Tuesday, December 31, 2013

A new year is nearly upon us



Another new year is looming in the shadows waiting to be called forth to gobble us up.  It is always nice to erase the old and dream of the possibilities of the new.  I wish everyone of my readers the best in 2014 and that the books they open up and read to their kids will plant seeds of success, adventure and wisdom into each and every one.  Make the year 2014 the year of "The Book," for both you and your kids.  Books are precious commodities that teach, inspire and becomes good friends.  Make your home a destination stop for homeless books. Invite them in to live with you and treat them with respect, tender care and love.  Bring them inside, read them lovingly and then find a special spot on your bookshelf to keep them with you so you can visit with them again and again.  Whether your preference is a paper book or an electronic one....books get into your heart and spirit and make you a much better person because you took the time to know them and spend time with them.  Cheers to more and more books to read in 2014!!!!! May the reading begin.......


I am deviating from my book review format for the next couple of days and featuring poems that will be fun to read aloud to your kids during this rather hectic (but amazing) time of the year.  Enjoy and smile......




 

On New Year's Day

On New Year's Day a year ago,
I started off the year
by making resolutions
that were probably severe.

I said I'd save my money,
as this seemed so very wise.
I vowed I would improve my health.
I swore I'd exercise.

I stated I would do my homework
every single day.
I'd brush my teeth religiously
to ward off tooth decay.

I'd eat my fruits and vegetables
and keep my bedroom clean.
I'd treat my sister kindly
though she's often very mean.

My resolutions lasted me
about a half a day.
I promised I would keep them
but I broke them anyway.

So now I'm fat and penniless.
My homework's overdue.
My sister's mad. My teeth are bad.
My room is messy too.

And yet I think I may have found
the best of all solutions,
and this year I've resolved
to not make ANY resolutions.
--Kenn Nesbitt


Copyright © 2004 Kenn Nesbitt. All Rights Reserved.


About the author:





  • Kenn Nesbitt is an American children's poet. On June 11, 2013 he named Children's Poet Laureate by the Poetry Foundation. He is a writer of humorous poetry for children, including the books My Hippo Has the Hiccups and Revenge of the Lunch Ladies. Wikipedia


  • BornFebruary 20, 1962 (age 51), Berkeley, California, United States

  •    Have a great day.  Read on and read always! Happy New Year!

  • Monday, December 30, 2013

    50 Below Zero - board book

    Quote of the Day:  


    "There is no friend as loyal as a book."

                                   - Ernest Hemingway










    Title:  50 Below Zero
    Author:  Robert Munsch
    Illustrator:  Michael Marchenko
    Ages: 2-5

    This book is a re-release for toddlers presented as a board book.  Some of the text and pictures have been updated but the hilarious message is still the same and ready to be unpacked to a new group of lucky kids.

    Jason hears funny noises in the middle of the night and when he gets up to investigate he finds his dad snoring....laying on top of the fridge.  He shouts, "Papa wake up!" and that's when the fun begins.  Jason goes back to bed only to be woken up time and time again finding his dad in very strange places indeed - like the top of his car and even outside in 50 below zero weather.  Jason has a huge responsibility rescuing his dad over and over and trying to keep him safe.  He finally uses his brain and concocts a plan to keep his dad safe by tethering him in one spot where he can't escape and keep walking off. You will love the ending, a special little twist that only Robert Munsch can pull off....let's just sum it up by saying...the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.

    This delightful zany book will have your kids laughing out loud.  The re-vamped illustrations are classic and Michael Marchenko is a storyteller in himself with what he produces visually.  I know your child will be asking for this often. You will hear the shout coming from the bedroom..."Papa wake up and read me that story one more time!"











