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The Kids Are All Right

Lunar New Year, New Picture Book Bios, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! I am finally mostly over being sick after 3 weeks of RSV and bronchitis, minus a lingering cough. Fingers crossed my kid doesn’t come home from preschool today with yet another virus. Now that I’m feeling better, I’ve been working on bookish lists and post ideas for the year. If you have a list theme you’d like me to compile, feel free to contact me via the email in the last paragraph! This week I have recommendations for new picture book biographies and Lunar New Year reads.

I’ve also been prepping my reading logs and spreadsheets and picking which reading challenges I’m participating in this year. One challenge I always tackle is Book Riot’s Read Harder Challenge, which is in its ninth year, with a set of 24 tasks that invite readers to expand their worldview through books. Read one book per task, or do some multi-tasking by counting one book for multiple tasks. It’s all fine! The point of the challenge is to push yourself to expand your horizons. Thank you to Thriftbooks for sponsoring Read Harder 2023.

To find the tasks and subscribe to our newsletter for tips and recommendations, visit Read Harder 2023.

Now on to children’s book recommendations!

Bookish Goods

Lunar New Year Bookmarks by KyariKreations

Lunar New Year Bookmarks by KyariKreations

These Chinese Zodiac bookmarks are super cute. The text reads “Good Fortune.” $5+

New Releases

Cover of The Green Piano by Flack

The Green Piano by Roberta Flack & Tonya Bolden, illustrated by Hayden Goodman (picture book)

This lyrical picture book written in a soft Southern cadence centers a young Roberta Flack and her first piano. From the time she was five, Flack dreamed of having her own piano, but her family was poor. At nine, her father finds a derelict piano in a junkyard. He brings it home, repairs it, tunes it and paints it green, and it becomes Flack’s very own green piano. I read this with my daughter last night and we both loved it, from the way the prose sings to the sweet illustrations. Afterward, we watched Roberta Flack perform several songs live on YouTube, and my daughter was mesmerized! I would much rather listen to Roberta Flack than Super Simple Songs, ha!

Cover of Love is Loud by Wallace

Love is Loud by Sandra Neil Wallace, illustrated by Bryan Collier (picture book)

This picture book biography also explores the life of an important Black woman, in this case Civil Rights leader Diane Nash. Using the second person point of view, Wallace chronicles Nash’s life from being raised by her grandmother in Tennessee to moving north and going to an inclusive high school. When Nash returns to Tennessee to attend Fisk University, she’s shocked by the segregation and joins the Civil Rights Movement. It’s a powerful and beautifully illustrated biography.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Lunar New Year begins January 22, so I thought I would share some of my favorite Lunar New Year children’s books.

Cover of A Sweet New Year for Ren by Sterling

A Sweet New Year for Ren by Michelle Sterling, illustrated by Dung Ho (picture book)

In this adorable picture book, Ren and her family prepare for their Lunar New Year celebration. But everyone keeps telling Ren she’s too little to help! When her older brother Charlie arrives, the two prepare pineapple cakes together. There’s even a recipe for pineapple cakes at the end of the book! This story is inspired by the author’s Chinese heritage.

Cover of Grumpy New Year by Moore

Grumpy New Year by Katrina Moore, illustrated by Xindi Yan (picture book)

Also based on the author’s Chinese American heritage, Grumpy New Year tells the story of a young girl, Daisy, visiting her grandfather in China for the Lunar New Year. She counts down the days with her grandfather and everything they do together, though everything seems to go wrong. Finally, it’s the big day, but when she wakes up, she can’t find her grandfather! This is a fun intergenerational read, and both the author and the illustrator share their favorite Lunar New Year recipes in the back — Yeh-Yeh’s Fried Jiao Zi and Eight Treasure Rise.

Cover of Tomorrow is New Year's Day by Kim

Tomorrow is New Year’s Day by Aram Kim (picture book)

My next two selections focus on Seollal, the Korean Lunar New Year celebration. Mina is so excited to share her Lunar New Year customs with her class. She wears her beautiful hanbok to school, and teaches them some of the traditional games played on the holiday. Her little brother’s tears threaten to disrupt the day, but delicious tteokguk cheers everyone up. This is such a fun picture book and includes instructions for how to fold a paper bokjumeoni.

Cover of Mindy Kim and the Lunar New Year Parade by Lee

Mindy Kim and the Lunar New Year Parade by Lyla Lee, illustrated by Dung Ho (chapter book)

In the second book in the Mindy Kim early chapter book series, Mindy’s father takes her and her friend Sallie to the Lunar New Year parade in Orlando, Florida. Much to Mindy’s disappointment, there’s no Korean representation in the parade. Then Mindy and Sallie become separated from Mindy’s dad during the parade. How will they find him?! After reading this, my daughter and I made our own yutnori game (which the group plays at the end of the book).

Marian science experiment The Kids Are All Right

My daughter, the mad scientist. Seriously, I told her I needed to go to the bathroom and then I’d set up a science experiment. I came out to this disaster, erm, experiment. My independent child can set up her own science experiments, thank you very much. If only she could clean them up, too.

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

New Year, New Books! Some 2023 Releases I’m Super Excited About

Happy New Year, kidlit friends! My 2023 is getting off to a bit of a rough start with a never-ending virus, but I’m feeling very ready for a new year and a fresh start on some goals. In today’s newsletter, I get excited about some of the many fantastic books that will be releasing this year. Seriously, it’s one of the best new book years I’ve seen in a while.

