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Bedtime for Biscuit

A HarperCollins My First I Can Read! easy reader, Biscuit is the story of a small, yellow dog who is reluctant to be put to bed by his little girl caretaker.  Published in 1996, this book was written by Alyssa Satin Capucilli and illustrated by Pat Schories. Although no recommended age range is listed on this book, it seems best suited for 4-6 year olds who are just developing reading skills.  It has plenty to help emergent readers along: lots of white space, short words and sentences, limited lines on a page, and a 24-point typeface. Repetition is also used effectively in this story: Biscuit’s “woof, woof!” is repeated on just about every spread following the small girl’s command of “Time for bed, Biscuit!”, helping young readers to anticipate what will happen next and learn to recognize these words.  The warm, brightly-colored illustrations are charming, making this a perfect choice for a bedtime read aloud or an independent read. Children and caretakers alike will enjoy reading this sweet story of a dog who just wants one more story, kiss, snuggle… before bedtime.

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Things That Go: Clackety-Clack

A National Geographic Level 1 easy reader, Trains by Amy Shields is a nonfiction text composed of episodic chapters full of facts about trains.  Published in 2011, this book teaches its readers about such topics as types of trains and how they run, the history of trains in America, and train sounds  The book contains no recommended reader age. Though the text is marked as a Level 1 reader, a ranking that most publishers use to orient these books toward beginning readers, this particular book would be best suited as an independent read for children who are beginning to develop confidence in their reading skills.  The text provides lots of helpful features for early readers: large typeface, mostly short words and lines, Gary the Engineer’s additional information, “Train Talk” boxes defining words such as “loot” and “turntable,” and phonetic spellings for pronunciation of words like “maharaja” and “diesel.” Another fun feature of the text is the onomatopoeia: train sounds such as “whirrrrr,” clackety-clack,” “woooo-woo,” and “ding-ding-ding” are in different colorful fonts throughout the text, making this book a fun read-aloud option.  However, early readers who are looking to read this book independently may find the layout visually overwhelming, as there is not much white space to speak of. The book is packed instead with color: photos both modern and historic, question and answer boxes, cartoon speech bubbles for Gary the Engineer. While these features are fun and interesting, they may not give an early reader’s eyes much chance to rest. This book would make a wonderful tool for classroom instruction or storytime, but is also a good choice for independent readers.  Not only will this text delight train enthusiasts, but it will also interest children who had not previously been particularly interested in locomotives.

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A Day at the Museum

A HarperCollins I Can Read! Level 1 easy reader, Fancy Nancy at the Museum is a charming story about Jane O’Connor (author) and Robin Preiss Glasser’s (illustrator) beloved character Fancy Nancy.  In this particular adventure, illustrated by Ted Enik, Fancy Nancy is going on a class trip to an art museum but gets sick on the way after eating too large a lunch.  Her teacher Ms. Glass, however, saves the day by loaning Nancy her extra sweater and beret (a French hat, as Fancy Nancy lets her readers know). This book is perfectly suited to its intended age range of ages 4-8 with a 22-point typeface, lots of white space, and short words and lines.  While the fun, colorful illustrations will please fans of the Fancy Nancy series, the best feature of this book is the way it manages to teach its readers new words, such as “overjoyed,” “merci,” and “spectacular,” through parenthetical asides that feel almost conspiratorial between Nancy and her reader, explaining that these words are “fancy words” for “very happy,” “French for ‘thank you,’ ” and “great.”  The text also manages to teach new words about its setting, the museum, defining such words as “gallery,” “landscapes,” “still lifes,” and “portraits” by weaving them into the story without disrupting it. A glossary of “Fancy Nancy’s Fancy Words” with pronunciation help for the French words is provided at the end of the book to recap for the reader.  This book makes a wonderful classroom supplement, especially for an art class, but also is an enjoyable independent read. While this story is clearly aimed at little girls with its fancy title character and her other female friends, including her teacher, boys have something to learn from this text, too, about art and the art of being considerate.

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A Bully’s Birthday

An Aladdin Paperbacks Ready-To-Roll Level 1 easy reader, Jon Scieszka’s Trucktown: Zoom! Boom! Bully is the story of the efforts of five little trucks who do something kind for Big Rig the bully’s birthday by giving him a gift to zoom! boom! knock over.  Published in 2008, this story is written by Jon Scieszka with artwork created by David Shannon, Loren Long, and David Gordon of the Design Garage. Similar to other publishers’ level 1 texts, this book uses short words and sentences, a large typeface, and white space to encourage early readers.  The larger, colorful text for the onomatopoeia Zoom! Boom! adds variety and interest. The text also offers a review of counting backward from four to one as the trucks build Big Rig a layered “cake” of barrels, crates, tires, and cement icing. The repetition of “Zoom! Boom!”, “Big Rig!”, and “He is such a bully,” will also help young readers along.  The artwork is colorful and engaging, effectively conveying Big Rig’s angry Zoom! Boom! and the other trucks’ looks of disappointment at his bullying. Though this book seems to be aimed at little boys, the presence of the pink garbage truck Gabby may seek to draw girls’ attention, as well. This book would make a fun independent read or a read aloud for children who enjoy reading about things that go.  