    About the author:



    Robert Munsch

    Robert Munsch is one of North America’s best-selling children’s authors. His books are staples of any child’s library. All together they have sold over 30 million copies, and have been translated into over a dozen languages.
    “I got into it backwards!” is Munsch’s reply to questions about how he became a children’s author. That’s because he makes up most of his stories on the spot, and tells them over and over before he writes them down. Munsch is bursting with ideas-though he says it sometimes takes him years to get a good story.
    Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Munsch studied for seven years to be a Jesuit priest before deciding to work with children instead. For the next five years he taught in a variety of nursery schools and daycare centers while he earned an M.A. in early childhood education. In 1975, Munsch and his wife, Ann, moved to Guelph, Ontario, where he became an associate professor of family studies and teacher at the University of Guelph’s preschool. During this time his reputation began to grow.
    Munsch has gained wide international recognition for his books and records.The Paper Bag Princess became the kids’ book of the ’80s, and Murmel, Murmel, Murmel won a Juno Award in 1985. In 1986, Thomas’ Snowsuitwon the Ruth Schwartz Award, and Munsch himself won the Canadian Booksellers Association’s “Author of the Year” in 1991.
    What do people like about Munsch’s stories? They’re contemporary and zany, reflecting “a jaunty belief in the power of children,” says Horn Book. To celebrate the publication of The Paper Bag Princess twenty-five years ago, Annick Press released The Paper Bag Princess 25th Anniversary Edition(2005) which has the complete storybook, how the book came to be, and never-before published original sketches.
    Every year Munsch receives thousands of letters from young fans. He likes to meet the children who send him mail, which sometimes leads to another story. Of his hectic touring schedule, he says simply, “I love it! One of the nicest things about my job is traveling across North America and meeting all kinds of people.”
    The Munschs have three children: Julie, Andrew and Tyya.
    Robert Munsch may be available for storytelling concerts, keynote speaking engagements, and school visits. Please write to Robert Munsch directly, at www.robertmunsch

    About the illustrator:


    Michael Martchenko

    “I try to give the kids in my illustrations spunk and make them a bit defiant; they’re always sticking out their chests and standing up for themselves. Did you notice how in Thomas’ Snowsuit Thomas causes the school principal’s hair to turn whiter in frustration as the story progresses?” asks Michael Martchenko in a Quill & Quire interview.
    Michael is recognized as one of the fastest illustrators in the country. According to an interviewer in Applied Arts Quarterly, “Such rapidity seems to suit the artist’s joyful sense of spontaneity.” Michael immediately breaks down a manuscript into a storyboard. He explains: “As I read, I get all these great pictures in my mind. I think about funny situations, and then start sketching.” After he has completed a rough, it takes approximately another four hours to create a finished drawing. For most of his books, Michael likes to use watercolor and pencil, as well as a generous dose of his own visual humor.
    Before he became a children’s book illustrator, Michael had already launched a successful career in advertising. Fortunately for fans of children’s literature, the Annick Press publishers and Robert Munsch saw Michael’s work—a scene in a park featuring pigeons equipped with landing gear—at a graphic arts exhibition, and felt that anyone with such a playful imagination should illustrate children’s stories.
    Since 1980, the year he worked with Robert on The Paper Bag Princess, Michael has illustrated over 30 books for children and has exhibited his work throughout North America. He won the Ruth Schwartz Award for Thomas’ Snowsuit in 1986, and has won additional awards for design and illustration.
    To celebrate the publication of The Paper Bag Princess twenty-five years ago, Annick Press published The Paper Bag Princess 25th Anniversary Edition (2005) which has the complete storybook, how the book came to be, and never-before published original sketches.
    Michael’s has also collaborated with Loris Lesynski on Shoe Shakes (2007), a zany blend of story-poem and toddler-friendly rhymes. They also worked together on “I Did It Because...”: How a Poem Happens (2006), a unique collection that blends “best of” with “how to.”
    Growing up in a small town north of Paris, France, Michael loved comic books and learned a lot about visual humor from watching cartoons. He moved to Canada when he was seven. By high school Michael knew that he wanted to make art his career. Upon graduation from the Ontario College of Art in 1966, Michael began working in commercial art. He was the creative art director for TDF Artists in Toronto until 1993. Michael’s other love is aviation art. He spends most of his time illustrating in his home studio.
    Michael lives in Toronto with his wife, Patricia.





