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

The Magic Fan Review

The Magic Fan
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a wonderful and captivating book that my first grade son loves so much. After he checked it out from his school library for the sixth time (and I read it to him countless nights) we have bought it as a Christmas gift for him.
He loves the way the message from the fan is revealed. He also appreciates learning about another culture and a boy who does so much.
It is one of the most beautifully illustrated children's books I have ever seen.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Magic Fan



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about The Magic Fan

Read More...

The Cat Barked? Review

The Cat Barked
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Have you ever wished you were something you're not? You know, wished for curly hair when yours is straight, or visa versa--the old "the grass is always greener" problem. That's the situation that a little orange striped cat finds herself in "The Cat Barked."
"Dogs have all the fun!" proclaims the envious puss, as she details the reasons why: dogs go to the park, dogs catch crooks and they're always the heroes in movies and books.
"Silly old cat," exclaims the mop-headed little girl who owns her, as she points out that there is a downside to dogs and an upside to cats.
The rhyming text does a good job of capturing the futility and folly of coveting your neighbor's bark. But what really stand out are the cool collages by Monks, a fine arts major at England's Kingston University. She uses a combination of paint, pencil, fabric and photos from magazines to concoct her personable canines and felines. Another unique artistic style that budding artists will be itching to emulate.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Cat Barked



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Cat Barked

Read More...

Pigs Picnic Review

Pigs Picnic
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The story was about not to always listen to what your friend's say, but to think for yourself. The pig goes around and wants to go to Mrs. Pig's house and ask her to go on a picnic. Some animals give him advice so Mrs. Pig will like him. But, it turns out that Mrs. Pig was scared of him and the way he looked. So he ran back and gave his animal friends back the advice they gave him! I think this book was really cool because it taught a lesson. Little kids can really learn from this book. It's exciting and everyone should read it. This is a very good book to read. Little kids will be happy when they read this book. I think it's really nice.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Pigs Picnic



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Pigs Picnic

Read More...

Superhero Review

Superhero
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Superheroes have an innate appeal to kids, and photographer Marc Tauss entertainingly taps into that subliminal vein with his visually stunning black-and-white photography "comic book," Superheroes, the endearing tale of Maleek, "a small boy in a big city-- [who's also] a scientist and a superhero!"
"Maleek loved comic books. It was fun to catch up on his fellow superheroes' adventures." the story begins. It's a relatively simple one, featuring disappearing parks and Maleek's over-the-top solution to the mystery, reveling in the seemingly lost art of a hero being a hero simply because it's the right thing to do. And it's fun! The photography -- the combination of a great eye, superior Photoshop skills, and some imaginative constructs -- is absolutely stunning, each collage capturing both the literal and subtextual aspects of Tauss' childlike fantasy.
More important than my enjoying it, though, was Superheroes passing the ultimate test: my almost 5-year-old son liked it, the same kid who typically only likes comics featuring characters he knows from TV, who turned his nose up at Owly, but loves Bumperboy. His enjoyment did come with a qualifier, though, as he explained to his mother: "It's not a comic book. It's a book!" And a wonderful book it is, a worthy addition to any child's bookshelf, sitting alongside any of Dr. Seuss and Maurice Sendak's best works.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Superhero



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Superhero

Read More...

Adios, Oscar: A Butterfly Fable Review

Adios, Oscar: A Butterfly Fable
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Anytime I see a new monarch butterfly book I get excited, so when I received a review copy of Adios, Oscar!: A Butterfly Fable from Scholastic, I was very happy. Even better? This isn't your typical monarch migration story. It's a new twist on the topic and it is great!
Oscar is a caterpillar who lives on a plant near a window. One day a monarch butterfly named Bob happens upon his plant. Bob is in an awful rush and tells Oscar to look him up when he gets to Mexico someday. Well, Oscar is just enamored with Bob, his gorgeous orange-and-black wings, and this talk of Mexico. When a bookworm named Edna decides to help Oscar learn about Mexico in preparation for his journey, he is ecstatic. Soon it is time for him to go into his pupa phase before emerging as a butterfly.
Or so he thinks.
Oscar is heartbroken when he emerges from his cocoon and discovers he has short grey wings instead of the gorgeous orange-and-black ones he anticipated. And instead of the urge to fly to Mexico, he has the urge to eat sweaters! And fly around a light! Oscar's friends all mock him for the time he spent learning Spanish and Mexican culture, and he is heartbroken. But that all changes when he finds a note Edna left behind for him.
I loved this fable about a moth who believes he can do anything, even fly 2000 miles to Mexico.
And Elwell sprinkles Spanish phrases throughout the book. He also includes an afterword with some information on monarchs and moths and the differences between the two. The illustrations are also adorable, in a great cartoon style. I can't wait to share this with my class and the Monarch Teacher Network!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Adios, Oscar: A Butterfly Fable

