Escape into a world where legends are real, danger is lurking, and a new hero is on the rise! From Julian Randall, contributor to the #1 New York Times bestseller Black Boy Joy, comes the next contemporary middle-grade fantasy blockbuster hit. The Land of Stories meets Dominican legends in this electrifying adventure!
Hey readers! I’ve got another batch of new releases for you!
In this biographical picture book, readers can learn the story of Fatima al-Fihri, a Muslim woman who loved to learn and dreamed of building a school in her community. Her dream eventually came true, leading to the creation of the University of al-Qarawiyyin.
In this heartwarming middle grade, Knox Wei-Evans and his family suddenly move back to California as COVID-19 hits Hong Kong. But Knox struggles in his new home, as his new classmates think that he’s brought the virus with him, they don’t know when they’ll see his dad again since he had to stay behind in Hong Kong to work, and his mom’s lost her job and is now worried about health insurance.
In this suspenseful middle grade, Max searches for his best friend Josie who disappeared and left only a note behind that said “I’m real.” As Max looks for her, Josie searches for him as well, but there are forces at work to keep them apart because as it turns out, Josie was never supposed to be real.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
Discover Her Art invites young art lovers and artists to learn about painting through the lives and masterpieces of 24 women from the 16th to the 20th century. In each chapter, readers arrive at a masterwork, explore it with an artist’s eye, and learn about the painter’s remarkable life and the inspirations behind her work. Young artists will discover how these 24 amazing women used composition, color, value, shape, and line in paintings that range from highly realistic to fully abstract. Hands-on exercises encourage readers to create their own art! Whether you love to make art or just look at it, you will enjoy discovering the great work of these women artists.
Hi Kid Lit Friends,
I was looking through my bookshelf of new releases today, and I noticed a lot of picture books with love themes. That’s not surprising since it is February, the month of Valentine’s Day, so I thought I would dedicate this newsletter to those books!
This beautiful book is a reflection of the many ways a father’s love is demonstrated through words and actions. The gorgeous watercolor illustrations show the tenderness and strength of fathers all over the world who are guiding, teaching, caring, and loving their kids in so many ways.
This sweet love story unfolds in the most difficult of circumstances: a War Relocation Center in the desert after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in World War II. Tama works in the camp’s tiny library, and it is there where she takes refuge in stories and beautiful pictures. George waits each morning outside the door with an armful of books to return – can anyone read that many books? Or does George spend so much time in the library for an entirely different reason?
This is the book we all want, especially after two years of pandemic life. This stunning picture book is all about welcoming people into our homes and our spaces, and it features the word “welcome” in fourteen different languages. There is a stunning spread that opens up to a feasting table at the end of the book that took my breath away!
Bright Brown Baby: A Treasury by Andrea Davis Pinkney, illustrated by Brian Pinkney
This book is a celebration of Black and brown babies! The award winning author illustrator duo has created another book that is filled with vibrant illustrations and hugs and affirmations. This is a book about JOY!
I am a huge fan of Renata Liwska’s charming and playful illustrations, and this book is filled with so much sweetness. When Lion shows his distaste for love, it’s up to Mouse to show him all the things he does love – especially their friendship! This is one adorable book!
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Aldermere is a town with its own set of rules: there’s a tea shop that vanishes if you try to force your way in, crows that must be fed or they’ll go through your trash, and a bridge that has a toll that no one knows the cost of. The magic-infused town is the first place eleven-year-old Fin has ever felt safe, and she’ll do whatever it takes to save her new home when she accidentally unleashes a shadow self who wreaks havoc everywhere she goes. Can she face her fears — literally — to help save her home?
Hey readers! I have another batch of new children’s books for you!
In this sweet picture book, a working mom reassures her daughter that, though she may have to step out to work or visit someone or take care of errands, she will always return home.
In this enchanting picture book, a child stays awake past bedtime, wondering who else might also be awake. When they spot a light on, they go on an adventure to find who it is.
In this coming-of-age story, Aafiyah has to step up to help her family and overcome a bad habit of hers. When her dad is accused of a crime he didn’t commit, she comes up with a plan to get him back. But the plan might not be as foolproof as she thinks, especially when it involves giving up her habit of “borrowing” pretty things she sees.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
An action-packed middle grade quest with empathetic heroes, missing treasure, and a great beast lurking beneath–all set against a vibrant, Sri Lankan-inspired landscape. Razi, a local fisherboy, is swept up in a thrilling seafaring adventure when he meets Zheng, a boy who’s just escaped a shipwreck and is full of tales of sea monsters and missing treasure. But now the villains who are after Zheng are also after Razi and his sister, Shifa. This delightful caper from the author of The Girl Who Stole an Elephant will thrill young fans of adventure and fantasy.
