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Targhee
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I am hoping to get some suggestions for good picture books! There have been a lot of good read-aloud threads lately, but most all of the suggestions were for chapter books. I love picture books, and even used them (with wonderful reception) with 7th and 9th grade science students when I taught public school. So, what are you favorite picture books (for teaching and for enjoying)?

 

Here are some of mine

For School:

The Lorax (and others) by Dr. Suess - my kids LOVE this (it's read almost every night in our house) ecology and environmental stewardship

The Reason for a Flower (and others) by Ruth Heller - poetic, lovely pictures, and scientifically accurate

If at First You Do Not See by Ruth Brown - perception and perspective (out of print :glare:)

Eats, Shoots & Leaves: why commas really do make a difference by Lynn Truss - a funny way to learn some grammar

What Do You Do With a Tale Like This (and others) by Robin Page - thought-provoking, nice illustrations, introduction to animal adaptations

The Salamander Room by Ann Mazer - wonderful illustrations, habitats

A Log's Life by Wendy Pfeffer - AMAZING illustrations, ecology and habitat

Can You Hear It? by William Larch - pairs fine art with classical music (CD with book) to show how music can be expressive and create imagery

 

 

For the Joy of it:

Roxaboxen by Alice Mclerran

Flotsam (and others) by David Wiesner

Where the Wild Things Are (and others) by Maurice Sendak

Blueberries for Sal (and others) by Robert McCloskey

The Gruffalo by Julia Donaldson

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I love Blueberries for Sal, too. Some of our other favorite fun picture books...

 

If you Give a Mouse a Cookie

If you Give a Moose a Muffin

The Clown Around's

Henry's Awful Mistake

Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day

 

I'm sure there's more, but these are the one that come to mind quickly.

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Bartholomew and the Oobleck (and most everything by Dr. Seuss)

Little One by Ann Rand

The Giant Jam Sandwich

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs

Owen by Kevin Henkes

anything by Mo Willems (Knuffle Bunny or Leonardo, the Terrible Monster especially)

The Snowy Day

How to Bake an Apple Pie and See the World

The Lois Lenski "small books"

 

There are more, but of course I can't think of them.

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I'm a picture book junkie, I don't know what I will do when my kids are all too old for them.

 

Our favorites:

 

Virginia Lee Burton's books- Mike Mulligan, Katy and the Big Snow, The Little House, etc.

 

Any of Tomi dePaola's books- The Clown of God, Strega Nona

 

Elsa Beskow- these have the most beautiful illustrations, we like Around the Year; it's a collection of poems about the months, seasons, etc.

 

Most of Jan Brett's books are good

 

Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendack

 

Harry the Dirty Dog and the other Harry stories (No Roses for Harry, Harry by the Sea).

 

Corduroy by Don Freeman

 

The Complete Adventures of Curious George

 

Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus by Mo Willems

 

Kitten's First Full Moon by Kevin Henkes

 

A Very Special House by Ruth Krauss

 

Anything Lois Ehlert- Snowballs, Leafman, Growing Vegetable Soup, Feathers for Lunch, Waiting for Wings.

 

Olivia

 

Old Mother West Wind by Thornton Burgess, the one with illustrations by Michael Hague is great.

 

On Market Street by Anita and Arnold Lobel

 

Anything Richard Scarry

 

Horton Hears a Who

 

Beatrix Potter

 

James Herriot's Treasury for Children

 

Winnie the Pooh

 

The Story of Ferdinand

 

The Story about Ping

 

Anything Robert McCloskey

 

Harold and the Purple Crayon

 

When I was Young in the Mountains by Cynthia Rylant

 

For longer picture books, we like Chris Van Allsburg (Two Bad Ants, Zathura)

 

How My Parents Learned to Eat

 

A Prairie Boy's Winter by William Kurulek

 

 

And so many more that I'm forgetting, I feel so lucky to live in a time when beautiful children's books are available in abundance.