Bookish Goods

Nursery Bookshelf SevenOneSixWood

Nursery Bookshelf by SevenOneSixWood

I have long wanted a front facing bookshelf wall. I don’t have room for it, but you might! This would be a great way to spend any Etsy gift cards. $28+

New Releases

Cover of An American Story by Alexander

An American Story by Kwame Alexander, illustrated by Dare Coulter (picture book)

This stunningly illustrated picture book opens with a question: “How do you tell a story that starts in Africa and ends in horror?” What proceeds is a powerful and lyrical history of slavery in the United States. In the back matter, Alexander explains how he was inspired to write this book after a racially charged incident with his daughter’s 4th grade teacher, where she became defensive when Alexander questioned her about why she wasn’t including slavery in her discussions of colonial America. This book is his response to how and why slavery must be taught in the classroom. Coulter uses a mix of sculpture, acrylic paints on wood, charcoal, and more in creating the illustrations for the book, and they feel like they could be in a museum. I know it’s way too early to be nominating books for awards, but if this masterpiece doesn’t win some awards next year, I will be very surprised.

Cover of We Are Here by Charles

We Are Here by Tami Charles, illustrated by Bryan Collier (picture book)

In her follow-up to All Because You Matter, author Tami Charles celebrates the power of Black love and Black history. Where An American Story grapples with the horrific history of enslaved Black Americans, We Are Here shows how Black children can look to the future and hope by embracing the joy of their ancestors. Where All Because You Matter was an affirmation, the author explains in the back matter, We Are Here is a celebration, and she plans for one more book in the series, United Together, which will be a confirmation.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Today I recommend four children’s books releasing in 2023 that I’m super excited about. I’ve only read one of these, so my reviews will be short and sweet. Feel free to email me what children’s books you’re excited to read this year! My email address is in the final paragraph.

Cover of Remember by Joy Harjo

Remember by Joy Harjo, illustrated by Michaela Goade, releases March 21 (picture book)

Can there be a more perfect author/illustrator pairing? I adore Joy Harjo’s poetry. If you’re unfamiliar with Harjo, she was the 23rd Poet Laureate of the United States, and she’s a member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation. The poem in Remember asks young readers to remember the natural world and their heritage, to take joy and to honor it. It’s gorgeously illustrated by Caldecott winner Michaela Goade, of the Tlingit Nation. This is the only book on this list I’ve read. I can’t recommend it enough!

Cover of One by by Ho

One Day by Joanna Ho, illustrated by Faith Pray, releases March 12 (picture book)

I have loved every single book by Joanna Ho, like Eyes That Kiss in the Corners and Playing at the Border. One Day is a mother’s lyrical ode to her baby son over the course of a day. The illustration samples I’ve seen are soft and tender and lovely. I can’t wait to get my hands on a print copy!

Cover of Camp QUILTBAG by Melleby

Camp QUILTBAG by Nicole Melleby and A. J. Sass, releases March 21 (middle grade)

This cover makes me smile! This contemporary middle grade is set in a summer camp for queer kids. It’s told from two perspectives: Abigail (she/her), who’s excited to finally be in a place where she can be herself, and Kai (e/em), who would rather stay home with eir best friend and eir parkour team. This book looks like such a joy.

Cover of We Still Belong by Day

We Still Belong by Christine Day, releases August 1 (middle grade)

Indigenous author Christine Day (Upper Skagit) has previously written two wonderful middle grade novels: I Can Make This Promise and The Sea in Winter. In her newest novel, middle schooler Wesley has big plans for Indigenous People’s Day at her school, but from start to finish, everything about her day bombs. But when she attends an intertribal powwow, she learns things that give her a different perspective. I love books that have Indigenous American kids in the present day, and I can’t wait to read this one!

Do you subscribe to School Library Journal? I have written for SLJ in the past, and I was disturbed by this post from author and illustrator Julia Kuo about how they white-washed characters from her most recent book Luminous in a review of the book, and when she and her editorial team asked for it to be corrected, SLJ refused. I won’t lie: I’m flabbergasted and appalled by their response. I wrote the editor I’ve worked with in the past about my concerns and received no response. I know a lot of librarians read SLJ and subscribe to this newsletter. Are you concerned about this, too?

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

New Year’s Resolutions, Kwanzaa, and More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! I hope everyone is having/had a delightful holiday and is staying cozy. Both my daughter and I are, unfortunately, sick with one of the myriad of bugs going around. I’m writing this before Christmas, but I suspect we will be spending a very quiet Christmas at home, well, quiet minus the coughing and nose-blowing. We are continuing to test negative for the big C, so that’s a relief at least. I hope everyone is staying healthy!

Before we move on to kid lit, Read Harder is back! Book Riot’s Read Harder Challenge is in its ninth year, with a set of 24 tasks that invite readers to expand their worldview through books. Read one book per task, or do some multi-tasking by counting one book for multiple tasks. It’s all fine! The point of the challenge is to push yourself to expand your horizons. Thank you to Thriftbooks for sponsoring Read Harder 2023.

To find the tasks and subscribe to our newsletter for tips and recommendations, visit Read Harder 2023. I’ve completed the last three or four challenges, and it’s been a fun way to diversify my reading!

Bookish Goods

Kwanzaa Coloring Pages by DramaMamaReads

Kwanzaa Coloring Pages by DramaMamaReads

These printable coloring pages and activities are perfect for kids celebrating or learning more about Kwanzaa, which began yesterday and ends on January 1st. Naima also has Kwanzaa search and spy activities to print. $5

New Releases

Cover of Together by Madison

Together: A First Conversation About Love by Megan Madison and Jessica Ralli, illustrated by Anne/Andy Passchier (board book)

The First Conversations series are must-reads for toddlers and preschoolers. The fourth board book in the series addresses love and all the ways love can present itself, from queer love to love between siblings and more. One especially poignant page shows a live stream of a prisoner reading a book to a child in a caregiver’s lap as the child follows along holding the same book. The text above reads, “Everyone in the world deserves love.” Additional materials in the back give discussion prompts for caregivers and other research about love and showing love to children.