Hi Kid Lit Friends,
It’s always so fun to see book Twitter shortly after the American Library Association’s Youth Media Awards is revealed! There is a celebratory mood for all the books recognized, and it just reinforces that well known fact that the children’s book community is the Best Ever! Here are some of the titles I loved this year that were recognized, but check out the full list here!
Caldecott Medal and Newbery Honor: Watercress by Andrea Wang, illustrated by Jason Chin
I talk about Jason Chin A LOT in this newsletter – I just love his illustrations – and this picture book is one that I’ve recommended dozens of times this year. Watercress was awarded the Newbery Honor as well as the Caldecott Medal. This book is set in Ohio, and in the start of the book we see a family driving along a road. The car stops and the family gets out to gather watercress at the side of the road, and the young girl is embarrassed that her family is foraging. But the experience leads to her parents sharing their own stories of gathering watercress in their home country, which helps create new family memories of watercress and feeling grateful for what they have.
Newbery Medal and Pura Belpré Award: The Last Cuentista by Donna Barbara Higuera
This intricately woven book follows a girl named Petra Peña, who wanted nothing more than to be a storyteller, like her abuelita. But when a comet destroys earth, only a few hundred scientists and their children – among them Petra and her family – have been chosen to journey to a new planet. They are the ones who must carry on the human race. Hundreds of years later, Petra wakes to this new planet – and the discovery that she is the only person who remembers Earth. This book will make you think and wonder and rediscover what it means to be human.
Winner of the Coretta Scott King Awards for Author and Illustrator, Caldecott Honor, Sibert Honor: Unspeakable: The Tulsa Race Massacre by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Floyd Cooper
This beautifully illustrated and informative book provides a powerful look at the Tulsa Race Massacre, one of the worst incidents of racial violence in our nation’s history. The book traces the history of African Americans in Tulsa’s Greenwood district and chronicles the devastation that occurred in 1921 when a white mob attacked the Black community.
This vividly illustrated picture book joins the ¡Vamos! world with familiar characters like Little Lobo, his dog Bernabé, and their pals El Toro and La Oink Oink. Little Lobo just got a new truck, and they are using it to carry party supplies over the bridge. But the line is long and there is a lot of traffic. They set up a party to pass the time where people from two countries meet each other and celebrate new friendships.
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Calling all middle grade fans! Don’t miss this big-hearted, beautiful, and funny mystery told from multiple POVs about neurodiversity, friendship, and community from Leslie Connor, the award-winning author of The Truth as Told by Mason Buttle. “Leslie Connor brilliantly depicts a genuine and meaningful friendship between a dynamic girl and her nonvocal friend. By showing the ways Aurora and Frenchie communicate, Connor gives us a blueprint for seeing autistic children in a new light. I loved, loved, loved this book!” — Cammie McGovern, author of Frankie and Amelia and Chester and Gus.
Hey readers! I’m back with another batch of new releases for you and your little ones.
In this vibrant picture book, Beauty is a Puerto Rican girl in love with her community. But as she gets older, seeing how her community is mistreated makes her forget what makes her so special, and the community rallies to remind Beauty of how beautiful she, and her heritage, is.
This poignant picture book tells the story of cousins living in separate countries and wanting to reunite. Olu lives in Lagos, Nigeria, and Greta lives in Milan, Italy, but their lives aren’t so different, and they both want to reunite more than anything.
In this heartwarming novel, shy Jillian promises her grandmother she’ll have more confidence in herself. Though Jillian usually tries hard to blend in, not speaking even when she has the correct answer, she decides the time has come when the school’s biggest academic competition arises.
The bestselling Wonder is adding an illustrated edition, bringing the story of August and his community to life with original artwork by cover artist Tad Carpenter, a decade (a decade!) after Wonder‘s first publication.
In this charming novel, new student Autumn is selected to be the anonymous voice of the student advice column. Her new gig gets complicated however when her new friends, Logan and Cooper, end up at odds. Now Autumn’s in the middle, and to make matters worse, her secret identity might be in trouble, too.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
Mary Hamilton was proud to be Black, and when the chance came along to join the Civil Rights Movement and become a Freedom Rider, she was eager to fight for what she believed in. Mary was arrested again and again—but she did not back down. In an Alabama court, a white prosecutor called her by her first name, but she refused to answer unless he called her “Miss Hamilton.” The judge charged her with contempt of court, but that wasn’t the end of it. Miss Mary Hamilton fought the contempt charge all the way to the Supreme Court.