                Book Review Rating:  9 ( Close to perfection!)


    Read on and read always!  Have an awesome day everyone.



    Saturday, December 28, 2013

    Time for sleep now Anna


    Quote of the Day:  " What is the use of a book; thought Alice, without pictures or conversations? "
                                          - Lewis Carroll








    Title:  Sleep Tight, Anna Banana
    Author:  Dominique Rogues
    Illustrator: Alexis Dormal
    Ages:  3-7






    Anna Banana cannot seem to settle herself this bedtime and wants to read. She puts off sleep much to the annoyance of her stuffed animals who are all tired and finally have had enough.  When she does turn out the light and is off to slumberland her animals decide it's payback time.  They rally together to give her a dose of what it is like to be kept awake unwillingly and Anna Banana is not amused.

    Anna Banana is a feisty little tyke with a mind and will of her own.  She definitely wants to be in charge and in no certain terms lets her animals know it.  The book highlights the love of reading but also the consequences of being selfish and making the world around you all about you and not being considerate of the needs of others.

    The illustrations are just fantastic. They are very expressive, colourful and playful.  This book will give you many opportunities to smile and even laugh out loud as it is shared.  I highly recommend it.  Sleep Tight, Anna Banana will be released June 17, 2014 so keep an eye out for it and be sure to add it to your collection of great children's books.




    About the Author and Illustrator:

    Dominique Roques was born in 1948 in Casablanca. She has two sons, one of whom likes drawing picture books. Her appreciation for her son Alexis's artwork inspired her to start writing stories for him. Together they have published several books starring Anna Banana. Sleep Tight, Anna Banana! is the first to be translated into English.
     
    Alexis Dormal was born in 1977 in Brussels and studied filmmaking and then fine arts in Lyon, France. Now he makes books with word balloons. He has collaborated with Dominique Roques on the Anna Banana series, the first of which is Sleep Tight, Anna Banana!






    Book review rating:  8 (fantastic!)



    Read on and read always!  Have a super day everyone.

    Friday, December 27, 2013

    Holiday fun....still going on.....



    Quote of the day: "What is the use of a book; thought Alice, without pictures or conversations."


    7 CHILDREN’S BOOKS THAT CAN STILL HELP US GROW UP

    While the real world can seem scary sometimes, and we can feel like we’re not nearly as grown up as everybody else seems to be, the books of our childhood can still serve to bring us together, and keep us growing up.
    Dec 23, 2013 
    1. “Where the Wild Things Are” By Maurice Sendak
     
    This classic, brought alive by the brilliant voice and illustrations of the late Maurice Sendak, is, to a child, about the unique power of an imagination, about facing your deepest fears and then appreciating the piece of good fortune that is having your parents provide you with a hot supper. For someone a little older though, it can still provide some lessons. For one, about leaving the comforts of your childhood home (or the comforts of your college campus) to a much more dangerous place, the real, working world: where the wild things are. In the story, Max doesn’t let himself be overwhelmed by their roars and teeth-gnashing of the wild things, but instead stares into their yellow eyes and, without blinking, shouts “be still!” He’s steely eyed as he works his way up to be king of all wild things. And the book could have ended right there and taught us a lesson about not being scared and steadfastly working for what we want: to be king. But, instead, ‘Wild Things’ also teaches us to always remember what’s most important as we try to enhance our own standing. Because, once Max has made it to king of the wild things, he realizes that being king is worth nothing if he can’t be with those who he loves most and who love him the most back. So he gives it all up and instead enjoys a hot meal with his parents. The book reminds us that being given all the power in the world doesn’t really matter if it means missing out on the love of your friends and family to get there.
     
