Potato Pants by Laurie Keller

Published by Henry Holt and Co.

Image result for potato pants keller amazon

Summary:  One day only…Lance Vance’s Fancy Pants Store is selling Potato Pants!  Potato is so excited he’s doing the Robot (okay, the Po-bot) before rushing down to the store to get a pair.  But when he gets there, he sees Eggplant inside, wearing his new Eggplant Pants! Yesterday Eggplant went rushing past Potato, pushing him right into a nearby trash can.  Potato is sure Eggplant will mash him again if he goes into the store, so he stands outside, watching all the other happy potatoes happily emerging in their apeeling new pants. Finally, he gets up the nerve to go inside, only to find that the pants have sold out, and when they’re gone…they’re gone.  A couple surprising twists bring about a reconciliation between the two vegetables, both of whom emerge well clad, at least from the waist down. 40 pages; ages 4-8.

Pros:  This wildly goofy, high energy veggie tale will have kids doubled over with laughter.  There’s a little bit of a lesson in forgiveness and friendship at the end, but mostly it’s just a lot of fun.

Cons:   After getting to know this cute and friendly Potato, mashed potatoes may be off the table for me at Thanksgiving.

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.

Picturing America: Thomas Cole and the Birth of American Art by Hudson Talbott

Published by Nancy Paulsen Books

Image result for picturing america talbott amazon

Image result for picturing america talbott

Summary:  Thomas Cole loved nature and drawing from the time he was a little boy growing up in the English countryside.  When the Industrial Revolution hit, his family fell on hard times and decide to emigrate to America. The family settled first in Ohio, then Pennsylvania, but it wasn’t until they moved to New York that Thomas’s luck began to change.  A merchant named Thomas Bruen admired Cole’s landscape paintings and financed a trip up the Hudson.  Cole’s paintings of the wilderness there brought him fame and fortune, enough to support him on a three-year visit to Europe. He was particularly fascinated by the ruins in Rome, and painted a series of landscapes depicting a society moving from wilderness to civilization and back again.  He returned to the U.S., where he married and settled in the Catskills, living and working there until his death at the age of 47. His style, known as the Hudson River school of art, was the first American art movement, and influenced many other American artists for generations. 32 pages; grades 1-5.

Pros:  This straightforward biography is illuminated with many of Cole’s paintings, showcasing an important early American artist.

Cons:  A timeline would have been useful, since only one date is given in the text (1818, the year the Coles came to the U.S.).

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.

The Nebula Secret (Explorer Academy) by Trudi Trueit

Published by National Geographic Under the Stars

Image result for nebula secret amazon

Summary:  Cole is excited to have been accepted into the elite Explorer Academy, not only because he wants to be an explorer, but because his mother worked there before dying in a mysterious accident when Cole was five years old.  The night before he leaves his home in Hawaii, a man tries to drown him while he’s surfing. On his trip to Washington, D.C. and during his first weeks at the Academy, Cole feels like he’s being followed, and he receives clandestine messages that he should leave.  When a hacker disrupts an important simulation that Cole’s team is participating in, he’s accused of the sabotage and expelled from school. Heartbroken, he and his aunt (a member of the Academy’s faculty) set out to prove his innocence. Their investigation reveals not only the real culprit, but important clues about his mother’s death and the people who want Cole out of the school–or worse.  Readers can look forward to the exciting sequel coming out in March 2019. Includes “The Truth Behind the Fiction” section that tells about real-life explorers and some of the technology they use. 208 pages; grades 3-7.

Pros:  An exciting page-turner with plenty of color illustrations that will appeal to both reluctant and avid readers.  This is the first book in a new imprint from National Geographic called Under the Stars that creates fictional stories based on real-life National Geographic explorers.

Cons:  There’s definitely some need for suspension of disbelief.  Also (spoiler alert): the librarian turns out to be the bad guy.

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.

Zola’s Elephant by Randall de Seve, illustrated by Pamela Zagarenski

Published by HMH Books for Young Readers

Image result for zola's elephant amazon

Image result for zola's elephant

Summary:  The narrator has a new neighbor, a girl named Zola.  Their mothers have already met and decided the two kids should be friends.  The narrator is sure Zola already has a friend–an elephant–because she saw a big box being moved into the house.  She imagines Zola eating toast with her elephant, playing in the bathtub with him, and enjoying a game of hide-and-seek together. After each page showing what she’s imagining, the illustrations show what’s actually going on at Zola’s house: she’s eating toast alone, washing dishes, then kicking her heels against the wall, bored and lonely.  Finally, the narrator gets up the courage to knock on Zola’s door. Together they watch the couch getting unpacked from the big box, then sit on it together as a new friendship is born. 40 pages; ages 4-8.

Pros:  The author and illustrator show kids how to overcome their fears and reach out to new friends.  Caldecott honoree Pamela Zagarenski’s colorful and imaginative paintings give readers plenty to savor.

Cons:  The narrator’s clown-like costume is a little creepy.

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.

