Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

March 31, 2016

Read Up! 3 Nonfiction Picture Books for Animal Lovers

I've got three here to share either on the lap or in a storytime; see what you think!


Every Day Birds
Amy Ludwig VanDerwater & Dylan Metrano
Metrano's large, bold cut-paper illustrations really catch the eye, and VanDerwater's sparse, lightly-rhyming text leaves plenty of room for the listener & reader to discuss whether they've seen each bird.  At the end of the book, for those with a more advanced attention span, all of the illustrations reappear in thumbnail form, along with a full paragraph of detail about each bird.

Fabulous Frogs
Martin Jenkins & Tim Hopgood
Hopgood's mixed-media illustrations are attention-grabbers for sure, starting out with the Goliath frog, which is 2-pages huge!  We get to see an amazing (okay, "fabulous") variety of frogs from around the world, with simple text printed large & bold, and more detailed information in a smaller font down below.  I love books that can work at multiple levels like this.  At the end of the book, the creators provide a simple index, recommended resources for further information--and even more wonderful frog pictures!

Giant Pop-Out Ocean
(Chronicle Books, no author/photographer information provided)
Kids in preschool & above will love knowing the answers to the guessing-game questions in this book ("I have a hard shell, and you'll find me in tide ppols.  My pincers help protect me.  What am I?"), and everyone will love the big, colorful photographs that unfurl as the answers.  I'm not sure what "I can even balance a ball on my nose" is doing on a spread that is supposed to be about wild dolphins, though!

Check out these books, and let me know what you think!  Do you have any favorite nonfiction picture books about wildlife, or favorite books of any kind about anything else?  Let me know!  See more of my suggestions at Read Up!

Storyteller John Weaver



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February 12, 2016

Read Up! Dogs at Bedtime

Have you got your library card ready?  Reserve these books now, and check them out!



Goodnight, Good Dog
Mary Lyn Ray & Rebecca Malone
This is a quiet book, quiet like the night.  Bedtime has come, but the dog isn't sleepy.  He's still thinking about his wonderful day in the sun with his family.  He's not ready for bed; he's ready for a new day to begin.  This seems like a very calming bedtime book, to help the people sharing it reflect upon their day, and think a bit about the next one.

Time for Bed, Fred
Yasmeen Ismail
While the dog in Goodnight, Good Dog quietly roams the house for a bit while his family sleeps, Fred is actively, disruptively, joyfully fighting against bedtime.  He's trying to squeeze in as much remaining action from the day as he can, before he is forced to go to bed.  It is probably those 26 pages of activity that finally tired him out!  I love the funny situations and the beautiful, action-loaded watercolor illustrations.

Have you read these books?  What do you think?  If you have any other favorite books to share, I'd love to hear about them!

Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!

-- Storyteller John Weaver



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January 13, 2016

READ UP!


Have you got your library card ready?  Reserve these books now, and check them out!


Say Hello!
Linda Davick
This book's official summary puts it very nicely: "...the world would be a lot more fun if hellos were shared." The rhyming text offers a wealth of different ways to give a friendly greeting: "With a hug.  With a shake.  With a Curtsy.  With a Cake."  I love the letter in the mail going to Uncle Wally on Sea Lion Drive in Pacifica!  The huge pictures of smiling faces, the abundance of white space surrounding them, the simple ideas offered one-per-page: all of these things pull in the adult reader & children, inviting them to take time to think & talk about each possibility, and to brainstorm a few other ways to offer hellos, and kindness.

Puddles
Jonathan London & G. Brian Karas
Here, a brother & sister take great joy in exploring the post-rainstorm world of their own yard & neighborhood, filled as it is with frogs, worms, mud, tiny rivers, and (of course) puddles!  Is Mom's order to not get wet one that is even possible to follow?  I love the sense of adventure here, and the opening to discuss that adventure, and the post-rain world, with young co-readers.

Have you read these books?  What do you think?  If you have any other favorite books to share, I'd love to hear about them!

Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!

-- Storyteller John Weaver


July 01, 2015

Read Up! Charming Animal Edition




Have you got your library card ready?  Reserve these books now, and check them out!

