The Sunflower Sword

The illustrations make this picture book especially appealing as we follow a young boy with a colander on his head who spends his day imaging battles with dragons using the sunflower his mother gave him for a sword.  Imagination takes flight in bright and cheerful illustrations which fill the page with whimsical images.  Suddenly the boy encounters a read dragon who mistakes the sunflower for a gift and gives the boy a ride on his back.  By the end, other knights join our hero.  They each put down their sword, pick up a sunflower gift for a dragon and hop on its back for a ride into the blue sky.

Will It Be a Baby Brother?

This book will especially appeal to a child whose mother is expecting a baby.  Little Edward really wants a little brother but finds his parents are right and he is delighted with his new baby sister when she finally comes.  Sweet and genuine, this darling picture book captures the view of a typical older sibling-to-be waiting in anticipation for the new addition to the family.

The Rogue Crew

This book in the Redwall series stood out as unique from the others in that it was more like a separate story with mainly new characters.  Martin the Warrior was present in the plot but many new characters were introduced.  The main character in the Redwall books are typically quite well-developed.  However, in this book, that was not so much the case.  It was an entertaining and exciting story as usual which earns a recommendation for adding to a school library collection.

The Lost Children

An interesting combination of fantasy, science fiction and horror, this book is hard to put down.  Although the cover art implies a 3rd or 4th grade reader, the content is definitely for older readers (5th – 7th grade).  In this story, a 12 year old girl named Josephine lives an unhappy life with a father who ignores her completely and without friends.  When a little boy who also doesn’t speak arrives at her remote house seemingly out of no where with ragged clothes, she is confused but thankful for a friend.  He stays for a short time then disappears back into the run down shed in the back yard.  In looking for the boy in the shed, Josephine tumbles into a void and another world full of danger and life-gobbling monsters.  Will Josephine ever make it out of this perilous world to get home and does she really want to leave her new friends for the life she left behind?  Read to find out!

Too Many Frogs!

Poor Nana Quimby discovers a flooded basement while baking her cake.  After the plumber does his work and the water is gone, Nana discovers 10 frogs hopping out of her dry basement.  Quickly following are 20 more frogs, then 30 more, then 40, then 50, then 100, then a million more frogs!  With each discovery, Nana shouts out her window to neighbor kids happening by for suggestions and each time finds a bigger and bigger container to keep her frogs safe.  Finally she just fills her basement back up with water and enjoys her new pets (and her cake).  This is a silly, funny picture book with entertaining illustrations.  Perfect, for reading aloud, it is going into my elementary story time lesson plans!  Kids will love it!

Queen of the Falls

This is the story of the first person to ride in a wooden barrel over the Niagara Falls.  Annie Edson Taylor had taught at a charm school but when she retired she needed a way to make money to support herself, so she decided to do something that no one else had done.  She thought that if she were famous she could make money from tours and speeches.

After Annie successfully survived the ride over the falls.  Everyone was excited about the success of Annie going over the Falls.  No one could believe that anyone especially a woman could survive the Falls.  Annie went to a fair to speak about the event, but people were more excited about the barrel than the 62-year old lady who had ridden inside.

This is a great story an and I think a little know adventure.  The text was well done and the pictures are wonderful.

No Girls Allowed (Dogs Okay)

Fourth grade Scab McNally has a twin sister that is always spying on him. Scab really wants a dog of his own but can’t afford one. When he creates a sister repellent spray that really stinks, he decides to sell it to his friends so he could save up money for a dog. When a bottle of his spray breaks open causing chaos in the schools, Scab apologizes to his sister which brings them together, and collectively they convince their parents to get a dog.  This fun story comes with many fact boxes of information and story enhancing pieces, several of which contain body function information that will entice many young readers.

Gilda Joyce: The Bones of the Holy

This is my second Gilda Joyce mystery, and I have to agree, along with my middle-school readers, that Jennifer Allison makes reading entertaining!  In this mystery, Gilda’s mom is about to re-marry, and her fiance is not someone you as a reader trust.  A creepy story, Gilda’s psychic instincts guide her investigations of this new man about to become her father.

Time for a Bath

This is a charming nonfiction book by Steve Jenkins and Robin Page about how different animals clean themselves.  Readers are sure to be captivated by the illustrations as well as the interesting bits of information. At the back of the book is a wealth of information about each animal featured in the book.  This is a charming example of art + science.  Beautiful done.  My only request would be to have it a larger size book, 8 1/2″ x 11″ minimum.  The pictures are worthy.  Recommended for elementary.