Welcome, Readers!

The contest Save the Picture Book has ended. Telling people about funny, informative, beautiful, or generally awesome picture books continues. I also share middle grade books, book apps, and educational apps that my kids and I like.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Children's Book and App Mentions: Week of March 12

This week, on my Facebook page, Author Bridget Heos, we celebrated St. Patrick's Day, browsed Scholastic Parent & Child's Greatest Books for Kids, and linked books to T.V. shows. You can join us for more discussions of children's media, including a Monday series on favorite characters, by liking the page. Here are titles mentioned the week of March 12. (Please note: these aren't really reviews; just conversations about books and apps to promote reading and learning.)

Grumpy Bird
by Jeremy Tankard
Scholastic, 2007



From Scholastic Parent & Child 100 Greatest Books for Kids: it's Grumpy Bird. Grumpy Bird is so grumpy he can't even fly, so he walks. And walking makes him grumpy. Until some un-grumpy friends join him. This is a lot of fun for kids to read aloud in a grumpy voice!

Al Capone Does My Shirts
by Gennifer Choldenko
Putnam, 2004



Nobody loves T.V. shows set in hospitals/detective bureaus like my 5th grader. Reminds me of when I used to rush in from playing on the monkey bars to watch Murder She Wrote. I heard a comedy routine by Aziz Ansari about how much his nephew loves Burn Notice, which made me think the core audience of T.V. dramas must be 11-year-olds. Right now, my son's favorite is Alcatraz. The series reminds me of this great read-aloud. The second in the series is Al Capone Shines My Shoes.

App
BigLittleBrother
by Kevin Kling, ill. by Chris Monroe
Minnesota Historical Society Press



App Review: What happens when your little brother is bigger than you? This book app is as close to a traditional picture book as you can get. But there is some sweet interactivity and author Kevin Kling, also a commentator on NPR's All Things Considered, narrates beautifully. The story was of particular interest to my big youngest son, but I think all siblings will relate to the relationship. Artist Chris Monroe perfectly depicts a big little kid, complete with toddler proportions and wide innocent eyes that don't quite grasp the nuances of what's happening around him (such as the kid being mean to his older brother.)

NCAA Basketball Championship
by Annalise Bekkering
Weigl, 2010



My kids like T.V. as much as the next kids. (Whereas I don't like T.V. I love it.) One thing I try to do is link books to what they're watching. With Alcatraz, I reserved some nonfiction books about the prison. During baseball season, there are TONS of options. And pro basketball and football at least provide titles about each team and the big stars. College basketball is tough. Here's one title I reserved about the NCAA tournament. I'll let you know if I find more!

App
Let Me See...What Will I Be (Miss Rosie Red)
by Trisha Deery
Dog Ears, ltd.



Happy St. Patrick's Day! Miss Rosie Red is a new preschool age character by author/illustrator Trisha Deery for children's media company Dog Ears, ltd., both based in Derry, Northern Ireland. In the app, based on the picture book, Rosie reads to you. So cute!

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Check These Out! A Printable List of Kids' Books and Apps Featured in February

Picture Books: Nonfiction

Jump! From the Life of Michael Jordan
by Floyd Cooper
Philomel, 2004

What to Expect When You're Expecting Hatchlings: a Guide for Crocodilian Parents (and Curious Kids)
by Bridget Heos, ill by Stephane Jorisch
Lerner, 2012

Groundhog Gets a Say
by Pamela Curtis Swallow, ill. by Denise Bunkus
Puffin, 2007

Picture Books: Fiction

Happy Endings: a Story About Suffixes
by Robin Pulver, ill. by Lynn Rowe Reed
Holiday House, 2011

E-Mergency!
by Tom Lichtenheld and Ezra Fields-Meyer
Chronicle, 2011

Pierre in Love
by Sara Pennypacker
Orchard, 2007

Who Will Be My Valentine this Year?
by Jerry Pallotta, ill. by David Biedrzycki
Cartwheel, 2011

Zombie in Love
by Kelly DiPucchio, ill. by Scott Campbell
Atheneum, 2011

Board Books

Pantone Colors
by Pantone
Abrams, 2012

We Belong Together
Joyce Wan
Cartwheel, 2011

Middle Grade: Fiction

Wonder
by R.J. Palacio
Knopf, 2012

Middle Grade: Nonfiction

Lincoln and His Boys
by Rosemary Wells, ill. by P.J. Lynch
Candlewick,2009

YA: Nonfiction

Steve Jobs: the Man Who Thought Different
by Karen Blumenthal
Feiwel & Friends, 2012