    2. “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day” By Judith Viorst
     
    In this book, Alexander goes through a day where absolutely everything goes wrong for him and everything seems to go right for everyone else. He gets increasingly frustrated, trying to tell everyone about how shitty his day has been only to find out that, as we find out when we consult the wrong people about our bad days, they don’t really give a damn. And then, instead of having something go really right at the end of his day, or providing some sentimental reward to Alexander at the end of the book, the author just lets the book end. With everything being really shitty. ‘I’m moving to Australia’, Alexander proclaims near the end of the book, hoping he won’t have any more days like this if he simply moves overseas. The book closes with his mom telling him that it doesn’t work like that, that everybody has crappy days sometimes, even people in Australia. There’s no escaping it. There’s only trying to remember it’s temporary, that you’re not alone, and that there will be a time when days like this will have given you the perspective needed to keep your kid from shipping himself off to Australia simply because he had a bad day.
     
    3. “Love You Forever” By Robert Munsch
     
    I’m not ashamed to admit it, this one still makes me cry every time. After reading this touching book about a mother’s love, a son’s appreciation, a father’s love passed on from his mother and a grandmother’s love given to a mother by her son, we would be remiss not to call our own mothers, fathers and, if we still can, grandmothers and grandfathers. To thank them for all their love, to remind them of how appreciative we are. Because, one day, and maybe this day has already come, maybe it will come soon or maybe, hopefully, not so soon, they will no longer be able to pick us up, rock us to sleep and tell us they’ll love us forever and their baby we’ll be. So we’ll have to keep that practice going on our own. First to them, and then to the people we cherish most in the lives that we make for ourselves after they’re gone.
     
    4. “The Story of Ferdinand” By Munro Leaf
     
    This one, written back in 1936, is about a bull who’s not interested in butting heads or playing rough with the other bulls, but instead likes to sit in a field, under his favorite cork tree, and smell the flowers. He grows up to be big and strong, and one day he is chosen to participate in a bullfight in Madrid. He goes, but once he’s in the ring he is much more interested in smelling the flowered hats of the audience members than bouting with the matador. Eventually, people realize that Ferdinand isn’t going to fight because it’s just not in him, and they take him home. Home, where he goes back to happily sitting under a tree and smelling the flowers. There are a lot of political statements packed into this story, some about pacifism and non-violence, others about going against gendered expectations. Outside of these, though, I think we can take from it that only we can know what makes us happy, it can’t be dictated to us by our gender, our body type, or anything else, really. This is not to say we should shirk all responsibilities and focus only on seeking our own happiness, but it is to say that it is part of those responsibilities to know and be comfortable with who we are.
     
    5. “Mr. Angelo” By Marjory Schwalje
     
    This one you may not have heard of and it has become quite hard to find. It’s about a man, Mr. Angelo, who loves to cook. Every day he makes large amounts of whatever he feels like cooking that day. And every day it’s different, because what he cooks is at the whim of what he’s in the mood for. He tries to start his own restaurant but the customers who come want to order food from a menu, not just be fed again and again whatever he had been in the mood for that day. Mr. Angelo doesn’t want to do this, so he quits. He doesn’t want to make the same thing every day. Most of us have been here before in one way or another, whether it’s with a job or a relationship or a place to live and settle down. We are so often at the mercy of trying to figure out who we are and how we feel, that we are sometimes afraid of settling down, of settling on one thing, one menu. And, like Mr. Angelo’s customers, many of the people in our lives probably get pretty tired of our jumping from one thing to the next. At the end of the book, Mr. Angelo decides to go into business with a young boy and his wagon, who rolls into town every night and sells whatever Mr. Angelo was in the mood to cook that day. The book doesn’t end up teaching us the lesson that, one day, we’ll have to settle on certain things that will define us, and that we’ll be happy to do so because the timing will be right. Instead, it teaches us that it’s okay if that day to settle down is not today, that there are ways we can make the most of this mercurial time while we’re in it. Also, as good and tempting as an endless cycle of frozen burritos and takeout will forever be, maybe it can teach us that it would make us feel good to actually cook what we’re in the mood for every once in awhile.
     
