pass.

Mary Had a Little Lamp

Jack Lechner

Illustrated by Bob Staake

Mary takes her lamp with her everywhere she goes.

Seamore, the Very Forgetful Porpoise

Darcie Edgemon

Illustrated by J. Otto Seibold

Seamore is very forgetful, so forgetful that he mistakenly invites a Killer Whale to dinner! Will he be dinner, or did he manage to find a new friend?

Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Book?

Lauren Child

Herb falls into a book of fairy tales one night.

I Drive a Bulldozer

Sarah Bridges

Illustrated by Derrick Alderman and Denise Shea

Tells about what a bulldozer does and how to drive one.

I Drive a Crane

Sarah Bridges

Illustrated by Derrick Alderman and Denise Shea

Tells about what jobs a crane can do and what it takes to operate one.

I Drive a Dump Truck

Sarah Bridges

Illustrated by Derrick Alderman and Denise Shea

Tells about things a dump truck does and what it takes to drive one.

Ollie

Oliver Dunrea

Gossie and Gertie want Ollie to come out of his egg, but he just won't come out!

Monday, May 26, 2008

The Paper Bag Princess

Robert Munsch

Illustrated by Michael Martchenko

Elizabeth was a beautiful princess who was to marry Ronald, until a dragon comes and burns everything in the kingdom but a paper bag. Then Elizabeth tries to rescue Ronald from the dragon, wearing only her paper bag.

Achoo! Bang! Crash! The Noisy Alphabet

Ross MacDonald

Alphabet book that goes through noises.

Seen Art?

Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith

While looking for his friend Art, people show him the art inside the MoMA instead.

I Don't Like Gloria!

Kaye Umansky

Illustrated by Margaret Chamberlain

Calvin the dog really doesn't like it when Gloria the cat comes to live with the family. The only thing that Gloria and Calvin can agree on is that they do not like Jeffrey, the new bunny to the family.

Baloney (Henry P.)

Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith

This is the story of why Henry P. Baloney, an alien, is late for school. Decoded by the authors, it uses many languages in place of common words.

Swimming Lessons

Betsy Jay

Illustrated by Lori Osiecki

Jane doesn't want to learn how to swim, and doesn't think she will ever need to learn, but she soon realizes how fun swimming can actually be.

Toot & Puddle Charming Opal

Holly Hobbie

Opal comes for a visit, and loses her tooth during her stay.

Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse

Kevin Henkes

Lilly wants to be a teacher when she grows up, until mean Mr. Slinger takes her new plastic purse, quarters and glasses away from her.

Dream Big Starring Olivia

Ian Falconer

Inspirational quotes with pictures of Olivia.

Toot & Puddle You Are My Sunshine

Holly Hobbie

Toot is moping, and the only thing that can clear it up is a good rainstorm.

Squids Will Be Squids

Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith

If you want to say something bad about someone, change their name to a type of animal and call it a fable!

Priscilla Superstar!

Nathaniel Hobbie

Illustrated by Jocelyn Hobbie

Priscilla wants to become the roller skating princess, but instead is cast as the wind. Her friend convinces her it really is the best part in the roller ballet.

Pajama Anytime

Marsha Hayles

Illustrated by Hiroe Nakata

Tells what months of the year (all of them) are good for pajamas.

Toot & Puddle The One and Only

Holly Hobbie

The new girl is copying Opal, and is also the teachers pet and becoming popular in class, but there are some things that the new girl can't beat Opal at.

Oh, Tucker!

Steven Kroll

Illustrated by Scott Nash

What happens when Tucker gets up in the morning and goes in for breakfast.

Hugville

Court Crandall

Illustrated by Joe Murray

Welcome to Hugville, where there is a large amount of different hugs to be given.

Miles Away From Home

Joan Cottle

Miles is on vacation with his family, but he feels like he is in the way and doesn't belong until he saves someone from the ocean.

The Runaway Rice Cake

Ying Chang Compestine

Illustrated by Tungwai Chau

The Chang family only have enough to make one rice cake for their new year celebration, but when the rice cake runs away and the Chang's don't get any of it, the neighbors come to the rescue.

The Story of Paper

Ying Chang Compestine

Illustrated by Yongsheng Xuan

Tells the story of the Kang brothers, and after getting in trouble at school again, decide to try to make something to write on.

Stop Drop and Roll

Margery Cuyler

Illustrated by Arthur Howard

Jessica is a worrier, and this book teaches kids about fire safety through the eyes of a worrier.

The Cello of Mr. O

Jane Cutler

Illustrated by Greg Couch

When war destroys a small village and the relief trucks that were running to it, the only peace a small town can get is from the music of Mr. O.

The Mystery of the Monkey's Maze

Doug Cushman

Following the casebook of Seymour Sleuth as he tries to find out who is out to stop Dr. Irene A. Tran as she finds the cure for hiccups in Borneo.

The Mystery of King Karfu

Doug Cushman

Told in the style of a journal, we follow Seymour Sleuth as he investigates the mystery of the missing stone chicken of King Karfu.

The Polar Express

Chris Van Allsburg

A boy boards the train Polar Express one night and finds himself in the North Pole at Santa's workshop.

John Willy and Freddy McGee

Holly Meade

John Willy and Freddy McGee are guinea pigs that are bored living in a cage life, but when they try to live in the pool table, they realize that sometimes boring is better.

But Excuse Me That is My Book

Lauren Child

Lola wants to go to the library to check out her book on bugs, beetles, and butterflies, but someone already has it. Can Charlie convince Lola to try another book?

I Am Not Sleepy and I Will Not Go To Bed

Lauren Child

Charlie has a tough time getting his little sister Lola into bed.

Jimmy Zangwow's Out-Of-This-World Moon Pie Adventure

Tony DiTerlizzi

Jimmy really wants a Moon Pie, but his mother thinks it will spoil his dinner. How far would Jimmy go to get a moon pie?

1, 2, 3 To the Zoo

Eric Carle

Counting book that shows animals on a train to the zoo.

Stellaluna

Janell Cannon

Stellaluna is a bat that grew up with birds. Some of the things they do seem strange to her, but despite their differences, Stellaluna and the birds she grew up with are friends.

Charlie Hits it Big

Deborah Blumenthal

Illustrated by Denise Brunkus

Charlie is a guinea pig that dreams of working in Hollywood, but are his big screen dreams really what he wants?

Slippers at Home

Andrew Clements

Illustrated by Janie Bynum

Slippers the dog tells about the four people that live in the house with him.

Frank's Great Museum Adventure

Rod Clement

Frank the dog and his owner are off in search of history at the local museum.

The Gum Chewing Rattler

Joe Hayes

Illustrated by Antonio Castro L.

A young boy likes chewing bubble gum, and always has some on him. One day a snake tries to bite him, but instead gets a wad of bubble gum.

A Bad Case of Stripes

David Shannon

Camilla likes lima beans, but is afraid to admit it. But not admitting to who she is and what she likes gives her a bad case of stripes!

Duck at the Door

Jackie Urbanovic

Max is a duck that did not migrate with his flock, instead he spends all winter with Irene and her animals. Everyone tires of Max by the end of winter, but once he leaves they all start to miss him.

Walter the Baker

Eric Carle

Walter the Baker will be banished from the kingdom unless he can make a special new bread. He ends up inventing the pretzel.

Princess Justina Albertina

Ellen Dee Davidson

Illustrated by Michael Chesworth

Princess Justina Albertina is whiny, and she wants a pet! What lengths will her nanny go to get her one?

Hattie Hippo

Christine Loomis

Illustrated by Robert Neubecker

Short stories about hattie hippo, who loves to dance and throw tea parties.

Love, Ruby Valentine

Laurie Friedman

Illustrated by Lynne Avril Cravath

Ruby Valentine's favorite day of the year is Valentine's Day. What happens when she sleeps through Valentine's and can't give out her gifts.

The Prog Frince

C. Drew Lamm

Illustrated by Barbara McClintock

A Mixed up version of the frog prince.