Apps

Presidents vs. Aliens
Dan Russell-Pinson

Bobo Explores Light
Game Collage, LLC

The Fantastic Flying Books of Morris Lessmore
Moonbot Studios, LA LLC

Books Featured February 20-March 9

On my Facebook page, Author Bridget Heos, I feature a variety of children's books and apps to connect kids and families with stories they love. Here are some that were featured recently:

The Journal of Biddy Owens
by Walter Dean Myers
Scholastic, 2001



‎"We need to let young people know that reading is going to really affect their lives." -Walter Dean Myers, National Ambassador for Children's Literature. Myers has written more than 85 books, including award-winning Monster, Jazz, and Harlem. He also writes about sports. This entry to the popular diary series My Name is America is a great book to get into the swing of baseball season!

Yertle the Turtle
by Dr. Seuss
Random House, 1958



Happy birthday to Dr. Seuss, who taught us that every revolution starts...with a burp. This is my favorite Dr. Seuss book. Who doesn't like when a jerk like Yertle is toppled by a turtle named Mack for the good of turtlekind? To celebrate the birthday, I get to judge literary-themed classroom doors at my kids' school. Can't wait! Fact: Theodor Geisel was a political cartoonist prior to illustrating children's books. Yertle, in early drawings, had a Hitler-style mustache.

BrainPOP Featured Movie
BrainPOP



Kids' App: BrainPOP Featured Movie offers one featured movie per day for free. Yesterday, we learned how Leap Year came about. Something about the calendar, Equinox, days, years...Then you take a quiz. J.J. and I didn't do so well. I didn't have my game face on. I don't know what J.J.'s excuse was. Probably also the game face one. Seriously, it's for older kids, though J.J. does enjoy the movies. There's a robot and funny stuff happens. It's a fun way to review/supplement what you learn in school, or, in J.J.'s and my case, laugh at what the robot does.

Steve Jobs: the Man Who Thought Different
by Karen Blumenthal
Feiwel & Friends, 2012



I'm going to go a little crazy and throw a YA book out there. I realize that reading Twilight doesn't NECESSARILY make me an expert on YA. But this is a YA NONfiction book. It's about the fascinating life of Steve Jobs, and those he worked with. You can tell a lot of research went into this thorough book, yet it's so well written that kids will fly right through it. So YA=grades 6-12. MG=grades 3-8. Approximately. I'd say this book would be enjoyed by 5th graders and up.

Wonder
by R.J. Palacio
Knopf, 2012



This is what we're reading aloud in our house. It's about a fifth grader, Auggie, born with a facial deformity making the transition from home school to private school. Remember the Natalie Merchant song "Wonder"? That's how the author got the idea for the book. It's actually for kids and grownups--in England its marketed to both. If you read it, let me know what you think!

The Fantastic Flying Books of Morris Lessmore
Moonbot Studios, LA LLC



The Academy Awards smiled on children's books last night. Hugo (based on The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick) won five Oscars. War Horse (based on the children's novel by Michael Morpurgo) got six nominations (but, alas, no wins.) And the Fantastic Flying Books of Morris Lessmore, which is also a children's book app, won best animated short.

Pantone Colors
by Pantone
Abrams, 2012




Good morning. What is your favorite shade of yellow? Lemon? Lion? Or how about French fry? Each spread of this 20-page board book includes a simple illustration and 20 shades of a basic color. We've gone through the book twice, and our favorite colors changed. Must depend on the time of day. In the morning, who doesn't love omelette yellow?

E-Mergency
by Tom Lichtenheld and Ezra Fields-Meyer
Chronicle, 2011



What if E, thE most frEquEntly usEd lEttEr in thE alphabEt, got in a frEak accident and could no longer contribute to words? Well Obviously O would have to take its place. This book is a lot of fun. At the end, it lists all letters in order of usage. Trivia: Name the three most used letters in the alphabet, including E. Try to "arrive" at your answer without looking it up.

