Tag Archives: children

1000 Books Before Kindergarten: My Toddler’s Top Ten Recommendations to Get You Started

6 May

1000BooksBeforeKindergarten

Image via BCCLS

1000 Books Before Kindergarten is a national program, which the Hoboken Public Library and other BCCLS libraries will soon be participating in with the goal to create lifetime readers starting at an early age.  Parents visit their local library to register their infant, toddler, or preschooler. They present their log at their library once they have read 50, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900, and 1,000 books. Each time they achieve a goal, they get a stamp on the log and a sticker.  You can learn more at http://1000booksbeforekindergarten.org.

In honor of this initiative, I thought I’d include 10 of my son’s favorite picture books that your child can borrow from BCCLS libraries.

1. The Very Hungry Caterpillar, by Eric Carle.

very-hungry-caterpillar
The Very Hungry Caterpillar was my sister’s favorite book as a child so she couldn’t resist buying a copy for her nephew who loves it just as much as she did.  The book’s bright colorful collages and simple story of a caterpillar who eats different foods each day of the week make this work a perennial classic.  My son saw a caterpillar yesterday and sweetly said, “It is going to turn into a beautiful butterfly and fly back to me.”

2. Chu’s First Day of School, by Neil Gaiman and illustrated by Adam Rex.

chus-first-day-of-school

I had mentioned in a previous post that Chu’s Day was my son’s favorite picture book, well now there are more Chu books for your child to enjoy. Chu’s First Day of School is a good choice if your little one is nervous about their first day of preschool or kindergarten as the little Panda with the big sneeze learns to make new friends by just being himself. I’m also looking forward to checking out for my son Chu’s Day at the Beach that was just released in April.

3. Mr. Brown Can Moo! Can You?: Dr. Seuss’s Book of Wonderful Noises, by Dr. Seuss.

mr-brown-can-moo-can-you

Kids love Dr. Seuss. My two favorites have always been How the Grinch Stole Christmas and The Lorax. My son loves Mr. Brown Can Moo! Can You?, which is filled with fun onomatopoeia words that have his mommy making funny noises from a mooing cow to the sizzle of a frying pan.

4. Again!, by Emily Gravett.

again

This is a picture book that my son loves and that every parent can relate to.  A little dragon asks his mom to read a book to him again and again.  Each time she shortens it slightly and changes the story, until exhausted she falls asleep.

5. You’re My Little Bunny, by Claire Freedman and Illustrated by Gavin Scott.

youre-my-little-bunny

Maybe it is because my son was born so close to Easter, but he loves rabbits. This is a story he asks to be read again and again. In sweet rhymes You’re My Little Bunny depicts a day in the life of a bunny and his mom.

6. Bedtime Bugs: A Pop-up Good Night Book, by David A. Carter.

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My son loves making the little bugs in Carter’s book brush their teeth and take their baths in this fun interactive pop-up book. He is also quite fond of the other books in the series. But due to the delicate nature of the pop-up pages make sure you are there to supervise your child’s enjoyment of them so that they will stay intact for years of enjoyment.

7. If You Give a Pig a Pancake, by Laura Numeroff and illustrated Felicia Bond.

if-you-give-a-pig-a-pancake
Numeroff has a series of books where cute, playful animals are given an item that triggers a series of events which all lead back to that original item.  The first book in the series is If You Give a Mouse a Cookie and all are fun to see how the chain of events unfold, but my son’s most requested is If You Give a Pig a Pancake.

8. The Spaghetti-Slurping Sewer Serpent, by Laura Ripes and illustrated by Aaron Zenz.

spaghetti-slurping-sewer-serpent

Be prepared to have your tongue tied in knots with the tongue twisters in this book where almost every letter begins with S. My son loves this silly story of Sammy Sanders search for the Spaghetti-Slurping Sewer Serpent.

9. The Pout-Pout Fish, by Deborah Diesen and illustrated by Dan Hanna.

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This adorable book is filled with cute rhymes as the Pout-Pout Fish’s under the sea friends try to convince him to turn his frown upside down. My son loves the twist ending and I like the message encouraging children to not put preconceived limits on themselves.

10. Professor Whiskerton Presents Steampunk ABC, by Lisa Falkenstern.

steampunk-abc

From my previous blogs it should be clear that I’m a huge fan of steampunk so it delights me that this is my son’s favorite alphabet book. Two cute steampunk inventor mice go through the alphabet with different objects from Anvils to the final reveal with Z of what they have been working to create. My son also loves Lisa Falkenstern’s A Dragon Moves In.

Want more recommendations?  Stop by the Children’s Desk for more fun book choices that will have your child entranced.  And tell us your kid’s favorites in the comment section.

-Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference

Kids Interacting with Books

8 Apr

Stephen Sondheim once wrote, in Gypsy, you got to have a gimmick and that seems to be the popular theme of today’s picture books for children.  It’s no longer enough to have beautiful pictures or glorious words.  The book has to be able to DO something and the child has to be engaged in the manipulation of the book or the story so that they’ll get to the end and start reading it again.

This is not a new phenomenon, but it has certainly picked up speed since the introduction of books by the French artist, Herve Tullet.  Tullet’s books, which actively engage the child in pushing, shaking, tilting, and turning the book, were quickly imitated and a whole new genre seems to have been born.