Cover of The Catalogue of Hugs by Stein

The Catalogue of Hugs by Joshua David Stein and Augustus Heeren Stein, illustrated by Elizabeth Lilly (picture book)

This adorable picture book would make an excellent gift to a caregiver. Each page catalogs a different type of hug. For “The Otter,” a child swims on top of their mother in a pool, while in “The Tower,” a child sits on their caregiver’s shoulders while a dinosaur lovey sits on the child’s shoulders and a bear lovey sits atop the dinosaur. It’s a silly, endearing book with more hug suggestions in the back for a child to try out.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

2023 is only a few days away. It seems unbelievable! I am more of a goal setter than a resolution setter, but I like the idea of having a New Year’s resolution. Here are four resolutions I think would be awesome to try for the new year—for adults, kids, or both!—with children’s books to go along with them.

Be Kind

Cover of Kindness is a Golden Heart by Kluthe

Kindness is a Golden Heart by Jessica Kluthe, illustrated by Charlene Chua (board book)

I used to have a goal of doing something actively kind every day. This was easier when I doubled as a book buyer in a busy bookstore and as an adjunct professor, but now that I work from home and pretty much see only two people all day long, it’s a little more difficult, and I have to define kindness in different ways. In this adorable and lyrical board book, kindness can be a happy song shared, art for a loved one, or even finding a cozy place to rest. Kindness doesn’t have to be big; it can be in the small things we do every day, and can be directed at both ourselves and others.

Speak Up For Change

Cover of Right Now! by Paul

Right Now! by Miranda Paul, illustrated by Bea Jackson (picture book)

This picture book biography collection encourages kids to speak up when they see an injustice. Paul looks at 11 kids who have spoken up against injustice, from Angela Zhang, who devoted herself to science at 14 and discovered a nanoparticle that helps detect cancer early, to 5-year-old Sophie Cruz, who handed a letter to Pope Francis about the plight of immigrants. A poem, a quote, and a paragraph explanation accompanies each profile.

Be Present in the Moment

Cover of Look and Listen by White

Look and Listen by Dianne White, illustrated by Amy Schimler-Safford (picture book)

If I set a New Year’s resolution, this will be it. This lyrical picture book encourages the reader to pause, look, and listen to nature. Each page spread shows a scene from nature, from a garden to a meadow to a creek, and an animal hiding within the scene. With good observation skills, the reader can find each animal. The illustrations are really vibrant and lovely.

Write More Thank-You Notes

Cover of Sallie Bee Writes a Thank-You Note by Sheinmel

Sallie Bee Writes a Thank-You Note by Susan Verde & Courtney Sheinmel, illustrated by Heather Ross (picture book)

I love the idea of writing thank-you notes, but I’ve never managed to do so consistently (in no small part because I have difficulty writing with a pen or pencil). Sallie is inspired to write her first thank-you note after her grandmother sends her a knit scarf. This leads her to notice all the people that impact her life in big and small ways, and she begins writing thank-you notes to them all. This picture book gives a really easy formula to follow for writing thank-you notes, and it immediately inspired my daughter to write some!

Hot chocolate and a book, the kids are all right

We bought hot chocolate and marshmallows, and my daughter immediately wanted to recreate the scene in The Last Marshmallow by Grace Lin, where two friends have three marshmallows and decide to split the third so they both have an even amount. My kid decided to eat the other half, ha!

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Board Books, Activities, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! I don’t know about you, but I’m a bit burned out. December is such a busy month, and it seems like every free moment is packed with obligations, from visiting family to Christmas shopping to donating books. I’ve decided to take a two-week hiatus from social media to try and recoup some of my energy. I hope everyone has a wonderful holiday!

Quick announcement: Read Harder is back! Book Riot’s Read Harder Challenge is in its ninth year, with a set of 24 tasks that invite readers to expand their worldview through books. Read one book per task, or do some multi-tasking by counting one book for multiple tasks. It’s all fine! The point of the challenge is to push yourself to expand your horizons. Thank you to Thriftbooks for sponsoring Read Harder 2023.

To find the tasks and subscribe to our newsletter for tips and recommendations, visit Read Harder 2023. I’ve completed the last three or four challenges, and it’s been a fun way to diversify my reading!

Bookish Goods

Baby Mini Bookmark by NightOwlPaperGoods

Baby Mini Bookmark by NightOwlPaperGoods

If you’re gonna give a baby a bookmark, this wooden one is a good choice. Bookmark + teether= win win! This listing claims it will arrive before Christmas as of writing this newsletter. $4

New Releases

Cover of Busy Little Hands: Science Play by Richmond

Busy Little Hands: Science Play!: Learning Activities for Preschoolers by Susan Edwards Richmond (activity book)

Of all the activity book collections I own, I use the science ones the most, probably because that’s where my knowledge base is weakest. This collection of science activities for preschoolers has lots of fun ideas, from making pulleys to an ice melt challenge to tracking rainwater and climate patterns. The illustrations and photographs are engaging, most of the materials needed are actually easy to find, and a few don’t even require any materials. I’ll definitely be digging into this one with my preschooler.

Cover of Hush, Little Hero by Bailey

Hush, Little Hero by Annie Bailey, illustrated by Dawn Lo (board book)

This is an adorably illustrated bedtime board book. The little girl protagonist has had a long day of being a superhero, saving loveys from errant dogs and rehoming lost ladybugs. But after a long day of rescues and adventures, it’s time for this little hero to go to sleep.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Here are some last-minute board book stocking stuffer ideas. I’ve tried them all out on my daughter’s stocking, and they fit! Amazon’s listing claims all of these should arrive by Christmas, as of writing this newsletter.

Cover of We Love Books! by Arrhenius

We Love Books! by Ingela P. Arrhenius

Each page of this little board book is a different size and shape, creating bookish landscapes. Scenes depict readers in a library, reading with caregivers on a park bench, and there’s even a kid hanging upside down on a tree branch with a book. While clearly this board book is for kids, I feel like if you’re also filling an adult book-lover’s stocking, this would be a fun addition!

