Showing posts with label favorites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label favorites. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Rooting for the Home Team

I am really looking forward to the award announcements from ALA on January 23rd.


I love to root for the home team, so here are a few books with Minnesota connections I am hoping will get some notice by awards committees.


Perfect Square
by Minnesotan Michael Hall






Blogged earlier this year here: http://liblaura5.blogspot.com/2011/06/perfect-square-by-michael-hall.html




Celebritrees
by Minnesotan Margi Preuss



What I love about this book: 
The premise is fabulous, it's not just a book about types of trees, but specific trees that are celebrities among trees - 14 trees so beloved they have earned names for themselves, including:
Methuselah - the oldest tree (4,800 years old)
General Sherman - the biggest tree (the biggest living inhabitant of the earth by volume)
and my favorite... The Tree That Owns Itself!
Official Site for Celebritrees
Review from 100 Scope Notes


Sparrow Road
by Minnesotan Sheila O'Connor



What I love about this book: 
I met Sheila O'Connor at Red Balloon Books last fall where she spoke about her 20 years of working with students as a poet in the schools through COMPAS. She explained that this book was her gift to the students, everything that she would want to say to them now that she was retiring. 


There is so much more loveliness to to this book - wonderful characters, and rich setting...
The Lemme Library explains it wonderfully here 
in her spoiler free book talk. 

Official Site for Sparrow Road




Luck of the Buttons
by Anne Ylvisaker, Raised in Minnesota



What I love about this book:
Luck of the Buttons reminded me a lot of one of my favorite musicals: The Music Man.
Also The town library and the fabulous librarian Miss Lucy play a wonderful part in Tugs' story. 
Offical Site for Luck of the Buttons 
Fuse #8 Review of the Day




Breadcrumbs
by Minnesotan Anne Ursu




Book trailer created by Julie hembree (@mrs_hembree), Librarian at AG Bell Elementary, Kirkland, WA


What I love about this book: 
I love the enchanting magical realism, the allusions to so many other stories from Narnia to Star Wars, and the brave, beautiful character Hazel.
Listen to NPR's Backseat Book Club session on Breadcrumbs
Official Site for Breadcrumbs






I have high hopes for this year, due to Minnesota's strong showing last year.
Last year's ALA award winners with ties to Minnesota included:


Geisel Award Winner
Bink and Golly 
by Alison McGhee and Kate DiCamillo







Newbery Honor winner
Heart of the Samurai 
by Margi Preus





Newbery Honor Winner
Dark Emperor & Other Poems of the Night
by Joyce Sidman






Do you have any hometown favorites from 2011?

Saturday, December 31, 2011

The Bud's top 5 Books of 2011

Yesterday I revealed Cupcake's favorite book of the year, today it the Bud's turn.


The Bud has always been a book lover, but over 2011 he has gone from "reading pictures" to reading words - it has been a pretty amazing year.


Here's what this 6 year old picked as his top 5 favorites of 2011:

1. Cat Secrets by Jef Czekaj




Blogged earlier this year here.

2. Missile Mouse #2 by Jake Parker


(Book Trailer for book #1 from 2010 - also a favorite of the Bud)


3. Frankie Pickle and the Mathmatical Menace by Eric Wight




2. Zita the Spacegirl by Ben Hatke






But hands down his top book of 2011 was....
1. Sidekicks by Dan Santat







Happy New Year!
and Happy Reading in 2012!

Friday, December 30, 2011

If Cupcakes chose Caldecotts

With all of the talk of best books of 2011 and 2012 award hopefuls, I've been thinking about my kids' favorite books from 2011.

My two year old, Cupcake (her online pseudonym) is an avid reader and very vocal about what she likes.
And there is no doubt that Cupcake's favorite from 2011 is Squish Rabbit by Katherine Battersby.

We have checked it out from the local library multiple times. When she knows we are going to go to the library, she asks to check it out again. After the most recent checkout, she asked if we could buy our own copy! Yes, she is a precocious one.

Here she is "picture reading" Squish Rabbit in reverse. (transcript below video).



"thought he was playing...he kicked his little legs"
"tantrum - argghhhh!"
"they broke all the rules!"
"passed him by!"
Squishing sound for when Squish gets stepped on


Wednesday, August 10, 2011

10 Read Alouds I Can't Live Without

This is a crazy picture heavy post. I just couldn't help myself.

I have been thinking for awhile now about my 10 "Must Have" picture books for August 10 for 10 (on twitter: #pb10for10

I wear two hats in my read aloud life, one as a school library media specialist, and the other as a parent.
There is so much cross over with what I read at school and home, but this list seemed to have a clear line for me with 6 school favorites and 4 home favorites. 

My School Favorites:
#1
by Jacqueline Briggs Martin 
Illustrated by Mary Azarian

What it's about: 
Wilson Bentley had a passion for snowflakes, and spent his life trying to capture and preserve them for future generations.