Betty Goes Bananas
Steve Antony
Betty is a baby gorilla, and she loves bananas.  When she is unable to open one by herself, things get out of hand: she cries, sniffles, kicks & screams, until she finally calms down.  In fact, it seems as if Betty is always crying, sniffling, kicking & screaming. Toddlers & preschoolers with whom I've shared this amusing, colorful book always seem to think Betty is overreacting, and needs to calm down.

Froodle
Antoinette Portis
From the author of two of my favorite books (Not a Box & Not a Stick) comes this imaginative story of a little brown bird that would not say "peep."  "Froodle sproodle," "tiffle biffle," sure, but just no more "peep."  Such nonsense upsets the other birds--especially crow.  The children taking this story in, though, always find it hilarious.  Plenty of fun playing with sounds.

Big and Small
Elizabeth Bennett & Jane Chapman
Big is a bear and Small is a mouse, but that is neither here nor there.  Big is big, and Small is small.  Sometimes Small needs help.  But sometimes, Big needs help, too.  A sweet tale of friendship, empathy, and the power of all sizes.

Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!



May 31, 2015

Read Up! A book with no pictures, and a story with no words

I like these two as a set: one with no pictures, the other with no words!



The Book with No Pictures
B.J. Novak
At a family storytime, when I announced that the book had no pictures, kids whined.  Once I'd finished reading it, those same children begged for me to read it again.  And that is all I have to say about that.

The Boy & the Book (A Wordless Story)
David Michael Slater & Bob Kolar
A boy walks into the library unsupervised (his mother was there; she just wasn't supervising him), and he gets down to business, terrorizing the books.  This is a book to talk about together (since there are no words to read), perhaps gasping and shaking heads together, commiserating over the way these poor books get treated.


Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!


April 28, 2015

Read Up!

Two new books I think you may like--get out your library card & check them out!



Hiccupotamus
By Steve Smallman & Ada Grey
I started chanting & tapping to this book’s text nearly from the first line.  One by one, the jungle creatures gather to form a beautiful beat, with each animal making its own unique contribution.  The illustrations are colorful and simple, with beautiful textures, and before you've ventured very far into the book, you may already be feeling the urge to read it twice in a row!  Especially great for toddlers.

By Mouse and Frog
Deborah Freedman
Mouse wakes up early one day, eager to write a story.  When Mouse’s friend Frog shows up, though, Mouse’s plans go awry.  Having two authors really changes a story! The way these two create is in the style of Harold and the Purple Crayon, with the characters becoming immersed in a world of their own creation as they are creating it.  Somewhere in this busy little tale is a little lesson in cooperation, but never mind that!  Especially great for preschoolers & early elementary.


Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!


January 11, 2015

Read Up: Four for fun

Pull out your library card & reserve these four new books from some favorite authors & illustrators of mine!



Sam & Dave Dig a Hole
Mac Barnett & Jon Klassen
It's a new book from the team who brought us Extra Yarn!
THIS yarn is about a pair of boys who dig a hole--a really deep hole.  They vow not to stop digging until they find something spectacular, and as the readers, we get to see how close they keep coming.  The end of this book kind of blew my mind.

Lola Plants a Garden
Anna McQuinn & Rosalind Beardshaw
I love Lola, and am always happy to see a new adventure with her.  This time, she's got some gardening to do--and of course, she wants to do some research with some library books, first!  Lola's is a family who loves to read.

If You Were a Dog
Jamie A. Swenson & Chris Raschka
What would you do if you were a dog...or a fish...or an insect...or a dinosaur?  The language of the book tickles the ears, while encouraging children to think about what makes them unique as people.

Where is the Rocket?
Harriet Ziefert & Borroux
This book is full of big words--well, big font--and a big space adventure! Borroux's bold collages grab the eye, while Ziefert explores concepts of place: over, under, around & through--and beyond!


Check these books out! Have fun with them, & let me know what you think. Do you have any favorite books about digging , or dogs, or gardening--or whatever? Please let me know!



Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!