Cover of Baby Basics: My Cuddly Fox

Baby Basics: My Cuddly Fox by Lucie Brunellière

I am cheating: this is not a board book. It’s an adorable and soft cloth book fox lovey. This book was made to be cuddled by babies and toddlers. The short book on fox’s tummy is a sweet bedtime story. It would be an excellent gift for a baby’s first Christmas.

Cover of We are Little Feminists: How We Eat by Fuente-Lau

We are Little Feminists: How We Eat by Shuli de la Fuente-Lau

This is the most inclusive children’s book about eating I’ve ever seen. Photographs capture real children eating using a variety of utensils and feeding aids: bottles, GI tubes, chopsticks, hands, and more. I teared up when I saw the opening photograph of a mother pumping and feeding her newborn with a syringe, which is exactly how I initially fed my child. It’s a diverse, joyous celebration of eating. The entire We are Little Feminists board book series are essential for baby libraries in my opinion, but I am especially impressed by this one.

Cover of I'm the Boss! by Gravel

I’m the Boss! by Elise Gravel

I love collecting Elise Gravel’s children’s books. In her most recent board book, a very opinionated young monster knows exactly what is best all of the time. Unfortunately, the adult monsters see things a bit differently. This is a silly read-aloud every toddler caregiver will relate to.

Marian's bedroom, the kids are all right

We finally finished decorating my daughter’s room! She loves it. Those are cat and rainbow decals on the wall, and her loveys have gathered on the rug for reading time. My SO converted a pumpkin trick-or-treat bucket into a night light (at my daughter’s request), which you can see on the dresser. It’s my favorite room in the house now!

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Hanukkah Children’s Books And Activities!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! It’s been unseasonably warm and rainy here in Nashville, and while I won’t say no to warm weather, I’m tired of being cooped up inside because of rain. Thankfully, the rain held off for my daughter’s fifth birthday party, her first big party with friends. We had it at a playground, and everyone had a blast. I am not a party planner, so I’m glad it went well!

This week I share some of my favorite Hanukkah children’s books. While I’m not Jewish, I know it’s important to introduce my daughter to other cultures.

Quick announcement first: Read Harder is back! Book Riot’s Read Harder Challenge is in its ninth year, with a set of 24 tasks that invite readers to expand their worldview through books. Read one book per task, or do some multi-tasking by counting one book for multiple tasks. It’s all fine! The point of the challenge is to push yourself to expand your horizons. Thank you to Thriftbooks for sponsoring Read Harder 2023.

To find the tasks and subscribe to our newsletter for tips and recommendations, visit Read Harder 2023. I’ve completed the last three or four challenges, and it’s been a fun way to diversify my reading!

Bookish Goods

Hanukkah menorah book folding pattern by BentBooksBoutique

Hanukkah Menora – Book Folding Pattern by BentBooksBoutique

If you make this, please email me with pictures (email address at the end)! I would love to see if this actually works, ha! It might be a good project to work on with preteens. $5

New Releases

The Story of Ukraine by Kharchenko

The Story of Ukraine by Olena Kharchenko and Michael Sampson, illustrated by Polina Doroshenko (picture book)

With the heartbreaking war and invasion happening in Ukraine, many kids are hearing about Ukraine far more than before. This picture book takes the Ukrainian national anthem line by line, providing a historical and cultural context to the anthem. It’s written in both English and Ukrainian. While most of the book doesn’t specifically address war, there are a couple of unsettling areas. For instance, one line in the anthem states, “Our enemies will die like dew in the sun.” I’d be prepared with some further context for younger readers about war in those sections.

Cover of The Universe in You by Jason Chin

The Universe in You by Jason Chin (picture book)

Jason Chin’s illustrations are always stunning (he won the Caldecott Award for Watercress last year), and his newest STEM picture book is no exception. While Your Place in the Universe went big, The Universe in You looks at the microscopic particles that make up life. It’s a beautiful, informative book, and I love that it centers a young Brown girl who uses a wheelchair.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Hanukkah begins in less than a week, so I thought I would share some of my favorite Hanukkah children’s books.

Cover of Ava's Homemade Hanukkah by Woberg

Ava’s Homemade Hanukkah by Geraldine Woberg, illustrated by Julia Seal (picture book)

In this sweet picture book, Ava makes a special menorah for the eighth day of Hanukkah and learns about the significance behind her other family member’s menorahs. Her family has a tradition of each member bringing their own menorah to the last day of celebrating. This is a great way to inspire readers to make their own menorah, and you better believe my crafty child insisted we make one immediately upon finishing the book!

Cover of Baby Loves Angular Momentum on Hanukkah by Spiro

Baby Loves Angular Momentum on Hannukah! by Ruth Spiro, illustrated by Irene Chan (board book)

In this delightful STEM board book and part of a larger series, a baby plays dreidel and learns how angular momentum works. This entire series is a fantastic way to learn science concepts, and I love that the newer books also have holiday connections. I had a proud Mama moment this past weekend involving this book. My daughter wanted to make a dreidel, and after we finished, she wanted to play the game. She went to one of her bookshelves, found this book, brought it back, and then opened it up to the page where it explains how to play for reference. Then she taught me how to do it. Yay for reference skills! (I hope no one minds all my personal stories, because that tends to be how I connect with books!)

Cover of Hanukkah: The Festival of Lights by Bader

Hanukkah: The Festival of Lights by Bonnie Bader, illustrated by Joanie Stone (picture book)

What I like best about this picture book is its explanation of why Hanukkah is celebrated and its description of the Maccabees and the destruction of their temple. It features a contemporary Jewish family, and a preschool-aged girl’s questions about the holiday. The illustrations are vibrant, and the prose is simple yet informative.

Cover of Hanukkah in Little Havana by Blank

Hanukkah in Little Havana by Julie Anna Blank, illustrated by Carlos Vélez Aguilera (picture book)

Every December the children in this picture book receive a crate of oranges from their Nonna and Nonno in Florida, but this year, instead of the oranges coming to them, they’re going to the oranges, and to their grandparents’ house. From making almendrikas to picking oranges to racing on the beach, the family has so much fun celebrating Hanukkah in Miami with their grandparents. This lovely, vibrantly illustrated book depicts Sephardic Jewish traditions.