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I have toddlers at my house, so these are some of our favorites:

 

How Do Dinasours Say Goodnight? (love the beautiful illustrations and the

names of the dinos imbedded in the picture)

 

My Dad! by Charles Fuge (big illustrations and a cute story line)

 

Llama Llama Red Pajama by Anna Dewdney (love the illustrations and the creative story)

 

Madeline by Ludwig Bemelmans (the girls have this memorized:001_smile: but older kids could look at the landmarks painted by Belemans and compare to actual pictures--might be fun)

 

A Bad Case of Stripes by David Shannon (beautiful illustrations as well as a lesson about peer pressure)

 

Of course, there are many others but these are the ones lying on the floor right now:)

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"Old Turtle"--save the earth. Didn't read this to DD when she was very young, though, because it had a metaphor that was confusing for a Christian home.

 

"Grandpa Bear's Fantastic Scarf"--About what makes up a life. Some things you accept because they are dealt to you, and others you choose. How those combine can make a life of beauty or one of misery, and your choices influence this a lot.

 

"The Lorax" for the reasons you mentioned.

 

"The Sneetches"--anti racist. Have to say, though, that now when I read it I find it a bit condescending in its attitude toward the 'lessor' race. Still it's a great book.

 

"Horton Hears a Who"--A person's a person, no matter how small.

 

"Warm as Wool"--pioneer life, and how woolen clothes are made from sheep to garment.

 

"Anna Needs a Coat"--life after WWII in Europe--the barter economy, the bombed out homes, the lack of funds. Trading family heirlooms for cloth for a coat for your daughter...

 

"What Did Jesus Do?" There are two books that begin with this title. I wish that there had been more in the series. Each book has two stories--a Bible story embedded in a life application of it. These are contemporary and quite well-written for maybe ages 6-10.

 

"The Very First...Easter, Christmas, Christians" by Paul Maier. Great and beautifully illustrated. Works for older kids as well.

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My best ever favourite was an old thing my grandmother picked up from an op shop: "What Happened After." What happened after the nursery rhyme ended, that is.

 

The prettiest picture book I've ever seen is:

http://www.amazon.com/Fabrics-Fairytale-Tanya-Robyn-Batt/dp/184686089X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1211589795&sr=8-1

 

The "I always wanted but no one ever bought it for me" books were Percy Trezize and Dick Roughsey's aboriginal stories. Turramulli and the Giant Quinkin was my favourite, closely followed by The Rainbow Serpent.

 

:)

Rosie- who loves picture books!

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One that makes me cry, one that calms my heart, one that fills me with joy--

 

All Those Secrets of the World

It's about a child whose dad goes off to war. I reread it when ds was in residential treatment--it has a line about things that are far away looking small, and they look bigger when they are nearer--that's why the kids looked bigger when the dad came home.

 

Only the Cat Saw

About a sweet young family--has a pic of mama nursing in the middle of the night--only the cat saw...then two page spreads of what the cat saw--gorgeous!

 

What Newt Could Do For Turtle

Oh, what a sweet friendship book! Truly dear, great pictures, happy and kind.

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Paul O. Zelinsky has done beautiful versions of Rumpelstiltskin (sp?) and Rapunzel

 

Molly Lou Melon - about the beauty of being different

 

Seven Silly Eaters - a large family of picky eaters that appears to be homeschooled

 

Norman the Doorman by Don Freeman - the mouse doorman at the Art Museum enters a scupture in the annual contest and wins

 

Great thread!

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We LOVE picture books here. Here is a list of some of our favourites:

 

Isadora Dances by Rachel Isadora. Story about Isadora Duncan

 

A Place Where Sunflowers Grow by Amy Lee-Tai--japanese internment camp during WWII

 

Apples to Oregon by Deborah Hopkinson

 

Sky Boys by Deborah Hopkinson--how they built the Empire state building

 

The White Cat by Robert D. San Souci

 

Hear, Hear Mr. Shakespeare by Bruce Koscielniak

 

All the World's a Stage by Rebecca Davidson--Shakespeare

 

Pig on the Titanic by Gary Crew

 

Mom and Dad are Palindromes by Mark Shulman

 

A Drop Around the World by Barbara Shaw McKinney

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I LOVE PICTURE BOOKS!!!

I kid you not that of my personal library of 5000+ books, about a thousand of them are picture books.

 

My favorites are rhyming books :-)

 

Clap Your Hands, Graeme Base books, and richly illustrated children's poetry books [esp Midnight Ride of Paul Revere and The Raven].

 

My Very Favorite Picture Book is one called William Tell by Terry Small --it just BEGS to be read aloud!!!

