Let’s take a look at the 2026 Boston Globe/Horn Book Awards!

The 2026 Boston Globe/Horn Book Awards were announced on June 15, and I was thrilled that Nicholas Day won the nonfiction award for A World Without Summer, and Julie Leung and Angie Kang won the picture book category for Navigating Night. The fiction award went to Lisa Greenwald’s A Scar Like a River, which I am hoping to get to before the summer is over. I’ve read a couple of the honor books, but I hadn’t heard about these two.

The Great Frog by Katie Palazzola (Neal Porter Books, 40 pages, ages 4-8). Two siblings contemplate a blob of frog eggs; younger brother Peedie wants to stay outside and watch over them while his sister Kit knows that it’s time to go inside. “But don’t worry,” she tells him. “The Great Frog will take care of the eggs.” When they return, the eggs have hatched into tadpoles, and Kit expands on the Great Frog story. He rides a horse named Tarnation and lives in a moon castle in the sky. Still later, the tadpoles have grown legs, and Kit predicts the Great Frog will arrive to choose his successor in another week. But when the day arrives, Kit admits to Peedie that she made the whole thing up. Peedie takes it in stride, understanding the importance of stories, and the two agree to be looker-afters, just like the Great Frog. Includes information on the frog’s life cycle, a list of websites to learn more, and an author’s note encouraging readers to dream and have big ideas.

This quirky debut picture book celebrates stories and sibling relationships, mixed in with a bit of scientific information. Kit and Peedie have a warm and understanding relationship, and readers may be inspired to become looker-afters of the natural world themselves.

When Beavers Move In by Alison Pearce Stevens, illustrated by Natasha Donovan (Godwin Books, 48 pages, grades K-3). When beavers more into areas populated by humans, they can be a nuisance and cause flooding, leading humans to kill the beavers. But the Tulalip Tribes of Washington State take a different approach. When they’re called in to help, members of the tribe trap the beavers and move them to their tribal land. High up in the mountains, the beavers cut down trees and build dams, starting a chain of events that increases fish populations, creates a wetland, and ultimately, helps protect land from forest fires. Includes an author’s note with additional information about beavers and the Tulalip Tribes’ beaver project, including ways readers can help.

This excellent nonfiction picture books emphasizes ways to create balance in nature, allowing beavers to improve land in a way that doesn’t harm humans, and celebrates Indigenous methods of land management. It would make an excellent companion to Kristen Tracy’s 2024 picture book When Beavers Flew.