Homemade dreidel, the kids are all right

I mentioned earlier that my child made her own dreidel over the weekend. She wanted it to be a heart dreidel, so she colored some hearts, then glued it to the back of some thin cardboard (a cereal box would work), using this dreidel template. We ran out of glue (of course) so we ended up using massive amounts of tape, lol. But it worked!

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Children’s Book Awards, Picture Book Love, And Tigers, Oh My!

Happy Tuesday kidlit friends! For the second year in a row, I was asked to be a judge in the Bookstagang Best of 2022 awards, and I just posted the winners on my Instagram account! We received over 500 children’s books from publishers to read and rate. I’m so happy with how the final list turned out, and I review four winners farther below! You can see all the winners by flipping through the slides on my post.

Bookish Goods

Sibling Love Print by Momisdrawing

Sibling Love Print by Momisdrawing

I recently reviewed one of Joy Hwang Ruiz’s picture books — Sometimes Love by Katrina Moore — and I was ecstatic to find out she has an Etsy shop full of her incandescent art! This is one of the more bookish prints, but I encourage you to check out Ruiz’s entire store, especially if you’re giving a present to a new mom this holiday season. There are some beautiful mom/infant pieces. $29

New Releases

Cover of Teddy, Let's Go by Nott

Teddy, Let’s Go! by Michelle Nott, Illustrated by Nahid Kazemi (picture book)

A grandmother sews the adorable plush Teddy for her newborn granddaughter, whom Teddy refers to as My, and the two fall instantly in love. My and Teddy have so much fun together, but as My grows older, she includes Teddy in her play less and less. That is until My’s baby brother is born. This is a sweet, softly illustrated picture book for any child with a beloved stuffed animal.

Cover of Bright Winter Night by Brydon

Bright Winter Night by Alli Brydon, illustrated by Ashling Lindsay (picture book)

In this lyrical picture book, a group of forest animals build a sleigh together from materials they find in a snow-laden forest, despite their differences. Afterward, they journey together through the forest, overcoming mishaps, to watch the Northern Lights. This is a magical winter read for kids.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Now it’s time to review a few winners from the Bookstagang Best of 2022! There were eight categories this year: Future Classics, Conversation Starters, Best Illustration, Best Read Aloud, Bookshelf Builders, Best Biography Books, Most Innovative Nonfiction, and Best Board Books. I’ve chosen to review one book from four of these categories, but I love all the winning books! Interestingly, almost all the picture books I’ve chosen made me cry. I am a sap like that!

Cover of Will It Be Okay? by Dragonwagon

Will It Be Okay? by Crescent Dragonwagon, illustrated by Jessica Love

This stunningly illustrated picture book was one of the 10 books that won in the Future Classics category. A young girl asks her mother “Will it be okay?” in a variety of scenarios, from being stung by a bee to wondering what would happen if her mother died. The mother’s reassurance is shown through the lyrical prose and Jessica Love’s (of Julián Is a Mermaid fame) absolutely beautiful, emotion-filled illustrations.

Cover of Making Happy by Sheth

Making Happy by Sheetal Sheth, illustrated by Khoa Le

This picture book speaks to me on so many personal levels: as a mom with a chronic illness, as a daughter who grew up with a father with a chronic illness, and as a daughter now whose father has cancer. It’s so difficult to depict chronic illness, agency, and the nuanced emotions a child will feel when a parent has a chronic illness — in this book’s case, cancer. Sheetal Shesh pulls from her own experiences as a mom with cancer to create one of the truest portrayals of what it’s like to live with a parent who has a chronic illness that I’ve ever seen, and she does so with simplicity and grace. Khoa Le’s tapestry-like illustrations are as lovely as they always are. This book is a winner on the Conversation Starters theme, and needless to say, is one of my favorites.

Cover of The Best Bed for Me by Cornwall

The Best Bed for Me by Gaia Cornwell

This queer-affirming sweet bedtime picture book won in the Best Read Aloud category. It’s time for Sweet Pea to go to bed, but Mama and Mommy have a bit of a problem — Sweet Pea is procrastinating by pretending to be different animals. How would a koala sleep? How about an emperor penguin? My child has forever been difficult at bedtime, and Cornwell perfectly captures that child bedtime mischievousness.

UNTIL SOMEONE LISTENS book cover

Until Someone Listens by Estela Juarez and Lissette Norman, illustrated by Teresa Martínez

This powerful picture book tells the true story of how Estela Juarez’s mother was deported to Mexico when she was eight years old. Her mother had lived in the United States since she was 18, working and eventually marrying a man in the military with whom she had two children. But that did not prevent her from being deported to Mexico during Trump’s term. Estela wrote a moving letter to Congress asking for her mother’s return, which was eventually granted during Biden’s presidency. It’s a poignant story about a family torn apart and a young girl’s bravery. It won in the Best Biography category.

Marian and tiger, the kids are all right

For my daughter’s fifth birthday yesterday, we took her to a special zoo-at-night light show, where she had a rather intense experience with a tiger. She’s wearing a cat hat with big eyes on it, and I think the eyes unsettled the tiger! Marian loved getting up close; judging by the laid-back ears, I think the tiger was glad to see us go. As a side note, how am I the mother of a five-year-old now!

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Christmas, Dogs, Firefighters, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! We always put up our Christmas tree and decorations the weekend after Thanksgiving, and I pull out all our Christmas children’s books then, too. My daughter has requested a real tree this year, which is problematic because I have lots of tree allergies! We might try a small one on the table and see if I break out in hives, lol. In the meantime, we have a perfectly serviceable fake tree she will have to settle for. I’m writing this from the future, but by the time you’re reading this, the tree should be up and decorated. This week I review my favorite new Christmas children’s books.

