Hitting the Jackpot: Random Library Picks That Luke Loves

Some library trips we come home with twenty books and none of them are any good.  Other trips, like this last one, we come home with ten books, and they all rock.  Luke is now three years old, but even if your child is a little older or younger, check them out!  As with all children’s books, different books appeal to different kids for different reasons.

  Batty by Sarah Dyer: Batty isn’t the most popular animal at the zoo, so he decides to try being more like the other animals.  Super cute book about being yourself.  Luke loves this book because some of the pictures are from Batty’s perspective…upside down, that is.  He loves turning the book over to view the illustrations right side up.  Very well done.

  Grumpy Bird by Jeremy Tankard: One morning Bird wakes up in a foul mood.  He doesn’t want to eat, play, or even fly.  So he starts walking.  Along the way he meets a host of animals, each of which eventually joins him on his walk.  Soon, the walk turns into a game, and Bird’s bad mood is gone.  Illustrations are bold and simple.  Text is spare and repetitive (perfect for toddlers/preschoolers).  A super cute story.

  Froodle by Antoinette Portis: Four birds sing the same song day in and day out…until one day when the little brown bird decides to try something different.  Something silly.  Something like, “Froodle!” A really cute, well-done book about how much fun it can be to break from the usual every once in awhile.  Illustrations are great.  Text is simple enough for early readers.  Luke says that he likes the words “blurv” and “inkpadink” the best.

  Interrupting Chicken by David Ezra Stein: Little chicken LOVES her bedtime stories.  She loves them so much that she can’t help but interrupt her father’s reading every time.  Papa starts stories only to have little chicken leap into the story (literally–she is actually drawn into the storybook pages) and save the characters from disaster.  This is a Caldecott honor book, so the illustrations are fun, and the text is simple enough for preschoolers.  Luke thinks little chicken is pretty funny.

  Cheese Belongs to You!: by Alexis Deacon and Viviane Schwarz: This is Rat Law: cheese belongs to you…unless a big rat wants it…unless a bigger rat wants it…unless a faster rat wants it…unless… and on and on.  Luke gets a huge kick out of the dirty rat (we do lots of nose holding and ewww-ing) and the hairy rat (gross), and he enjoys watching the story build.  What’s funny is that the ending is all about how nice it is to share, but Luke usually walks away for the last two pages.  Maybe that’s why he doesn’t know how to share very well?

  Come Back, Ben by John Hassett and Ann Hassett: Luke can read this book independently.  Simple, repetitive text is great for the newest readers.  And for such an early reader book, it’s actually really cute.  Ben goes up and up holding onto his balloon, and everything he passes says, “Come back, Ben!” including the window, a tree, some bees, a big hill, etc.  He finally reaches the moon, where he fills his pockets with moon rocks and floats gently back home.  Luke really enjoys reading this book, in part because it’s easy enough for him to read by himself,  and in part because we’ve started doing baby signs with Brynn (3 months old) and we can sign almost the entire book.  Fun!

 

Clicking on the books will take you to Amazon.com, and if you decide to buy the book, a portion of your purchase comes back to me.  I, in turn, will use the profits to purchase books for our local library or for a children’s literacy project.

The Birthday Book Post: Books We Have Given

For one reason or another, many of my little friends have birthdays in May.  This slew of birthdays has inspired me to post a list of the books that I have given to others for their birthdays over the past three years.  I consider these books the “best of the best,” otherwise I wouldn’t pass them on!  Books are arranged by the ages of the children to whom I gifted the books, but that doesn’t mean that older children wouldn’t enjoy them as well….

FOR ONE YEAR OLDS:
  Pete the Cat: I Love My White Shoes by James Dean and Eric Litwin: I don’t know a little one who doesn’t like Pete the Cat!  Pete has a new pair of white shoes, but he keeps stepping in different colored things (strawberries, blueberries, etc.).  “Does Pete cry?  Goodness no! He keeps walking along singing his song.”  I loved that this book could be read with tons of inflection and that Mama and Dada sang (I use the word loosely) the little ditty that Pete sings.  Fantastic for kids learning their colors.

   Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus! by Mo Willems:  I’m not sure how many times I can post this book before I get in trouble for copyright infringement.  This book is great for little ones because of the big text, inflection, and funny storyline.  See Mo Willems post for more info!

