Have you noticed that children’s books aren’t just for children? As I add books to my pop-up bookshop, I am drawn to books that are about speaking up, making a difference, and following your dreams. Wouldn’t you know that as I reimagine my business, I have been taking courses, listening to podcasts, and reading books about these very things. We’re all just kids still figuring out how to make those dreams come true, aren’t we? As a young girl I devoured books and wrote stories and poems. In college I became an English major (many books and much writing), and in grad school I pursued a graduate degree in Education (loved all subjects but especially all things literacy). As a classroom teacher for 12 years I became a coach and mentor working to make sure my quiet students were heard, that all students discovered their strengths and especially their voice during our writers’ workshop. Publishing my students’ stories and hosting an annual Authors’ Tea for families was my delight. It was always a magical night! After my first son was diagnosed with Cornelia deLange Syndrome, I pivoted from classroom teaching to leading writing workshops, camps, story times with my son tagging along, and selling children’s books…always celebrating the stories that connect us and the power of words to effect change. It turns out that my son, Benjamin, has extremely limited speech due to apraxia. His brain is unable to make and deliver correct movement directions to his lips, jaw, and tongue. Thankfully he is able to say “mom” and “dad” along with “hi” and “bye”! He is able to communicate his wants and needs by using a speech app on an iPad, and that has made all the difference. And believe me, he has found his voice! So with this importance of voice in my own life, how delighted I was to discover the amazing books, Say Something and Find Your Voice! Say Something was written and illustrated by Peter H. Reynolds for young children. It opens with “The world needs your voice.” I just love that. And there are so many ways to say something. It doesn’t have to be with words! A diverse group of children show that you can say something with a paintbrush, with planting seeds in an empty lot, writing a poem, sharing your brilliant idea, and speaking out about injustice. Whether just one person listens or the whole world pays attention, keep sharing what is in your heart, says Reynolds. This book is perfect for children ages 3 to 8, but I know a few adults would benefit from hearing the words, as well!
Find Your Voice: A Guided Journal for Writing Your Truth was written by Angie Thomas, the author of the incredible YA novel The Hate U Give! She shares so many truths with aspiring young writers in just the first few pages: “Practice makes greatness.” “If you write, then you’re a writer with a capital W.” “The desire to tell the story has to outweigh the fear.” Solid gold for young and not-so-young aspiring writers! Thomas also gets practical and specific with sections on character, setting, dialogue, problems, story structure, subplots, and more. This journal is perfect for youth age 10 and above. There are exercises throughout with plenty of space for writing. Thomas shared a powerful story in The Hate U Give and is lighting the way for others to follow in her footsteps with this inspiring and practical guided journal. I highly recommend it! Purchase Say Something from Bookshop Purchase Say Something from Amazon Purchase Find Your Voice from Bookshop Purchase Find Your Voice from Amazon Disclosure: For your convenience, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase items through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.
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There is so much to love about these books! As we celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month (which should be celebrated every month IMO) and prepare to vote in our local, state, and national elections we can share history and empowering fiction with our children! 📚 Equality’s Call is about the history of voting rights in America written in rhyming text by Deborah Diesen. I love the powerful illustrations by Magdalena Mora. The preface, endnotes, and glossary will help with a deeper dive into history. My fifth grader enjoyed this as a read aloud since it included more detailed information. I’m a big fan of sharing picture books with older kids! 📚 Separate is Never Equal is such an informative, important book about the fight for desegregation in California by the Mendez family. Duncan Tonatiuh is a fabulous author and incredible illustrator. I look forward to checking out his other books! This story is so detailed and rich. I love that it includes a glossary and photos of the families involved in this historic moment in our nation’s history! 📚 Last but not least is the inspiring story of Sofia Valdez, Future Prez written by Andrea Beaty and illustrated by David Roberts. Sofia and her Abuelo encounter a problem in their neighborhood that Sofia decides to change. She takes her idea all the way to city hall, not without a little trepidation. The run around she gets at city hall will sound familiar to anyone who has tried to create change at the local level. Sofia’s determination and coalition building are a great example to encourage change makers in our communities! Purchase from Bookshop Disclosure: For your convenience, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase items through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. Interest Level: 3 to 8 years Author: Britney Winn Lee Illustrator: Jacob Souva Publisher: Beaming Books, 2019 Retail: $17.99 Are you raising or teaching a child with big feelings? The Boy with Big, Big Feelings is