Tag Archives: Book Recommendation

15 Dance Picture Books

Katie Merkel

Hello everyone!

I love to dance! There is something deeply satisfying about moving in time to the music and expressing the emotion of a song through movement.

These fifteen dance picture books celebrate the joy of dancing, and I hope they inspire you and your young readers to get up and dance. At the end of the post are dance-themed coloring pages, crafts, and YouTube dance tutorials. The dance video sections for ballet, hip-hop, and tap have lessons and/or dances for every age from toddlers through 5th graders. The miscellaneous dance video section contains individual dances or dance routines that are appropriate for specific age groups.

No matter what style of dance you love, free style it and explore a new form. Break it down, hip and hop, tap your feet, clap your hands, and let the books move you to express yourself through dance!

Book Recommendations

Barnyard Dance

Barnyard Dance by Sandra Boynton has a rhyming text that is reminiscent of square-dance calling but with animal dancers and some animal movements.

Rap A Tap Tap: Here's Bojangles - Think of That!

Rap A Tap Tap: Here’s Bojangles – Think of That! by Leo and Diane Dillon tells about a man who is always tap dancing. It shows him dancing through the streets, past people, and on stage. At the end of the book, the man’s name, Bojangles, is revealed. The final page has an afterward with historical information about Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, who was one of, if not the greatest, tap dancers of all time.

Clap Your Hands

Clap Your Hands by Lorinda Bryan Cauley has a rhyming text that tells the characters in the book to move different ways and make different types of faces and sounds. For added fun, you can have kids follow the directions along with the book’s characters.

Hip-Hop Lollipop

Hip-Hop Lollipop by Susan Montanari is about a girl named Lollie who loves to dance hip-hop. Her parents tell her to stop dancing and go to bed, but Lollie keeps dancing. She dances with her sister; she dances while brushing her teeth; and when she’s finally in bed, Lollie dreams of dancing hip-hop.

I Got the Rhythm

I Got the Rhythm by Connie Schofield-Morrison, illustrated by Frank Morrison is about having the rhythm. The book starts with the protagonist thinking the rhythm. Then she experiences the rhythm with her senses and starts to express it with different parts of her body. Finally, she is expressing the rhythm with her entire body and full-out dancing. The final line of the book (“I got the rhythm and you can too.”) encourages the reader to move and dance as well.

Kitchen Dance

Kitchen Dance by Maurie J. Manning is about a young girl who hears noises coming from the kitchen and together with her brother discovers that their parents are dancing and singing while cleaning up from dinner. When their parents catch them spying in the doorway, they bring their children into the kitchen, and the entire family sings and dances together. This book is a beautiful reminder that even the most mundane tasks can be used to bond as a family.

How Do You Dance?

How Do You Dance? by Thyra Heder is more or less the dance version of Green Eggs and Ham. The text is a conversation between an unseen voice and the protagonist, who claims that he doesn’t dance. As the unseen voice lists many of the ways that people dance, the illustrations show those movements, and the protagonist’s reaction to a lot of the dancing. The book ends with the protagonist finally revealing how he dances.

Zoogie Boogie Fever!: An Animal Dance Book

Zoogie Boogie Fever!: An Animal Dance Book by Sujean Rim reveals the secret as to why zoo animals always seem to be tired during zoo visiting hours: they spend the whole night dancing! A little red bird is the reader’s guide through a typical night of dancing at the zoo. Enjoy the book, but as the little bird reminds the reader, the dancing is a secret, so “Don’t. Tell. Anyone.”

Hilda Must Be Dancing

Hilda Must Be Dancing? by Karma Wilson, illustrated by Suzanne Watts is about a hippopotamus named Hilda who loves to dance, but whose friends dislike her dancing because it is very loud and creates a mess in the jungle. Her friends suggest different hobbies for her to try instead of dancing, but Hilda doesn’t like any of them and keeps dancing. At last, they suggest a hobby that Hilda loves and is able to combine with dancing. The result is a quiet form of dance that does not create a mess, and that both Hilda and her friends can enjoy.