Naturally, these books depend more on illustrations that on words (with one notable exception), and call on the nascent humor of the child and the adult reading the book to improvise a relationship with what the author or illustrator has produced.

These are sure-fire kid-pleasers and, if your child doesn’t already have titles in this list in their personal library, you might want to go out and get them.  Also, these are terrific presents for other children in your life.

I like to say that these are interactive books that require no batteries and absolutely no screen time; just the amazing imagination of a child:

Press Here, by Herve Tullet.

press-here

The minute the child opens this book, he is engaged in activities.  The book directs the reader to press on dots, by number or color, to make them multiply.  Shaking the book makes all of the dots slide to one side or the other of the page.  Inverting the book makes the dots fall to the top or bottom of the page.  The book is on heavy stock and will take quite a bit of handling, but if your child loves it as much as most kids do, you might want to stockpile an extra to replace the first when it wears out.  When your child tires (it won’t happen!) of Press Here, you can move on to Mix It Up! which teaches colors and color mixing with the same “fingers on” approach, or Help! We Need a Title! which involves a monstrous assortment of characters in search of an author (et voila!  Tullet!) to produce a book.  Tullet makes a guest appearance as do a couple of referential jokes about his other books.  Great fun!

Go Away, Big Green Monster!, by Ed Emberly.

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Emberly, whose color-splashed, wildly drawn illustrations have been around for a while, pre-dates Tullet in reader involvement in his books.  This title is one we use regularly for non-scary monster story times. A black page with yellow eyeballs appearing in two holes starts the book and, with each turn of the page, the child builds, the elements of a monster face.  Giving the child control of the process, it is then time to make the monster go away so each page takes away one of the monstrous features.  At the end, the child has banished the monster and admonished him not to come back again.  At which point most kids scream, “Again,” and the monster building reemerges.

Tap the Magic Tree, by Christie Matheson.

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If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, Matheson sincerely flatters Herve Tullet.  The illustrations, however, are more realistic, picturing a tree in different seasons with leaves and fruit coming and going at the child’s command.  The child can knock on the tree trunk to make apples fall off, or blow away autumn leaves ready to fall.  The clap of a child’s hands bring snow (please stop clapping, kids!) and as winter turns to spring again, birds nest in the tree and the process stars over.

Tap to Play, by Salina Yoon.

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If children drank (well, I hope they don’t) we could play a drinking game with each book that involves the word “tap” in the title.  This book, however, also features an adorable, animated dot named Blip, who has big round eyes.  Blip grows and shrinks, changes form and appearance based on the child’s manipulation of the book.  The book is framed as a game that the child and Blip are playing with the final result being Blip taking off, birdlike, and finding a Blippette girlfriend at the end of the book.  Kids will love it.

Duck! Rabbit!, by Amy Krouse Rosenthal and Tom Lichtenheld.

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This award winning book from several seasons back plays on the optical illusion of a shape that can be either or a duck depending on your perspective.  An off-page voice debates as to whether the long protuberances are a duck’s bills or a rabbit’s long ears.  The duck/rabbit is tempted with carrots or bread to see which he responds to.  Water might be cooling or a place to swim.  The mystery of the ambiguous animal is never quite solved only to be replaced by an equally ambivalent anteater/dinosaur.

Warning: Do Not Open This Book!, by Adam Lehrhaupt.

warning-do-not-open-this-book

Any book that involves monkeys is bound to be funny.  So a book that is full of monkeys, baboons and apes has to be really, really funny.  However, kids have to be careful not to let the monkeys out of the book.  You know what happens when you let monkeys out of a book, right?  They all go a little crazy.  So does the book especially when they come up against an alligator.  But the child has control of the style.  The reader gets to set a monkey trap with, what else, a banana.  Then, under strict instructions from the author, the reader is told to close the book, but only till he or she opens it again and lets the monkey shines begin!

Can You Make a Scary Face?, by Jan Thomas.

can-you-make-a-scary-face

Jan Thomas has a whole series of interactive, boldly colored books that will not just engage your child, but reduce both of you to tears.  A very bossy (male) lady bug demands that your child stand up, sit down, eat a bug, blow it out of his mouth, and summon a gigantic frog.  For full effect, your child must do EVERYTHING the book tells him or her to do.  Two suggestions: the second time the bug tells your child to “Stand up,” you might tell them to sit down even though it isn’t written.  Otherwise, your child will be standing for the rest of the book.  Also, this lady bug needs a personality to be really funny.  When I tell it, he sounds like a refugee from a gangster movie.  You can develop your own character to make him both bossy and a scaredy cat.

The Book With No Pictures, by B.J. Novak.

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This book has been the absolute hit of the year, written by B.J. Novak, the head writer of the TV show The Office. (He also played Ryan, the temp, Michael Scott’s long-suffering punching bag).  Novak has taken a book and proved that you don’t need pictures to make a picture book.  All you need is a gullible adult who is willing to do what the book says, whether it is to say nonsense words or read gross-out phrases like “Boo Boo Butt.”  That’s as bad as it gets. Honest.  The final page, when the reader has to go through a series of sounds, squeaks, and yodels to please the listener will have the kids in stitches and begging the reader to start again.

These books may not be lyrical or lovely, but they are certainly a lot of fun and they are guaranteed to give your child a new love for reading in all of its inventive forms.

-Written by Lois Rubin Gross, Senior Children’s Librarian