Library Mouse

Daniel Kirk

Sam was a mouse who lived in the library. He decides he wants to write his own stories, and the people of the library want to meet him, but instead Sam shows everyone that an author lives in everyone.

Grumpy Bird

Jeremy Tankard

Bird is really grumpy, too grumpy to eat, too grumpy to fly. When he starts walking and his friends join him, he forgets to be grumpy and starts having fun.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Andrew's Bright Blue T-Shirt

Jessica Wollman

Illustrated by Ana Lopez Escriva

Andrew loves his bright blue shirt with a soccer ball on it so much he refuses to take it off, even after he gets bigger and the shirt gets tight.

How the Tiny People Grew Tall

Nancy Wood

Illustrated by Rebecca Walsh

A Creation tale showing what happens when little people learn from animals.

The Scarab's Secret

Nick Would

Illustrated by Christina Balit

A little scarab beetle saves the life of an Egyptian prince, and tells the story of how he became honored.

Bear Feels Sick

Karma Wilson

Illustrated by Jane Chapman

Bear is feeling sick, can his friends help him feel better.

Bear's New Friend

Karma Wilson

Illustrated by Jane Chapman

There is someone new in the forest, but bear and friends cannot guess who it is.

The Dumpster Diver

Janet S. Wong

Illustrated by David Roberts

The dumpster diver turns trash into treasure, and shows us how to reuse some old stuff in new ways.

How I Became a Pirate

Melinda Long

Illustrated by David Shannon

Jeremy Jacob becomes a pirate one day, and finds out they are cool because they do whatever they want. But are they really cool once Jeremy Jacob finds out some of the things they don't do?

Grumpy Gloria

Anna Dewdney

When Gloria's best friend gets a doll, Gloria feels left out and grumpy, and nothing will cheer her up.

Hilda Must be Dancing

Karma Wilson

Illustrated by Suzanne Watts

When Hilda the Hippo dances everything moves with her! The animals tire of their homes being shaken about, so they try quieter hobbies, but Hilda want to keep on dancing. Will they ever find a quieter hobby that Hilda likes.

Bear Wants More

Karma Wilson

Illustrated by Jane Chapman

Bear wakes up from hibernation, and he is hungry. Every time he eats, he realizes he just wants more.

The 39 Apartments of Ludwig Van Beethoven

Jonah Winter

Barry Blitt

Fact: Beethoven moved to 39 different apartments. Fact: He had 5 legless pianos. What happens to the movers when he wants to move again.

If I Had A Robot

Dan Yaccarino

Phil wonders what he could do if he had a robot, but sometimes the rewards are better if you do it yourself.

The Lima Bean Monster

Dan Yaccarino

Illustrated by Adam McCauley

Sammy hates lima beans, and when the pile he has of them in the vacant lot next door get struck by lightning, it becomes the lima bean monster.

Bubble Gum, Bubble Gum

Lisa Wheeler

Illustrated by Laura Huliska-Beith

A whole load of animals get stuck in a piece of gum on the road.

Oswald

Dan Yaccarino

Oswald just moved into town and is worried he won't make any friends. Then his piano rolls away.

An Octopus Followed Us Home

Dan Yaccarino

A girls wants to keep an octopus that followed her home, but her father reminds her of all the pets that are still in the house.

Deep in the Jungle

Dan Yaccarino

Lion is king of the jungle, and all the animals know it. One day a lion tamer comes and offers him a chance to be a star, but it isn't what lion had expected.

Unlovable

Dan Yaccarino

Alfred is a pug who thinks he is unlovable. All the other dogs make fun of him, and so do the cats and fish. Then he tells the new dog next door a lie about who he is, and when he finds out the truth will he think Alfred is unlovable too?

Monday, May 19, 2008

Verdi

Janell Cannon

Verdi is a snake who's mother wants him to grow up to be big and green, but Verdi wants to be yellow instead.

I'm Gonna Like Me: Letting off a little self-esteem

Jamie Lee Curtis and Laura Cornell

A book that encourages boys and girls to feel good about themselves.

Such A Prince

Dan Bar-el

Illustrated by John Manders

Marvin isn't powerful or rich, or even very handsome, but can an unusual fairy help him win the heart of Princess Vera and turn him into a prince.

Whopper Cake

Karma Wilson and Will Hillenbrand

Grandad want to make a whopper of a cake for grandma's birthday, and makes a mess of everything.

Penguin

Polly Dunbar

Ben tries to get his new present - a penguin - to say something to him.

Falling For Rapunzel

Leah Wilcox

illustrated by Lydia Monks

A retelling of Rapunzel, which involves the prince and Rapunzel getting into some misunderstandings.

Dance by the Light of the Moon

Joanne Ryder

Illustrated by Guy Francis

It's the annual barnyard party, and all the animals are ready to dance! Based on "Buffalo Gals" originally published in 1844.

Hello, Red Fox

Eric Carle

Mama Frog gets a surprise when guests arrive for Little Frog's Birthday party. The book explores complementary colors.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Cowboy and Octopus

Jon Scieszca and Lane Smith

Grade 1–5—Picture-book readers meet an unlikely pair of friends here: a refined octopus and a cowboy who is a little rough around the edges. The two are actually paper cutouts: the title page reveals that Cowboy has been snipped from a Western Heroes paper-doll book and Octopus from a comic strip. Seven hilarious short stories are presented, beginning with the origin of the friendship, in which Cowboy is confused about a teeter-totter that doesn't seem to work until Octopus "repairs" it by sitting on the opposite end, and concluding with the pair gazing into the sunset of a picture postcard. All of the vignettes are silly and perfectly absurd; Scieszka captures a childlike dialogic cadence and ends the pieces with the sudden, agreeable solutions to problems that kids often come up with. Incorporating mid-20th-century illustrations, graphic art, newspaper clippings, and toys, the collage and mixed-media artwork perfectly matches the wacky text. The colors are slightly muted and the paper appears to have yellowed with age. The delightful paper protagonists never change poses, though Smith occasionally dresses them in zany paper hats and silly costumes, and their static nature adds to the humor. Share this title with devotees of Scieszka's and Smith's other collaborations and with fans of Mini Grey's Traction Man Is Here! (Knopf, 2005). Cowboy and Octopus prove that we all get by with a little help from our friends.

Time To Say "Please"

Mo Willems

PreSchool-Grade 3–This painless introduction to good manners is sure to produce a generation of more civilized beings. With tongue firmly in cheek, Willems uses an army of mice and a cast of multicultural children to cover the basics of polite conversation: please, excuse me, sorry, and thank you. The tiny rodents are responsible for maneuvering the colorful text bubbles (and parachutes, arrows, signs, hot-air balloons, sails, wrecking balls, etc.). Framing the words in creative ways against expansive white backgrounds reinforces their importance while providing a boost to beginning readers. The examples speak directly to a young child's experience, thereby inspiring the motivation to try the author's suggestions: If you ever really want something–the illustration shows an entranced girl eyeing a cookie jar–...don't just grab it! Go ask a big person and please say ˜please'! Other relevant situations follow as the mice instruct and cajole the youngsters on the art of approaching adults while remaining sincere. A certain pigeon makes a cameo appearance, and a simple board game decorates the endpapers. While treatises on good manners abound, this entertaining and practical guide is closest to the spirited style of Sesyle Joslin's What Do You Say, Dear? (HarperCollins, 1958). Willems offers no sermons, no sentimentality, just good sense–and fun, thank you very much

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Henry the Dog with No Tail

Kate Feiffer

Illustrated by Jules Feiffer

Henry wantedone thing in life.
He wanted a tail.
All the other dogs he knew had tails.
Grady, a black Labrador,
had a great big black tail.
Pip, a pug, could do
tricks with her tail.
Larry had a big
puffy ball tail...
WHAT WAS
HENRY TO DO?

The Incredible Book Eating Boy

By: Oliver Jeffers

Henry loved books, not reading them, but eating them! Eating books turns out to be very beneficial, with each book he eats he gets smarter. However, soon a good thing turns into a bad thing and all the information starts to get jumbled up. Will Henry find a way to still be able to enjoy books now that he can no longer eat them?