Giraffes Can't Dance

Giraffes Can’t Dance by Giles Andreae, illustrated by Guy Parker-Rees is about a clumsy giraffe named Gerald. At the annual Jungle Dance, when Gerald steps onto the dance floor, the other animals make fun of him and tell him he can’t dance. When Gerald leaves, a cricket tells him that different people need different types of music and encourages Gerald to listen to the music in nature. Gerald does and finds that he can dance. He learns that everyone can dance if they find the right music.

Rupert Can Dance

Rupert Can Dance by Jules Feiffer is about a girl named Mandy and her cat, Rupert. Mandy loves to dance for Rupert during the day, and Rupert loves to dance at night when Mandy is asleep. One night, Mandy wakes up and sees Rupert dancing. She is excited and tries to teach Rupert some of the moves she knows, but Rupert doesn’t want to take lessons and loses all interest in dancing. Mandy comes up with a plan to get Rupert to dance again, and the two of them start dancing together.

Dino-Dancing

Dino-Dancing by Lisa Wheeler, illustrated by Barry Gott is about a dance competition between different dinosaur dance groups. Many different styles of dance are featured, and while some acts go smoothly, others don’t go as planned.

Dance With Me

Dance With Me by Penny Harrison, illustrated by Gwynneth Jones is about a music box ballerina who loves to dance with the little girl who comes and dances with her every day. But when the little girl gets older and stops dancing with the ballerina, the ballerina leaves her music box in search of a new dance partner. Everyone the ballerina invites to dance with her says no, and the ballerina returns to her music box. For years, the music box is packed away, but one day, a new little girl opens the lid and invites the ballerina to dance with her.

Diana Dances

Diana Dances by Luciano Lozano is about a girl named Diana who does not do well in school and who will fail her grade if she does not learn her multiplication tables. When hiring a tutor doesn’t help, Diana’s mother takes her to the doctor, who recommends that Diana see a psychologist. The psychologist determines that Diana is a dancer and tells her mother to enroll her in a dance class. Diana loves dancing and discovers that it is easier for her to focus when she is moving. Through finding her creative outlet in dance, Diana also unlocks her ability to master her multiplication tables.

PAR-TAY!: Dance of the Veggies (And Their Friends)

PAR-TAY!: Dance of the Veggies (And Their Friends) by Eloise Greenfield, illustrated by Don Tate is about a dance party that the vegetables in the refrigerator throw while their humans are out of the house. Different vegetables, fruits, and dance styles are featured. At the back of the book is a section that explains what a vegetable is and that lists the vegetables and fruits that participate in the dance party.

Coloring Pages

Crafts

Dance Videos

Ballet

Hip Hop

Tap*

*You can wear sneakers, dress shoes, or create your own penny tap shoes as an inexpensive way to try out this style of dance.

Miscellaneous Dances

Happy reading and dancing!

Katie

P.S.

For more themed book recommendations and activities, visit my post library.

Advertisement

12 Best Easter Picture Books

Hello everyone!

Katie Merkel

Happy Easter! Below are a dozen eggcellent Easter picture books. Some tell the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection and others feature the Easter bunny or Easter egg hunts.

After looking at the book recommendations, don’t forget to check out the Easter-themed crafts (some make cute Easter decorations), math activities, and snacks at the end of the post.

Picture Book Recommendations

The Easter Bunny's Assistant

The Easter Bunny’s Assistant by Jan Thomas is a lesson in how to color Easter eggs given by the Easter Bunny and his assistant, Skunk. Unfortunately, Skunk gets excited easily, which makes the process a smelly affair. Kids will enjoy this humorous lesson in egg dying.

A Very Happy Easter

A Very Happy Easter by Tim Thornborough tells the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection while paying special emphasis on how different people felt. In addition to sharing the Good News about Jesus, the book teaches empathy by asking kids to mimic the characters’ facial expressions and to think about how they felt.

