The Snowball Fight by Beth Ferry, illustrated by Tom Lichtenheld (Clarion Books, 48 pages, ages 3-8). Neighborhood friends enjoy a snow day that starts with the creation of two forts armed with plenty of snowballs. After lobbing these at each other for a while, one of the forts gets buried in snow that falls off a nearby roof, creating the perfect conditions for sledding. From there, it’s time to go inside for a cookie and hot chocolate break, but three marshmallows floating side by side in the cocoa remind the friends that they never built a snowman. Back outside they go to enjoy the final hours of their snow day.
This author-illustrator team never disappoints, and their latest creation comes at a perfect time, with 3-6 inches in the forecast here for tomorrow. The rhyming text is simple but catchy, and would be equally fun to listen to or to use for some reading practice, while the simple illustrations perfectly captures the chilly fun of playing in the snow, and the cozy warmth of heading inside.
The Old Sleigh by Jarrett Pumphrey and Jerome Pumphrey (Norton Young Readers, 48 pages, ages 4-8). The Pumphrey brothers are back again with a holiday follow-up to The Old Truck and The Old Boat. The sleigh in this story is used to transport firewood in a small town, a boy and his dad working together to chop it, load the sleigh, and deliver it to the delighted townspeople who use it for warmth and light. But when the town grows, so do the loads of wood until one day, the old sleigh breaks in half. While Dad repairs it, the boy makes his own small sled so that he can continue to bring wood to his favorite customers. Finally, the old sleigh is repaired, and the work continues. The last page shows the old sleigh, now painted the same red as the boy’s sled, with a driver who looks like a grown-up version of the boy, delivering wood in the “small city.”
This deceptively simple story celebrates community, winter, and the circle of life as the town grows, but the boy and his father continue to serve their community, bringing both actual and metaphorical warmth and light with their firewood deliveries. While not specifically a holiday book, this has a definite December vibe, and would make a great gift or read-aloud in the last few weeks of school before vacation.