Purplicious

Victoria & Elizabeth Kann

Pinkalicious gets upset because all the other girls think that pink is just for babies. They all like black now. However, when Pinkalicious meets another girl who likes pink, things turn around.

Pinkalicious

Victoria & Elizabeth Kann

Pinkalicioius has turned pink after eating too many pink cupcakes. When one more turns her red, she knows that the only way to be herself again is to eat green foods.

Fancy Nancy Bonjour, Butterfly

Jane O'Connor
Illus: Robin Preiss Glasser

Nancy is thrilled to be going to a butterfly birthday party, but then her parents tell her that she has to go to her Grandparents anniversary party instead. Will she be able to have fun or will she be in a sour mood the whole party?

Kari gives this one 5 stars!

Monday, May 12, 2008

Julius: The baby of the world

Kevin Henkes

Lilly is not so sure about her new brother. She thinks he is smelly, loud, and obnoxious. What will it take for Lilly to accept her new baby brother?

The Surprise

Sylvia van Ommen

Sheep wants to get a special present for his friend. He dies his wool red, shaves it off, and turns it into a sweater.

The Great Kapok Tree

Lynne Cherry

A young man walks into the rainforest to cut down a tree. Soon he tires out and falls asleep at the base of the tree. The animals/people of the rainforest come to him while he sleeps and whisper to him about why he should not cut down the tree. When he wakes up he looks at all the animals, did they manage to change his mind?

Big Al and Shrimpy

Andrew Clements
Illus: Yoshi

Little Shrimpy is too small, and he has no friends. When playing tag one day, Big Al and Shrimpy are kicked out of the game because they are too slow to catch the other fish. This leads them to becoming good friends. How will smart little shrimpy end up saving the day and earning the respect of the other fish?

Big Al

Andrew Clements
Illustrator: Yoshi

Big Al is a kind fish, but he is big, ugly, and scary looking. None of the other fish want to be his friend. What will it take for the littler fish to realize that just because he is big doesn' t mean he is mean?

But Excuse Me That is My Book*

Lauren Child

"Charlie and Lola" Charlie and Lola go to the libary and Lola wants to get her favorite book. However, someone already has it checked out. What will Lola do when she can't get "her" book? Maybe she will find out that other books are good to read also.

Punk Farm*

Jarrett J. Krosoczka

The farmer has gone to bed, but what about the animals? The animals are getting ready to put on a show! Old MacDonald has never been sung quite like this.

Kari gives this book 5 stars!!

The Fabulous Bouncing Chowder*

Peter Brown

Chowder is back! Chowder wants to be an acrobat, but it's No Dogs Allowed. Instead he goes to Fabu Pooch Boot Camp. However, Chowder doesn't quite fit in. Find out how Chowder bounces into everyone's hearts in the First Annual Fabu Pooch Pageant.

Kari gives this book 5 stars!!

It's Hard to Be Five: Learning How to Work My Control Panel

Jamie Lee Curtis

Illustrated by Laura Cornell

The creative team behind Today I Feel Silly amiably addresses the challenges of being a five-year-old—especially the pesky problem of learning self-control. In the story's wry opening, the narrator observes, "It's hard to be five. I'm little no more. Good old days are gone. 'Bye one, two, three, four." Among the trials he faces are controlling his temper when dealing with his younger brother ("My mind says do one thing, my mouth says another"), avoiding dirt and starting school ("School seems so scary. School seems so strange. I'm only five. My whole world's going to change"). Curtis's singsong verse also focuses on some of the pluses of being five: though his brother is strapped into a stroller, the hero can walk by himself ("It's fun to be five! Big changes are here! My body's my car, and I'm licensed to steer") and school entails some entertaining activities ("At five I'm a worker—a bee among bees. I build things and grow things, say thank you and please"). Cornell's buoyant, teeming spreads and spot illustrations convey the boundless energy and changeable moods of this likeable five-year-old with on-target, hyperbolic humor. Though the narrative winds to a rather corny close, this cheerful book with its clever visual details will surely appeal to fans of the collaborators' earlier books as well as those looking for a reassuring, age-appropriate tale for the kindergartner in their lives. Ages 4-8.

Roadsigns: A Harey Race with a Tortoise

Margery Cuyler

Illustrated by Steve Haskamp

The classic Tortoise and Hare race is told through traffic signs

Monkey and Me

Emily Gravett

A little girl and her toy monkey love imitating different animals, everything from jumping like kangaroos to waddling like penguins! Open this book and play along with them.
Can you guess what animal they are now?

Pancakes, Pancakes!

Eric Carle

The barnyard rooster crows to tell Jack it's time to get up. It's very early in the morning -- and Jack is so hungry that what he really wants is a large pancake for breakfast. But first, Jack's mother needs flour from the mill, an egg from the black he, milk from the spotted cow, and butter churned from fresh cream. Will it ever be time for breakfast and that large pancake?

My Apron

Eric Carle

PreS-Gr 1-When an eight-year-old boy helps his uncle at his job as a plasterer, he takes a fancy to his workman's apron with a pocket. As a result of his fascination, his aunt makes him an apron of his own and he spends a few days as his Uncle Adam's assistant. The text is brief and simple but clearly conveys the warmth between the man and his nephew and the child's satisfaction in a job well done. The line/tissue paper illustrations are colorful and somewhat geometric, reminiscent of French Cubist Leger's work featuring laborers

Today is Monday

Eric Carle

PreSchool-Grade 3-- Featuring the artist's familiar bold and colorful style, this song was originally illustrated as a frieze in 1977. Now adapted as a picture book, it is a joyous invitation to "all the hungry children"--shown at a multiethnic banquet at the end of the book--to ". . . Come and eat it up!" Each double-page spread shows a line from the song, with a different animal for each day of the week, eating a different food. Most of the animals are eating a predictable food (a fox with a chicken, a pelican with a fish), but there are some nonsensical scenes (a snake with spaghetti, an elephant eating "zoop"). Overall, the verse has a catchy, cumulative rhythm, but it's the dazzling illustrations--gorgeously displayed with a mastery of design and form--that make this a simple, yet memorable, picture book.

Tell Me Again About the Night I Was Born

Jamie Lee Curtis

Illustrated by Laura Cornell

PreSchool-Grade 2?While Curtis's fame as an actor may get this adoption story special attention, it deserves recognition in its own right. If the title suggests a blow-by-blow description of the birth process, readers are quickly set straight; the news arrives by telephone. The narrator's adoptive parents rush to the hospital via plane, and any questions about the identity of the birth mother are brushed aside; she is simply "too young" to take care of her child. The new parents see their daughter in the nursery, howling wide-mouthed and oblivious to their pleased and loving gazes. Both participate equally in this tale; the first night home with the baby, the father tells her about baseball, holding her and a bat cradled in his arms. The humor implicit in the text is made explicit in the illustrations: watery, cartoonstyle watercolors with fine-pen accents to show outlines and facial features. This book exudes action and light; nothing here will lull children to sleep, except the warmth of feeling and comfort. It does not delve into the complexity of adoptive dynamics, but simply affirms family love, the pleasure parents feel about new babies, and how pleased children are to hear the story of their birth.?

Will and Squill

Emma Chichester Clark

PreSchool-Grade 2–A sweetly told tale about the friendship between a boy named Will and a squirrel named Squill. They do just about everything together until Wills parents surprise him with a kitten, and she becomes Wills new playmate, leaving Squill to feel lonely and left out. However, the boy soon discovers that Kitty likes to sleep most of the day and doesnt appreciate his favorite games. Will and Squill reunite, and the child realizes that old friends should not be abandoned for new ones. Lively watercolor-and-colored-pencil artwork keeps the message simple and soft. The repetition in the text makes the reading predictable and pleasurable and suitable for young children.–

The Secret Science Project That Almost Ate the School

Judy Sierra

Illustrated by Stephen Gammell


Grade 1-3–A nameless girl needs an idea for her science project. Her solution is to go on the Internet, where she comes across Professor Swami's Super Slime–a mutant yeast with just a piece of dragon DNA. Of course, she orders it and doesn't follow the directions on the box: do not open until the science fair, then feed the slime sugar until it expands to 1000 times its size and watch it explode into a harmless cloud of gas. The child finds herself with a large, green, slimy glob that begins to grow and swallow those who are rude to it: her cat, which hisses; her dad, who complains of a smell; her third-grade teacher–Eeew! What is that big, digusting creature?–and so on. Finally the child remembers the sugar and, once kids have pelted the goo with sweets and sprayed it with soda, it explodes. My project didn't win first prize, and that was fair...I guess..../Miss Fidget kept me after school to clean up all the mess.