When Oscar the caterpillar discovers that he will one day become a butterfly, he's overjoyed. And his friend Edna the bookworm encourages his hopes of flying to Mexico with the other Monarch butterflies. To prepare, Oscar learns Spanish and dreams of flying through the purple Sierra Madre Mountains. But when Oscar emerges from his cocoon with stubby little wings, a craving for the taste of desginer sweaters -- and the urge to take a spin around the bathroom lightbulb-- his dreams are dashed.There will be no trip to Mexico for Oscar -- or will there?
(Continued on next page)
Yes there will!How Oscar ignores the limitations of being a moth and learns how to dream like a butterfly is both inspirational, liberating -- and hilariously funny.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Adios, Oscar: A Butterfly Fable

Read More...

The Rag Coat Review

The Rag Coat
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
One of the most touching and beautiful stories I have ever read! A little girl loses the father she so deeply loves, but never forgets the important lessons he taught her or the love he had for her. Her dream is to go to school, but her family can't buy her a coat. Finally, kind friends of her mama help make her a coat out of quilt pieces. Her excitement at wearing her new coat to school and sharing it with her new friends quickly changes to sadness when she is taunted by her playmates. But she remembers her father's lessons and his love and helps her friends come to see how special her coat is--to ALL of them! This story is part of the reading series I teach from and when I read it for the first time last year, my class was staring at me in amazement as I sobbed my way through the end! I had to get a copy for myself and my little girl!

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Rag Coat



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about The Rag Coat

Read More...

The Best Friends Book Review

The Best Friends Book
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a wonderful book about what a best friend is and does. Children will immediately relate and respond to the best friend how-tos, as well as, to the illustrations of bold primary colors and silly line illustrations reminiscent of a child's line drawings. Pure joy for both children and adults.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Best Friends Book



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Best Friends Book

Read More...

A Frog Thing (with Audio CD) Review

A Frog Thing (with Audio CD)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book is amazing! The pictures are unique in that they make you feel sorry for the charaters, but also laugh at the same time. It also delivers a powerful message about how you can do anything you put your mind to, no matter who or in this case "what" you are. This book is a must have for any childs library no matter the age.

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Frog Thing (with Audio CD)



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about A Frog Thing (with Audio CD)

Read More...

Marsupial Sue Presents "The Runaway Pancake": Book and CD Review

Marsupial Sue Presents The Runaway Pancake: Book and CD
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
When I learned there was a new "Marsupial Sue" book out I knew I had to get it for my daughter's fourth birthday. The original "Marsupial Sue" is now tattered and taped from many fun-filled readings. After perusing the reviews I was hesitant to order the book because the critics thought it might be confusing for small children. Not so! My kids (2.5 and 4) are asking to read it over and over. They are not confused at all about the characters' costumes and they picked up on the rhyme immediately. We're now laughing about the costumes the animals put together and singing "No No No No No" joyously! Thanks Mr. Lithgow for more great memories.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Marsupial Sue Presents "The Runaway Pancake": Book and CD



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Marsupial Sue Presents "The Runaway Pancake": Book and CD

Read More...