What I love: 
I love stories about having passions and hobbies that are life changing, as well as stories about leaving a legacy. Snowflake Bentley does both. I hold back tears each time I read the end of the book about his death and his snow crystal photos living on as his "gift to the world." 



Wilson Bentley intentionally gave a gift to the world with his photographs by placing the images in the public domain (you may print your own copies of many snowflake images here: http://snowflakebentley.com/WBsnowflakes.htm).
I love to use this book to discuss biography, copyright, public domain, and leaving a legacy.

I also have a collection of Bentley's photographs, Snow Crystals (Dover photography collections), in my library, which is hardly ever on the shelf.


It includes over 2400 of Wilson Bentley's images.

And it includes a few dew covered spider webs (also talked about in the book).

#2
The Happiest Tree
by Uma Krishnaswami
What it's about: 
Meena feels clumsy most of the time, through yoga she learns how to feel more in control of her body.


What I love:
Meena makes a discovery near the end that she "can change her body by how [she] feel[s] inside...if [she] is quiet on the inside, [her] body will be still." Anyone who has ever worked with young children knows that is a powerful message. I love doing some relaxing breathing and intro to yoga with kids when reading this book.

I also love that Meena's teacher is a teacher of color. Something that is not as common as it should be in picture books.

#3
by Barbara Lehman


I blogged about why I love The Red Book and Lehman's other fabulous wordless stories here: http://liblaura5.blogspot.com/2011/06/wordless-books-of-barbara-lehman.html


#4
Tops and Bottoms
by Janet Stevens
What it's about: 
Hare tricks a lazy bear into giving him all the good parts of his crops.


What I love: 
Hare is so clever, and Bear keeps getting conned. When I read it for the first time with a group, I love having them try to figure out "how is Hare going to get the good part of the crop this time?"
"It's a done deal, Bear!"


#5
Sam and the Tigers
by Julius Lester
Illustrated by Jerry Pinkney

What it's about:
Sam loses all of his brand new clothes to a bunch of tigers on the way to school, but when the tigers start fighting with each other, he gets them back again.
What I love:
I love that everyone in Sam's town is named "Sam". I love that Sam convinces a tiger that his shoes are "ear shoes" so that the tiger won't eat him.  I love the fabulous examples of hyperbole, metaphor and simile.
And I love all of the faces hidden in the trees all through the story.




#6
One Dog Canoe
by Mary Casanova
illustrated by Ard Hoyt

I blogged about why I love this favorite before as well:
http://liblaura5.blogspot.com/2011/05/one-dog-canoe-by-mary-casanova.html


Home Favorites:
#7
Jamberry
by Bruce Degen
Our very worn out copy of Jamberry.
What it's about:
A boy and a bear go on a berry adventure in berryland.


What I love:
This book was a gift to us when my 5.5 year old was born.
It totally won me over with it's rhythm and language: "Raspberry, Jazzberry, Razzmatazzberry, Berryband, Merryband, Jamming in Berryland."





#8
Snuggle Puppy
by Sandra Boynton
What it's about:
Snuggle Puppy is a sweet love song to a child.


What I love: 
I love books that connect to singing. Listen to Snuggle Puppy sung by Eric Stolz here: http://www.sandraboynton.com/sboynton.com.data/Components/Music/Snugglepuppy.mp3. We love to make the "whisper verse" barely audible and try to hold the "oooooohs" until we are absolutely out of breath. Life is about the little things, right?
One of my Snuggle Puppies

#9
The Little Mouse,
The Red Ripe Strawberry
and the Big Hungry Bear
by Don and Audrey Wood 


What it's about:
A little mouse is trying to save a strawberry from being found by a bear, eventually deciding to share it with the you, the reader.

What I love:
Just look at that little mouse!






#10
Babybug Magazine
by Carus Publishing
What it's about: 
Babybug is a magazine made for board book readers with NO advertising.


What I love:
I know that this is not officially a picture book, but I am breaking the rules for good reason: Babybug rocks! It's made for small hands, and each page of the magazine is heavy card stock. Each issue starts with story about Kim and her stuffed bunny named Carrots. The rest of each issue includes a variety of stories, poems, nursery rhymes and finger plays. The illustrations are wonderful and varied in within each issue.

I keep a copy in my "diaper bag" at all times.
Also a plus... my kids always enjoy getting something in the mail.

(Carus Publishing also has other fabulous magazines: Ladybug, Spider, Cricket, Click, Ask, Oddyssey, Muse, Appleseeds, Faces, Cobblestone - I'm a big fan)

There they are... my 10 picture books for August 10 that I can't live without.

Thanks to...
@mandyrobek  of http://enjoy-embracelearning.blogspot.com/
@cathymere of http://reflectandrefine.blogspot.com/
for organizing this second annual picture book event!

I am excited to read about others' favorites.

Participants' posts are all linked here:
http://www.jogtheweb.com/run/8TKwjH6iOxjz/August-10-for-10-Picture-Book-Event--2011#1