    6. “Frog and Toad are Friends” By Arnold Lobel
     
    Frog and Toad is the longest book in this list and only chapter book. It is made up of a series of vignettes about a cheery frog and a grumpy toad and the ways in which they are best friends. It’s simple and it’s lovely. From a story called “The Letter” about Frog writing Toad a letter when he’s feeling lonely and sad because he never gets mail to, my personal favorite, a chapter called ‘The Story’ where Toad makes hot tea for Frog and lets him rest in his bed when he’s feeling sick. In this one, Frog asks Toad to tell him a story while he’s resting. Toad says he doesn’t know any stories but he’ll try to think of one. So he goes through great lengths to rack his brain for a story: he pours water on his head, he slams his face against a wall repeatedly, he stands upside down, all in his attempt to think of a story to tell his sick friend. It takes so long that Frog starts to feel better, but now Toad feels sick from slamming his face against the wall and standing on his head and pouring water on himself. So Frog makes toad some hot tea, tucks him into bed and tells him the story of the time his best friend tried and failed to tell him a story. Most of us are lucky enough to have best friends, maybe even multiple best friends. As caught up in our own world as we get sometimes, what with our jobs and romantic endeavors, Frog and Toad Are Friends serves as a good reminder that there are few jobs or relationships more important than the one we have with our best friend. To lift them up when they are feeling down, to do very silly things together and then tell the story of those things you did together again and again, over hot tea.
     
    7. “Everyone Poops” By Taro Gomi
     
    It’s so easy to forget this sometimes. Like with the boss who we’re terrified of or with that girl we see every day and think is really cool but we’re afraid to ask on a date or with that former classmate who’s so perfect and successful now and we’re so jealous of because, fuck, we’ve accomplished nothing in comparison. It’s too easy sometimes to forget that they’re all human and, like us, they all poop.
     
    While the real world can seem scary sometimes, and we can feel like we’re not nearly as grown up as everybody else seems to be, the books of our childhood can still serve to bring us together, and keep us growing up. Because we all live amongst the wild things, we all have horrible, no good days, we all have parents and grandparents who have given us life, love and baggage, we all have to find our own way to stop and smell the flowers, we all are at the mercy of what we’re in the mood for and we all have best friends who we should look out for and who should be looking out for us. And yes, we all poop.  
     
    This is a great article for you to read today.  It was re-posted from : 
    www.xojane.com and the author is Daniel Waters.

    Read on and read always.  Hopefully back to "normal" tomorrow....whatever that is!   Have great day everyone!

    Tuesday, December 24, 2013

    Happy Christmas Eve everyone!

    Quote of the Day:

    "Do give books-religious or otherwise-for Christmas.  They're never fattening, seldom sinful, and permanently personal."
                                              -Lenore Hershey




    Have a beautiful Christmas Eve everyone!  Enjoy the lights, the food, the gifts, and especially the friends and family that gather around you.  Be blessed and as you are blessed....bless others!  Merry Christmas to all my readers and may this blog be a landing place for you often in the new year. I love you visit me and I look forward to expanding this blog into different venues so that fine children's literature can be exposed and consequently enrich kid's lives every day, everywhere.


















    Read on and read always!!!  

    Monday, December 23, 2013

    Do NOT bring your grumpy face to Christmas.....


    Quote of the day:
            "Christmas is the day that holds all the others together."   
                                          ~Alexander Smith






    Title: Grumpy Badger's Christmas
    Author:  Paul Bright
    Illustrator:  Jane Chapman