Bookish Goods

Merry and Bookish Holiday Card by annyamarttinen

Merry & Bookish Holiday Card by annyamarttinen

This handmade bookish holiday card would be perfect for sending to friends and family (and enemies) this holiday season. $5

New Releases

Cover of Knitting for Dogs by Molk

Knitting for Dogs by Laurel Molk (picture book)

Izzy is a builder, and building comes easily to her. When she decides to take up knitting, she thinks it will be just as easy as building, but she could not be more wrong. Everything she knits turns out all wrong. When she takes her pet dog, Max, to the dog park, however, she has a big idea about how to turn her mistakes into something useful. This is a lovely picture book about knitting, making mistakes, and the comfort of a beloved pet.

Cover of Who is Ketanju Brown Jackson? by Moses

Who Is Ketanji Brown Jackson? by Shelia P. Moses, illustrated by Dede Putra (early chapter book)

This latest addition to the Who HQ Now Series gives a detailed biography of Ketanji Brown Jackson, the most recent Supreme Court justice and the first Black woman to be on the Supreme Court. From her childhood in Florida watching her father finish law school assignments to being on the high school debate team and her acceptance into Harvard Law School, this is an engagingly written biography about this history-making justice.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

I just cannot do Christmas until after Thanksgiving. I don’t know why, but I can only handle one holiday in my brain at a time, so now that Thanksgiving is over, it’s time to bring out the Christmas books! These are four of my favorites that have released this year.

Cover of It's Christmas Everywhere by Barnaby

It’s Christmas Everywhere: Celebrations from Around the World by Hannah Barnaby, illustrated by João Fazenda (board book)

Kids can explore global Christmas traditions in this tree-shaped board book that counts down the 10 days before Christmas. In Australia, for example, a child hangs a shell ornament on the tree while friends and family have fun on the beach. In the Andes Mountains in Peru, children carve gourds to hang on the tree, while in Ethiopia boys play Ye’gena Chewata. It’s a fascinating read for children and adults! And a great way to introduce some new traditions.

Cover of The Christmas Book Flood by Kilgore

The Christmas Book Flood by Emily Kilgore, illustrated by Kitty Moss (picture book)

Speaking of traditions, this picture book is based on the Icelandic tradition of giving books on Christmas Eve, known as Jolabokaflod. It’s a lyrical, cozy, and delightful read for book lovers of all ages. Back matter includes the author’s experiences with the holiday and how to make a book tree.

Cover of The Twelve Cats of Christmas

The Twelve Cats of Christmas by Feather Flores, illustrated by Carrie Liao (picture book)

This hilarious picture book rewrites “The Twelve Days of Christmas” to feature cats. On day four there are four cats laying on gifts; on day seven, cats shred wrapping paper; and on day 10, 10 cats help Santa. Soon, the Christmas tree has been demolished by 12 oh-so-helpful cats. But they’re still adorable! This is my daughter’s favorite Christmas read right now. We love the illustrations!

Cover of Murray Christmas by Keller

Murray Christmas by E.G. Keller (picture book)

If you’re more of a dog person, then you will love this delightful new picture book, which is just as mischievous as the previous book. Murray knows his job: to keep his family safe. So when Murray’s first Christmas arrives, he dutifully pees on the Christmas tree to mark his territory, snatches away ‘snakes’ (aka Christmas lights) from his humans, and howls at carolers. Then comes the worst offense: a stranger in a red suit in the house at night! But maybe Murray can be a helper instead of a menace this time.

Marian the firefighter, The Kids are All Right

Last weekend Marian dressed up as a firefighter on a walk in our neighborhood while also wearing a pink cat hat. It was pretty adorable. Here she is throwing sticks and leaves in a creek. She’s wearing three layers under the fire chief costume because it was well below freezing!

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Interactive Books, Friendship, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! It is finally cold here in Tennessee, for better or worse. I sprained my knee last week, and it’s slowly recovering, so I haven’t been outside for much of the cold weather. Usually I host Thanksgiving, but my sister recently bought a new house and wants to host it this year, and I am happily handing over hosting duties to her and will be spending my Thanksgiving in a rural West Tennessee town. My sister has some farm animals, so I know my daughter is going to have a blast! I hope everyone has a lovely Thanksgiving.

Bookish Goods

Library Card Ornament by CreatedByKrystina

Library Circulation Card Ornament by CreatedByKrystina

These library card ornaments are a great gift for librarians and library-lovers alike. And they’re not breakable! My daughter has broken so many ornaments in her first 5 years, and yet people still gift us breakable ornaments… $7

New Releases

Cover of I Don't Care by Idle

I Don’t Care by Julie Fogliano, illustrated by Molly Idle and Juana Martinez-Neal (picture book)

This charming picture book is about friendship and learning how to embrace differences to make an even closer friendship than before. I love the backstory on this one: originally, Molly Idle was approached to illustrate the book. Idle thought it would be even better if she could illustrate it with her good friend Juana Martinez-Neal. Thus, they partnered on this manuscript over the course of the pandemic. It was a perfect choice for the book, which has two distinct voices and two distinct individuals who become BFFs.

Cover of Human Body Learning Lab by Choi

Human Body Learning Lab: Take an Inside Tour of How Your Anatomy Works by Betty Choi, MD (activity book)

This fascinating activity book provides lots of insight into how the human body works with activities, models, and crafts to help kids learn more. Activities include making cell and 3-D skin models, stretches to learn how the musculatory system works, coffee filter kidneys, and so much more. This is fantastic for homeschoolers or anyone with a kid passionate about science. It says for ages 8+, but I think many 6-7 year-olds would enjoy the activities, too.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Interactive books make great holiday gifts, and so many awesome ones have been published this year. I’ve picked my 4 favorites — mostly from Quarto Kids because they publish so many good interactive series — but it was hard to narrow it down!