such a great book and is a great way to start a conversation to validate all the feelings our young ones experience! As a sensitive mom herself to two boys with sensory processing disorder (SPD) and social anxiety, I definitely recognized familiar scenes in this sweet book. It features a sensitive little boy whose feelings are so big that they show up in his body. The shadows at night, the rumble of a truck, or a change in plans lead to big emotions. The boy in the book even feels the feelings of those around him, something my now ten-year-old recently shared happens to him. One day on the playground the boy meets a friend who feels things a little extra big, too. In sharing their big hearts, they also discover that other children experience big emotions and that feelings aren’t meant to be hidden away. Beaming Books shares six ways to help little ones with big feelings: *Celebrate Sensitivity *Rehearse Transitions *Give Language *Stay Steady *Maintain Boundaries *Discuss Your Feelings, too. Purchase from Bookshop Purchase from Amazon Disclosure: For your convenience, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase items through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. The storyline in The Boy With Big, Big Feelings reminds me in many ways of one of my favorite books from Barefoot Books, The Boy Who Grew Flowers! Rink Bowagon is a shy boy who has a very unique talent of sprouting flowers all over his body whenever there is a full moon. Because he is shy and different, his horrible teacher puts him at the back of the room and his classmates ignore him. One day a new girl joins the class, and Rink's life is changed forever. I won't give the story away but will say that it melts my heart each time I read it. The new girl, Angelina Quiz not only has one leg shorter than the other but also holds a secret that deepens their friendship that much more. At the time I first read this story my oldest son had been recently diagnosed with a genetic syndrome called Cornelia deLange Syndrome or CdLS. We didn't know anything about CdLS but first impressions from the research showed a life of challenges and a grim prognosis. Though our little boy was born "different" from most, we loved him unconditionally as our little Benjamin. It was worrisome to think that he would grow up in a world where people wouldn't love and care for him the way we did. Reading The Boy Who Grew Flowers brought so many tears as Rink's differences are embraced by a new friend. It melted my heart and will always be one of my favorites. When I learned that the author, Jen Wojtowicz, wrote it in recognition of her brother who has autism, it meant even more. Jen is an artist who happens to write and teaches artists who also happen to have disabilities. I am so grateful she created this beautiful, well-written story and that Steve Adams brought it to life with his dreamy illustrations. I am also incredibly grateful to have met many people over the past 14 years who embrace our joyful, unique son, Benjamin, and see him and not his disabilities first. He is Benjamin who happens to have CdLS. Interest level: Ages 4 - 8 years Author: Meera Sriram Illustrator: Mariona Cabassa Publisher: Barefoot Books, 2020 Retail: $16.99 & $8.99 (also available in Spanish) Have you ever searched for the perfect gift for your mother? In A Gift for Amma a young girl visits an Indian market in search of the perfect gift for her Amma. As she travels from stall to stall she discovers a rainbow of colors: saffron orange, jasmine white, lotus pink, peacock green, vermilion red, and more. The way Meera Sriram describes the sights, sounds, and smells of the market transports the reader. If you are a cook, you will especially love the pages of saffron, mint, coriander, sweetcorn, kebabs, turmeric, sweets, and tea. Mariona Cabassa's illustrations are vibrant and offer a sensory feast. The peacock page just might be my favorite. The richness and design lines repeated in the peacock feathers and herb leaves is so soothing to the eye. This book includes endnotes that further describe the items you might find at a market in the author's hometown of Chennai and introduces markets around the world! The real treat for me was discovering a page of photographs at. the end of this beautiful book featuring the author with her Amma and the actual market she visited. In her dedication the author honors her Amma's gentle strength. I feel the combination of descriptive text and gorgeous illustrations create a book with gentle strength, as well. I highly recommend it as a wonderful Own Voices addition to your home or classroom library. Purchase from Barefoot Books Disclosure: For your convenience, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase items through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. Interest Level: Ages 2-100! Author and Illustrator: Innosanto Nagara Publisher: Triangle Square, 2013 Retail: $10.99 board book Purchase from Bookshop Purchase from Amazon Are you an activist? If you are, you will love A is for Activist! This little board book packs a progressive punch! It's an alphabet book, a call to action, and a call to unite in the fight for social justice, climate justice, and more. The illustrations are powerful and include folks young and old from all walks of life. You'll recognize activists from different movements (Cesar Chavez, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr.) and young ones will get to search for the cat hidden on each page. One of my favorite pages celebrates our diversity. Disclosure: For your convenience, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase items through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.