I am Dodo: Not a True Story

Kae Nishimura

PreSchool-Grade 3–In this quirky story, readers are taken back to once upon a time, when dodo birds became extinct. One quicker and smarter bird manages to survive, and one dedicated professor who had studied dodo birds for more than seventy years stubbornly believes in its existence. After traveling the world, this sole dodo settles in New York City, where he can dance and spend a lot of time in the park. Then one day, he and the professor have one of those big-city chance encounters. The professor wants to catch the bird so that people will finally believe his theory, but Dodo really doesn't want to be caught. Finally, after high pursuit and a clever twist, Dodo and the professor become close friends who dance and spend a lot of time in the park. Done in rich watercolors with thick lines, the offbeat illustrations add punch and details that bring out the wry humor of the story. A note on the dedication page reminds readers caught up in Dodo's adventures that Unfortunately, as far as we know, the dodo (Raphus cucullatus) really is extinct. This amusing tale is a treat to read aloud and pays special tribute to New York City and the two unlikely friends.

I Lost My Tooth in Africa

Penda Diakite

Illustrated by Baba Wague Diakite

Kindergarten-Grade 4–This story recounts a child's visit to Mali, where she loses her tooth. After she hides it under a calabash, she waits for the African Tooth Fairy to replace it with a chicken. When her patience runs out and she returns to the gourd to retrieve her tooth, a chicken and a rooster emerge. She is delighted. The strength and enduring warmth of her African extended family emerge fully through thoughtful detail. Grandma N'na gives her a blessing each morning: May you rise high with strength and knowledge. When the child returns home to Oregon, Uncle Madou volunteers to take care of the chickens until her return. The vivid ceramic-tile illustrations expand the text, revealing a range of animals, houses, and greenery. At the end are the words to Grandma's Good Night Song, the recipe for African Onion Sauce, and a glossary of Bambara words, all of which add to the authentic feel of the story. In his illustrator's note, Baba Diakité states, Storytelling is a gift to me from my elders and I simply wanted to pass this gift along to my children. He has succeeded, as his artistry supports his daughter's storytelling beautifully

Llama Llama Red Pajama

Anna Dewdney

PreSchool-K–With its sweet rendering of the trials of bedtime and separation anxiety, this book's familiar theme will be a hit with youngsters. Baby Llama, all tucked in and kissed after his bedtime story, watches his mama leave the room with a worried expression on his face. When he calls her and she does not come back immediately, he succumbs to a fit of wailing and weeping, finally bringing his panic-stricken mother at a full gallop. After her reassurance that "Mama Llama's always near, even if she's not right here," Baby Llama settles and drifts off to sleep. This story has a simple rhyme scheme, using natural language that children will enjoy. The large, boldly colored pictures have a grand and sweeping quality, extending out to the edges of the pages. Baby Llama's facial expressions capture his fear and alarm wonderfully. The contrast between light and dark enhances the drama in the story. This effective read-aloud will be a popular choice for storyhour and one-on-one sharing

Pirate Girl

Cornelia Funke

Illustrated by Kerstin Meyer

K-Gr. 2. With this tale of a bonny lass kidnapped by pirates who live to regret their choice of victim, Funke and Meyer deliver a booster shot of the girl power they celebrated in The Princess Knight (2004). Afloat in a dinghy with a flowered sail and clad in sensible shorts and a T-shirt, redheaded Molly is snatched and held for ransom by Captain Firebeard, an infamous buccaneer who causes "the knees of honest seafaring folk [to] shake like jelly." But Molly remains unfazed, for she knows something Firebeard does not: her mom is Barbarous Bertha, queen of a crew of fierce maidens and matrons. The tale comes to an oddly abrupt conclusion, and the premise of a little girl alone on a ship of rum-guzzling male delinquents may cause some children and parents to wince. But Meyer's whimsical, color-soaked line-and-watercolor illustrations ensure that the captors appear more as burly dimwits than genuine threats, and the premise of a defiant kid duping a nasty adult through personal cleverness and parental heroism has universal appeal.

The Wildest Brother

Cornelia Funke

Illustrated by Kerstin Meyer

Kindergarten-Grade 1–Ben is a brave and loyal little brother. Sure, he uses Anna's makeup to paint red blobs on her desk. But really they're drops of blood from the man-eating monster standing behind her, fork in hand, sprinkling her hair with a soupçon of salt. He instructs her to hide inside her wardrobe and make monster noises (no giggling–this will inflame the creature) while he attacks the suddenly ferocious armoire with his plastic artillery. While Anna extricates herself from her vanquished furniture, Ben is battling the green bathroom slime, the weekly burglar, and the backyard bears. His strength and courage are distinguished by a trail of spilt and broken things left in the wake of his heroics. Yet when night sneaks in through the windows, Ben is up against the wildest monster of all and he is so very glad to have a sister to shelter him. Meyer's color-soaked cartoons are bursting with a zany energy in which fantasy becomes real. While the text is somewhat awkward, Meyer takes up the slack whenever the words falter. This is not so much the story of a small boy's daytime bravery and nighttime fears as it is the tender description of a special sibling relationship.

Olivia Saves the Circus

Ian Falconer

When it comes time to tell the class what she did on her vacation, Olivia isn't at all nervous. In fact, she remembers it quite clearly--she went to the circus, you see. "But when we got there, all the circus people were out sick with ear infections." What are the odds? But the show must go on! Fortunately, Olivia jumps right in to help out--riding elephants, posing as the Tattooed Lady (she draws on the pictures with a marker), taming lions, walking tightropes, juggling, clowning around, and more. In a marvelous fold-out, four-panel spread, our porcine heroine even reigns supreme as the Queen of the Trampoline. "And that's how I saved the circus. And now I am famous." Olivia looks proud. Her teacher looks mad.

Iggy Peck, Architect

Andrea Beaty

Illustrated by David Roberts

Meet Iggy Peck—creative, independent, and not afraid to express himself! In the spirit of David Shannon’s No, David and Rosemary Wells’s Noisy Nora, Iggy Peck will delight readers looking for irreverent, inspired fun.

Iggy has one passion: building. His parents are proud of his fabulous creations, though they’re sometimes surprised by his materials—who could forget the tower he built of dirty diapers? When his second-grade teacher declares her dislike of architecture, Iggy faces a challenge. He loves building too much to give it up! With Andrea Beaty’s irresistible rhyming text and David Roberts’s puckish illustrations, this book will charm creative kids everywhere, and amuse their sometimes bewildered parents.

Thank You, World

Alice B. McGinty

Illustrated by Wendy Anderson Halperin

The Princess Knight

Cornelia Funke

Illustrated by Kerstin Meyer

King Wilfred's three sons learn to become big, bad knights the way any boisterous boys would: "They learned riding and jousting, fighting with swords...They learned how to stride proudly and how to shout very loudly." At her father's urging, young Princess Violetta tries to keep up with the same lessons, "even though she was so small she could hardly lift a sword at all!" Despite her brothers' teasing and laughing, Violetta continues to practice--even secretly at night. Soon enough, Violetta becomes "so nimble and quick" that when practicing with her brothers, "their spears and swords just hit the empty air." But then King Wilfred does the unthinkable: For his Violetta's sixteenth birthday, he plans a jousting tournament designed to bring "the bravest knights in the land flocking to the castle" to win…her hand in marriage! Violetta is outraged: "You want me to marry some dimwit in a tin suit?" Fortunately, of course, the princess finds a way to come to her own rescue.

