Countries of the World: Australia

By Rebecca Sabelko

Australia covers basic information of the country. It has appealing images and maps as well as words in bold that correlate to a Glossary at the end of the book. Readers will be interested in the unique animals of the Australian continent as well as some of the exotic items the people eat including: Vegemite, Witchetty Grubs and sweet Lamingtons. This book is recommended for any library where students at a young age do country research or for English language learners.

The Blastoff! Readers Countries of the World series contains many informational chapters including but not limited to: All about the country, land and animals, life for the people, and facts. These books also include a glossary with terms that are in bold throughout the book as well as an index and a section with links and books to learn more about the country. These books are recommended for grades 1-3. They are at “Level 2 which offers early readers a bit more challenge through varied sentences, increased text load, and test-supportive special features.”

Too Cute! Baby Wolves

By Elizabeth Neuenfeldt

Baby Wolves is a beginner reader non-fiction book that discusses the early part of the wolf’s life cycle from newborn to juvenile and finishes at adulthood. It is very descriptive about daily life, where they live, care for the baby, and family/pack structure. The images are adorable and will interest any young reader.

Part of a series from Bellwether Media, this beginner non-fiction book Contains: a sight word list, a Glossary, Index, Animal Facts and Links to reading level appropriate sites to get more information about the animal. This book is recommended for your elementary library.

Too Cute! Baby Cows

by Rachel Barnes

Baby Cows is a beginner reader non-fiction book that discusses the early part of the cows life cycle from newborn to juvenile and finishes at adulthood. It is very descriptive about daily life, baby care, and family structure. The images are adorable and will interest any young reader.

Part of a series from Bellwether Media, this beginner non-fiction book Contains: a sight word list, a Glossary, Index, Animal Facts and Links to reading level appropriate sites to get more information about the animal. This book is recommended for your elementary library.

Too Cute! Baby Raccoons

by Elizabeth Neuenfeldt

Baby Raccoons is a beginner reader non-fiction book that discusses the early part of the raccoons life cycle from newborn to juvenile and finishes at adulthood. It is very descriptive about daily life, where they live, how baby’s are cared for, and family structure. The images are adorable and will interest any young reader.

Part of a series from Bellwether Media, this beginner non-fiction book Contains: a sight word list, a Glossary, Index, Animal Facts and Links to reading level appropriate sites to get more information about the animal. This book is recommended for your elementary library.

Too Cute! Baby Squirrels

By Elizabeth Neuenfeldt

Baby Squirrels is a beginner reader non-fiction book that discusses the early part of the squirrels life cycle from newborn to juvenile and finishes at adulthood. It is very descriptive about daily life, care of a baby squirrel and family structure. The images are adorable and will interest any young reader.

Part of a series from Bellwether Media, this beginner non-fiction book Contains: a sight word list, a Glossary, Index, Animal Facts and Links to reading level appropriate sites to get more information about the animal. This book is recommended for your elementary library.

Too Cute! Baby Monkeys

By Rachel Barnes

Baby Monkeys is a beginner reader non-fiction book that discusses the early part of the monkey’s life cycle from newborn to juvenile and finishes at adulthood. It is very descriptive about daily life and family structure. The images are adorable and will interest any young reader.

Part of a series from Bellwether Media, this beginner non-fiction book Contains: a sight word list, a Glossary, Index, Animal Facts and Links to reading level appropriate sites to get more information about the animal. This book is recommended for your elementary library.

Too Cute! Baby Sloths

Rachel Barnes

Baby Sloths is a beginner reader non-fiction book that discusses the early part of the sloth life cycle from newborn to juvenile and finishes at adulthood. It is very descriptive about daily life and family structure. The images are adorable and will interest any young reader.

Part of a series from Bellwether Media, this beginner non-fiction book Contains: a sight word list, a Glossary, Index, Animal Facts and Links to reading level appropriate sites to get more information about the animal. This book is recommended for your elementary library.

Noni the Pony Counts to a Million

Alison Lester, Author/Illustrator

Noni returns in a fourth book about counting. Noni counts from one to ten but then expands to dozens, hundreds, thousands and finally ends under millions of stars. What a beautifully illustrated picture book that allows younger readers a better understanding of what these overwhelmingly large numbers are. I would recommend this book to be included within an elementary library’s counting books.

Walter Had a Best Friend

Deborah Underwood, Author Sergio Ruzzier, Illustrator

Walter and Xavier are best friends until they meet Penelope. Soon, Walter no longer Is Xavier’s best friend. He is sad and lonely because his friendship is not the same now that Penelope is in the picture. He feels like there is a hole in his heart where Xavier used to be. Eventually, he decides that one sunny is going to be a good day. Walter goes out on his own to create his own adventure only to find that one can find friends in the most interesting places. This is a wonderful book about how friends come and go and that’s okay. I would highly recommend this picture book for elementary school.

Dark on Light

Dianne White, Author, Felicita Sala, Illustrator

Children adventure out at dusk to see the world in a different way. These siblings discover things in the dark that are beautiful and mysterious and thus diminish their fear of the nighttime. This is a beautiful story with folk style art in which the rhythmical text blends in a way that young readers would enjoy.