Safety Basics

I like the size and the sturdy binding and the color photos, and I like that most pages include 2-4 sentences rather than some early readers that only have 1-2 sentences per page, but I think it’s trying to be more than it can be.  Given the limitations of the early-reader format, it perhaps needed a smaller focus.  Each page is dedicated to safety tips for different places, but in just a few sentences, you are obviously limited to how much content you can include. For example, the “At Home” section only addresses poison safety; the “At School” page only considers slipping or getting lost on a field trip.  Obviously there are many, many ways children can be hurt both at home or at school, so a few sentences really don’t cover it.  I do like that it started with the idea safety starts with thinking before you act — that helps to cover what cannot be listed.

Dairy Group

Recommended with reservations.  It fits a narrow curriculum niche, strictly for young readers for health lessons — not likely to be chosen as recreational reading.  But if you need something to fit this niche, it’s a good selection:  one to two sentence on each page are accompanied by full-page color illustrations; it explains what kinds of foods are part of the dairy group, what makes a serving size, how much is recommended each day, and offers meal/snack suggestions.  It’s got a sturdy binding and the full range of non-fiction text features.

Protein Foods Group

I recommend this book with reservations.  It is strictly an early reader book, and it is not likely to be chosen for recreational reading, which means it serves a small niche in a school library collection.  I have a hard time recommending such books, due to the limited information one gets for one’s buck, but if you need something to fit this particular niche in your curriculum, this is a good choice.  It lists examples of foods included in the protein group, including portion sizes and daily recommendations. It describes some of the benefits offered by the protein group, and offers meal/snack suggestions.  One or two simple sentences on each page accompany full-page color photos.  The full gambit of non-fiction text features are included at a rudimentary level. And it’s got a good, sturdy binding

Copperheads

Beginning with a Cherokee Indian legend about copperheads, facts are presented about this fascinating reptile.  Their habitat, coloring, types of copperheads, and how they hunt fill this 32 page book.  Highlighted terms are defined on the page as well as again in the glossary.  Fact boxes provide extra details.  Photographs are large, colorful, and show features of each type of snake.  Glossary, index, and books for further reading are in the back.  A facthound internet site and a publisher site provide further information and activities.

Volleyball Dreams

Ramona loves to play beach volleyball and dreams of playing in the Olympics.  When a developer plans to build on their court, Ramona must learn how to be a team player instead of just a skilled one.  Each chapter has black and white illustrations.  In the back are: a glossary of volleyball terms, brief information about the author and illustrator, discussion questions, writing prompts, two pages of beach volleyball facts, other Jake Maddox stories, and two internet sites for further information and activities.

The Stourbridge Lion: America’s first locomotive

I love the illustrations:  they evoke the time period well and draw the reader in.  Unfortunately, the writing doesn’t live up to the illustrations.  The story is not told very well, and this reader was left wondering why I’m supposed to care about this particular bit of obscure American history. Questions are left unanswered.  After the big build up of acquiring the locomotive and explaining its purpose, it says it went three miles on its first run and had to turn around because there was a bridge it couldn’t fit under, but it never says whether they resolved that problem or not, whether it ever actually served its intended purpose or not.

Not Inside This House

In rhyming verse, this tells the story of a boy who likes to explore. When his mother protests his tendency to bring bugs home, he brings a mouse home instead.  As mom continues to protest, he continues to escalate, bringing home a pig a moose, an elephant, and a whale.  In the end mom decides bugs aren’t so bad after all.  The illustrations are cute, the story is one that will make kids giggle (even if it never does explain where he acquires his pig and elephant, etc.); it would likely have earned an R* if the rhythm of the poem read a little more smoothly.

Lucky Luis

A young rabbit who’s nervous about his upcoming baseball tryouts listens to his dad’s stories about what he and his friends did for luck when he was a boy.  On the way to tryouts, young Luis stops at the market and enjoys a free sample on offer, and does really well.  The stops at the market become part of his routine at the beginning of a very successful season, but one day when there are no samples left, he seems to lose his mojo, and becomes superstitious that his luck is dependent upon his pre-game snacks.  His dad assures him that success comes from listening to your coach and working hard, but young Luis is not convinced until the very end, when he concentrates and hits the ball even though he didn’t stop at the market.  It may come across a wee bit preachy, but it gets its message across.

Silly Classroom Jokes

I very nearly gave this a “recommended.”  The riddles are generally quite clever (all school themed, as the title indicates), and these types of play on words are good for developing children’s vocabulary.  The reason I hesitate is based on bang for one’s library buck — given the cost of reinforced library binding, I’d like to see more than 20 jokes in the entire book — but if you can afford it, it is a fun book.  I do however disagree with the publisher’s target audience.  They list it with a reading level of K-1 and an interest level of PreK-2.  Though preschoolers do tend to show an interest in the concept of riddles, they rarely “get” them, and it would take a very advanced kindergartener to read this.  I would suggest it for grades 2-5.

I See Fall

It’s charming.  The text is simple — one sentence per page, arranged in rhyming pairs, all starting with “I see…”  It lists all the things one might see around them to indicate the season is fall (both in nature and in society), a good tool for young classes studying the seasons.  The color palette reflects the season, and the illustrations both support the text and charm the reader.