December 04, 2014

Read Up! Shh! We Have a Plan, by Chris Haughton

I love this new book.  It's gotten a lot of laughs every time I've shared it at storytime, and I think you may like it a lot, too!


Chris Haughton's whimsical, collage-style illustrations (actually rendered digitally) are what drew me into this book about four little friends who I think may be up way past their bedtimes. When they see a beautiful bird, the littlest one of them all seems to want to make friends with it--but judging by the nets, I think the others have something different in mind.  They have a plan.  Check this out, and have fun reading aloud in whatever silly little voice comes into your head!  



Check this book out! Have fun with it, & let me know what you think. Do you have any favorite books about friends, or birds, or the night--or whatever? Please let me know! 


Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!



March 03, 2014

Read Up! A fun trio

I've just met these fun characters recently, and I want to make sure you don't miss out!  All feature fun illustrations, and quite a lot to talk about & explore when sharing with the children in your life.




A Monkey Among Us
Dave Horowitz
"Among us?" a child in the group asked the first time I shared this book.  "Yes," I said, "among us!  Here with us!  Somewhere between us--it's among us!"  The book does more than possibly introduce challenging new vocab; it also plays with sounds ("A monkey among a fungus. A monkey, HUMONGOUS"), and lets us get to know a trio of silly animal characters.  I like the collage-style drawings, and the many opportunities to laugh & discuss the increasingly-wacky proceedings.




Early Bird
Toni Yuly
Many parents may be able to recognize this early bird, who wakes up before the sun, raring to go.  Early Bird gets moving, too: across, through, under, up, around and over!  This all happens over the course of several pages, but it's fun to go back and retrace her movements, emphasizing those prepositions.  Of course, the real conversation-starter is when Early Bird meets the Early Worm!



I Can See Just Fine
Eric Barclay
Our first image of Paige shows her holding a book upside-down; the second catches her walking out of the boys' room.  You can imagine what animal she's holding when she announces to her dad that she's found a kitty.  The charm & humor of this book are shouldered almost entirely by Barclay's super-cool retro advertising-art style, which packs in treats on every page.  It may be a book to make kids feel better if they need glasses, but it's a cool sight for anyone.

Check out these books, and let me know what you think!  Do you have any favorite books about monkeys, birds, glasses--or anything else?  Let me know about it, so I can read up!

Storyteller John Weaver

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October 21, 2013

Read Up! A pair of silly animal tales

Have you got your library card handy?  Hop over to your local branch's website & reserve these fun books today!


Ribbit!
Rodrigo Folgueira & Poly Bernatene
The frogs are quite surprised to find a pig on their lily pad--a pig that says, "ribbit!"  What is it doing there?  Is it making fun of them?  Pretty soon, all of the animals are trying to figure out the pig, and you can sense their disappointment when the object of their attention disappears. I love the ending of this book, wherein all things become clear.



Hippospotamus
Jeanne Willis & Tony Ross
"Hippopotamus had a spotamus... on her bottomus."  Oh, my--do we really want to read this?  We DO!  So many diagnoses: is it hippopox, or hippolumps, or potomumps--or something else entirely?  When the answer finally comes, you may not be sure whether you are relieved or about to retch. Better re-read the book until you finally figure it out!  I was kind of sick of all of the cutesy rhyming, but the ending makes it very much worth multiple readings.


Check these books out! Have fun with them, & let me know what you think. Do you have any favorite books about frogs, or pigs, or hippos, or mysterious red spots--or whatever? Please let me know! 

Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!






September 07, 2013

The reading bond



--and the same goes for reading to your children, even well after they are perfectly able to read on their own!  Start early, and never stop!



Storyteller John Weaver

For regular updates, connect with me on Facebook!

September 06, 2013

A beautiful sight, a joyful noise



I heard the most joyful noise coming from a cozy corner of the Menlo Park Library's children's room:

A grandpa reading to his grandchild with such wonderful, lively expression! I am far too accustomed to seeing adults drag their children to the library, and then play with their cell phone apps while the kids are supposed to be dutifully reading. Adults like this grandpa are demonstrating the value & joy to be found in reading, AND they are building memories that will be treasured for 2 lifetimes. 