Half a World Away

Libby Gleeson

Illustrated by Freya Blackwood

Kindergarten-Grade 2—Best friends Amy and Louie build pretend towers, see magical creatures in the clouds, and regularly climb through a hole in the fence into one another's yards. The special "Coo-ee Am-ee" or "Coo-ee Lou-ee" call is enough to bring one or the other running. But then Amy's family moves "to the other side of the world" and the two friends are bereft. They think about each other night and day until Louie comes up with a way to send his special call out to his friend. Blackwood's watercolor paintings depict the imaginary world in which the two children are immersed. There are playful touches, such as tissue-box shoes, a colander hat, and a laundry-basket tower. But their playfully colorful world changes when Amy leaves. Though clad in red, Louie looks out on a neighborhood awash in gray as her moving van pulls away. A tiny Amy, also clothed in red, stares up at the gray skyscrapers and apartment buildings of her new city. Both children appear downcast and alone on subsequent pages, but the power of the imagination triumphs in the end. Loss of a friend is a common childhood experience and is the subject of many picture-book stories. This one is unique in that a new friend doesn't immediately come along and the two children must find a way to cope.

Hooway for Wodney Wat

Helen Lester

Illustrated by Lynn Munsinger

PreSchool-Grade 2--Poor Rodney Rat is teased mercilessly by all the other rodents because he can't pronounce his R's in this beginning to read title by Helen Lester (Houghton, 1999). When Camilla Capybara joins the class and announces that she is bigger, meaner, and smarter than any of the other rodents, everyone is afraid, especially Wodney. One day he unwittingly catches Camilla out in a game of Simon Says, and surprises himself and saves his classmates from big bully Camilla. This retelling nicely reflects Wodney's transformation from shy rodent with a speech impediment to hero of the class. Narration is accompanied by synthesized music and some sound effects. Side one includes page-turning signals (that sound like a small rodent being squeezed), while side two contains an uninterrupted reading. This book and tape set will be popular in school and public libraries.

Bobbie Dazzler

Margaret Wild

Illustrated by Janine Dawson

PreSchool-Grade 2—Bobbie, a red-necked wallaby, discovers that practice makes perfect in this Australian import. She can jump, skip, balance, stand on her head, do somersaults, and perform a number of other gymnastic feats, but she cannot do splits. Koala, Wombat, and Possum tell her it doesn't matter, but it bothers her tremendously. One morning, the determined animal finally manages to slide into the desired position, but she can't get up without the help of her friends. Eventually, with lots of practice, Bobbie—and her pals—master the tricky maneuver. This story of encouragement doesn't have much of a plot, but the straightforward message is sure to be understood by even the youngest readers. The illustrations are engaging and cheerful, and the simple text is easy to read. This story isn't much of a dazzler, but it may inspire children to keep trying until they accomplish their goals.

Gorilla! Gorilla!

Jeanne Willis and Tony Ross

PreSchool-Grade 2–While searching for her lost baby, a mouse is chased by a great, big, hairy, scary ape! The gorilla follows her from the rainforest to China, to America, to Australia, and even to the Arctic, yelling, Stop! all the way. But the mouse keeps on running, exclaiming again and again, Help! Help! He'll catch me!/He'll squash me and scratch me,/He'll mince me and mash me,/And crunch me up for lunch! Young readers will guess what the mother mouse, in her terror, can't see–that the seemingly fierce gorilla is simply trying to return her baby to her. The brief, lively text and the melodramatic refrain make for a humorous and boisterous read-aloud. Ross's bright pastel illustrations capture the mouse's fear and the gorilla's determination with verve. This deceptively simple, satisfying tale is sure to be a storytime hit, and it subtly conveys a great message about prejudices to boot.

I'm Mighty

Kate and Jim McMullan

PreS-Gr. 2. Like the garbage truck in the McMullans' I Stink! (2002), the tugboat that narrates this picture book tells his story with more than a splash of moxie. Strong ink drawings define the harbor setting from a variety of perspectives and show the emotions of the anthropomorphic figures of boats and trucks, while color brightens the scenes and heightens the drama. As the little tugboat heads into the harbor in the morning, he checks his gear and revs his engines. Taking charge of an oil tanker, he guides it through the channel and parks it at the dock. Next up is a "six-decker doozie" carrying a cargo of automobiles, followed by "Queen Justine, a super-duper cruiser, as WIDE as she is long" (an absurd statement to make about a ship that is clearly longer than it is wide). Kids aren't likely to worry about that for long, though, when there's so much here to enjoy: the energetic writing, the boastful tug's bravado, and the well-conceived illustrations. Best of all, the big boats need help from the little boat instead of the other way around, making this an appealing nautical version of every preschooler's dream.

I Stink

Kate and Jim McMullan

"I stink!" How can you not love such swagger and candor? And Kate and Jim McMullan's big-eyed, loudmouthed garbage truck really must stink--by its own admission, and given all those smelly bags it's been cramming into its huge back hopper.

Most kids already love garbage trucks on general principle, and one assumes that can only go double for a sass-mouthed, animated dumper like this one, out on its early-morning rounds: "See those bags? I SMELL BREAKFAST! Crew? Get me to the curb! Lights? Blink! Brakes? Squeal! Tail gate? SAY AH!" The many opportunities for loud, large-type sound effects should make for spirited readings, and a recipe for "alphabet soup" lets young readers practice their letters, working through the ABCs from apple cores to zipped-up ziti with zucchini.

The text to I Stink!, while fun, is nowhere near as clever as the art. But fortunately Jim McMullan's fun, fat drawings and type treatments more than make up the difference, loading Dumpsters full of personality into this grimacing, grinning, growling--even burping!--big rig. Kids will have a good time doing diesel-powered imitations, but even more importantly, they'll learn where they'd be without their neighborhood trash truck: on top of "Mount Trash-o-rama, baby." (Ages 4 to 8)

Heckedy Peg

Audrey Wood

Illustrated by Don Wood

Although text and art in this picture book match as hand and glove, it is really the ornate illustrations that carry it aloft to the dimension of classic fairytale. The mother of seven children (who are named for each day of the week) leaves for the market with a list of things for thembutter, knife, pitcher, honey, salt, crackers and egg pudding. The witch Heckedy Peg who "lost her leg" drops in on the kids and turns them into foodbread, pie, milk, porridge, fish, cheese and roast rib. The mother finds her children and saves them by matching each food item on her list, as in bread and butter, cheese and crackers, etc. The story has essential elements of playfulness and eeriness; also evident is a poetic license that effects a looseness in structure. The realistic figures of the happy inhabitants of the cottage are bathed in bursts of light, in contrast to the shadowy, ghastly hideout of Heckedy Peg. Ages 4-8.

If You Give A Mouse a Cookie

Laura Joffe Numeroff

Illustrated by Felicia Bond

Who would ever suspect that a tiny little mouse could wear out an energetic young boy? Well, if you're going to go around giving an exuberantly bossy rodent a cookie, you'd best be prepared to do one or two more favors for it before your day is through. For example, he'll certainly need a glass of milk to wash down that cookie, won't he? And you can't expect him to drink the milk without a straw, can you? By the time our hero is finished granting all the mouse's very urgent requests--and cleaning up after him--it's no wonder his head is becoming a bit heavy. Laura Joffe Numeroff's tale of warped logic is a sure-fire winner in the giggle-generator category. But concerned parents can rest assured, there's even a little education thrown in for good measure: underneath the folly rest valuable lessons about cause and effect. Felicia Bond's hilarious pictures are full of subtle, fun details. Fans will be happy to know that this dynamic author-illustrator pair teamed up again for If You Give a Moose a Muffin and If You Give a Pig a Pancake. (Great read aloud, ages 4 to 8)

Who is Melvin Bubble?