The Parable of the Lily

The Parable of the Lily by Liz Curtis Higgs, illustrated by Nancy Munger is about a girl named Maggie who receives a box of dirt from her father with a mysterious plant’s bulb in it. She is disappointed with the gift, forgets about it for a while, and then throws the bulb outside. On Easter morning, she discovers that the bulb has grown into a beautiful lily. On most of the pages a Bible verse shows how Maggie’s story mirrors Jesus’ life on Earth and how God the Father must have felt that the precious gift of His Son was undervalued and unappreciated. And just as God forgives us for our sins, the books ends with Maggie’s father forgiving her for not appreciating his gift sooner.

The Story of the Easter Bunny

The Story of the Easter Bunny by Katherine Tegen, illustrated by Sally Anne Lambert tells how the Easter Bunny got his start making eggs and delivering Easter baskets on Easter morning.

Happy Easter, God

Happy Easter, God by Elspeth Campbell Murphy, illustrated by Jim Lewis is a series of poems that celebrate what children love about Easter. Each poem is paired with an illustration and a Bible verse.

That’s My Colt: An Easter Tale by Dandi Daley Mackall, illustrated by Chris Ellison tells the story of Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem, His death, and His resurrection from the point of view of Matthias, the boy who owned the colt that Jesus rode into Jerusalem.

Turkey's Eggcellent Easter

Turkey’s Eggcellent Easter by Wendi Silvano, illustrated by Lee Harper is about a group of farm animals who want to win an Easter egg hunt prize by finding one of the special eggs, but they can’t participate in the hunt because it is only for children. The animals disguise Turkey different ways so he can find a special Easter egg, but each attempt to get an egg is foiled. The animals’ shenanigans are sure to delight readers of all ages!

God Gave Us Easter

God Gave Us Easter by Lisa Tawn Bergren, illustrated by Laura J. Bryant is about a father bear telling his daughter about the meaning of Easter and how God gave us Easter so that we could be with Him forever.

Benjamin's Box: The Story of the Resurrection Eggs

Benjamin’s Box: The Story of the Resurrection Eggs by Melody Carlson, illustrated by Jack Stockman tells the story of Jesus from His triumphal entry into Jerusalem through His resurrection from the point of view of a boy named Benjamin, who has an empty treasure box that he fills up with meaningful objects that he finds or is given during key events. Although this book can stand alone, it is designed to be read while children open resurrection eggs.

Last One in Is a Rotten Egg!

Last One in Is a Rotten Egg! by Diane deGroat is about Gilbert, Lola, and their older cousin Wally, who is very competitive. At the Easter egg hunt there are two prizes: one for finding the golden egg and one for finding the most eggs. Wally is so determined to win that he steals the golden egg from Lola despite already having the most eggs. Using Wally’s competitiveness against him, Gilbert tricks Wally into dropping all of his eggs. Gilbert returns the golden egg to Lola and wins the prize for finding the most eggs. When Gilbert gives his prize to Wally because it rightfully belongs to him, Wally learns that how you treat people is more important than winning.

Easter Eggs for Anya: A Ukrainian Celebration of New Life in Christ

Easter Eggs for Anya: A Ukrainian Celebration of New Life in Christ by Virginia Kroll, illustrated by Sally Wern Comport is about a girl named Anya who is sad because her father is fighting in a war and they do not have any eggs to turn into pysanky eggs for Easter. When a fox kills a wild goose that was defending its nest, Anya takes the eggs home, thankful that God has given her eggs for Easter. On Easter morning, the eggs hatch, and Anya finds that God has given her a better gift than pysanky eggs.

The Garden, the Curtain and the Cross

The Garden, the Curtain and the Cross by Carl Laferton, illustrated by Catalina Echeverri tells why Jesus died and rose again. An abridged version of the Garden of Eden, the curtain in the Temple, and Jesus’ life on Earth are given. The book’s focus is that it is good to be with God, but that we are separated from Him by our sin. The book ends with the Good News that because Jesus took our sin away when He died on the cross and rose from the dead, we can be with God again.