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Caring for a Baby Bird

A HarperCollins My First I Can Read! easy reader, Just a Baby Bird by Mercer Mayer is another adventure of the Little Critter and his family.  In this story for children ages 4-8 who are learning to read with help, Little Critter and his sister discover a baby bird whose momma is nowhere to be found.  The family takes care of the bird until it is time for it to fly away, but the bird returns in the spring with a family of its own. Published in 2016, this story is told in an accessible manner for emergent readers with short words and lines, a 24-point typeface, and plenty of white space.  The brightly-colored illustrations help to communicate the story and will be familiar to fans of the Little Critter series, while the modern touches of Mom looking up what to feed the baby bird online and Dad using his smartphone to take a picture of it add modern elements that children will recognize.  Children will enjoy reading this story of compassion and patience on their own or experiencing it as a read aloud.

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(Sleep?)over

A HarperCollins I Can Read! Level 1 easy reader, The Berenstain Bears’ Sleepover by Mike and Jan Berenstain is another tale of the beloved Berenstain Bear family’s adventures.  In this story for children ages 4-8 who are just beginning to read, Sister and Brother Bear have a sleepover with some friends, but not much sleep actually occurs, resulting in a sleepy Papa and Mama Bear the next morning.  Published in 2009, this story is told in an accessible manner for beginning readers with short words and lines, a 22-point typeface, and plenty of white space. The brightly-colored illustrations help to communicate the story and will be familiar to fans of the Berenstain Bears series.  One thing of note, while the word and line length in this book are not excessive for this beginning reading stage, the sentence length is at times a tad long, with sentences frequently composed of 10 words or more, and there are several lines on each page.  The sentences are simple and declarative, so the complexity should not be prohibitive, but they are longer and more plentiful than sentences found in other I Can Read Level 1 easy readers, a fact for caretakers to be aware of if recommending this book to be read independently by readers truly just beginning to read.  Being too excited to sleep is surely an experience that both children and adults can relate to, making this story a fun read-aloud or an enjoyable book for a child to read on her own.

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Sharing Is Caring

Picture book The Rainbow Fish, written and illustrated by Marcus Pfister, is the story of a rainbow fish who learns about beauty and friendship as he discovers the joy of sharing with others.  Translated by J. Alison James, this book was originally published in 1992 in Switzerland under the title Der Regenbogenfisch, and was published by North-South Books in the U.S. in the same year.  The blues and purples of Pfister’s watercolors are beautiful, but the underwater world they create is sometimes interrupted by all-white, text-only pages.  The namesake fish glimmers across the pages, his holographic scales all over his body on the book’s beginning endpapers in contrast with the single holographic scale left on the final endpapers.  Therein lies the message of the book: the rainbow fish’s vanity keeps him from having any friends until he learns to share his beautiful scales with the other fish who admire his beauty so much. On the one hand, this is a wonderful lesson for children to learn about not being prideful about one’s appearance and learning to give sacrificially, the latter part of this theme reminiscent of Silverstein’s The Giving Tree.  On the other hand, it can leave the reader wondering: should I have to give away my beauty, or any part of myself, to make others happy?  Despite the controversy that sometimes surrounds the message of this book, as with The Giving Tree, its heart seems to be in the right place as Pfister closes the text: “The Rainbow Fish shared his scales left and right.  And the more he gave away, the more delighted he became. When the water around him filled with glimmering scales, he at last felt at home among the other fish…Finally the Rainbow Fish had only one shining scale left.  His most prized possessions had been given away, yet he was very happy.” The beautiful colors and glimmering scales will enchant readers at storytime, and the lesson of generosity, humility, and selflessness is worth sharing and discussing.  