I'm the Best Review

I'm the Best
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I love Lucy Cousins! Her books are always great for story time sharing because of the big bold pictures and her simple, beautiful stories. I'm the Best is all about a dog (in perfect rainbow plaid pants of course) who loves to brag. He is always telling his friends that he is better than they are at everything, not realizing that he is making them feel sad. The friends then tell him that they are the best at things too, and he finally understands how mean he has been. The friends forgive him and tell him they think he is the best too, and they share a nice hug. A great little story about the dangers of bragging and being a show off. But wait! You turn to the last page, and I'll be darn if that dog isn't up to his old bragging once again. Just when we thought he'd learned his lesson!
I know that final page is meant to be funny, but I wish the author had stopped with that last hug. The dog going back to his old habits just seems to take away from the message a bit. That was my only complaint about this really cute book. Ms. Cousins' illustrations are engaging and whimsical and I am once again amazed that she tells such a good story with so few words. A must have for any toddler or preschooler!

Click Here to see more reviews about: I'm the Best



Buy NowGet 60% OFF

Click here for more information about I'm the Best

Read More...

Thank You for Me Review

Thank You for Me
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I bought this book as a Baby Shower Gift. This book is cute, well written and the pictures are wonderful. I totally recommend this book to new mothers or anyone who needs a book for a child.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Thank You for Me

Thank you for hands and feet that keep a beat, for ears that hear, and eyes that see. Thank you for each bendy knee.

Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Thank You for Me

Read More...

How to Be Review

How to Be
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I shared this book with my eighth graders as we were discussing families. Each student wrote a poem about how to be the ___ family. We put these in a booklet that each student gets to take home and share with his or her family. It's a wonderful book to use as a springboard to writing poetry and talking about a variety of topics.

Click Here to see more reviews about: How to Be



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about How to Be

Read More...

Read for Me, Mama Review

Read for Me, Mama
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Mama is a wonderful storyteller. You know the type- she paintsvivid word pictures, setting off each line with a gesture, a body orhand motion, a snatch of song. But Mama has a secret...
How would you feel if you couldn't read?
Mama has never told her small son her humiliating secret, but now he's learning to read and she won't be able to hide it much longer. What will Mama do? Told from a child's standpoint, this touching and delightful story for children will appeal to anyone who reads- or loves his mama.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Read for Me, Mama



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Read for Me, Mama

Read More...

Yes Day Review

Yes Day
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Great book...I know my 5 year old grand daughter will love it! I hope her parents will go along with it...all children need to feel like they have a voice in this world. This is a small way that all of us can help give them the confidence to make good decisions.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Yes Day



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Yes Day

Read More...

Who Wants to Be a Poodle I Don't Review

Who Wants to Be a Poodle I Don't
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have always loved Lauren Child's style. From her wild and frequent patterns selections to her use of assorted fonts, her style exhibits a particularly lovely sense of whimsy. Geometric black and white print drapes meet abstract pink walls and green cabbage print wallpaper. The effect is definitely striking rather than jarring.
I particularly like this book because the main character is the divinely glamorous Mademoiselle Verity Brulee, who lives in a sumptuous apartment and likes everything to be "just so." Of course, being a lady of leisure means her hobbies include shoe shopping and ... more shoe shopping. Of course, her dog is a fluffy little white poodle, named Trixie Twinkle Toes Trot-a-Lot Delight. Unfortunately, Trixie is not the sort of dog who appreciates her name or living in the lap of luxury.
Trixie may not look the part, with her fluffy white coats and perfectly poofed tail, but she craves a life of adventure! Her dream is to prance through puddles, not to be sprayed by perfume. Trixie is being squashed by her life and finally decides she must take action. After reading (I guess this dog can read) an article titled "How to Change Your Dog Image," she feels emboldened to take action.
Trixie puts her plan into action by becoming dangerous and daring. She catches fleas and chews the neighbors newspaper. She slides straight down the banister and leaps onto the chandelier. Finally, Trixie runs through the raindrops and dives into the deepest puddle to save a smaller dog. Suddenly, Verity Burlee sees her pooch in a new light and understands what Trixie needs. And from then on, the pair are sure to venture outside every day that it rains.
The story is cute, but it's Child's illustrations that steal the show. I love the pairings of flowers with checks and the mad jumble of each page. Your eye won't know where to look first - it's a virtual playground of pattern and font. And the book has a wonderful happy ending with Trixie being able to convey to her owner what will make her feel alive.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Who Wants to Be a Poodle I Don't



Buy NowGet 60% OFF

Click here for more information about Who Wants to Be a Poodle I Don't

Read More...