Nick Bruel

Kindergarten-Grade 4–The author begins by sharing a letter from Melvin's friend, suggesting that Mr. Bruel write a book about his pal, so that everyone can know him. What follows are interviews with Melvin's family, dog, teddy bear, and other assorted characters, including Santa, a big ugly monster with three eyes that lives in the boy's closet, and a talking zebra. Each perspective is relayed in humorous monologues that, naturally, reveal more about the speakers than they do about the subject. Dad claims he's a chip off the old block as black-and-white photos of a clumsy, clueless parent contrast with similar shots in color of a talented, tender son. The zebra is too preoccupied with his fear of lions to think about anything else. (Readers who peek under the dust jacket will hear from a lion–an example of the attention paid to detail in the overall design.) It is Melvin's friend who shares something sure to endear the protagonist to children: He can whistle 'The Itsy-Bitsy Spider' through his nose! Gigantic dialogue bubbles frame the text and the bold, watercolor caricatures animating the descriptions; the speakers report from the sidelines. In the end, the bespectacled, skinny kid with the baggy jeans gets his turn to talk. While teachers will find this a delightful choice for exploring point of view or the concept of identity, children will simply think it's great fun. The layered perspectives ultimately show that Melvin is one cool kid.

Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity

Mo Willems

Knuffle Bunny returns, but this time he has a doppelganger. Trixie is off to school, and things are going well enough—until she notices that Sonja is holding her own Knuffle Bunny. Arrgh! The afternoon results in dueling bunnies, which are confiscated by the teacher. Happily, they are returned at the end of the day, but at 2:30 a.m. realization hits: the bunny Trixie is sleeping with is not her own. Despite parental protestations, phone calls are placed, bunnies are exchanged, and the girls, bonded during the trauma, become best friends. This has much of the charm of Knuffle Bunny (2004), a Caldecott Honor Book, but the premise is stretched here: the middle-of-the-night meeting is energetic, but it seems overplayed. As in the previous title, the slice-of-life artwork is smashing. Willem's cartoon-style art, set against crisp black-and-white photos of New York City interiors and exteriors, catches every bit of the plentiful emotion. Keen-eyed kids will have fun keeping track of the Knuffle Bunny as he's lost, then found again.

Boing

Nick Bruel

PreSchool-Grade 1–Told mainly through bright, cheerful pictures that are enhanced by bits of dialogue and pertinent sound effects, this simple story will make children smile. A young kangaroo is learning to hop with the help of its mother and their friends, a grasshopper, a rabbit, and a frog. Despite the repeated demonstrations and many words of encouragement, the joey tries is unable to duplicate the resounding "boing" produced by its mother and the others, only managing a feeble "bloomp" or "blop." Finally, a koala that has been looking on from a perch in a tree suggests that the youngster empty its pocket. After pulling out a carefully itemized collection of amusing belongings including, among other things, "1 sock," "2 jacks," "a red ribbon," "a green ribbon," and "a banana," the little kangaroo joyously leaps into the air and off the page in an unexpected pop-up illustration. Pair this charming title with Emily Arnold McCully's First Snow (HarperCollins, 1985), another tale told in pictures of a young animal's triumph over a seemingly insurmountable challenge.

Madlenka

Peter Sis

"In the universe, on a planet, on a continent, in a country, in a city, on a block, in a house, in a window, in the rain, a little girl named Madlenka finds out her tooth wiggles." To further illustrate where exactly this girl fits into the universe, Peter Sís's endpapers depict a tiny blue planet Earth with a red dot, then a bigger Earth and a bigger red dot, then an aerial view of the south part of Manhattan Island, then city blocks, then lo! a small Madlenka in an apartment window. And, since she has a loose tooth that wiggles, she simply must tell everyone.
As she traipses around New York, she sees the whole world in the way a child might peer into a sugar egg at a colorful three-dimensional diorama within. At Mr. Gaston's patisserie, he tells her about Paris as he bakes croissants and madeleines. Readers peer through a die-cut square in his bakery window to glimpse the Eiffel Tower. Turn the page, and an exciting blue landmark map of Paris unfolds. (Is that a tiny petit prince we see as well?) At Mr. Singh's newspaper stand, our window on the world takes us to winged elephants and onion domes and the many-armed gods of India. Mr. Ciao from Italy ("Buon giorno, Maddalena") makes visions of the Leaning Tower of Pisa and cats on gondolas and the Coliseum dance through our heads. Throughout Sís's enchanting, moody illustrations dances blonde-haired, lavender-clad, yellow-booted Madlenka with her yellow umbrella--reminding us of what is really important. "Madlenka! Where have you been?" "Well... I went around the world. And I lost my tooth!"

Wild About Books

Judy Sierra

Pictures by Marc Brown

PreS-Gr. 2. In this rollicking story, librarian Molly McGrew accidentally drives her bookmobile into the zoo, and then the fun begins! The animals draw close to listen to a Dr. Seuss story, and soon they begin stampeding "to learn all about this new something called reading." Many picture-book authors who try their hands at rhyme have less-than-stellar results. Here, the best part of the book is Sierra's handy way with a rhyming text that not only scans properly but also is both clever and full of images that will amuse children ("Tasmanian devils found books so exciting / That soon they had given up fighting for writing"). The wild animal goings-on offer illustrator Brown an opportunity to get away from his vaguely aardvarklike Arthur and create some real animals--in fact, about every animal one can think of. All the slaphappy art fits nicely into double-page spreads that allow the energetic action room to breathe. That's good because there are tons of things to look at, all in sunny colors. Not only are the animals reading books but they are also hugging them, licking the pictures off the pages, and trying their "hands" at writing. A wonderful advertisement for the joys of a literary life.

Ballerina!

Peter Sis

Young ballerinas who love to leap, twirl, flutter, or float in their leotards and tutus will be enchanted by Peter Sís's graceful celebration of dance in Ballerina!. A little girl named Terry changes from pink tutu to blue gown to violet cape to white feather boa as she dances and imagines herself as the prima ballerina in The Nutcracker, Sleeping Beauty, Cinderella, and Swan Lake. In her mind's eye, the little girl she sees in her bedroom mirror becomes a willowy, poised, grownup dancer with all the glamorous trappings of a real performance. By the end of her own performance, Terry gathers her many different colored scarves and becomes the best ballerina of all, while her audience (her mother and father) "claps and claps and claps."
Peter Sís, creator of such favorites as Madlenka and the Caldecott Honor book for older kids, Tibet: Through the Red Box, brings the joy of dance to the printed page. Terry appears on the left pages in each successive costume, while on the right page readers see a transformed ballerina reflected in her big bedroom mirror, captioned by a dance position or movement: "tiptoe," "dip," "stretch." (Ages 4 to 7)

Dinosaur!

Peter Sis

PreSchool-K-A wordless picture book that takes readers on a wild adventure of the imagination. A boy and his toy dinosaur are in the tub when a larger dinosaur appears, and then another, and as the beasts loom larger, the boy and his surroundings become smaller. The culmination is a three-page spread revealing a full-color herd of dinosaurs racing across the page, and if children look very closely, they'll see a tiny boy in his tub. Then, magically, the oversized creatures disappear, and all that are left are the boy and his bath toy and his mother, who appears with a towel. This imaginative story with wonderful endpapers naming the creatures should appeal to all young dinosaur lovers. S's's barely fleshed-out, cookie-cutter cartoons tell the story. He masterfully plays with white space and perspective, conveys action, and captures a full range of emotions with the absolute minimum of line and detail. As in Fire Trucks (1998) and Trucks, Trucks, Trucks (1999, both Greenwillow), the author's bold artwork and simple plot are right on the mark for this audience.