FOR TWO TO THREE YEAR OLDS:

  Snip Snap!: What’s That? by Mara Bergman and Nick Maland:  One of my all time favorite books just before I turned two!  Lots of fun noises for parents to make, a jaunty rhyme, nice repetition, and an alligator on the loose make this book a sure hit.  There is a great close up of the alligator that always made me laugh, too!

  If I Were a Lion by Sarah Weeks and Heather Solomon: Another huge favorite of mine!  A spunky little girl is in time out for making a huge mess and her mother dubs her “wild.”  The rest of the book is the girl protesting that if she were truly wild, she’d do all of these “wild” things like “poke and pierce and tear, not sit here nicely in my chair.”  Great rhyming text, expressive illustrations, and, of course, the little girl is the quintessential toddler: equal parts mischief and sweetness.  (She does apologize and say sorry at the end!)

  Gorilla! Gorilla! by Jeanne Willis and Tony Ross:  Definitely a fun book for toddlers who can talk (or at least yell, “STOP!”).  A mother mouse’s baby goes missing, but as mama is looking for him, a giant gorilla yells, “Stop!” at her.  She takes off running, of course, and that begins a chase across the globe.  In the end, the gorilla turns out to be a great guy who found her baby and has been trying to give him back the entire time.  Nice repetitive text, opportunities for audience involvement, and a surprise ending make this book another fun read for both parents and kids.

FOR THREE TO FOUR YEAR OLDS:
  Creepy Carrots! by Aaron Reynolds and Peter Brown:  What a fantastic book!  Jasper Rabbit is obsessed with carrots, and he picks them from a field every day.  One day, however, the carrots start following him, “tunk tunk tunk…” or do they?  Jasper sees carrots everywhere, but with Peter Brown’s clever illustrations, neither Jasper nor the reader is entirely certain whether the carrots are really there.  Finally, Jasper hatches a plan to ensure that those carrots never bother him again, but it is the carrots who get the last laugh!  Black and white illustrations with only splashes of orange for the carrots lend a Twilight Zone feel to the book.  Entertainingly suspenseful text, too!

  The Gruffalo (Picture Books) by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler:  Another great book with a clever twist at the end!  Everyone wants to eat Mouse, but he foils them all by making up an imaginary creature called a Gruffalo who loves to eat the other animals.  Mouse soon discovers that the Gruffalo DOES exist, and it’s hungry for mouse, too!  But Mouse is pretty darn clever, and he fools the Gruffalo just like he did the other animals.  Nice repetition, catchy rhyme, and Mouse’s cleverness make this book tons of fun for both parents and kids!

  Ladybug Girl by David Soman and Jacky Davis:  I liked this book for a very long time.  Lulu may dress like Ladybug Girl, but she is a spunky girl with a can-do attitude.  When her brother refuses to play with her one morning, Lulu makes her own fun and proves to the world that she is NOT too little to do big things (like save ants, count letter Ls, and rebuild rock walls).  This book encourages kids to be independent, use their imaginations to entertain themselves, and leave their own pint-sized impact on the world.  Illustrations and language are both wonderful.

Happy gifting!

–Luke (age 2.5, blog co-author)

 

Weekly Bookshelf–Books for Two to Three Year Olds–Installment 1


Tickle Time!: A Boynton on Board Board Bookby Sandra Boynton: A huge favorite of mine because, well, there’s tickling involved.  Who doesn’t enjoy tickling?

Mary Engelbreit’s Mother Goose: One Hundred Best-Loved Verses: Various nursery rhymes (repeated over and over and over again): I like the collection illustrated by Engelbreit because the rhymes are formatted one to a page and the illustrations are very bright and colorful.



Alphabet (Paula Wiseman Books) by Matthew Van Fleet: Very well-done touch and feel animal alphabet book.  My favorite animal is the sticky octopus.


Alphabet Cityby Stephen T. Johnson: Really neat life-like illustrations of letters found in unlikely places in the city.  Jump started my own interest in finding letters out in the world.

 

 

Pssst!by Adam Rex: A girl visits the zoo and the animals each ask her for something very specific.  You don’t find out until the very end what they use everything for!

 

Posted by Luke (blog co-author, age two and a half)