Storyteller John Weaver

For regular updates, connect with me on Facebook!

May 18, 2013

Library Summer Reading: What do YOU like?



Summer Reading Season is almost here!  I've checked out a lot of library summer reading programs over the years, and I wanted to get your opinions regarding these programs: whether you've ever taken part in one, what your favorite parts are--and your fantasies of a "perfect" library summer reading program.


I was surprised to learn that library summer reading programs of one kind or another have been with us for well over a hundred years.  I wasn't around back then, but I think it's safe to say summer at the library has changed quite a bit over the years!  Summer programs' goals of preventing summer learning loss, encouraging the joy of reading, and helping fill those long hours take many forms--and these days, many libraries include adults in the summer reading fun, as well.  I think that's a vital component: if the adults don't model a love of reading, the kids are less likely to follow suit.


The core of a summer reading program is a reading log and a prize.  Libraries vary in how they measure what is read: books, pages, time spent reading.  The culminating prize--and my favorite--at most libraries seems to be a book.  How great to get a congratulations from the librarian, and then get to explore the available books on the cart--and pick one to take home "for keeps!"  For me, it's the one prize that makes perfect sense.  Give me a dinner on the town, sure; a trip to Borneo, yes, please--but definitely give me my choice of a book for finishing the reading game!

Of course, prizes depend upon a library's budget, and library budgets (many of them) have fallen upon hard times.  Donations from local vendors makes up much in the way of prizes for some programs: pizzas, burgers, etc.  A library might throw down for some little trinkets along the way, many purchased from party catalogs or from the same organization from which they purchased their annual theme (the themes you'll see at most libraries this year are "Dig into Reading," or "Reading is So Delicious").  Libraries with a budget can actually go shopping.  They can decide what their communities would love, without having to fully rely upon what might be donated to them from a business interest.

Okay, so reading & prizes.  But wait, there's more!  Storytimes, of course, plus crafts, and special events.  Some libraries will show movies, and many have performers and presenters.  During many summer reading programs, you can see more assemblies than children do in multiple school years: animal presentations, storytellers, puppet shows, music programs, cultural presentations, magic shows--most with elements designed to address common core state standards in education.


Sad to say, not all libraries can afford this multitude of special events.  Some do not even have the budget for a single full-priced event.  Spend enough time online exploring various libraries' event offerings, and you will discover that some libraries actually have "The Hamburger Clown" as their special performer. You know who I mean.  He might read to the kids, do a trick, give a prize--his people say he supports literacy, but... well, you fill in the blanks, there.

A lucky library is one that can depend upon its Friends.  The Friends of the Library (some libraries are lucky enough to have more than one support group, such as a Library Foundation), through memberships, book sales, and other fundraising activities, keep their communities afloat in tough times.  A library might survive without its Friends--but it wouldn't be pretty.  During most events at the library, you'll hear the facilitator thanking the Friends group, because they are the source of funds for those wonderful, fun & educational programs I mentioned earlier.

In my desire to give a few examples, and a little context, I drifted from what I told you I wanted to do here: to get your opinions regarding library summer reading programs!

Have you sampled Summer Reading Games at various libraries?  What do you like best?  What do you like least?  If YOU were to design a library summer reading program, what would it look like?  I'm interested in hearing about your dream program at the library--and how you think it could happen.  

Please, chime in!




April 14, 2013

Author Spotlight: Dan Yaccarino


 

I've enjoyed the work of prolific author/illustrator Dan Yaccarino for many years now.  His colorful, painted art often captures the look of mid-20th-century advertising art, and is always fun & eye-catching.  The art is enough to draw me into not only his own books, but those he has illustrated for other authors (all of whom owe him a debt of gratitude).  From the simplest of picture books for the youngest children, to beginner chapter books for independent readers, Yaccarino has a lot of creativity to share.  Here are just a handful of my favorites to get you started:


 

An Octopus Followed Me Home
When a little girl comes home with a new eight-legged friend, her father has to remind her of the troubles visited upon him by the rest of her menagerie. The rhyming couplets & big paintings of a funny range of beasts make this a very fun read.