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An Aussie Adventure

Picture book Possum Magic, written by Mem Fox and illustrated by Julie Vivas, is the charming tale of an invisible possum and her magical grandmother.  Originally published in 1983 by Omnibus Books of Australia, it was published by Voyager Books in 1991 in the U.S. and has come to beloved by readers of many cultures.  Children ages 4-7 and their caregivers will enjoy reading of the adventures of Hush and Grandma Poss as they travel all over Australia eating all kinds of traditional Australian foods (Fox’s map and glossary at the end of the book help with discovering more about these things) in order to make invisible Hush visible again.  Vivas’ illustrations are clever, depicting Hush initially as only an outline but gradually as a full-color possum as her culinary adventure with her grandmother breaks grandma’s spell and makes Hush visible again. This story would make a delightful storytime read as children as introduced to new animals, places, and foods.

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Adventure Awaits

Wordless picture book Journey by Aaron Becker is an exciting tale of adventure for children ages 4-8, but anyone will be entranced by this book’s artwork, pictures which tell the story so well that no words are necessary.  Published in 2013 by Candlewick Press, this 2014 Caldecott Honor Book is reminiscent of Harold and the Purple Crayon but with a story all its own to tell.  The muted pen and ink illustrations at the beginning of the book, brightened only by the color red, depict a lonely girl for whom everyone is too busy.  Picking up a red crayon, she draws a door on her bedroom wall and enters a world of her imagination filled with beautiful watercolors. For each step of her journey, she draws her modes of transportation–a boat, a hot air balloon, a magic flying carpet–but must be set free by a friend that she had freed earlier in the tale: a purple bird.  In an homage to Harold, Becker has subtly placed the color purple throughout the book, even from the first pen and ink spread with a boy on the edge of the page holding a purple crayon.  This story of friendship and adventure will delight readers of all ages.

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When You Leave a Sandcastle…

Wordless picture book Sea of Dreams by Dennis Nolan is a beautiful work of art that draws you in from its cover with a boat on the crest of a wave and doesn’t let you go until the last page’s sandcastle.  Published in 2011 by Roaring Brook Press, this book is aimed at children ages 4-7, but anyone interested in art and its capacity to tell stories will delight in its pages.  The pictures tell the story of a young girl who builds a sandcastle on the beach and the tiny family who must vacate that sandcastle at night when the tide comes in. The seagull present throughout the story, the return of the little girl to build a taller sandcastle, the light on again at the end of the story…all of these elements leave the reader wondering what happens to the little family, and the lack of text enables the reader to come up with her own interpretation.  Both the story’s realistic and imaginative elements, such as mermaids riding seahorses, are rendered in vibrant, richly saturated hues capable of drawing a reader of any age into this imaginative look at what happens after you head home from a day at the beach, the sandcastle that you built still standing.

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American Women from A to Z

Picture book A is for Abigail: An Almanac of Amazing American Women, written by Lynne Cheney and illustrated by Robin Preiss Glasser, is an alphabet book presenting noteworthy American women to readers ages 6-12.  Published in 2003 by Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, the book’s rich details will draw readers in, as there is so much in both the text and illustrations to explore.  The colors and beautiful designs of the pages are enticing, especially the gatefold for the letter P: a curtain stage that reveals a bevy of American female performers. There is so much information packed onto each page that it is a bit visually overwhelming at times, particularly the B page for “Elizabeth Blackwell and others who wanted to heal” as you have to read around triangular pictures to learn about each woman featured.  That fact aside, this text contains a wealth of knowledge that would make a wonderful support for an elementary or middle school history class. Through this text, children will be introduced in an exciting way to many American women whose lives ought to be remembered and modeled.

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Z Is for Moose?

Picture book Z is for Moose, written by Kelly Bingham and illustrated by Paul O. Zelinsky, is a zany story of an impatient moose and his friend zebra, who is organizing an ABC presentation.  Published by Greenwillow Books in 2012, this book is one that is aimed at children ages 4-6, but children of all ages (including those just young at heart) will delight in this silly story, maybe even learning some letters of the alphabet along the way.  The book’s delightfully funny illustrations begin on the endpapers, where we see a moose holding up a curtain, standing in a line of animals before a zebra with a clipboard saying, “Okay, everyone. Let’s get ready.” We continue to be ushered into this world through the acknowledgement and title pages until we see an apple climbing a set of stairs to be the first feature in zebra’s alphabet show.  A, B, C…the book is moving along as expected until “D is for Moose,” a page on which a duck is falling off the back of the stage and zebra is scolding moose for being on the wrong page. The hijinks continue from there until zebra finds a way to work his friend into an unexpected place. While this is not necessarily an alphabet book for caretakers hoping for a clear illustration of each letter and a corresponding word with which to teach their children (the spread for O, P, and Q is trampled upon by a frustrated moose), the humor and unexpected nature of the story make it a fun read for storytime as children squeal with delight, “D is not for Moose!!”