One Riddle, One Answer

Children's Book - One Riddle, One Answer

Published: 2001 Theme: Math Riddle Best for: 5 to 8 "Aziza learned all there was to know. But her favorite subject was numbers. And her favorite game was riddles." This is a simple and enjoyable way to present numbers and riddles to young children who are already showing signs up interest in numbers.

Blockhead – The Life of Fibonacci

Children's Book - Blockhead,

Published: 2010 Theme: Math Biography Best for: 6 to 9 "You can call me Blockhead. Everyone else does. One day when I was just a boy, Maestro wrote out a math problem and gave us ten minutes to solve it. I solved it in two seconds." If you have any young children who love numbers, this is definitely a children's book they should read - a superb biography about Fibonacci.

The Most Magnificent Thing

Children's book

Published: 2014 Theme: Perseverance Best for: 5 to 8 "This is a regular girl and her best friend in the whole wide world. They do all kinds of things together. They race. They eat. They explore. They relax..." Right from the opening lines, you fall in love with this nameless little girl and her best friend, a very quirky looking dog ...

Fairy Haven and the Quest for the Wand

Children's Book: Fairy Haven and the Quest for the Wand

Published: 2007 Theme: Contentment Best for: 5 to 8 "After drying her eyes on a leafkerchief, Rani kicked off her sensible walking shoes and slipped into the lagoon. of all the fairies, Rani was the only one who could swim, and that was because she had no wings to drag her under." A true fairy tale about fairies, by a great children's author, alas, co-opted by Disney, which means dreadful illustrations, but the story and writing are excellent.

The King’s Equal

Illustrated Children's Book: The King's Equal

Published: 1992 Theme: Equality in Relationships Best for: 5 and up "You will become ruler when I die," the old king said, "for that is the ancient law that cannot be changed. But you will not wear my crown until the day you marry a woman who is your equal in beauty and intelligence and wealth." This story has all the classical elements of a great fairy tale: an impoverished girl, tending her goats, who outsmarts a conceited prince, and in the end, rules happily ever after.

Smarty Marty’s Got Game

Children's Book - Smarty Marty's Got Game

Published: 2013 Theme: Baseball Best for: 5 to 8 "Marty got her love of baseball from her Great Grandma Martha (Gigi), who loved baseball more than anything. Gigi followed the game faithfully and even kept her own scorebook. She taught Marty everything she knew." This children's book is all heart, even as it goes about its mission of explaining the rules of baseball to young boys and girls...

The Fortune Tellers

Children's Book: The Fortune Tellers

Published: 1992 Theme: Folk Tale Best for: 5 to 8 "Rich you will surely be," answered the fortune-teller, staring into the crystal ball on the table. "On one condition: that you earn large sums of money." In this beautifully illustrated children's book, we laugh aloud as a naive man becomes a fortune teller. The illustrations of Africa are superb.

Miss Rumphius

Miss Rumphius - Children's book

Published: 1982 Theme: Beauty in Simplicity Best for: ages 5 to 8 "There is still one more thing I have to do," she said, "I have to do something to make the world more beautiful. But what?" How wonderful to find an illustrated children's book where the story itself is as important as the pictures...

We Need A Horse

We Need a Horse - children's book

Published: 2011 Theme: Value Yourself Best for: 5 and up "The horse already had a question prepared. He shuffled his feet on the ground and said, 'What is the reason I was made a horse and not some other animal?" The light said, 'Because we needed another horse." In this exquisitely painted and carefully crafted children's book, the essential question of life is asked and answered.

Emily Dickinson

Children's Book - Emily Dickinson

Published: 1994 Theme: Poetry Best for: all ages "Hope is the thing with feathers/ That perches in the soul,/ And sings the tune without the words,/ And never stops at all" Do our children today love poetry? Can they tune into the subtle way that the poetic verse touches something outside the mundane? This children's book asserts an affirmative...