Llama Llama Mad at Mama

Anna Dewdney

PreSchool-K—In this sequel to Llama Llama Red Pajama (Viking, 2005), the hoofed protagonist goes shopping with his mother. Gradually the small annoyances of the Shop-O-Rama ("Yucky music,/great big feet./Ladies smelling way too sweet....Try it on and take it off./Pull and wiggle,/itch and cough") send the youngster into a tantrum: "It's no fun at Shop-O-Rama./Llama Llama/MAD at Mama!" With admirable patience and parenting skills, Mama tames the "llama drama," explaining to her son that they can make the chore fun by working together. Soon Llama Llama is helping Mama clean up the messy results of his meltdown and complete their purchases, and then they are off to pursue more pleasurable activities. Children will giggle at Dewdney's rhythmic rhymes. The inviting, oversized paintings are bold and colorful, and Llama Llama's priceless expressions carry the emotional arc of the story to its gentle conclusion. Add this amusing tale to your storytime repertoire or recommend it for one-on-one sharing.

Princess Grace

Mary Hoffman

Illustrated by Cornelius Van Wright and Ying-Hwa Hu

This year two girls will be selected as princesses in the town parade, and Grace can’t wait to be one of them. It’s the perfect opportunity to dress up—but how, exactly, should a princess costume look? Grace asks her teacher for help, and soon the whole class is learning that there’s more to princesses than pink dresses and frills. From Kenya to China and from warriors to spies, princesses are a multicultural and multitalented bunch, and there are just as many kinds of happily ever afters—both for the royals and for Grace’s community and its princess parade.

My Taxi Ride

Paul Dubois Jacobs and Jennifer Swender

Illustrated by Selina Alko

Ho taxi! Yo taxi!Where to Miss? Where to Mister?Where to brother? Where to sister?All around New York town!"Take a wild ride in a yellow taxi that's "buzzin' down the street like a bumblebee," visiting famous New York sites along the way, including Broadway, the Empire State Building, Greenwich Village, and Central Park. This book is perfect for people everywhere who love New York City, and a fun multicultural jaunt into the Big Apple for kids everywhere.

The Princess and the Pea

Rachel Isadora

PreSchool-Grade 2—Isadora drops her simplified and humorless retelling of Andersen's tale into an African setting without adding meaningful cultural context to this story of a prince who travels the continent looking for a wife. Africa is treated as one culture except for three spreads that show individual princesses. These spreads are wordless except for a phrase: "Iska Waran," "Selam," or "Jambo, Habari." No translation is provided in the body of the book, so readers only learn on the last page that the words mean "hello" in three different languages. Awkward phrasing like "What a sight the rain and the wind had made her look" slows the pace of the story. Isadora uses oil paints on palette paper and decorative print paper to interpret the story visually and infuses her art with exuberant color and stylized figures. The prince and his entourage appear as shadowy figures that contrast dramatically with the deep reds and oranges of a setting sun. The three princesses are vividly portrayed: one is covered in body tattoos and looks menacing, another has light skin and an elegantly long neck covered in multicolored jewelry, and a third is dark and heavy. Faces exhibit paint strokes and look flat with minimal expression. One effective spread shows the "real" princess perched on top of "twenty feather beds on top of the mattresses" as she complains to the king and queen that she is "black and blue all over."

Leonardo the Terrible Monster

Mo Willems

Starred Review. PreSchool-Grade 1–Leonardo is a terrible monster–terrible as in he can't scare anybody. He's not big, doesn't have hundreds of teeth, and isn't even weird. So one day he comes up with an idea: He would find the most scaredy-cat kid in the whole world…and scare the tuna salad out of him! After much research, he chooses Sam, sneaks up on him, and [gives] it all he [has]. When the boy cries, Leonardo is convinced that he is a success. But Sam proceeds to recite a litany of wrongs that actually brought on his tears: My mean big brother stole my action figure right out of my hands…, and on and on. Leonardo makes a decision that is sure to surprise and delight readers. Willems's familiar cartoon drawings work hand in glove with the brief text to tell this perfectly paced story. It is printed on pastel grounds in large, fancy letters that change color for emphasis. Sam's list of woes marches across a spread. Leonardo, a small greenish-beige creature with tiny horns; blue eyes; and pink nose, hands, and feet, first appears in a lower right-hand corner looking dejected, but when he makes his momentous decision, his circular head fills two pages. His antics to produce a scare will have youngsters laughing, while the asterisk next to the number of monster Tony's teeth (*note: not all teeth shown) will have grown-ups chuckling, too. A surefire hit.

Blue Goose

Nancy Tafuri

When Farmer Gray takes a trip, Blue Goose, Red Hen, Yellow Chick and White Duck decide to paint their black-and-white farm. Red Hen paints the barn red and White Duck paints the fence white. Then Blue Goose and Yellow Chick pour their paint together to make green for the grass and trees. By the time Farmer Gray comes back, the whole farm is full of color--what a wonderful surprise! Incorporating primary and secondary colors, as well as animals, this is a simple and engaging way for young children to learn basic concepts.

Sweet Tooth

Margie Palatini

Illustrated by Jack E. Davis

Kindergarten-Grade 3–Stewart is an "average, everyday kid" with a talking molar that inevitably lures him into trouble. At his cousin's wedding, the tooth demands a large chunk of cake, and when the boy crams it into his mouth, his parents deny that he's their son. At school, its clamoring for candy causes the boy's teacher to send him to the principal's office yet again. He foists off blame with the predictable phrase, "It's The Tooth!" The illustration adds to the hilarity as the molar peeks out of the boy's mouth with an impish and belligerent smirk, its fist raised in apparent anger. Throughout, the mixed-media cartoon artwork extends the comedy of Palatini's text and enriches her characterization of Stewart. In one spread, readers look down on him as he lies on the floor with a stomachache after raiding an Easter basket. This scene adds visual interest with a change in perspective, showing only the feet of his family members–even the paws of the cat–clustered around the sick boy. When Stewart finally tells his molar that he's switching to a "Healthy diet," Davis uses rosy red to perk up the palette and show the youngster's new determination to win the war with the tooth. Finally, Stewart extracts it with the help of a big carrot and the Tooth Fairy administers justice in an upbeat ending. With a rollicking text and charming illustrations, this adventure is a scrumptious delight.

Where Do Balloons Go? An Uplifting Mystery

Jamie Lee Curtis

Illustrated by Laura Cornell

This far-fetched tale by the creators of Today I Feel Silly and Other Moods That Make My Day may well raise youngsters' spirits as verse and art muse fancifully on the possible fates of wayward balloons. Cornell casts the balloons in human roles as the young narrator, a boy who has accidentally let go of his balloon's string, wonders, "Where do they go when they float far away? Do they ever catch cold and need somewhere to stay?" The zany accompanying cartoon pictures show a balloon sitting on the couch in a doctor's waiting room and another approaching a hotel, its string attached to a suitcase. In other scenarios, balloons dine in a restaurant, write postcards home and "cha-cha with birds" on the wing of an airplane, culminating in a four-page fold-out spread of "a big balloon dance." Bursting with color and balloons of all shapes, sizes and functions (many balloons making encore appearances bear clever messages or advertisements), Cornell's busy art provides ample diversion for young readers. Though not as memorable as some of the collaborators' earlier work, this volume, like the high-flying balloon that sets a boy's imagination soaring, is way out thereAin a kid-pleasing way. Ages 4-8.

David Gets in Trouble

David Shannon

"No" and "David" were the first words David Shannon learned how to spell. Shannon's Caldecott Honor Book No, David! is based on a book he made as a child showing a kid doing all the things he isn't supposed to do. In the sequel David Goes to School, it turns out that teachers say no, too. And in this third picture book, it's David's turn to talk back. What does he say when he gets in trouble? "I didn't mean to." (Skateboarding into a lamp table.) "It was an accident!" (Hitting a baseball into a window.) "I forgot!" (Happily walking down the street... in his underpants.) "But Dad says it!" (Boy in corner with mouth full of soap.) Of course, the cat-tail-pulling, burping, grape-juice-dropping, runny-egg-hating, out-of-control David wins us over in the end. A defiant "No, it wasn't me!" evolves into a guilt-ridden, late-at-night shout, "Yes! It was me! I'm sorry. I love you, Mom." Awwww. Shannon's expressive, childlike paintings of the round-headed, shark-toothed David-in-trouble perfectly capture the manic joys of early boyhood. (Ages 3 and older)

My Dog is as Smelly as Dirty Socks and other funny family portraits

Hanoch Piven

Grade 2–4—Filled with plays on words and similes, this delightful offering will encourage children's creativity. The narrator makes a line drawing of her family but explains that it doesn't do them justice. "And what about this drawing of my mom? Sorry, but it doesn't tell the whole story. My mommy is as soft as the softest FLUFF and as bright as the brightest LIGHT." This section ends, "That's my yummy mommy!" The gouache-and-watercolor illustrations are embellished with glued-on objects like a lightbulb for a nose, a croissant for a mouth, and a boa for hair, in this case on Mom. The pictures support the text and add to the subtext. The book ends with an invitation to readers to create images of their families. Younger children will enjoy the story, but older kids will love the nuances, the opportunity for individuality, and the challenge of portraying their own relatives in this style. An author's note describes a workshop that Piven conducted for children hospitalized with cancer; their wonderful creations adorn the endpapers.