 
The Birthday Fish
Another book about a little girl & her potential new pet.  Cynthia really, really, really wants a pony. "Every year she put a pony on her Christmas list.  But no matter how good she was, she never got a pony."  When her birthday comes, Cynthia thinks surely the box from her parents must contain "a very small pony!"  Can she learn to accept her birthday fish?



Deep in the Jungle
"The lion was the king of this jungle and he made sure everyone knew it... The animals couldn't stand him one bit."  When a man found wandering through the jungle offers the lion a job in show business, the offer is snapped right up.  Unfortunately, the lion finds itself, caged, whipped & humiliated in a circus--and worse yet, the other jungle animals are being rounded up, as well!  Will the lion be able to win the animals their freedom--and itself their friendship?  Comeuppance can be hard to swallow--or not!

 

Boy + Bot
Written by Ame Dyckman, & illustrated by Yaccarino, this simple, fun story of a new friendship always has children & adults in storytime groups smiling.  Did you know that robots read to each other, too?  Of course, they read instruction manuals...






Doug Unplugged
Freshly-published (February 2013), this book shows a happy little robot boy who is plugged in for downloading each day so his parents can go about their business.  When something outside the window catches his eye, Doug unplugs and ends up discovering an amazing world!  I've enjoyed reading this to storytime audiences in which the adults are too plugged in to enjoy the events along with their children.  For a few moments, at least, this grabs the attention of some of them.



If you'd like to get a look at more of Dan Yaccarino's books, visit his website.  There are even movie-trailer style book preview films! Do YOU have any favorite books by Dan Yaccarino--or anyone else, for that matter?  Please tell me about them!  Also, please spread the word about these great books, check them out, and read up!

Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!

 

March 25, 2013

Read Up! A Handful of Books for You to Check Out.

No real thread between the five books I'm sharing with you today; they all just happen to appeal to me in one way or another, and I think you might like them, too!




Perfectly Percy
Paul Schmid
A porcupine and his balloon are soon parted, and this makes poor Percy very sad.  Percy's sister Pearl (star of Schmid's Hugs from Pearl) has an idea involving marshmallows, but that's probably not too practical.  Percy must think--and you and the children can think along with him, trying to come up with the perfect idea to allow Percy to enjoy balloons once again.



HARRY HUNGRY!
Steven Salerno
The first thing that attracted me to this book was Salerno's bold art, which reminds me of the UPA cartoons of the 1950s.  The entire story could be executed like one of those classic 'toons, as a very hungry baby demonstrates an ever-growing insatiable hunger--even driving his mommy to call in the army!  Yes, everything turns out okay, at least until the NEXT mealtime.  The author dedicates his book to "parents who encourage their children to take a BIG bite out of life," and I encourage you to share this funny fantasy with your hungry child!


Lunchtime for a Purple Snake
Harriet Ziefert & Todd McKie
This is a book I saw many times before finally picking up, because the cover art just was not calling out to me.  The wormy-looking snake (as well as the flowers, and the sky, and the bug) on the cover looked as if it had been painted by a small child--and as it turns out, that was exactly the point!  The cover is the work of Jessica, the book's young star, during a visit to the studio of her artist grandfather.  I love McKie's paintings of Grandpa's studio, a very mod place.  Grandpa teaches Jessica (and the reader) about mixing colors of paint to make new colors, about how to turn mistakes into something good, and how to have fun collaborating on a painting & a story.  Don't be surprised if, after sharing this book with children, they want to create a masterpiece of their own!




In Front of My House
Marianne Dubuc
Very thick book, very few words (about 2-3 words on most pages).  In Front of My House takes the format of the circular story (wherein the ending leads right back to the beginning, a la If You Give a Mouse a Cookie), and brings it close to home for young readers.  We go inside the child's house, into the bedroom, into a book of fairy tales--and then all kinds of adventures take place!  I certainly have questions about how we get from one place to another at points, but that makes for fun conversation between the reader and the read-to.