Presidents vs. Aliens
Dan Russell-Pinson



An apt app for President's Day: Presidents vs. Aliens: Answer trivia questions (with presidents' portraits as multiple choices) and then, logically, battle aliens. It's by Dan Russell-Pinson, the creator of Stack the States and Stack the Countries. He's cornered the market on 5th grade social studies apps, and they're FUN. I'd love to see more big kid apps like these.

Lincoln and His Boys
by Rosemary Wells, ill. by P.J. Lynch
Candlewick,2009



For President's Day: Did you know that Lincoln had a soft spot for his boys and let them run wild in the White House? In this very short read aloud, you'll get to know each of the boys and their father. This is not a light read; the Lincolns, as you know, had a tragic family life. But it is worth the tears and very well written by Rosemary Wells, who writes and illustrates the Yoko and Max & Ruby picture books.

And my book!

What to Expect When You're Expecting Hatchlings: a Guide for Crocodilian Parents (and Curious Kids)
by Bridget Heos, ill by Stephane Jorisch
Lerner, 2012



They've hatched! What to Expect When You're Expecting Hatchlings is now available online at Barnes & Noble, Powell's, and Amazon. It's also in 10 public libraries, including Bend, Oregon, for my friends there. It will make it to most library shelves later in the Spring. If you'd like to see it at your library, be sure to request it!

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Children's Book Roundup: Week of February 6

This is a roundup of children's books and apps mentioned this week on my Facebook page, Author Bridget Heos.

1. App
Bobo Explores Light
Game Collage, LLC



Bobo should be the poster robot for nonfiction book apps. Under the theme of light, he explores everything from photosynthesis to auroras. Pull down screens provide additional info like sidebars in a standard nonfiction book, although in this case they include videos. The main screens are interactive. You can shoot lasers, for instance. There are a couple typos, but I'm certainly one to talk, say my proofreaders. J.J. opened the app to tell Bobo goodnight. That is the true measure of the story.

2. Nonfiction Picture Book
Groundhog Gets a Say (Puffin, 2007)
by Pamela Curtis Swallow, ill. by Denise Bunkus



Ii...iit's Groundhog's Day! Which means 1. The movie is on at 8 p.m. CMT. 2. Your middle grader could start 11 Birthdays by Wendy Mass, in which a girl must relive her 11th birthday until she gets it right, and 3. Groundhog finally gets a say in this funny nonfiction picture book. By the way, we have 6 weeks left of winter, which, our meteorologist said, you could also learn by looking at the calendar. Oh, come on! Let the Groundhog get his say!

3. Board Book
We Belong Together (Cartwheel, 2011)
Joyce Wan



Continuing our week of Valentine's Day books...This board book reminded me of a gift book. As it turns out, the author/illustrator owns her own greeting card company and has been designing cards since she was a little girl. I guess it is a gift book in a way...for little ones. I love the art and design.

4. Picture Book
Zombie in Love (Atheneum, 2011)
by Kelly DiPucchio, ill. by Scott Campbell



I never knew how much I liked Valentine's Day until I joined Pinterest. As it turns out, I LOVE Valentine's Day. It's the pastels. As a boy mom and boy sister, I've never been exposed to many pastels and therefore have never built up immunity. Like Vizzini in Princess Pride, I fall over dead every time I see a pastel, such as the lilac on this book cover for Zombie in Love, which by the way is a great book to read to boys on Valentine's Day.

5. Picture Book
Who Will Be My Valentine this Year? (Cartwheel, 2011)
by Jerry Pallotta, ill. by David Biedrzycki



Look no further. I will be your Valentine. I LOVE this hippo. Though the rest of the book doesn't match the hilarity of the cover, it is a sweet story about one hippo's quest for friendship on Valentine's Day.

6. Picture Book
Pierre in Love (Orchard, 2007)
by Sara Pennypacker



Now for a love story. Pierre, a fisherman, dresses in disguise to leave gifts for Catherine, a ballet teacher. Little does he know that Catherine is in love with a fisherman she's seen from afar. Some critics say the love story will go over children's heads. I don't think so. Remember, kids=shorter than adults, not dumber than adults.