 

Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain, kapok Tree, The True Story of the Three Little Pigs, and Robert McCloskey books are staples here.

 

Counting picture Books that go to at least twenty are another obsession: the bug, butterflies, and bird ones are great. The best ones -IMNSHO- include an element of academia to them: science, artists, history, etc.

 

Mustn't forget the math picture books! m&m's! cheerios! hershy fractions! yum!

The Sir Cumference series is HILARIOUS!

I also remember a book about a ...civil war? ... battle. It is told by kids who are remembering their grandfather recounting the story of a battle fought on his farm. You see the blurred battle scenes in the cloud formations --neat effect.

 

Another one was about another battle: again, i don't remember if it was the revolutionary war or civil war, but in the book, the kid drummer boy gets SHOT and falls down dead [boy was I mad!!!], only to turn the page and he gets up....as a participant in a re-enactment. {whew!}.

 

those are the top-of-my-head ones......

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We use a ton of picture books at all ages and I still love them, myself! I can't quite recall which ones are the best in looking through my lists, but I've included some from our Ancients reading (and hopefully I haven't messed up on any of these):

 

Archaeologists Dig for Clues, Duke

I can be an Archaeologist, Pickering

One Small Bead, Baylor

Seeker of Knowledge: The Man Who Deciphered Egyptian Hieroglyphs, Rumford

Mummies Made in Egypt, Aliki

Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt

Mysterious Places of the Mediterranean

Greek Myths, McCaughrean

all the Gilgamesh books, Zeman

Black Ships Before Troy

Myths and Civilization of Ancient Greeks

Greek Gods and Goddesses, McCaughrean

DK’s Great Wonders of the Ancient World

D’Aulaire Greek Mythology (and Norse)

The Wanderings of Odysseus, Sutcliff

Odyssey, McCaughrean

One Grain of Rice

Buddha, Demi

Buddha Stories, Demi

Myths and Civilization of the Ancient Celts

Myths and Civilization of the Ancient Romans

Cleopatra, Stanley

Behold the Trees

Demi has out a ton of books about the Orient and they are all beautiful....

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Just a few ...

 

For the younger crowd: The George and Martha books by James Marshall

 

Grandfather Twilight by Barbara Helen Berger

 

For older children including teens: The High Rise Glorious Skittle Skat Roarious Sky Pie Angel Food Cake by Nancy Willard

 

Regards,

Kareni

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I love picture books. I hope I'm never too old for them, lol.

 

I love Sandra Boynton's books, esp. Blue Hat, Green Hat. And Moo, Baa, La, La, La.

 

Some of my favorites when I was a kid:

Ma Lien and the Magic Brush by Hisako Kimishima

The King and the Whirlybird by Mabel Watts

Pretty much any & all Richard Scarry books

Harry the Dirty Dog by Gene Zion

Miss Nelson is Missing! by Harry Allard (alas, my dc don't even like this book!)

 

Other faves:

Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss (great read aloud)

The Mitten by Jan Brett

Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown

A Porcupine Named Fluffy by Helen Lester

Do The Good Times Travel Agency books (by Linda Bailey) count as picture books?

The Tomb of the Boy King by John Frank

 

A lot of the Angelina Ballerina hardback books (the original ones, I guess, not the newer paperback versions) have lovely, lovely illustrations.

 

I know there are a ton more that I'm not thinking about right now....

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No one's mentioned William Joyce yet.

 

I think I love all his books and the illustrations are great. We enjoyed reading and seeing the movie about the Robinson's (movie and book had different titles).

 

And one of my favorite christmas books is Santa Calls.

 

And the really little ones like the Rolie Polie Olie books!

 

And don't forget George Shrinks, which is how we discovered William Joyce in the first place - from the pbs show!

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My dds just for fun top picks are:

 

Dogger by Shirley Hughes

 

Fritz and the Beautiful Horses by Jan Brett

 

The Little House by Virginia Lee Burton

 

Caps for Sale by Esphyr Slobodkina

 

Mog Stories by Judith Kerr

 

Katy No Pocket by Emmy Payne

 

For learning about art we've really enjoyed:

Katie meets the Impressionists and other Katie books by James Mayhew

 

For slightly older children the Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers by Mike Venezia. I know that some people don't like the cartoons, but my 8yo dd thinks they are fun.