Being Frank

Donna W. Earnhardt & Andrea Castellani

The book begins:
     Frank was always frank.
     "Honesty is the best policy," he said.
But how frank is TOO frank?  The boy ticks people off & gets into trouble left & right, reminding me of old Dennis the Menace cartoons I read growing up--hilarious but awkward!  Castellani is a professional animator, and it shows in his lively art, full of expression & humor during often-uncomfortable situations.  The question, though, is whether Frank can ever learn to balance honesty with mercy: a question many parents, themselves, may sometimes wonder about their own little ones!

Check these books out! Have fun with them, & let me know what you think. Do you have any favorite books about porcupines, or art, or honesty--or whatever? Please let me know!


Click on this link & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!





January 13, 2013

Read Up: Author! Author!

Did you love elementary school "book club" sales flyers as much as I did?  I'd always bring those catalog circulars home, full of checkmarks of the books I wanted.  The books were cheap, the choices were abundant, and the calls to action were frequent!  The joy came back anew when I had a child of my own in elementary school--a child who also, of course, was the beneficiary of waves of those books.

But do you know what I never appreciated about those book club editions?  I mean, BESIDE the low-quality binding.  Those versions of the popular books almost never, ever had any author biographies at the end!


Shown here, are the author bios from (clockwise from the top) Soup Day, by
Melissa Iwai; Thank You Bear, by Greg Foley; and Truck, by Donald Crews.

Anyone who's been to many of the storytimes I host knows that I talk about the creators of the books I am sharing.  I will pick up a book, show the cover and read the title, followed by the name of the person or people who wrote & illustrated the work.  

For instance, using a book from my previous blog entry here, I might say:


"This book is called 'Thank You Bear,' and it was written and illustrated by Greg Foley.  He wrote the words AND drew the pictures!  Shall we open up the back & see if he's there?"


Flipping back, we find that Greg IS back there (shown in the collage at the top of this post)!  When we are lucky enough to find the author back there (doesn't happen nearly often enough, in my opinion), I'll enthusiastically say, "he IS back here!"  Then I'll share some details from the bio.  Sitting at home with one or two children, or in some classroom or library settings, reading the whole bio is good, but at other times just sharing a couple of pertinent details will be enough.  Being the silly person I am, I read Greg Foley's bio & say to the group, "he grew up in Austin, Texas--JUST LIKE US!"  This gives the children the opportunity to very forcefully tell me where they actually are from.  The detail that Thank You Bear is his first book gives us all the chance to appreciate together what a wonderful first book it really is.  

So, why do I bring so much attention to the people who make the books I share?  It is for the same reason that, when I am making storytelling appearances, I emphasize to my audiences that "we are ALL storytellers."  We all potentially have stories to tell, including our own unique takes on common cultural material.  Anyone who's visited a good preschool has seen the stories that come from children's minds, when enabled by an adult's secretarial skills in getting the words down on paper!  Discussing the author & illustrator makes the book more tangible, something with which the reader & listener can make a stronger connection.  The bios that connect the writer with her story (as in the piece for Melissa Iwai's "Soup Day," pictured above, which shows the author & her child in the kitchen making soup together) also help us connect ourselves better with the story, as well as connect ourselves with the author.  This empathy teaches us about different people, and how we can always find similarities despite our differences.  

Whether or not there is any creator information to be found, we often talk about the the illustrations--not what they portray, but the illustrations themselves. "Do you think you could draw this," I might ask.  To the children who say "no," I'll say, "you can if you practice enough!"  Remember, there are lessons to be found in any book, whether the authors put them in there intentionally or not!  

So talk about the authors of the books you read.  Celebrate them, emulate their work.  Have an "author's day" occasionally for your favorites, where you check out every book you can by that person & talk about the ones you like best--and why.  Help your child right a "new" book based on a favorite character--and send a copy to the author, if that's (you know) a possibility!  Take your child to author events when they happen at libraries & bookstores in your area.  

The more you interact with the book, the more you get out of it on multiple levels, so have fun!



Click here & READ UP!  I have many more great books to share with you!