Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! Has anyone watched Shape Island on Apple TV? It’s based on children’s books by Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen. It looks super cute, but unfortunately my old TV has trouble streaming from Apple. I’m really curious about it, though!
Today I recommend two new picture book releases and three children’s books about the Holocaust for Holocaust Remembrance Day on the 27th. Before we get to that, let’s talk about Valentine’s Day!
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Bookish Goods
The Wondrous Little Book Store Print by bleubri
Last week I shared a cute winter print from children’s book illustrator Blanca Gómez, and for this week, here’s a scene of a precious little book store. $28
New Releases
The Moon Tonight by Jung Chang-hoon, illustrated by Jang Ho (picture book)
This lovely nonfiction picture book lyrically explains the 29-day lunar cycle. The beautiful acrylic illustrations depict a father, daughter, and a white kitten outside at night as the moon progresses through each stage. It’s a fascinating and poetic STEM-themed picture book by a South Korean astronomer.
Just Like Grandma by Kim Rogers, illustrated by Julie Flett (picture book)
Wichita author Kim Rogers teams up with award-winning Cree-Métis illustrator Julie Flett in this poignant, intergenerational picture book about a little girl’s love for her grandmother. Becca wants to be just like Grandma. She wants to dance like Grandma does at the powwow, she wants to bead moccasins just like her. But while Becca wants to be like Grandma, Grandma wants to be like Becca.
For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter!
Riot Recommendations
January 27th is Holocaust Remembrance Day, so I wanted to recommend these three very different children’s books about the Holocaust that can be used as discussion starters or for further reading.
Hidden Hope by Elisa Boxer, illustrated by Amy June Bates (picture book; March 23)
This fantastic picture book biography doesn’t release until March 23rd, but I had to include it here. Judith Geller/Jacqueline Gauthier was a Jewish member of the French Resistance. For five years during WWII, she posed as a non-Jewish social worker and visited Jewish homes with identity papers smuggled inside a wooden toy duck. She was able to save more than 200 lives. It’s a beautifully written biography, but just as moving is the author’s note in the back about connecting with Judith as a Jewish journalist with family killed during the Holocaust and the research she conducted to write this book.
The Lady with the Books by Kathy Stinson, illustrated by Marie Lafrance (picture book)
Jella Lepman was a Jewish woman who fled Germany prior to WWII and returned afterward both to help rebuild the country and to share international books in a children’s books museum in the hopes of building “bridges of understanding.” This fictional picture book tells the story of two poor siblings who stumble upon Lepman’s museum and become enchanted with reading. This is a good companion to more discussions about the Holocaust and WWII.
The Dollmaker of Krakow by R.M. Romero (middle grade)
Reminiscent of E.T.A. Hoffmann and Hans Christian Andersen, this middle grade fantasy depicts the horrors of the holocaust through the eyes of a doll, Karolina. Karolina’s doll world has been ravaged by rats, and when she escapes with a toy soldier named Fritz, a wind ferries them to our world and into the hands of two human magicians. Karolina’s magician is the dollmaker of Krakow, a kind-hearted and shy war veteran who makes toys. With Karolina’s help, he breaks out of his introverted shell and makes friends with a violinist and his daughter. Both are Jewish. When the Germans invade Krakow, a dark magic descends on their lives, reminding Karolina of when the rats invaded her homeland.
My daughter has lost her first tooth, and she has a second one loose as well! This was a bit of a surprise — she only recently turned five. A permanent tooth is already peaking through her gums. The tooth fairy gave her $5, which I thought was way too much, but the next day at preschool one of her friends told her the tooth fairy gave her $10 for her first lost tooth. $10!? I got a dollar when I was a kid. But I guess the price of teeth has gone up.
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