Crafts

  1. DIY Resurrection Eggs (Preschool through Elementary)
  2. Popsicle Stick Cross (Preschool)
  3. Tape Resist Easter Cross (Preschool through Elementary)
  4. Easy Cross Bird Feeder (Elementary)
  5. He is Risen! Empty Tomb Craft (Preschool)
  6. He is Risen! Empty Tomb Craft (Elementary)
  7. Handprints Easter Lily Bouquet (Preschool through Elementary depending on amount of adult prep)
  8. Tin Foil Easter Egg (Preschool through Elementary)
  9. Paper Eggs (Elementary)(The English instructions are below the Swedish instructions.)
  10. Easter Bunny Headband (Preschool through Elementary depending on amount of adult prep)
  11. Foam Cup Bunny (Preschool through Elementary depending on amount of adult prep)
  12. Paper Plate Sheep Mask (Preschool)
  13. Bubble Wrap Sheep Craft (Preschool through Elementary)
  14. Mini Popsicle Stick Chicks (Preschool through Elementary)
  15. Spring Chicks Egg Carton Craft (Elementary)

Math Activities

  1. How To Make Learning Fun With Jelly Beans (Pre-K through Elementary)
  2. Hands On Easter Math (Pre-K through Elementary)
  3. Easter Egg Math Activities for Kindergarten {Freebies Included!} (Kindergarten through 1st grade)
  4. 16 Spring and Easter Math Ideas (Kindergarten through Elementary)
  5. Easter Basket Math Challenge w/ FREE Printables (Elementary)

Snacks

  1. Easter Resurrection Rolls
  2. Rice Krispies Easter Egg Treats
  3. Easter Cross Rice Crispy Treats
  4. Peeps Easter Bunny Dirt Cups
  5. Decorated Easter Sheep Cookies with Gift Tags to Print
  6. M&M Easter Egg Marshmallow Fudge Brownies
  7. Empty Tomb Cupcakes with He Is Risen Printable Flags
  8. Easter Basket Cookies
  9. Empty Tomb Cake
  10. Easter Chocolate Covered Strawberries

Happy reading!

Katie

P.S.

For more themed book recommendations and activities, visit my post library.

The 10 Best Books Read in 2021

Hello everyone!

In 2021, I read 685 books. At the beginning of 2022, I thought back over all the books I’d read the previous year and realized that there were a few that stood out.

In the video below, I share my top ten books that I read in 2021 and why I loved them.

Top Ten Books

  1. Planet Earth Is Blue by Nicole Panteleakos
  2. The Remember Balloons by Jessie Oliveros, illustrated by Dana Wulfekotte
  3. Fall Is Not Easy by Marty Kelley
  4. One Grain of Rice: A Mathematical Folktale by Demi
  5. While Mama Had a Quick Little Chat by Amy Reichert, illustrated by Alexandra Boiger
  6. Mama Seeton’s Whistle by Jerry Spinelli, illustrated by LeUyen Pham
  7. Beauty: A Retelling of the Story of Beauty and the Beast by Robin McKinley
  8. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
  9. The Very Last Leaf by Stef Wade, illustrated by Jennifer Davison
  10. If Picasso Painted a Snowman by Amy Newbold, illustrated by Greg Newbold

Happy reading!

Katie

P.S.

For more themed book recommendations and activities, visit my post library.

Dads – Celebrating the Father-Child Relationship

Katie Merkel

Disclosure

This blog post contains Amazon affiliate links. This means that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. There is no additional cost for you, and it helps me to keep creating awesome content!

Hello everyone!

Dads are so important. They make us feel safe, teach us to have confidence in ourselves, and are the loud cheerers in the audience and on the sidelines. A father’s duties include, but are not limited to, homework helper, meal maker, child entertainer, and bedtime wrangler.

The books below celebrate the special father-child relationship and all the amazing things dads do for their children on a daily basis.

Be sure to check out the Father’s Day crafts and family activities I’ve recommended at the end of this post.

Picture Books

Side by Side: A Celebration of Dads by Chris Raschka shows multiple fathers and their children doing different activities together.

Side by Side

Mighty Dads by Joan Holub, illustrated by James Dean shows multiple construction vehicle fathers and their children working together on construction projects.

Mighty Dads

When a Dad Says “I Love You” by Douglas Wood, illustrated by Jennifer A. Bell is about all the things dads do to show their children that they love them.

