Saturday, November 22, 2008 | 4:44 p.m.

Kids' Home Library by Lee Littlewood

Home > Lifestyle Columns > Kids' Home Library
Please contact your local newspaper editor if you want to read Kids' Home Library's column in your hometown paper.
lee littlewood

Recently

  • Put a Book and Toy Together for a Great Holiday Gift Package
    How about going with a themed gift package for that special child in your life? Pair a special book or CD with a toy — and thrill the little dinosaur or Elmo fan this holiday season. Below are some ideas for toys and book combinations for kids …

  • Kid-Friendly Books That Make Perfect Holiday Gifts
    It's that time of year — the time where parents and grandparents start looking for holiday gifts for the children in their lives. These new books teach cooking, offer buried treasure and hieroglyphs as well as reintroduce a pair of favorite …

  • Young Adults Will Enjoy These Adventurous and Mysterious Stories
    Kids, too, are tired of politics and relieved most of the election hoopla is over. Help them sink their teeth into absorbing young adult novels. These are five fantastic new books for older children and teens. "The Lost Island of Tamarind" …

  • Independent Books are Just as Fascinating as More Well-Known Stories
    Small and independent publishers often get overlooked in the publicity drive that sells many children's books. Still, books from smaller companies can be carefully written, unique works of art and information. These new stories are certainly every …

Zesty tales add appeal to any kid's bookshelf

Vibrant new picture books add appeal to any young child's bookshelf. Need a fabulous gift that keeps on giving? These zesty tales add oomph, humor and kid-friendly fun.

"The Retired Kid" by Jon Agee; Hyperion Books for Children; 32 pages; $17.

Disgruntled kid Brian has had it with violin lessons, walking his dog and school. So he decides to retire and flies off to the Happy Sunset Retirement Community in Florida, where he plays golf and cards with friendly people named Ethyl, Harvey and Myrtle. Soon, though, Brian finds its not so fun going to knitting class and drinking prune juice smoothies, and follows Harvey's advice to think back to the good old days, of soccer playing and playing ball with Sparky. After returning home, with a fresh outlook on childhood and happy greetings from his parents and teachers, Brian realizes he's lucky to be a kid.

Agee's fantastic cartoonlike illustrations capture the pink and palm tree-green hues of Florida's retirement communities perfectly. He also makes old age and childhood both look fantastically appealing, and adeptly reminds kids (and seniors!) to enjoy the here and now.

"Mimi" by Carol Baicker-McKee; Bloomsbury Books; 32 pages; $16.

Move over Olivia. Little girls have a new toddler heroine to love. Pink piggy Mimi plays with her stuffed bunny and her roly-poly bug Frank, until she discovers Frank missing. Still, Mimi manages to slide down the slide at the park, dance and sing and blow tons of bubbles when she wakes up angry. Subtle hilarity fills the sherbet-colored collaged pages, from when Mimi realizes she forgot to wear underpants to her love of "belly zerberts."

Happily, Frank shows up at bedtime, as Daddy and Mommy sing the moon song and Mimi, Bunny and Frank curl up snug and cozy.

Baicker-McKee's soft three-dimensional artwork looks appealingly tactile, and will have preschoolers giggling and trying to touch Mimi and friends.

"Giant Meatball" by Robert Weinstock; illustrated by Harcourt Children's Books; 32 pages; $16.

A selfish giant pink meatball rolls throughout a township every day, with no regard for anyone's feelings but his own.
With funny buck teeth and little arms and legs, the meatball squashes raspberry fields, interrupts sheep from grazing, and sends "puddles and hats and poodles and cats flying in his wake." Finally, the townspeople and mayor have had it and call a meeting. What punishment does the meatball incur? Ending up on a silver platter as the menu du jour.

Interestingly unique and quirky, "Giant Meatball" is a subtle lesson in inhumanity - and may get tots to slow down and think before they act rude or selfish. But mostly, it's a fun little tale boys especially will love.

"Peg Leg Peke" by Brie Spangler; Alfred A. Knopf; 32 pages; $16.

Peking dog Peke has a "boo-boo," a broken leg. But when an "off-camera" voice encourages Peke to dress up as a pirate and use his leg as a peg leg, Peke's imagination takes off. Though his leg bothers him from time to time, the narrator keeps reminding Peke of other ways to be creative to make himself feel better. He dons an eye patch, pretends to sail for treasure and eventually finds his comforting blankie in the treasure box.

Sparse, clean illustrations and reminders of the powers of imagination make "Peg Leg Peke" a super little book about refusing to let "boo-boos" get you down. It's also a gentle, fun tale for tot pirate fans.

"Gobble It Up! A Fun Song About Eating!" by Jim Arnosky; Scholastic Press; 32 pages; $17.

It's suppertime in the wild, and the animals are hungry. Renowned wildlife artist and folk musician Arnosky pens a catchy, rhyming, wild read-aloud about animals' appetites, and includes a zippy CD so kids can sing along with the book.

"If a great whale you could be, you'd dive to the bottom of the deep blue sea. You'd pick a fight with the biggest kid, and gobble you up a giant squid. Yes, you would. Yes, you would. You'd eat that squid up if you could. Yes, you would. Yes, you would. You'd gobble it up and it'd taste good," sings the lively lyrics.
Arnosky's lifelike but friendly artwork is astonishing, making "Gobble It Up!" a super choice for story hour.

© Copley News Service
Visit Copley News Service at www.copleynews.com.




AddThis Social Bookmark Button RSS Get RSS Feed for Lee Littlewood Email updates Email me Lee Littlewood updates Comments Comments
Originally Published on Monday June 30, 2008

More Lee Littlewood
Nov. `08
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
View By Month
About the author Print friendly format Write the author Email This Article to a friend
All newspaper editors want to know what their readers like. If you would like to read this feature in your local newspaper, please do not hesitate to share your enthusiasm with your local newspaper editor.

 

Shop Creators Syndicate

 
Saturday, November 22, 2008 | 4:44 p.m.
About Creators | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Editor's login | FAQ | En Español
Copyright © 2006 Creators.com. All Rights Reserved.
Web Development by JJCO