    What's inside?
    Badger is not amused with all the hustle and bustle surrounding Christmas.  He makes it very clear to his fellow animal friends that he just wants to be left alone and hibernate in peace...uninterrupted...everyone stay away...period.  He goes into his house and slams the door shut, checks out his winter stash of food, then satisfied, settles down for his long winter's nap.  But things don't go exactly as he plans. With many disruptions and annoyances he discovers that maybe his sleep may have to be postponed for this winter. He tries to ignore all the distractions at first that cause him to get grumpier and grumpier. Then an urgent request reaches him that makes him unable to settle back down and journey back into slumberland.  He opens his eyes wide, jumps out of bed and runs to help a friend who is in desperate need of him.  He discovers a true Christmas principle...it is getter to give than to receive.  He is so happy when he is recognized as a hero. He invites all of his friends inside his home, opens wide his cupboard doors, and spreads a festive feast fit for a king for everyone to enjoy.  I think he even amazes himself when he realizes how fun celebrating Christmas can be and he wants to make it a tradition for years to come.








    About the author:




    I originally trained as an engineer - which is rather unusual for a children's author - and spent many years working for companies making and using plastics, in England,SwitzerlandHolland, and, more recently,Spain. I used to make notes for stories when I was sitting in boring meetings, or travelling on trains and planes. Now we live in Kent and I spend a lot more time writing. I started writing stories for my children, when they were small, but it was a long time before I had anything accepted for publication. My children have now grown up and left home, so I've been working on my writing for a long, long time.

    The first things I had published were poems - you might come across some of them in poetry anthologies for children. Here's one of my favourites (just to fill up the page!), you can find more on the My Poems page:

    A tyrannosaur in Tesco's came stomping down the aisle,
    Searching for the dental floss and practising his smile.
    Did the stegosaur in Sainsbury's want a trolley or a basket?
    No one knew, and no one really had the nerve to ask it.
    A megalosaur in M&S was trying something frilly,
    But checking in the mirror just to see if she looked silly.
    The dinosaurs, all loaded down with boxes, bags and bits,
    Then jumped into a taxi to take coffee at The Ritz

    My first picture book, Under the Bed, was published in 2003. The second book, Quiet!was shortlisted for the Blue Peter Book Award - in the end it didn't win the award, but I did get a Blue Peter badge and was on the telly for about 5 seconds. I write the words for my stories but other people do the illustrations, and I get to work with some wonderful illustrators.

    I find that most of my ‘writing’ time is spent thinking – trying to think of words or phrases or rhymes. Quite often I’m thinking so hard I fall asleep! A picture book has to have a ‘shape’ – made up of rhyme or repetition of a phrase, or a pattern of words. Once I have worked out the ‘shape’ I can start filling in the text and the story. Maybe other writers have different processes, but that is what works for me.

    Also I know, almost for certain, that the story I start writing will be very different from the final version – the first draft is never as good as I want it to be, so I change it over and over again, and sometimes file it away and come back to it weeks, months or even years later. I’m often asked how long it takes me to write a story – the answer is ‘anything from one week to ten years’!   

    Happy Reading!

    About the illustrator: 
     Jane Chapman is the best-selling illustrator of Bear Snores Onand Bear Wants More by Karma Wilson, as well as Mommy Mineby Tim Warnes, her husband. Jane and Tim live in rural southwest England with their son, Noah, and share a studio at home with views of the open countryside.






    Book Review Rating:   9 (Close to perfection!)

    Read on and read always!



    Saturday, December 21, 2013

    The best gift by far.....


    Good morning to you.  Hope  you have a great day and your Christmas shopping is done or almost done!  Just a few more days until that jolly, round man creeps down the chimney and gives you what you asked for on your Christmas list.  Wishing you all the very best at this time of year. Remember to take time out to read to your kids......





    I asked for new gadgets for Christmas.
    My list was a hundred lines long.
    I figured I might as well try it.
    Why not? I mean, what could go wrong?

    My parents bought all that I wanted:
    An iPod, a big-screen TV,
    a camera, a laptop computer,
    a Playstation, Xbox, and Wii.

    I got a new Kindle, a smart phone,
    an RF remote-controlled car,
    a robot, a video camera,
    a brand new electric guitar.

    But those things were just the beginning.
    This Christmas, I had such a haul,
    it took me all morning, and then some,
    to finish unwrapping it all.