When a Dad Says "I Love You"

Nelly Gnu and Daddy Too by Anna Dewdney is about a dad helping his daughter to build a cardboard playhouse.

Nelly Gnu and Daddy Too

Daddy’s Sandwich by Pip Jones, illustrated by Laura Hughes is about a little girl who makes her daddy a sandwich with all his favorite things (not just the edible ones).

Daddy's Sandwich

Just Like Daddy by Ovi Nedelcu provides a comedic contrast between a little boy’s belief that his daily routine is just like his dad’s and his father’s actual daily routine.

Just Like Daddy

Night Shift Daddy by Eileen Spinelli, illustrated by Melissa Iwai shows a father, who works the night shift, and his daughter taking turns putting each other to bed.

Night Shift Daddy

Papa, Do You Love Me? by Barbara M. Joosse, illustrated by Barbara Lavallee is a question and answer session between a father and son in which the son asks if and how much his father loves him and the father provides answers that demonstrate the unconditional nature of his love.

Papa, Do You Love Me?

Papá and Me by Arthur Dorros, illustrated by Rudy Gutierrez is about the fun that a father and son have together on their way to visit the boy’s grandparents.

Papá and Me

I Love My Daddy by David Bedford, illustrated by Brenna Vaughan is about a little squirrel who feels like he can’t do anything after his attempts to show off for his daddy end poorly and about how his daddy rebuilds his self-confidence.

I Love My Daddy

My Daddy Rules the World: Poems about Dads by Hope Anita Smith is a series of poems about fathers and how they interact with their children.

My Daddy Rules the World

Red Kite, Blue Kite by Ji-li Jiang, illustrated by Greg Ruth is about a father and son who enjoy flying kites together and how they use the kites to communicate their love to and for each other when they are separated during the Cultural Revolution.

Red Kite, Blue Kite

Activities

Gifts for Dad

  1. Coupon Book (Cut out slips of paper. On each slip, write down a chore you will do and for how long you will do it. Cut one extra long strip of paper and fold it in half. This will be the cover. Decorate the cover. Put the coupons inside the cover and staple the folded side of the cover so that all of the coupons are secured inside.)
  2. Superhero Handprint Cards (Add a personal message letting your dad know why he is great and/or how much you love him.)
  3. Award Ribbon For Dad
  4. Handprint Dad or Little Man
  5. Father’s Day Fry Box
  6. DIY Suit-Tuxedo Pen Stand
  7. Father’s Day Bobble Head
  8. Football Handprint & Photo Keepsake
  9. DIY Handprint Keychain
  10. Father’s Day Goodie Bag

Memory-Making Family Activities

I pulled the following activities from “15 Fun Father’s Day Activities to Spend Some Quality Time With Dad” by Jamie Ballard and Selena Barrientos and “Top 10 Fun Ways to Spend Father’s Day as a Family” by Erin Dower:

  1. Have a family game night
  2. Go on a hike
  3. Play golf or mini golf
  4. Go on a picnic
  5. Do arts and crafts (this includes woodworking)
  6. Go fishing
  7. Play an outdoor sport (i.e. catch, basketball, touch football)
  8. Go on a family bike ride
  9. Have a movie night
  10. Go camping

Happy reading!

Katie

P.S.

This blog post is dedicated to my dad, who taught me the importance of family and comedic timing. Growing up, Dad was always ready to be my date to a dance or show, drilled me on flashcards, and made reading fun by adding voices and actions. (If there were a read aloud competition for Hand, Hand, Fingers, Thumb by Al Perkins, my father would win.) Dad, thanks for a lifetime of games, evil Easter egg hunts, and always cheering me on and telling me that I can do anything. I love you!

P.P.S.

For more themed book recommendations and activities, visit my post library.

Moms – Celebrating the Mother-Child Relationship

Katie Merkel

Disclosure

This blog post contains Amazon affiliate links. This means that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. There is no additional cost for you, and it helps me to keep creating awesome content!

Hello everyone!

