Monday, August 7, 2017

FYI - kidsbookwraps









Choosing for you today some great kid's books that just might tickle your fancy... check them out and enjoy!!!






Board Book

Big Fish Little Fish by Jonathan Litton, illustrated by Fhiona Galloway

Ages: Birth-3

In this bubbly tale about how eels, hammerheads, tiddlers, and other sea creatures spend their day, fish-shaped cutouts helped hold the attention of our toddler testers. “My 18-month-old used the cutouts to turn the pages, and the story had a nice flow to it,” says one mom. Basic opposites (like slow and fast, sad and happy, and, of course, big and little) make this book relevant into preschool.





Alphabet Book

TouchThinkLearn: ABC by Xavier Deneux 

Ages: 2-5

While the word choices for each letter are clever—U stands for universe—the design is what makes this book stand out. “The raised die-cut letters encourage toddlers and preschoolers to trace them with their fingers,” says Kate Simpson, who manages the children’s department of the Central Library in San Antonio. “Plus, simple styled images are incorporated into some of the letters themselves.”





Bedtime Book

Goodnight Everyone by Chris Haughton

Ages: 3-6

Parents appreciated the calming, repetitive phrasing (like “ahhhh, yawn,” and “we’re too tired”) while kid reviewers related to the plot (all the animals are sleepy except Little Bear). “It’s the perfect length,” says one mom of a 4-year-old. “The book feels substantial, but you can finish it in ten minutes.” 






Early Reader

The Cookie Fiasco by Mo Willems and Dan Santat

Ages: 4-7

A relatable problem (not having enough cookies to share), familiar faces (Willems’s Elephant & Piggie), and simple yet funny dialogue made this title the category’s runaway winner. Says one mom: “Seeing Elephant and Piggie again helped my boys, ages 4 and 6, transition to the new characters, and they were able to read most of the words themselves.”






Picture-Book Sequel

Hedgehugs and the Hattiepillar by Steve Wilson and Lucy Tapper 

Ages: 3-7

In this sweet follow-up to Hedgehugs (a tale of two hedgehog friends who try to find a comfy way to hug despite their spikiness), the besties notice “a wriggly, stripy thing” under a leaf. Kids marveled over its transformation from caterpillar to butterfly—and how the pair of hedgehogs get into the act too.







Picture Book

There’s a Giraffe in My Soup by Ross Burach

Ages: 3-7

Kids roared when they heard this silly story about a restaurant that mistakenly put zoo animals inside a boy’s bowl of soup. The kids’ favorite line was delivered by a waiter pushing a whale out of the bowl: “Errrhh…can’t he just eat around it?”





Nonfiction Picture Book

Whoosh! Lonnie Johnson’s Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions by Chris Barton, illustrated by Don Tate 

Ages: 6+

This biography of Johnson, an African-American NASA scientist and the inventor of the Super Soaker, begins when he is in grade school. “The kids will love that he built rockets from scratch when he was their age,” says Betsy Bird, collections manager of the Evanston Public Library, in Illinois. Science-related vocab, like prototype, propulsion, and formulated, will lead to discussion beyond the story.





Beginning-Chapter-Book Series

Inspector Flytrap by Tom Angleberger and Cece Bell 

Ages: 6-9

A Venus flytrap and a goat team up to solve “big deal” mysteries, like the case of Mimi Kiwi’s missing rose plant. Children raved about the cartoonish illustrations (some with comic-like thought bubbles) and the fact that most of the chapters are fewer than five pages.





Big-Kid Chapter Book

The Wild Robot by Peter Brown

Ages: 8+
Plot twists and turns in this tale of a robot who washes up on an island inhabited only by animals kept kids in suspense. “You’d think one thing was going to happen, but then the opposite happened,” says a 9-year-old.







Graphic Novel



Ghosts by Raina Telgemeier 


Ages: 8+


The story about sisters who are new to a seaside town offers more depth (one sibling has cystic fibrosis) and less spookiness than it would seem. Kids related to the family dynamics and picked up on the symbolism. No spoilers!








To follow Storywraps:  



*Instagram: Storywraps
*Email:  Storywrapsblog@gmail.com
*Facebook:  www.facebook.com/Storywraps
*Twitter: Storywraps@Storywraps1
Pinterest: Storywraps



I put hours of work finding the best kid's books to review for you each day.  If you enjoy visiting Storywraps and would like to donate something for my time and effort I would greatly appreciate it.

Go to the bottom of my blog at the right hand corner (below my photo) and please donate what you feel lead to give.  The amount you donate and the frequency you donate is totally up to you.  I thank you in advance for your support.  I love what I do and appreciate any amount that you may give so I can make our community even better.  Thanks a million! 


Read on and read always!


It's a wrap.

No comments: