Children Make Terrible Pets

Anyone who has a child, or knows a child, or was a child, can remember the cajoling of finding an animal and wanting to keep it as a pet. "Please?  Can I take it home and keep it?  I'll take care of it, I promise!" Author Peter Brown turns those experiences around in Children Make... Continue Reading →

Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears

The mosquito is causing problems in the jungle - no surprise, right? But this mosquito is not causing problems for people. Not quite yet. This mosquito is causing problems between the animals. In Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People's Ears by Verna Aardema, readers learn the mosquito buzzed in the ear of an iguana, telling a... Continue Reading →

Georgie

The little ghost Georgie takes great comfort in his evening routine. He makes the stair creak, the parlor door squeak, and the inhabitants of his house know what they need to do next. It's the same routine every evening. Until Mr. Whittaker decides to fix the creak in the stair, and oil the parlor door's... Continue Reading →

Chicken Sunday

I mentioned Chicken Sunday by Patricia Polacco in an earlier post about Polacco's books. But I enjoy this book so much, it deserves it's own recognition. Chicken Sunday is a personal story from Polacco's childhood in southern California. She and two brothers from her neighborhood are siblings, "by a solemn ceremony [they] had performed in... Continue Reading →

Rechenka’s Eggs

Every day in winter, Babushka would prepare for the Easter Festival in Moskva by painting an egg shell from her basket. Until one day, when the goose she rescued was startled and broke all of Babushka's eggs. Babushka was so sad - she would not be going to the Easter Festival that year. But her... Continue Reading →

Heckedy Peg

Many mothers would be overwhelmed with seven children, but not the mother in Heckedy Peg  by Audrey Wood.  On one market day, she rewards her seven children, named after the days of the week, for their hard work.  She says she’ll bring home whatever they want from the market. The children make their requests, and... Continue Reading →

Born and Bred in the Great Depression

Author John Winter remembers his father's stories of growing up during the Great Depression in Born and Bred in the Great Depression. He recounts how his father grew up in a small house outside a small town in Texas. He describes the hardships, and the joys, of being a child during those difficult years. The... Continue Reading →

We’re Going on a Bear Hunt

I was digging through my bookshelves recently, looking for books I could donate, when I came across one of my children's favorites.  I read We're Going on a Bear Hunt by Michael Rosen and Helen Oxenbury so many times I think I can still almost recite it from memory. As it sat on my desk... Continue Reading →

What Do You Do, Dear?

Children need help learning manners, and Sesyle Joslin has created the perfect manner book for children.  Maurice Sendak (of Where the Wild Things Are fame) drew the pictures for What Do You Do, Dear?, which makes this book extra fun. Joslin helps children understand what to do in the most interesting situations.  What do you... Continue Reading →

The Story of a Boy Named Will,

Children will enjoy this picture book, featuring a boy named Will on his sled.  It contains rhyme and rhythm and repeating - loved by all children - plus a surprise ending. Adults will enjoy all of the above, and the interesting illustrations.  Vladimir Radunsky illustrated The Story of a Boy Named Will by Daniil Kharms,... Continue Reading →

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