Mother’s Day is coming up soon, but honestly, every day is a good day to celebrate mothers! Their job duties include boo-boo kisser, meal maker, answerer of impossible bedtime questions, finder of favorite toys… The list is endless.

The picture books below celebrate the special bond between mother and child, whether it’s Mother’s Day or any of the other 364 days of the year.

Be sure to check out the Mother’s Day crafts and family activities I’ve recommended at the end of this post.

Picture Books

Please Pick Me Up, Mama! by Robin Luebs is about a child asking her mother to pick her up and put her down for different activities.

Please Pick Me Up, Mama!

Llama Llama Home with Mama by Anna Dewdney is about a llama who has a sick day at home with his mama.

Llama Llama Home with Mama

Mama Saurus by Stephan Lomp is about a baby brachiosaurus who gets separated from his mother and describes her to many other baby dinosaurs in his search for her.

Mama Saurus

My New Mom & Me by Renata Galindo is about a cat and puppy learning how to be mother and child.

My New Mom & Me

My Mother Is So Smart! by Tomie DePaola is about how a young boy knows that his mother is smart.

My Mother Is So Smart!

Oh, the Things My Mom Will Do by Marianne Richmond is about all the sacrificial things that mothers do on a daily basis for their kids.

Oh, the Things My Mom Will Do

Just Like a Mama by Alice Faye Duncan, illustrated by Charnelle Pinkney Barlow is about a girl who is being raised by a woman who is not her mother but loves her and does everything for her…just like a mama.

Just Like a Mama

I Love You with All My Heart by Noris Kern is about a bear who wants to know how his mother loves him.

I Love You with All My Heart

Miss You Like Crazy by Pamela Hall, illustrated by Jennifer A. Bell is about a son who doesn’t want his mother to go to work, and she tells him that she always takes a part of him with her.

Miss You Like Crazy

Me & Mama by Cozbi A. Cabrera is about a little girl’s day with her mother.

Me & Mama

The Best Mother by C. M. Surrisi, illustrated by Diane Goode is about a girl who goes in search of a new, more permissive mother only to discover that her mother is the best mother she could ever have.

The Best Mother

Mama Seeton’s Whistle by Jerry Spinelli, illustrated by LeUyen Pham is about a mother whose whistle to come home for supper always reaches her children no matter where they are.

Mama Seeton's Whistle

Activities

Gifts for Mom

  1. Coupon Book (Cut out slips of paper. On each slip, write down a chore you will do and for how long you will do it. Cut one extra long strip of paper and fold it in half. This will be the cover. Decorate the cover. Put the coupons inside the cover and staple the folded side of the cover so that all of the coupons are secured inside.)
  2. Hands Holding a Heart Mothers Day Card (Add a personal message letting your mom know why she is great and/or how much you love her.)
  3. Mothers Day Award
  4. Finger Painting Flower Craft
  5. Paper Flower Bouquet
  6. Paper Flower Pencil Holder
  7. Pipe Cleaner Flowers and Yarn Wrapped Bottle Vase
  8. Salt Dough Handprint Frame
  9. DIY Handprint Coasters
  10. Delicious Dark Chocolate Mother’s Day Bouquet

Memory-Making Family Activities

I pulled the following activities from “45 Super Fun Mother’s Day Activities to Do With the Whole Fam” by Selena Barrientos and Marisa Lascala:

  1. Go on a family bike ride
  2. Have an at-home karaoke night
  3. Make a scrapbook
  4. Have an at-home photo shoot (Work together to create fun outfits and take turns being the photographer and model.)
  5. Do a puzzle
  6. Go on a hike
  7. Set up a DIY sundae bar
  8. Create and go on a scavenger hunt (You can create the scavenger hunt list together and divide the family into teams or have one person create the list and everyone else search.)
  9. Go on a picnic
  10. Plant a garden

Happy reading!

Katie

P.S.

This blog post is dedicated to my mother, who is the real live Wonder Woman. Through her homeschooling (especially through reading biographies, autobiographies, and historical fiction during lunch), she instilled in me a love of learning, history, and stories. Mom, thanks for everything. I love you, and I’m so glad you’re my mom!

P.P.S.