Dear Kid Lit Friends,
Like many members of the kid lit community, I was deeply saddened to hear of the death of children’s book legend Ashley Bryan last weekend. I’ve had the pleasure to meet him multiple times, twice at his beautiful home on Islesford, a small island off the coast of Maine. His studio, located in a sunlit corner of his home, has jars brimming with sea glass he has collected from long walks on the beach and jars filled with newspaper that he mashes up into a paste for his gorgeous sculptures and puppets.
When Ashley was eighteen, he was drafted to fight in World War II. As a Black soldier in a segregated army, Ashley spent the next three years witnessing the atrocities of war. He experienced harsh and inhumane treatment at the hands of his officers and was given the cruelest tasks, such as burying the bodies of fallen soldiers. Throughout it all, he drew and made notes in his sketchbook and dreamed of returning home.
When he came back to America in January of 1946, he planned to return to his college studies in art at Cooper Union. Haunted by the images of war, he instead enrolled at Columbia University and studied philosophy. He tucked his war drawings away in a drawer, speaking of that time in his life only to his family and close friends. He traveled the world and later settled down in Islesford, Maine. For decades, Ashley, pulling a wagon filled with his paint supplies, became a familiar fixture on the island. He painted big murals filled with bold flowers and took long walks on the beach where he collected sea glass polished smooth by the waves that would later be used for his stained glass windows. Some of those windows were installed at The Storyteller Pavilion, a project of The Ashley Bryan Center, which is down the road from his home.
He created and illustrated dozens of books over his lifetime, each one beautiful and special.
Ashley’s autobiography is stunning, filled with never-before-seen artwork and handwritten letters and diary entries from his time serving in World War II. It is one of the most powerful and honest and illuminating autobiographies I have ever read, and I encourage you all to pick up a copy and spend time in his story.
This is probably one of my favorite books because it captures the essence of this remarkable man. From his walks on the beach by his home on Little Cranberry Island, Ashley would gather weathered bones and stones shaped like hearts and empty bottles and fishing net. He would bring them back to his home and make the most magnificent puppets out of them, some nearly two feet tall. In the book, he gives them names and stories.
Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life by Ashley Bryan
This luminous book, which won a Newbery Honor and Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor Award, has its roots in original slave auction and plantation estate documents. Ashley Bryan contrasts the monetary value of each person and imagines and interprets each person’s life on the plantation, as well as the life their owner knew nothing about—their dreams and pride in knowing that they were worth far more than an overseer or madam ever would guess.
The last time I saw Ashley was the summer of 2019. He had just been visited by a team from the Kislak Center for Special Collections at the University of Pennsylvania where they spent a week photographing an archive of his work, which includes drawings he made as a child, letters and correspondence to friends, and preliminary and finished material from a number of books. Ashley offered me a seat at his dining room table, pushed over a bin of gumdrops in my direction, and showed me a mosaic that our friend Linda Sue Park had made for him – it is a peacock made of gumdrops.
I will never forget this incredible man. He is truly a national treasure.
Rest in peace, Ashley Bryan. Thank you for your big, beautiful life.
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Now in paperback! Sixteen storytellers. One intertribal powwow. In Ancestor Approved, Native kids are the heroes of their own stories. This collection of intersecting stories by both new and veteran Native writers bursts with hope, joy, resilience, the strength of community, and Native pride.
Hey readers! I’m back with another week of new kids’ books!
In this picture book, River worries that she may never dance at the powwow again after an illness. But River soon learns about the healing power of her community.
In this lyrical and vibrant picture book about the connections between trees, Britta visits her two favorite apple trees, named Apple and Magnolia. She’s convinced they’re the best of friends, and when Magnolia’s branches begin to droop, Britta wonders if there’s anything anyone can do.
In this middle grade novel, Annie’s optimistic about her seventh grade play, The King and I. But when she’s cast, her happy news leads to whispers from her classmates, who say she was only cast because she’s Asian, and Annie becomes determined to prove them wrong.
This inventive middle-grade is told from the points of view of best friends Sam and Asha, as well as the titular Very Best house in Town, Donnybrooke. When Sam gets accepted into a new school, he starts hanging around with Prestyn, who dislikes Asha and refuses to allow her into Donnybrooke.
In this fun middle grade, Ellie’s a witch which means she’s also despised by most people. So she applies to the Fairy Godmother Academy, only to be disappointed when she’s assigned to King Arthur’s Round Table instead. Meanwhile Caedmon learns his family’s death is foretold; he travels to the knight’s castle, only to find the knights have been cursed.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
OverDrive is the leading digital reading platform for libraries, schools, corporations and organizations worldwide. We deliver the industry’s largest catalog of ebooks, audiobooks, magazines, streaming media and more to a growing network of 76,000+ partners in 94 countries.