The Season of Styx Malone by Kekla Magoon

Published by Wendy Lamb Books

Image result for season styx malone amazon

Summary:  Caleb and his older brother Bobby Gene are delighted to meet 16-year-old Styx Malone one day in the woods near their house.  They’re looking to unload a bag of fireworks they won, but that their parents won’t let them keep, and Styx has some good ideas.  He tells the younger boys if they keep trading for something slightly more valuable, they’ll eventually be able to get a new moped that the three of them can share.  Caleb in particular has a worshipful admiration of Styx, whose free-and-easy ways contrast with the boys’ strict parents.  Caleb’s modest wish is to go to the Indianapolis Children’s Museum, but his father insists it’s safer for African-American boys to stay in their small town where everyone knows them.  As the summer goes on and Styx’s plans grow increasingly daring–and dangerous–Caleb and Bobby Gene have to make some tough choices about where their loyalties lie.  When tragedy strikes, the boys learn the truth about Styx and gain a new appreciation for their family and for each other.  304 pages; grades 4-7.

Pros:  Caleb is an engaging narrator, and there’s plenty of fun to be had before things get a bit more serious.  Many readers will figure out Styx’s troubled life in the foster system before Caleb and Bobby Gene do, but don’t worry, there is ultimately a happy ending.

Cons:  The story has a contemporary setting, but the boys seem to have a lot of freedom to wander around all day on their own (particularly given their strict parents), and Styx is constantly chewing on candy cigarettes, which don’t seem like they’d be readily available in their small Indiana town in the 21st century.

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.

 

Imagine by Juan Felipe Herrera, illustrated by Lauren Castillo

Published by Candlewick

Image result for imagine herrera amazon

Image result for imagine lauren castillo

Summary:  Former U.S. Poet Laureate tells the story of his life in a poem inviting readers to imagine his past and their own futures.  Starting off as a little boy who loved nature (“If I picked chamomile flowers as a child/in the windy fields and whispered/to their fuzzy faces,/imagine”), he shows his life as a child of migrant farm workers, having to repeatedly leave his home and friends, and going to school not knowing any English.  He loved his new language, using it to write poetry, then learning music so he could turn his poems into songs. Each sentence ends with the word “imagine”. He concludes: “If I stood up/wearing a robe/in front of my familia and many more/on the high steps/of the Library of Congress/in Washington, D.C., and/read out loud and signed/my poetry book/like this–/Poet Laureate of the United States of America/Imagine what you could do.”  32 pages; grades K-5.

Pros:  This picture book-length poem allows Herrera to tell his own amazing story as well as to inspire kids to follow their own dreams.

Cons:  I almost cried when I got to the end and there was no author’s note or biography to give more information about Herrera.

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.

Best Friends in the Universe by Hector and Louie also by Stephanie Watson, with drawings by Le Uyen Pham

Published by Scholastic

Image result for best friends in the universe amazon

Image result for best friends in the universe pham

Summary:  Hector and Louie are such good friends, they want to tell you all about it, so they’re writing a book called Best Friends in the Universe.  Why are they best friends? There are five million reasons! They both want a python; their moms got them both a fish instead (that they both named Python); they both love dance parties and inventing new foods like a peanut butter toast milkshake.  They’re such good friends that they know each other’s secrets…like that Louie once wet his pants after drinking too much milkshake and that Hector likes Linda Berger. Uh-oh, they weren’t supposed to say that! Suddenly the best friends are in a fight and not speaking.  They’re even writing a book called WORST Friends in the Universe! But after awhile, the two boys realize life without a best friend is lonely. Acknowledging that they are both not the greatest at keeping secrets, they patch up their friendship. The book is over, but their friendship is not!  40 pages; ages 4-8.

Pros:  Some positive messages about friendship and forgiveness, told with exuberant cartoon bubbles and illustrations that look like kids’ drawings on notebook paper.

Cons:  A peanut butter toast milkshake?

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.

 

What Do You Do With A Voice Like That? The Story of Extraordinary Congresswoman Barbara Jordan by Chris Barton, illustrated by Ekua Holmes

Published by Beach Lane Books

Image result for what do you do with a voice like that amazon

Image result for what do you do with a voice like that amazon

Summary:  From an early age, Barbara Jordan had a powerful voice.  As she grew up, she had to figure out how she would use it: as a teacher?  A preacher? Finally, she decided to become a lawyer. But the work bored her.  She moved into politics, instead–or at least she tried to. It took three attempts, but she finally won a seat in the Texas Senate.  From there, her voice took her to the U.S. Congress. She used that voice to speak out against Nixon in 1974. Barbara’s star was rising, but, unknown to the public, she suffered from multiple sclerosis.  She retired from Congress in 1979 and moved back home, where she taught at the University of Texas. Jordan died in 1996, but her legacy lives on through her former students. Includes an author’s note, timeline, and additional sources.  48 pages; grades 2-6.

Pros:  One huge benefit of doing this blog has been learning about so many inspiring people whom I have heard of but didn’t really know much about.  Here is a perfect example, and it is beautifully and imaginatively illustrated by Caldecott honoree Ekua Holmes.

Cons:  Too bad Barbara Jordan isn’t still around to lend her inspiring voice to the current political discourse.

If you would like to buy this book on Amazon, click here.