Beastly Verse by Johee Yoon

Published by Enchanted Lion Books 

Summary:   16 poems about animals are presented, illustrated with vividly colored prints.  Some poets, such as Lewis Carroll and Ogden Nash, will be familiar to many readers, while others, such as Arthur Waugh and Carolyn Wells, are less well-known.  Some of the pages unfold to reveal even larger illustrations.  48 pages; grades K-4.

Pros: The large square design and brightly colored, busy illustrations will provide an enticing introduction to poetry for young readers.

Cons:  I always enjoy an author’s note explaining the selection of poems, and maybe a description of how the art was produced to complement them.  Other than acknowledgements, there was none of this sort of information.

Forgotten Bones: Uncovering a Slave Cemetery by Lois Miner Huey

Published by Millbrook Press

 

Summary: When construction workers near Albany, New York, dug up a human skull, police, town officials, and archaeologists were all called in. The skull was determined to be over a century old.  Construction was halted, and an archaeological site was set up.  More skeletons were found, indicating a cemetery had been there.  Since there were no markers and it was far away from the main house of the farm that had been there in the 1800’s, the archaeologists were fairly certain it had been a slave cemetery.  This book looks at how scientists, historians, and artists worked together to learn the history of the people who had been buried there, as well as in two other slave cemeteries in New York City and Portsmouth, New Hampshire.  Using clues from the bones, DNA, and artifacts found on or near the bodies, much could be learned about the people, where they came from, what their lives were like, and even what their faces looked like.  Back matter includes an author’s note, glossary, bibliography, and places to visit to learn more.  112 pages; grades 5-7. 

Pros:  A fascinating blend of science and history, covering both the history of slavery in the northern United States, and the science of how the skeletons contributed to this knowledge.

Cons: A picture of a slave being burned alive near the end of the book could be disturbing to some readers.

Hansel & Gretel by Holly Hobbie

Published by Little, Brown

Summary:  Holly Hobbie (yes, children of the 1970’s, that Holly Hobbie) stays close to the original version of this tale.  In an author’s note, she explains how she grew up listening to a recording of the Great Gildersleeve reading the story and imagined pictures to go with it.  Her illustrations portray blonde Germanic-looking children, a pointy-nosed-and- chinned witch, and a classic gingerbread cottage.  Shadows loom in many of the illustrations until the final page when the children and their father are reunited.  32 pages; ages 3-6.

Pros:  The watercolor illustrations are beautiful and will make this classic fairy tale accessible to a new generation.

Cons:  Some of the details of the fairy tale were left out; I always liked how Hansel tricked the witch into thinking a chicken bone was his finger, but that was excluded from this retelling.

 

The National Geographic Book of Nature Poetry edited by J. Patrick Lewis

Published by National Geographic 

Summary: Over 200 poems are paired with nature photographs, arranged in sections about animals, seasons, specific places, and natural disasters. J. Patrick Lewis, former U.S. Children’s Poet Laureate, edited the collection and wrote an introduction about looking at nature and responding to it poetically.  He includes six of his own poems in post-it note form at the end, and an essay on “Who is Mother Nature?” that invites kids to write their own poetic answer to that question.  Also included at the end: a bibliography of children’s books on wordplay in poetry arrange by category (acrostics, anagrams, epitaphs, etc.), and indices by title, poet, first line, and subject.  192 pages; grades K-6.

Pros:  This is a rich collection of poetry by many different writers that invites children to engage in the creative processes of enjoying poetry and creating their own.  Readers will be drawn in by the beautiful, National Geographic quality photographs on every page.

Cons:  It would have been interesting to know a little more about some of the lesser-known poets; at the very least, the year they wrote their poems.

This just in – Newbery, Caldecott, and other award winners

Here’s the link to this year’s winners.  The Newbery winner was a total surprise to me!  What do you think of the selections?

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/american-library-association-announces-2016-youth-media-award-winners-300202055.html

 

My Seneca Village by Marilyn Nelson

Published by Namelos 

Summary:  From 1825 to 1857, Seneca Village in Manhattan was populated by newly-freed African American slaves and immigrants from Ireland and Germany.  The people were poor and life was hard, but there was also celebration, hard work, and hope for the future.  This collection of poems tells the story of those years through the people who lived there.  Each facing page introduces the poem and creates a picture of the person at the moment it is spoken.  Characters are referenced in others’ poems, or come back with their own several years later.  The second to last poem, “The Law of Eminent Domain” quotes the law that ordered the eviction of Seneca Village residents so their land could be used to create Central Park.  The author’s introduction gives the history of Seneca Village; she uses the last few pages to describe the different poetic forms in the book.  87 pages; grades 5 and up.