7. Nonfiction Picture Book
Jump! From the Life of Michael Jordan (Philomel, 2004)
by Floyd Cooper



Just returned from my 3rd grade son's wax museum. You press a "button" on each kid's hand, and he or she speaks as a famous person. I loved seeing who the kids chose. My son was Michael Jordan. There was also an Amelia Earhart, Davy Crockett, Princess Diana, Thomas Edison, Martin Luther King, Jr., Salvador Dali, Anne Frank, and more. They prepared by reading biographies like this one. So, for writers, the wax museum is also good for business!

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Happy Endings

The perfect book to end Save Everything! (and the Picture Book) must be Happy Endings: a Story About Suffixes by Robin Pulver, ill. by Lynn Rowe Reed (Holiday House, 2011.)



In this hilarious follow up to Punctuation Takes a Vacation, Silent Letters Loud and Clear, and Nouns and Verbs Have a Field Day, Mr. Wright has saved suffixes for last...as in the last few days of school. Suffixes are so excited that it is finally their turn. But the students are in no mood for studying. They are ready for summer.

Mr. Wright tells the kids they'll have to tackle the endings after lunch. That makes the endings nervous. If they're going to get tackled, they better get in shape! They head to the gym to workout. When the students return, the endings are gone. The students make signs in hopes of finding them. The suffixes on the signs, of course, are missing.

This is a book to read-aloud to introduce endings, but also to let kids spend time with on their own in order to catch everything going on in the illustrations. It's the perfect book to end Save the Picture Book! because there is so much to it, both in terms of learning and making kids laugh.

As the year-long event winds down, here is a wrap-up, by the numbers:

680...the number of picture book reviews by students in preschool through eighth grade.

108...the number of picture books the event promoted, in addition to picture books teachers selected from their libraries.

60...the number of books given away.

18...the number of teachers and school librarians who received picture books for their libraries.

1...the fourth grade teacher who planned to revamp her curriculum to include more picture books.

Unknown...the impact one picture book can have, even if it only brightens somebody's day. That day might be the day that most needed to be brightened!

A big thanks to all of you for making this happen by donating picture books, spreading the word, and most of all voicing your love of picture books!

This blog will now shift gears slightly. The purpose will be two-fold: to share picture book activities and events, and to share children's book reviews. I post very short reviews of picture books, nonfiction, middle grade, and children's book apps and educational apps several times a week on my Facebook page Author Bridget Heos. Actually, they're not really reviews because I only talk about books I like. (Hey, I'm a writer first. I'm not against negative reviews, but I don't want to be a part of them, either.) Here, I'll do a roundup of my "reviews."

I invite you to join in the conversation here or on Facebook. I love hearing what children's books people are reading.

We did it! We saved everything! (and the picture book.) Now I need to go fix some meatballs for my children. The end.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Kid Reviews: Winter Books IV

My three sons and I have read lots of picture books featuring sports MVPs. The Sunflower Elementary 5th grade may just be the MVP of saving the picture book. They've participated several months in a row and always do a great job reviewing the books. Here are a few winter picture book reviews from Mrs. Secrest's 5th grade class.

Paige reviewed Thomas' Snowsuit by Robert Munsch, ill. by Michael Martchenko. She liked "that a little kid wouldn't put his snowsuit on and the adults ended up wearing the wrong clothes." Here is her excellent drawing:



Brayden reviewed Thomas' Snowsuit as well. He does a great job depicting a very frustrated Thomas.



Delaney reviewed Axle Annie by Robin Pulver, ill. by Tedd Arnold. She liked that "even though Shifty tries to make Annie not make it up the hill, she still lets them on the bus." I love her drawing of Shifty!



Great job, 5th graders!

Friday, January 27, 2012

Review: 1+1=5 and Other Unlikely Additions

1+1=5 and Other Unlikely Additions, by David LaRochelle, ill. by Brenda Sexton (Sterling, 2010.)



Can you think of why 1+1 would = 5? Using clues from the previous page, kids guess why 1+1 equals various unusual sums. The answer is explained at the page turn.

This is a fun book that incorporates addition...and algebra! When you think about it, the two ones really represent x and y. I did this with my family; we were able to guess "sum," not all. As we got into the mindset of looking for clues on the page to solve the equation, we got better at it. This would be a fun book to read with your class, and then come up with equations of your own.

On his Web site, www.davidlarochelle.net, the author offers a teaching guide describing ways of doing this. It also includes printable activities such as The Secret Life of Numbers, in which kids turn numbers into drawings.

So, why does 1+1=5? You'll have to read the book to find out!