The Secret of the Great Houdini Review

The Secret of the Great Houdini
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The figure of Houdini, so prominently referenced in Michael Chabon's, "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay," gets the mythic treatment in this beautifully illustrated, ambitious book by Robert Burleigh and Leonid Gore. It features alluring, poetic prose from six different voices: The third person narrator ("The crowd is so still that even from far off the lock's tiny click can be heard as it snaps shut"), young Sam ("Is he afraid?"), his wise uncle Ezra(Everyone's afraid sometimes....The Great Houdini goes where he has to go"), a Greek chorus of other Houdini watchers ("He won't make it out!"), a man narrating Houdini's attempt to escape (while bound in chains) from a submerged, locked box, and the real or imagined words of Houdini, questioning the readers' beliefs:
I am Houdini.
I escape the hold of all things.
I free myself.
Do you believe me?"
Sam wonders and worries about Houdini's safety, but his uncle offers him reassuring metaphors"
"Sam looks at his own thin wrists. `Handcuffs?' Uncle Ezra Looks out of the corner of his eye. `Handcuffs are paper bracelets to the great Houdini.'" As Sam and the other spectators wait 30 seconds, I minutes, 2 minutes for Houdini to emerge from the river, Uncle Ezra recalls some of Houdini's prior feats, all of which will amaze young readers. Burleigh's vivid text brings you into Sam's anxious thoughts and over-identification with Houdini: "Locked in a trunk. Oh, locked in a trunk! Sam remembers the little click. He feels terrified fingers trying to pick and claw and force the lock."
The man yells, "Two Minutes at the Bottom of the River. Two. I repeat: Two Minutes. THE GREAT HOUDINI." Sam again imagines himself as Houdini; the crowd calls for an ambulance, but we "hear" Houdini again (in bolded italics, to differentiate it from the rest of the text):
I am Houdini.
I confound the sleeper.
I amaze the unwilling-to -believe.
I mystify the all-too-sure.
Leonid Gore's soft-focus blend of pastel and ink is equally adept in capturing the youthful emotions of Sam, and the mystery of Houdini beneath the waters. The first pictures show Houdini as Greek god, but when Houdini finally escapes, he looks unexpectedly tired and very human: "[He] awkwardly climbs the rope ladder." Houdini's current and past exploits are astounding, but Uncle Ezra reminds Sam that Houdini calls them "secrets," not tricks. IN the book's thematic close, Sam asks his Uncle what the secret is. Ezra explains, "It's a mix of many things. It's bravery and hard work and practice...," but then says" But maybe you shouldn't wonder so much about his secret... What's really important is finding your secret--something that becomes like a seed inside you--that will grow as you grow up." While one reviewer thought this "prim," and another, "unneccesary," it's consistent with the figure of Uncle Ezra and will get at least some (slightly older) kids thinking about their potential. It's slightly more concrete and not nearly as false-sounding as a few anachronistic New Ageisms that are not easily understood. Here's one example, a "quote" in the voice of Houdini:
"Mysterious is the water I move through,
(deeper than all of my doubters)
as a fish swims in the sea.
Do you believe?
This faux-Zen comment is too artful and forced, and puts the attention on the author rather than on Houdini or Sam. Similarly, Uncle Ezra's metaphors get a bit tired after a while; it begins to feel like you're hearing a loop of David Carradine lines in "Kung Fu." However, the otherwise well-written text, the building suspense, the interwoven biography of Houdini (there's also an afterward with a brief bio), illustrator Gore's atmospheric portrayal of mood and emotion, and the slightly ambiguous, thought-provoking conclusion make up for these few false steps. Note: Sam's vivid imagination of the terrors of Houdini's escape and the crowd's fear may scare some toddlers and others--use your judgment.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Secret of the Great Houdini



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Secret of the Great Houdini

Read More...

Three Nasty Gnarlies Review

Three Nasty Gnarlies
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
We love Keith Graves books. The illustrations are great, and the rhymes are fun and appeal to adults as well as kids. Our son loves the yuck factor of this book. This is not among our most frequent reads, but he always enjoys it when picked.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Three Nasty Gnarlies



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Three Nasty Gnarlies

Read More...