Cover of Spin to Survive by Hawkins

Spin to Survive: Deadly Jungle by Emily Hawkins, Illustrated by R. Fresson

One of my daughter’s favorite books last year was Spin to Survive: Frozen Mountain, and she literally screamed when the newest book in the series arrived. These books are so neat, and can be enjoyed just as much by my 4-year-old as they can by a middle schooler. In this newest one, Grandma Beatriz has given you, the reader, an important mission: find the fabled Lost City of the Jaguar God before the treasure hunters steal all the Indigenous artifacts. Each page presents new dilemmas, and the reader has to make a choice, then spin to survive with a compass. The reader is then directed to another page based on the results. There are also lots of survival tips, historical insights, and ecological facts scattered on every page. It’s an awesome book.

Cover of The Story Orchestra: I Can Play by Courtney-Tickle

The Story Orchestra: I Can Play by Jessica Courtney-Tickle

I love The Story Orchestra series, which typically retells the story of an opera with buttons to push for musical accompaniment from the opera. Their latest has a small piano so young readers can play along with 8 famous musical pieces, from Tchaikovsky’s “The Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy” to “Royal March of the Lion” by Camille Saint-Saëns. This would pair well with other books in the series, like The Story Orchestra: The Magic Flute.

Cover of Let's Tell a Story: Jungle Adventure by Murray

Let’s Tell a Story: Jungle Adventure by Lily Murray, Illustrated by Essi Kimpimäki

Another jungle book, and another entertaining book in a series. In the Let’s Tell a Story series, the reader is prompted to create every aspect of a story from page one. Readers choose from a list of characters, character clothes, quests, villains, and so on, creating an entirely new story each time they read. This interactive series helps with early storytelling skills and could be used in classrooms or at home. It’s another series that transcends age.

Cover of the Habbi Habbi started set

Habbi Habbi Starter Set

These bilingual board books are amazing. The languages offered are Chinese, Spanish, French, Hindu, and Korean. You choose a language, then receive a set of books and a reading wand. The reading wand reads the text in both the chosen language and in English. The Habbi Habbi company offers all kinds of products to go with the reading wand, from books to puzzles to flash cards. It’s a super neat and well-executed idea.

Marian's room The Kids are All Right

Here’s an update on our room makeover for my daughter’s 5th birthday. We bought some cat wallpaper and it looked like a bandaid with cats on it. My spouse had the idea to cut the cats out of the wallpaper and use them as decals. He said this in front of our daughter, who immediately grabbed scissors and started cutting up the wallpaper, lol. She has yet to meet a crafting project she is not one hundred percent ready to put into action. I’m not sure how this is going to turn out yet. I’ve bought more cat wallpaper and some rainbow decals. I think we’re going to have to tackle some of it while she’s in preschool, or else it’s going to look very uneven. Thankfully, we still have 2 more weeks until birthday weekend arrives. I’ve also purchased a bed, hurray! Though it probably needs a mattress…

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Nonfiction November, Secrets, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! The election is over, and while I’m disappointed with Tennessee’s outcome, I’m happy to see so many amazing wins across the country. I’m currently in the midst of redecorating my daughter’s bedroom — who knew finding the perfect, affordable cat wallpaper would be so hard? I will show pictures when we finish, but I’m beginning to think a couple of cat wall decals might be a much easier and cheaper way to go, though not as cute!

Bookish Goods

Fuzzball Vinyl Stickers by Isabella Kung

Fuzzball Vinyl Stickers by IsabellaKung

Speaking of cats, a couple of weeks ago, I reviewed the books No Fuzzball! and No Snowball! by Isabella Kung. I’m delighted to say that yesterday I discovered the author/illustrator has an Etsy store filled with Fuzzball-related merchandise! I’m definitely considering buying these stickers as stocking stuffers. There are also Fuzzball totes! $12

New Releases

Cover of Cookie and Broccoli: Book of Secrets by McMahon

Cookie & Broccoli: Book of Secrets! by Bob McMahon (early reader graphic novel)

My daughter and I read this funny early reader graphic novel last night, and we immediately put the other two books in the series on hold at the library: Cookie & Broccoli: Ready for School! and Cookie & Broccoli: Play It Cool. In this third book, best friends Cookie and Broccoli, along with their sidekick Blueberry, discover the world of secrets and how secrets don’t stay quiet for long on a school playground. It’s a really fun read, and I also love that there’s no food shaming.

Cover of Scaredy Bath by Blake

Scaredy Bath by Zoë Foster Blake, illustrated by Daniel Gray-Barnett (picture book)

This is another hilarious book that will elicit lots of laughs from little readers. The narrator, Bath, is scared of the very thing it’s designed for — bathtime. It doesn’t like how loud and messy bathtime is. But when Bath’s family goes away for a while, it begins to miss them. When they finally return home, Bath is surprisingly happy to see them, especially the new little baby they bring with them.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

It’s Nonfiction November, so I thought I would recommend some beautiful biology children’s books that have been released this year. These would make excellent gifts!

Cover of Luminous by Kuo

Luminous: Living Things That Light Up the Night by Julia Kuo

This is the book that inspired me to make a Beautiful Biology list. It’s a stunningly illustrated picture book about bioluminescence, depicting a mother and daughter exploring the many ways bioluminescence is present in our world, on land and in water. Kuo explores bioluminescence in lyrical language but then provides more detailed information in short paragraphs on each page. It’s a perfect marriage of poetry and science, both in language and in illustration.

Illumibugs by Carnovsky

Illumibugs by Barbara Taylor, illustrated by Carnovsky

This innovative nonfiction uses a three-color lens to reveal hidden pictures within the illustrations. Each section describes an ecosystem from around the world, and readers can use various lenses to reveal insects, habitats, and other invertebrate creepy crawlies that call that ecosystem home in the layered illustrations. It’s a book bug lovers of all ages can get lost in for hours. It’s really fascinating.