The End

David LaRochelle

PreSchool-Grade 3—Turning the standard fairy-tale formula on its head, LaRochelle begins his story at the end. The endpapers depict a princess and a knight waving good-bye to a long line of intriguing characters who are marching away from the castle. The text begins, "And they all lived happily ever after. They lived happily ever after because…" and proceeds backward through a madcap chain of events that includes a skittish dragon, a giant tomato, a pack of ferocious bunnies, and a fortuitous bowl of lemonade. Only on the last page are readers rewarded with the anticipated phrase, "Once upon a time." Egielski's illustrations are a triumph. The flattened, static quality of the characters calls to mind Maurice Sendak's In the Night Kitchen (HarperCollins, 1995), and the warm, muted tones evoke the fairy-tale art of Trina Schart Hyman, but the fanciful details—a blue, winged pig; a pair of runaway lemons—are completely original. The hand-lettered text, enclosed in streaming banners, consists of terse, declarative statements that are lavishly expounded upon by the illustrations. The tension between the simplicity of the narrative and the richness of the artwork allows this tale to transcend its clever gimmickry. Though the book can be appreciated in one reading, and would work well when shared aloud, multiple perusals are necessary to spot all of the details. When youngsters reach the beginning of The End, they will want to start all over again

Richard Egielski

Clarice Bean, Guess Who's Babysitting?

Lauren Child

Olivia ...and the Missing Toy

Ian Falconer

Olivia Helps with Christmas

Ian Falconer

Olivia

Ian Falconer

I'm Dirty

Kate and Kim McMullan

Naptime for Slippers

Andrew Clements

Illustrated by Janie Bynum

Yo, Jo!

Rachel Isadora

The Younger Brother's Survival Guide by Matt

Lisa Kopelke

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Bad Dog, Marley

John Grogan

Illustrated by Richard Cowdrey

Baghead

Jarrett J. Krosoczka

Max for President

Jarrett J. Krosoczka

Buffalo Wings

Aaron Reynolds

Illustrated by Paulette Bogan

Ella, of course!

Sarah Weeks

Illustrated by Doug Cushman

When the Cows Got Loose

Carol Weis

Illustrated by Ard Hoyt

If I Were a Lion

Sarah Weeks

Illustrated by Heather M. Solomon

Just Me and 6,000 Rats

Rick Walton

Illustrated by Mike Gordon and Carl Gordon

The Great Pet Sale

Mick Inkpen

Kipper's Monster

Mick Inkpen

Kipper and Roly

Mick Inkpen

Kipper

Mick Inkpen

Nothing

Jon Agee

Kipper's A to Z

Mick Inkpen

The Pigeon Wants a Puppy!

Mo Willems

Fancy Nancy and the Posh Puppy

Jane O'Connor

Illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus!

Mo Willems

The Pigeon Finds a Hot Dog!

Mo Willems

Milly and the Macy's Parade

Shana Corey

Illustrated by Brett Helquist

Fancy Nancy

Jane O'Connor

Illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser

Oh, Brother!

Nikki Grimes

Illustrated by Mike Benny

Something Special

Terri Cohlene

Illustrated by Doug Keith

I Love You, Stinky Face

Lisa McCourt

Illustrated by Cyd Moore

Grandma Drove the Garbage Truck

Katie Clark

Illustrated by Amy Huntington

Hoodwinked

Arthur Howard

Terrible Teresa and Other Very Short Stories

Mittie Cuetara

The Story of Kites

Ying Chang Compestine

Illustrated by YongSheng Xuan

You Forgot Your Skirt, Amelia Bloomer!

Shana Corey

Illustrated by Chesley McLaren

We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story

Hudson Talbott

Tooth Fairy's First Night

Anne Bowen

Illustrations by Jon Berkeley

Miss Spider's Tea Party

David Kirk

Paper Lanterns

Stefan Czernecki

Trupp

Janell Cannon

Skippyjon Jones in the Doghouse

Judy Schachner

Mystery at the Club Sandwich

Doug Cushman

Ella Takes the Cake

Carmela and Steven D'Amico

Tippy-Toe Chick, GO!

George Shannon

Pictures by Laura Dronzek

Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport

Marjorie Weinman Sharmat

Pictures by Byron Barton

Lizard's Home

George Shannon

Illustrated by Jose Aruego and Ariane Dewey

Heart to Heart

George Shannon

Illustrated by Steve Bjorkman

Lizard's Guest

George Shannon

Pictures by Jose Aruego and Ariane Dewey

Frog Legs

George Shannon

Pictures by Amit Trynan


not that great

Tomorrow's Alphabet

George Shannon

Pictures by Donald Crews



really confusing

The Jazzy Alphabet

Sherry Shahan

Illustrated by Mary Thelen

Busy in the Garden

George Shannon

Pictures by Sam Williams


not that great

The Rain Came Down

David Shannon

Alice the Fairy

David Shannon

Duck on a Bike

David Shannon

David Goes to School

David Shannon

No, David

David Shannon

Sheep in a Shop

Nancy Shaw

Illustrated by Margot Apple

Sheep Trick or Treat

Nancy Shaw

Illustrated by Margot Apple

Sheep Take a Hike

Nancy Shaw

Illustrated by Margot Apple

Sheep on a Ship

Nancy Shaw

Illustrated by Margot Apple

Sheep Out To Eat

Nancy Shaw

Illustrated by Margot Apple

Gullible's Troubles

Margaret Shannon

and Tango Makes Three

Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell

Illustrated by Henry Cole

Clarice Bean, That's Me

Lauren Child

I Want a Pet

Lauren Child

Uptown

Bryan Collier

Toestomper and the Bad Butterflies

Sharleen Collicott

The Mysterious Package

Francesca Chessa

Best Best Friends

Margaret Chodos-Irvine

Sam Panda and Thunder Dragon

Chris Conover

Pirate Pink and Treasures of the Reef

Jan Day


Illustrated by Janeen I. Mason

Knuffle Bunny

Mo Willems

Edwina The Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct

Mo Willems

Don't Let the Pigeon Stay Up Late!

Mo Willems

Dumpy La Rue

Elizabeth Winthrop


Illustrated by Betsy Lewin

Only You

Robin Cruise

Pictures by Margaret Chodos-Irvine

Truelove

Babette Cole

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Skeleton Hiccups

Margery Cuyler


Illustrated by S.D. Schindler

What's Cookin'?

Nancy Coffelt

Ella Sets the Stage

Carmela and Steven D'Amico

The Great Pig Search

Eileen Christelow

Kindergarten Rocks!

Katie Davis

The Pirate, Pink

Jan Day


Illustrated by Janeen I. Mason

Who Hoots?

Katie Davis

Ruby's Wish

Shirin Yim Bridges

Illustrated by Sophie Blackall

Click, Clack, MOO Cows That Type

Doreen Cronin

Betsy Lewin

Click, Clack, Quackity-Quack

Doreen Cronin

Betsy Lewin

Giggle, Giggle, Quack

Doreen Cronin

Betsy Lewin

Diary of a Fly

Doreen Cronin

Pictures by Harry Bliss