    A hundred new gadgets to play with.
    I couldn't be bothered to wait.
    The moment I plugged them all in, though,
    it blew every fuse in the state.

    If you're spending Christmas in darkness,
    and can't play your video game,
    I'm sorry for all of the trouble;
    it's probably me who's to blame.

    I know now I shouldn't be greedy,
    so, next year, I think you'll be fine.
    Instead of a hundred new gadgets,
    I'm asking for just ninety nine.

    --Kenn Nesbitt




    I have the perfect solution to that problem....he should have gotten a book instead!   No batteries, no electricity, no blackouts to worry about.  There ..... problem solved!!!  Be sure to include some good books in your child's gifts this year. They are the gifts that keep on giving.......





    Read on and read always!!!  Opening up a book will open up the world to your child ......

    Friday, December 20, 2013

    And the star goes right on the top....

    Quote of the Day:

    "I wrapped my Christmas presents early this year but I used the wrong paper  See, the paper I used said, 'Happy Birthday' on it.  I didn't want to waste it so I just wrote 'Jesus' on it."
                                  - Demetri Martin






    Title: Little Star
    Author: Anthony DeStefano
    Illustrator:  Mark Elliott




    This charming Christmas tale tells the story of a little boy who receives the meaning of why stars are granted the privilege of highest honour as they are placed atop the Christmas tree.  One night the little boy is gazing out the window and he is trying to locate the bright Christmas star.  This encourages his father to tell him this charming narrative of a very special night long, long ago.

    Little Star lives among a babbling cluster of big, bright stars that  engage in a lot of Twinkle talk. He is isolated and rejected by the other stars because of his size so he is a very lonely little star indeed.  He hears the other stars twinkle that one night soon, an incredible event is about to occur.  A king is to be born and the star that can shine the brightest will be richly rewarded.  The big stars shine and glow,  polish and preen for the big  upcoming event.  Little Star however gets passed over because of his size and insignificance in their sight.  Lo and behold the night arrives that the King is born and all the stars hurry to the competition to see if they will be chosen to be the brightest and best for him.  When they see him they are shocked to find that he is just a wee, insignificant baby, not a noble, proud king at all.  They feel that they had been tricked, a baby, a king indeed....so they zoom away grumbling and complaining all the way.

    Little Star stays however because he recognizes that the baby truly is a king....a baby king...small and insignificant... just like him.  He makes up his mind to shine to the best of his ability and to bless that little baby King with all that he has to offer...which turns out to be everything he has.

    The illustrations are beautiful and engaging.  This retelling of the nativity story is fresh and this book is destined to be a Christmas classic.   It brings a whole new meaning to the significance of the Star that sits and shines on top of your Christmas tree.  I highly recommend this book be added to your Christmas book collection.








    About the Author:




  • Anthony DeStefano is an American bestselling author of A Travel Guide to Heaven,Ten Prayers God Always Says Yes To, Angels All Around Us and the children's books, This Little Prayer of Mine, Little ... Wikipedia


  • BornSeptember 1965, United States of America




  • About the Illustrator:


    Mark Elliott is a graduate of New York's School of Visual Arts and an established artist in the illustration field for more than 20 years. He has worked for all of the major publishing houses including Harper Collins, Simon and Schuster, Scholastics, Holiday House and Penguin. He has worked with many talented and well-know authors such as Gail Levine Carson, Archer Mayer, Anthony DeStefano and Gregory Maguire. He's received a Christopher Award for his illustration in Andrew Clement’s "Extra Credit" and has been recognized for his work in Anthony DeStefano’s "Little Star". Mark's illustrations have been displayed in numerous shows and annuals. Also, as a contributor in today’s Pop Surrealism movement, Mark's gallery work appears in group and solo shows internationally. Mark's unique style is created through classical hand-painted work combined with contemporary warmth, playful realism and humour.







                                        Book review rating:  9  (Close to perfection!)




    Read on and read always!  Have a wonderful, reading day!