Dance Like a Leaf arrived recently and I am head over heels! The poetic descriptions by A.J. Irving and rich illustrations by Claudia Navarro are almost too much for me. This tale of relationship, loss, and celebrating memories touches your heart and stirs up all the feels. The sensory images of sipping tea, wearing scarves, and dancing like leaves capture the closeness between a little girl and her grandmother. It is a precious introduction to talk about the difficult topic of death with young children, but also how we might honor our loved ones and celebrate their memory. Recommended for ages 4-8 years. Available from independent publisher of the most gorgeous books, Barefoot Books! I have been thinking about my grandmothers and know I’m lucky to have been close to them all. I especially cherish spending the last chapters of my Grandma Pat’s 100 years getting to visit each week. I remember red lipstick, smoky afghans, white carpets, the clip, clip, clip of coupons, orange fish swimming on the walls, and the most joyful laugh I think I’ve ever heard. Angie, Virginia, Patricia, you are the angels I summon when I need a light to find my way. Dance Like a Leaf will touch all who read it, and how lovely to have it available in Spanish and French editions. Thank you, Barefoot Books! Disclosure: For your convenience, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase items through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. Do you want to raise children who believe their ideas and actions can make a difference in this world? If so, you will love my featured books today! Kamala and Maya’s Big Idea features Kamala Harris and her sister, Maya, when they were young and is based on a true story. The story is retold by Kamala’s niece, Meena Harris. In the book the girls have an idea to turn the empty lot near their apartment into a playground. They show persistence, learn to advocate with spoken and written words, and gather allies, as they work towards their goal. In spite of disappointments they persist and problem solve one step at a time with and without the adults in their lives. The dialogue, simple language, and bits of repetition make this story accessible to read independently for ages 6-8 and fun as a read aloud for ages 3 and above. My favorite line from the book was: “No one could do everything. But everyone could do something.” The illustrations by Ana Ramirez Gonzalez are colorful and cheerful. I enjoyed learning that Ana grew up in Guanajuato, Mexico and lives in Oakland, California. She worked on the movie, Coco, and illustrated the companion picture book Coco: Miguel and the Grand Harmony by Matt de la Pena. The last pages of the book include an author’s note and photographs of the girls. This is a wonderful story celebrating girl power and the strength of community. I recommend it as an addition to your home or classroom library. This would make an excellent gift especially at this historic moment of Senator Kamala Harris being the Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States. Disclosure: For your convenience, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase items through these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you. Purchase from Bookshop Purchase from Amazon When I first read Kamala and Maya’s Big Idea I immediately thought of the book, The More We Get Together, written by Celeste Cortright and illustrated by Betania Zacarias. Cortright cleverly takes a traditional sing along and creates a rhyming, lighthearted call to action for young people and their families. When we use alternative modes of transportation, help others, recycle, and speak up about things we want to change, we can make the world a better place. The four pages of endnotes share specific ways kids can make a difference and participate in community building and teamwork. The colorful illustrations are inviting for young children. Children will recognize themselves in this book as it is both racially diverse and inclusive of different abilities. The book includes a man with a visual impairment being assisted by his guide dog, a boy wearing noise canceling headphones, a boy with a prosthetic leg, a doctor using crutches, and folks using wheelchairs. Men cook, women do yard work, and children take action to make their community a better place for all! And here’s an extra fun addition…there’s an animal that appears throughout the book that little ones can try to find. I highly recommend this engaging, vibrant sing along from Barefoot Books for ages 2-6. The addition of the endnotes make it a great gift for siblings. Beyond the Books Discussion Questions (recommended for ages 4 and above):
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About the Author
I am a mom to two sweet and lively boys and live in Santa Barbara, California. My oldest has Cornelia deLange Syndrome. He fuels my passion for advocating for equity and inclusion wherever I go. I love the power of a good story to inspire, educate, and make change in our world. Archives
April 2022
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