Cover of The Sea Below My Toes by Guillain

The Sea Below My Toes by Charlotte Guillain, illustrated by Jo Empson

This beautiful concertina-style exploration of the sea unfolds to reveal each layer of the sea, from otters diving along the surface to anglerfish deep in the ocean’s depths. This is a book that requires a lot of room, as it unfolds to about 10 feet! It also provides lots of fun facts about the ocean.

Cover of A River's Gifts by Newman

A River’s Gifts: The Mighty Elwha River Reborn by Patricia Newman, illustrated by Natasha Donovan

This picture book is a little different from the other three in that not only does it provide a fascinating glimpse into the Elwha River’s ecology, but it also gives a call to action to protect the environment, gives a history of how the U.S. government took land from Indigenous Americans — particularly the Strong People — and shows how contemporary Indigenous Americans lobby for their land rights and rehabilitate ecosystems. The book is beautifully illustrated by Métis illustrator Natasha Donovan, and it’s a great way to look at broad topics like environmentalism, the effects of overpopulation, and the history of how the U.S. government treated Indigenous Americans by focusing on one single example — the Elwha River.

Books to be judged, The Kids are All Right

I am one of 16 judges for the Bookstagang Best of 2022 children’s book awards. In my biased opinion, this is the best children’s award list because it’s judged by a diverse array of Instagrammers who come from a variety of backgrounds and experiences with one thing in common — we read thousands of new children’s books a year, and we share our reviews of our favorites on Instagram. I love working with this group, and this year we have received around 500 books for award consideration so far! There are only a couple more weeks left to rate and judge books, and these shelves are what’s left for me to rate. I will indubitably be receiving a few more books to judge, but I’m pretty sure I can get them rated in time! *fingers crossed*

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Native American Heritage Month, Early Mornings, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! This month is Native American Heritage Month, and something neat to do with kids is to look up which tribes lived in your area before encountering white colonists and research those tribes — what happened to them when white colonialists forcibly occupied their territories, where do members of those tribes live now, etc. This map, created by an Indigenous nonprofit, is an excellent tool for discovering where tribes lived.

Bookish Goods

Decolonize Education tote bag by OgokiWild

Decolonize Education Tote Bag by OgokiWild

This decolonizing education tote will be perfect for carrying your current Indigenous and Native American reads (and perhaps a good present for teachers). It’s created and sold by an Indigenous Etsy shop. $20

New Releases

Cover of Too Early by Ericson

Too Early by Nora Ericson, illustrated by Elly MacKay (picture book)

This lovely and oh-so-relatable picture book is told from the perspective of a child who wakes up very early. Both the child’s parents and infant sibling are still asleep, but the father rises with the child, both going outside, snuggling, and watching the sunrise. It’s a lovely moment between child and father, though I imagine the father would rather be sleeping. The author told me this was inspired by her child waking up at 4 a.m. every morning when they were younger.

Cover of My Paati's Saris by Gopal

My Paati’s Saris by Jyoti Rajan Gopal, illustrated by Art Twink (picture book)

In this vibrantly illustrated, lyrical picture book, a young boy loves his Paati’s (Grandmother’s) saris. Whether he’s hiding in them in a busy market or listening to her wonderful stories or wearing them himself, Paati’s saris fill him with joy. This is a really special intergenerational story about queer joy and acceptance.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

A few weeks ago, I wrote and reviewed a list of 10 new children’s books by Native American and Indigenous authors for Book Riot, but as is always the case, I found more books after the list was published! So here are four more picture books by Native American and Indigenous authors not included on that list, but make sure to check out my reviews there too!

Cover of Finding my Dance by Thundercloud

Finding My Dance by Ria Thundercloud, illustrated by Kalila J. Fuller (picture book)

In this picture book biography, Indigenous dancer Ria Thundercloud — from the Ho-Chunk Nation and Sandia Pueblo — describes how she came to be a dancer, from attending powwows at four to participating in jingle dances to learning ballet and tap. No matter what kind of dance she learns, she feels connected to her Indigenous ancestry, and she stays connected through adulthood. It’s a lovely, powerful biography.

Cover of Be a Good Ancestor by Prince

Be a Good Ancestor by Gabrielle Prince and Leona Prince, illustrated by Carla Joseph (picture book)

This stunningly illustrated picture book connects the past, present, and future through both words and illustrations, showing the cyclical nature of our choices. It encourages young readers to be a good ancestor by practicing active respect towards themselves, others, and the environment. It’s a lyrical call to action, unlike any other book I’ve seen. The authors are from the Lake Babine Nation and Nak’azdli Whut’en and belong to the Likh Tsa Mis Yu (Beaver) Clan. The illustrator is Cree.

Cover of I Hope / nipakosêyimon by Smith

I Hope / nipakosêyimon by Monique Gray Smith, illustrated by Gabrielle Grimard, translated by Dolores Greyeyes Sand (picture book)

This bilingual poetic picture book is written in both English and Plains Cree. Accompanied by Grimard’s warm and joyful illustrations, Smith’s poem presents a list of hopes she has for children and future generations. It would make a lovely present for new parents. Monique Gray Smith is Cree, Lakota, and Scottish.

Cover of Beautiful You, Beautiful Me by Spillett-Sumner

Beautiful You, Beautiful Me by Tasha Spillett-Sumner, illustrated by Salini Perera

While snuggling in bed during story time, Izzy notices that her skin is darker than her mama’s and, later, that her hair is poofy when dancing while her mama’s hair swings side to side. Her mama assures her of her beauty and Izzy realizes that no child and mother match exactly. Based on the author’s experiences as an Afro-Indigenous girl (Cree and Trinidadian), this lyrical picture book is a lovely story about self-love and self-acceptance.

Marian reading to her stuffed animals, the kids are all right

My daughter had grown disturbingly quiet, and I worried I was about to walk in on a giant mess. Instead, I found her whisper-reading The Big Green Garage to her stuffed animals. She lined them up like the students do at her preschool during story time, and she’s the teacher. So sweet!

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

Until next Tuesday!

Margaret Kingsbury