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Authors:

 

Virginia Lee Burton (anything, but my favorite is The Little House)

 

Leo Lionni (except Frederick)

 

Uri Shulevitz (anything, but my favorite is The Treasure)

 

Frank Asch

 

Bill Peet

 

Beatrix Potter

 

Jan Brett (I like some much more than others -- I really like Town Mouse Country Mouse and Gingerbread Baby) Nice art work.

 

Janet Stevens (Tops and Bottoms, And the Dish Ran Away with the Spoon)

 

Dr. Seuss

 

Lois Lenski's "Mr. Small" books

 

Richard Scarry

 

Paul Galdone

 

 

Individual Titles

 

Owl Babies (Martin Waddell)

 

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See (Bill Martin Jr.)

 

Chicken Soup with Rice: A Book of Months (Maurice Sendak)

 

Caps for Sale (Esphyr Slobodkina)

 

There's an Alligator Under My Bed (Mercer Mayer)

 

Old Hat, New Hat (Stan and Jan Berenstain)

 

Hand, Hand, Fingers, Thumb (Al Perkins)

 

Miss Spider's Tea Party (David Kirk) This is such a fun book to read aloud. I don't bother with the rest in the series, though Little Miss Spider is great to read to adopted children).

 

The Lorax (Dr. Seuss) [One of my favorite books to read aloud.]

 

Anansi stories

 

Millions of Cats (Wanda Gag)

 

The Napping House (Audrey Wood)

 

The Wolf's Chicken Stew (Keiko Kasza)

 

Stone Soup (many authors)

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I like the FIAR and similar lists.

 

When looking for picture books at the libarary, I "browse the spines" looking for the little stickers that indicate if a book is an award winner of some type.

In general, I go for reading lots and lots of picture books versus hoping to find just the gems. I check out more picture books than I expect to read. I then pre-read them at home before reading them aloud to my kids.

 

Here are some books that I stumbled across at the library that I don't hear others mention, yet struck a cord with me for their gentle handling of difficult subjects:

 

"The Other Side" by Jacqueline Woodson and E. B. Lewis

A lovely book about a friendship that breaks a racial boundry.

 

"Tomas and the Library Lady" by Pat Mora and Raul Colon

A true story about Tomas Rivera and the library lady who

helped him to love books. The book is a snapshot of his

childhood as a migrant worker, but the author's note at the end

explains how he grew up to be a university chancellor.

 

"The Lotus Seed" by Sherry Garland and Tatsuro Kiuc

Historical fiction, a multi-generational story about a

Vietnamese girl who flees Vietnam for America.

 

"Marvelous Mattie" by Emily Arnold McCully

A biography of "The Lady Edison". A great book for budding inventors and discussions about life in the 19th century.

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The King of the Golden River - John Ruskin

Miss Rumphius - Barbara Cooney

CDC? - William Steig

Little Tim and the Brave Sea Captain - Edward Ardizzone

Something From Nothing - Phoebe Gilman

 

authors: Jill Barklem

Graham Oakley

Robert McCloskey (esp. Burt Dow Deep Water Man)

Jim Arnosky (esp. Crinkleroot)

Max Lucado

Richard Scarry

Jan Brett

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The Little House by Virginia Lee Burton

Miss Rumphius by Barbara Clooney

Papa Piccolo by Carol Talley

 

I'm so grateful to Five in a Row for sparking in me a love for children's literature.

 

Katy and the Big Snow by Burton

The Funny Thing and Millions of Cats

Part-Time Dog

Time of Wonder

The Napping House

Mr. Putter and Tabby

Two OOP: One Horse Farm and The Outside Cat

Petunia

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Some of our favorite (humorous) picture books include:

 

Duck on a Bike, David Shannon

No, David!, David Shannon

How I Became a Pirate, Melinda Long

How Do Dinosaurs Say Goodnight?, Jane Yolen

Knuffle Bunny, Mo Willems (this is our toddler's current favorite)

Click, Clack, Moo, Doreen Cronin

Bear Snores On, Karma Wilson

 

Nap in a Lap, Sarah Wilson (another cute one for littles)

The Story About Ping, Marjorie Flack

The Diggingest Dog, Al Perkins

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