Pros:  These moving, beautifully crafted poems introduce a little-known chapter in American history.  Footnotes give additional historical context.  The final lines of the last poem bring the inhabitants of Seneca Village into the present:  “I am one who knows that time and we are mist/hiding Light’s ever-changing panorama,/where the future holds a President Obama.”

Cons:  The drab colors of the cover could make this less appealing for young readers to pick up and try.

In! Over! And On! (The Farm) by Ethan Long

Published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers

Summary:  A pig, chicken, goat, and cow explore the concepts of in, out, over, under, around, on, and off in three very short cartoon-style stories.  Each story includes one lift-the-flap.  40 pages; ages 3-6.

Pros:  This would be a fun read-aloud to young children as well as a good first book for emergent readers to try on their own.  The cartoon illustrations are sure to be enjoyed, and lifting the flaps is always fun.  Also a good introduction to the concepts listed above.

Cons:  Those flaps may not survive long if this is a library purchase.

In a Village by the Sea by Muon Van, illustrated by April Chur

Published by Creston Books

 

Summary: In a village by the sea, a woman and her child wait for their fisherman husband/father to return. Near the baby’s cradle is a hole in the wall.  Inside that hole is a cricket who is painting a picture of a fisherman on the sea.  The fisherman in the painting is dreaming about his family at home, waiting for his return.  An author’s note tells about her father, a Vietnamese refugee, who made his living as a fisherman, and her mother, who raised their nine children while he was away.  Ages 4-8.

Pros: A deceptively simple tale that moves inward from the sea to the tiny cricket in the hole then back out again. The illustrations are gorgeous and evoke a feeling of home, while showing details of the Vietnamese culture.  Each picture presents a unique perspective.  The author’s note adds an interesting dimension to the text and illustrations.

Cons:  I didn’t find the cover as appealing as the illustrations, so it took me awhile to get around to reading this book.

Breakthrough! How Three People Saved “Blue Babies” and Changed Medicine Forever by Jim Murphy

Published by Clarion Books

Summary: In November, 1944, Dr. Alfred Blalock made history by performing delicate cardiac surgery on 18-month-old Eileen Saxon, repairing heart defects that had caused her “blue baby syndrome”. Standing beside him was Dr. Helen Taussig, a pediatrician who had worked with blue baby patients for many years before recruiting Dr. Blalock to help her.  Although Blalock received most of the fame and celebrity from this groundbreaking operation, the procedure had been developed and refined by his research assistant, Vivien Thomas.  It would be years before Thomas, who was African American, received any credit for his contributions.  Whether this was because of racism or his position as a research assistant instead of a doctor is unclear, but despite this, Thomas continued his hard work and dedication for many years, training many other surgeons at Johns Hopkins.  In 1971, his work there was recognized when his portrait was hung in Blalock Building alongside other great surgeons from that institution.  Back matter includes extensive source notes, a bibliography, and an index.  130 pages; grades 5-8.

Pros: A fascinating look at medical history and the contributions of three unique and interesting individuals.

Cons:  This could be a hard sell in the middle school community.

Lola Levine Is Not Mean! By Monica Brown, illustrated by Angela Dominguez

Published by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers 

Summary:  Dolores “Lola” Levine is an athletic second grader who loves playing soccer, writing in her diary, and hanging out with her best friend, Josh, who is also the school principal’s son.  When she makes an aggressive play during a recess soccer game, a boy in her class gets hurt, and she is banned from playing soccer.  Worst of all, some of the girls in her class start calling her Mean Lola Levine.  After suffering a few days in silence, Lola confides in her family, and together they figure out a way for Lola to resolve her problems.  96 pages; grades 1-3.

Pros:  With a Jewish father and Peruvian mother, Lola is a multicultural successor to Judy Moody and Junie B. Jones.  She incorporates aspects of both cultures into her strong, feisty personality.

Cons: Not a particularly groundbreaking entry into the early chapter book genre.