For more themed book recommendations and activities, visit my post library.

Dragon Tales for Preschool through High School

Katie Merkel

Disclosure

This blog post contains Amazon affiliate links. This means that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. There is no additional cost for you, and it helps me to keep creating awesome content!

Hello everyone!

Last year, a friend let me read her work-in-progress dragon novel, and it got me on a dragon kick. I started reading published books featuring dragons. Below are some dragon stories that I think young dragon lovers will enjoy, too!

After reading a dragon tale or two, try drawing a dragon of your own. Dragon coloring pages and how-to-draw-a-dragon videos and instructions for preschool through high school are at the end of the post.

Preschool and Early Elementary

One Drowsy Dragon by Ethan Long is a counting story about a dragon who just wants to go to bed.

One Drowsy Dragon

Have You Seen My Dragon? by Steve Light is part story, part search and find.

Have You Seen My Dragon

How to Dress a Dragon by Thelma Lynne Godin, illustrated by Eric Barclay is about a boy helping his dragon to get dressed.

Dragons Love Tacos and Dragons Love Tacos 2: The Sequel by Adam Rubin, illustrated by Danie Salmieri are about dragons and the situations caused by their tacos obsession.

Dragons Love Tacos

When a Dragon Moves In and When a Dragon Moves In Again by Jodi Moore, illustrated by Howard McWilliam is about a boy who has fun, and gets into trouble, with a dragon that his family does not believe exists.

When a Dragon Moves In

Dragon Brothers Trilogy by James Russell, illustrated by Link Choi

The Dragon Brothers Trilogy

The Dragon Brothers Trilogy is about two brothers who live on an island inhabited by dragons and the dragon-related adventures they have.

The Boy Who Painted Dragons by Demi is about a boy who must overcome his fear of dragons by seeking their wisdom.

The Boy Who Painted Dragons

Saint George and the Dragon by Margaret Hodges, illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman is a retelling of the legend of Saint George and his fight with the dragon. This book is best for elementary-aged children.

Saint George and the Dragon

Behold…the Dragons! by Gail Gibbons is a non-fiction book that gives a brief overview of the different types of dragons from around the world and some of the mythology surrounding them. This book is best for elementary-aged children.

Behold...the Dragons!

How to Draw a Dragon by Douglas Florian is a book in rhyme about drawing all the different parts of dragons.

How to Draw a Dragon

Late-Elementary through High School

The Wings of Fire Series is a good read for children in late-elementary, middle, and high school. It is your typical high fantasy series, but with dragons as the protagonists. The books also contain social and relationship themes and explore the concept of destiny versus choice.

Dragon Rider Series by Cornelia Funke

The Dragon Rider Series is ideal for children in late-elementary or middle school. On the surface level, it’s a quest to find home, but it also has themes of friendship, self-sacrifice, belonging, respect for all creatures, and the consequences of greed.

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon by Grace Lin is a good story for children in late-elementary or middle school. The primary plot is the protagonist’s quest to improve her family’s fortune, but the story could also be viewed as a collection of folktales because legends and other characters’ fantastic backstories are interspersed with and woven into the protagonist’s journey.

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon

The Inheritance Cycle is a good read for high school fantasy lovers. Elves, spells, dragons…what’s not to like? Some of the themes explored in the series are loyalty, respecting differences in beliefs, and responsibility and consequences for actions.

Ralph Masiello’s Dragon Drawing Book by Ralph Masiello is great for middle and high schoolers. It is primarily mini, step-by-step art lessons, but it also contains cultural blurbs about dragon lore around the world.

Ralph Masiello's Dragon Drawing Book

Activities

  1. Printable Dragon Coloring Pages by Supercoloring.com
  2. “How to Draw a Dragon (For Super Young Artists)” (This YouTube tutorial is appropriate for preschool through elementary.)
  3. “How to Draw a Dragon” (This YouTube tutorial is appropriate for mid-elementary through middle school.)
  4. “How to Draw a Dragon” by wikiHow (These step-by-step directions are appropriate for middle and high schoolers.)
  5. “How to Draw a Dragon Step by Step” by Monika Zagrobelna (These step-by-step directions are appropriate for high schoolers.)