Hi Kid Lit Friends,
What is life like in your corner of the world? Here in NYC, it’s a beautiful sunny day and snow still carpets the sidewalks from the storm we had over the weekend. My dog Lalo – who turned a year old last Thursday! – is loving the snow. He truly is a cold weather dog.
A lot of picture books about fabulous grandparents have crossed my desk lately, and I thought I would share them here!
Soul Food Sunday by Winsome Bingham, illustrated by C.G. Esperanza
This gem of a book is filled with vibrant illustrations that truly capture the love of a family as they gather each Sunday at Grandma’s place for soul food. While the narrator typically joins the rest of the children in the backyard or the great room, today he is invited to help with the meal… and maybe make his own contribution to soul food Sundays! This book is a 2022 Coretta Scott King Book Award Illustrator Honor Book!
Amah Faraway by Margaret Chiu Greanias, illustrated by Tracy Subisak
This tender book about a girl visiting her grandma in Taiwan is so sweet and honest. Although Kylie talks to her Amah every week, it is very different to get on a plane and fly across the world to see her grandmother in person in a new country with a different language, different food, and a different culture. Will Kylie fit into Amah’s world?
What is Love? by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Carson Ellis
I really adore these illustrations – each page tells a beautiful story. The book begins with a young boy asking, “What is love?” His grandmother responds, “If you go out into the world, you might find an answer.” And so the boy travels the world, asking all sorts of people this very important question.
On a rainy spring day, a pair of siblings look out at the thundering weather. Their grandmother says, “Use those beautiful and brilliant minds of yours… Lift your arms, close your eyes, take a deep breath, and believe in a thing.” The siblings do as she says, and suddenly they’re no longer stuck inside – they’re flying over the city exploding with every kind of flower.
A perfect picture book for younger kids, this sweet book is all about a boy and his grandma at their weekly Sunday dinner. For the boy, these meals are full of hugs and kisses, full of tasty dishes, full to the brim with happy faces, and full, full, full of love.
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Perfect for fans of Other Words for Home, Front Desk, and American as Paneer Pie, this powerful and poignant coming-of-age debut novel follows an Arab American girl named Yasmeen as she moves to San Antonio with her family and meets her new neighbor, Ayelet Cohen, a first-generation Israeli American. As the two girls become friends, and grapple with how much closer the events of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are than they’d realized, can they learn there’s more that brings them together than might tear them apart . . . and that peace begins with them?
Hello readers! I’m back with another batch of new releases.
In this joyful picture book inspired by the Cedella Marley’s childhood with her father, musician Bob Marley, Marley and her family leave Jamaica for Delaware. To celebrate the move Marley plans an outdoor concert that’s unfortunately ruined by bad weather, until their new neighbors step in to help.
From the author of Amal Unbound comes a companion novel about the titular Omar, a scholarship student at a boarding school. Though Omar’s looking forward to his new school, he’s quickly disappointed, and then furious, when he learns that not only are first year scholarship students not allowed to take part in extracurriculars, but they have to get much higher grades than students paying tuition. So Omar sets out with a new group of friends to change the system entirely.
In this middle grade novel set against the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, kids in the same apartment building struggle with adjusting to their new lives at home. But as time goes on, the kids realize that there’s power in community, and they can help each other through difficult times. As protests erupt across the country, they begin to consider what they can do to make the world safer for everybody in it.
In this historical fiction novel, siblings Homer and Ada escape the plantation where they have been enslaved and discover Freewater, a secret community of formerly enslaved and freeborn people. When Homer learns of a threat to Freewater, he resolves to save his mother, reluctantly left behind, and his new home.
For fans of Ramona Quimby, this new novel is about Harriet Wermer. who is unhappily sent to her grandma’s B&B for the summer. But Harriet is surprised to find Marble Island isn’t as boring as she thought, not with a mystery about her dad’s own childhood on the island that she’s determined to solve.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
A personal, humorous, and body-positive middle grade standalone about a fat kid who wants to stop his bullies . . . and enlists the help of the world’s most infamous supervillain. Perfect for fans of Holly Goldberg Sloan, Julie Murphy, and John David Anderson!
Hi Kid Lit Friends,
The person I see for physical therapy is pregnant, and she asked me the other day if I had book recommendations for her baby registry. One of my favorite questions! Here is the list I gave her. I love that there are so many beautiful books for babies out in the world!
Board Books (Due to an issue with the widget, some of these book links go to the hardcover edition, so just make sure you’re selecting the board book if that’s what you want!)
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