How Do Dinosaurs…?

If you have a toddler - or a preschooler, or even an early elementary student - fascinated with dinosaurs, you'll want to pick up the How Do Dinosaurs....? books by Jane Yolen and Mark Teague. Yolen has written each of the books in a similar format, several questions about bad behavior followed by a "No,"... Continue Reading →

Sarah, Plain and Tall

In Sarah, Plain and Tall by Patricia Maclachlan, Anna tells the story of her family.  Her mother died shortly after her little brother, Caleb, was born and Anna can't help feeling sad and somewhat resentful towards him.  But her father's surprising announcement quickly diverts her attention.  He has placed an ad in the newspaper for... Continue Reading →

The Runaway Bunny

"Once there was a little bunny who wanted to run away." So begins The Runaway Bunny by Margaret Wise Brown, a book you and your child will enjoy over and over and over again. The little bunny tells his mother of his wishes, and his mother promises to run after him. He imagines all the... Continue Reading →

Winnie-the-Pooh

Winnie-the-Pooh is a beloved character, but I'm afraid most children these days only know the Disney-fied Pooh Bear.  If that's the only Pooh your children know, please, please please! pick up A.A. Milne's original books and read them with your children. Milne first published the original books in 1928, and the fact they are still... Continue Reading →

Angus and the Ducks

Before Curious George, there was Angus.  Angus's curiosity got him into lots of trouble, just like Curious George.  The main difference between them, besides the fact George was a monkey and Angus was a dog, is that George has so many books, films, and TV shows.  Angus has just three books. But those three books... Continue Reading →

The Velvet Room

One book I picked up over and over again over the course of my childhood was The Velvet Room by Zilpha Keatley Snyder.  It's not as well-known as Anne of Green Gables, but I loved it nearly as much. The Velvet Room tells the story of Robin, the middle child of five.  She and her... Continue Reading →

Calico Bush

I imagine Calico Bush by Rachel Field is not at the top of many people's reading lists.  But it should be! This is the second time I've read through Calico Bush, but it will certainly not be my last.  I had forgotten how much I enjoyed this story. Marguerite is an orphaned French girl who... Continue Reading →

Misty of Chincoteague

If the children in your life love horses, they will love Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry.  (By the way, it's pronounced chink-o-teeg) The story follows Paul and Maureen, two children on Chincoteague Island in Virginia who desperately want to buy a wild horse from Assateaugue (ass-a-teeg) Island.  They work very hard, finding odd jobs... Continue Reading →

Anne of Green Gables

An orphan delighted to find a new home on Prince Edward Island - then crushed to discover that her new guardians had wanted a boy.  Her bright spirit and delightful chatter wins Matthew over, and he decided they must keep her.  Thus began Anne's life with Marilla and Matthew on their farm, Green Gables. Anne... Continue Reading →

Doctor De Soto

The hero of Doctor De Soto by William Steig, is a dentist.  He's not an ordinary dentist - he's a mouse dentist, and a good one at that.  All the animals come to see him, and he has various solutions for working on the mouths of animals bigger than he. However, Doctor De Soto does... Continue Reading →

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