Happy reading!

Katie

P.S.

For more themed book recommendations and activities, visit my post library.

Alternate Perspectives

Katie Merkel

Disclosure

This blog post contains Amazon affiliate links. This means that as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. There is no additional cost for you, and it helps me to keep creating awesome content!

Hello everyone and happy New Year!

You probably know the stories of Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, and The Three Little Pigs, or do you? Try looking at these same tales from the antagonist’s perspective. Are they as bad as the original stories would have us believe or just misunderstood?

This question is answered in the following retellings.

The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs!

The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs! by A. Wolf by Jon Scieszka, illustrated by Lane Smith

Activities:

1. Compare and contrast the retelling with the original story.

2. Rewrite a classic tale from a different perspective.

Happy reading!

Katie

P.S.

For more themed book recommendations and activities, visit my post library.

Plans for 2021

Hello everyone!

Sorry that it’s been a while since I posted anything. In the craziness of 2020, I reached a point where I needed to stop writing and just be. I used my downtime to reassess who I wanted to be as a writer. Although my goals as a writer did not really change, I did revamp my vision for my blog.

Stack of Books

Starting in 2021, I will be using my blog to recommend books in a way that I hope will be useful to parents, teachers, and anyone leading a story time. Recommendations will be categorized by theme (e.g. picture books that teach math), and posts will sometimes include teaching suggestions, crafts, and/or activities that go with the book(s) or theme.

Since these posts will require more time to create, I will be posting monthly. Be sure to check out my January book recommendation!

Happy New Year!

Katie

Literary Scavenger Hunt

Hello everyone!

After being under a stay-at-home order for more than a month, many of us are eager to reengage with the rest of humanity and resume our normal comings and goings. Unfortunately, we still have to wait.

To give us something fun to do while complying with the stay-at-home order, I challenge you to a literary scavenger hunt.

Rules:

  1. Look in books to find something that satisfies each category.
  2. A different book must be used for each category.
  3. Once you’ve found all twelve categories, share what you found and the books they came from in the comments section.

Open Books

Categories:

  1. A weapon
  2. A difficult decision
  3. A beautiful setting
  4. A first kiss
  5. A mistake
  6. A betrayal
  7. A loss
  8. Best friends
  9. More than two siblings
  10. A single parent
  11. A grandparent
  12. A talking animal

Good luck! Happy reading!

Katie

Make February Kindness Month

Hello everyone!

Did you know that Valentine’s Day is not the only relationship focused holiday in February?  February 17th is National Random Acts of Kindness Day.  Perry Human Services has expanded that idea and started a month-long kindness challenge at local schools.

I liked the idea so much, that I decided to piggyback off it.  For the month of February, I challenge you to try to do one random act of kindness a day.  It could be as simple as holding the door for someone or greeting everyone you meet with a smile.  Click on the link to access the PDF file of Perry Human Services’ Kindness Calendar.  They have something listed for every day in February and some additional ideas at the bottom of the calendar.

Here are some ideas for how to be kind to other writers:

  • Recommend a favorite book to a friend.
  • Write or e-mail an author and let him/her know how much you enjoyed his/her book.
  • Review a book on Amazon and Goodreads.
  • Leave a positive comment on an author’s Facebook page or blog.

I am going to start this kindness challenge off by recommending two book series that I discovered in 2019, and which I have thoroughly enjoyed.

Wings of FireWings of Fire by Tui T. Sutherland

This is a fantasy series set in a dragon society.  Although the main plot is about fulfilling or stopping a prophecy, there are underlying themes of friendship, personal growth, and empathy.  The series is well-written and the concept surrounding magic is interesting.

The Great Shelby HolmesThe Great Shelby Holmes by Elizabeth Eulberg

This is a modern retelling of Sherlock Holmes set in New York City.  Each book has a mystery to solve and deals with Watson’s feelings concerning his parents’ recent divorce and Shelby’s inability to relate to people.  The series is told from Watson’s perspective and has a comedic tone.

Happy writing!

Katie