Wednesday, October 30, 2024

111 Essential Children’s Books

What are the best picture books for kids? The list is somewhat objective, of course, but here are my top 111 – the ones I hope every kid is exposed to. For the sake of brevity, I am only looking at picture books – illustrated chapter books are not included (although this is fuzzy, so… grains of salt).

 

For Younger Children and Classics

 

A Bear Called Paddington – Michael Bond & Peggy Fortnum

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

The abridged picture-book version of the Paddington story covers his arrival and settling-in with his adoptive family. The little bear’s curiosity (sometimes leading to trouble) and friendliness make for a pleasant, but still relatable, role-model for children.

 

A Sick Day for Amos McGee – Philip C. Stead & Erin E. Stead

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A great introduction to friendship, this award-winning work tells of how friends look after one another, even if those friends are zoo animals. Very sweet, at times it allows the images to do the storytelling – always a plus.

 

Bears – Ruth Krauss & Phyllis Rowland

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 1/5.

This work is hilarious. The demented illustrations and bizarre concepts pair perfectly in a short surreal masterpiece. A later version, illustrated by rockstar Maurice Sendak, has far less charm.

 

Caps for Sale – Esphyr Slobodkina

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 2/5.

A charming little tale about a man who sells caps, and the cheeky monkeys who steal them. The well-done but child-like illustrations illuminate a pleasant little world, and the clever way the man gets his caps back will stick with children.

 

Corduroy – Don Freeman

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

There are two delightful takeaways from this story: the first, is the inquisitive teddy bear’s approach to his department store world. The second is the little girl’s persistence in making a new friend. Nearly as excellent is the follow-up: A Pocket for Corduroy.

 

Don’t Let Pigeon Drive the Bus – Mo Willems

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 5/5.

In this short work a pigeon sounds an awful lot like a young child, and rattles off all the common excuses and attempts to get their way. The fabulously simple pictures convey the pigeon’s emotions well.

 

Each Peach Pear Plum – Janet & Allan Ahlberg

 

Illustrations: 4/10. Story: 3/10. Lesson: 1/10.

This simple rhyming book lets children into a storybook world, where the three bears meet Cinderella, and the Wicked Witch lives near Jack & Jill. The premise is revisited, in a great picture book for older readers: Jeremiah in the Dark Woods, by the same authors.

 

Go Dog, Go – P.D. Eastman

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 1/5.

A simple little collection of stories and phrases, Eastman’s classic is still fun to read. Still a great choice for basic words and phrases, with some solid humor thrown in via the illustrations and the hat story.

 

Good Dog, Carl – Alexandra Day

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 2/5.

With no words beyond the last page, we join a good dog, Carl, who takes care of a little baby. A nice example of a wordless book, this is a great choice for parents who want to make up a story and talk through what is happening on the page.

 

Goodnight Moon – Margaret Wise Brown & Clement Hurd

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

One of the most-beloved kids’ books of all-time, and the de facto going to bed story. The end of the book gets weirdly… poignant? Hurd’s classic illustrations create a delightful world.

 

Hippos Go Berserk – Sandra Boynton

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Boynton’s familiar style is on display in this fun counting book. The lesson is also worthwhile: too many hippos (or party guests of any kind) makes for a big problem.

 

I Can Fly – Ruth Krauss & Mary Blair

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 2/5.

One of the best in the Little Golden Book series, this book for young children portrays ways you can use your imagination. Later editions pare down the original, which is a shame, since legendary illustrator and animator Mary Blair’s art is a decided plus.

 

If You Give a Mouse a Cookie – Laura Joffe Numeroff & Felicia Bond

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Another great animal stand-in for a young child, the hyper little mouse gives a boy an exhausting run for his money as he bounces from activity to activity. A wonderful way to help children develop empathy for parents.

 

In the Night Kitchen – Maurice Sendak

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 2/5.

This bizarre story follows a beautiful dream logic into the land of the Night Kitchen, where buildings are pantry items and the cooks all look like Oliver Hardy, for some reason… Amusing and weird fun.

 

It’s Halloween – Jack Prelutsky & Marylin Hafner

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Prelutsky’s simple, but excellent, rhymes give a nice, not-too-spooky introduction to Halloween for children. There are ghosts and goblins, but they are relatively benign, teaching kids that it’s okay for things to be just a little spooky.

 

Johnny Crow’s Garden – Leslie Brooks

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 2/5.

A delightful old book, the expressive illustrations really sell the story. As the crow hosts a garden party there are also lessons to be learned about good party etiquette – again, vividly and amusingly illustrated.

 

King Baby – Kate Beaton

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Another great book about empathy for parents! Beaton’s drawings are often laugh-out-loud funny, as is her storytelling: both due to her successful background in humor comics. Fun for children as well as grownups.

 

The Little Engine That Could – Watty Piper

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 4/5.

Admittedly, this book is not aging super well. The story is relatively long, and the repetition a bit grating. For now, though, the classic lesson of perseverance retains its spot, but newer works with the same message (and fun rhymes and noises) like Little Blue Truck are great alternatives.

 

The Little Red Hen – Paul Galdone

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 5/5.

This funny telling of the popular morality lesson is enhanced by Galdone’s delightful pictures, which capture perfectly the emotions from the three layabouts. A great edition of the story to have on hand.

 

The Mitten – Jan Brett

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 3/5.

A winter or Christmas classic. A young boy asks for a pair of white mittens, is told that’s a bad idea, loses one, and brings it back, ruined from forest animals trying to squeeze inside. Nice example of the ‘straw that broke the camel’s back’ as a lesson.

 

The Monster at the End of This Book – Jon Stone & Michael Smollin

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 1/5.

A standout in the Little Golden Book series. Grover pleads, page after page, for you to stop turning the pages. Weird and wonderful, and genuinely funny, it’s a blast to read as the Sesame Street character gets increasingly unhinged.

 

Owl Babies – Martin Waddell & Patrick Benson

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Sweet and amusing, this story does a great job handling a child’s natural fears about parents leaving and coming back. An improved take on Are You My Mother? with better humor and messaging.

 

Pat the Bunny – Dorothy Kundhart

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 1/5. Lesson: 1/5.

It’s hard to rate board books for the very small – often perfectly nice books are just pages of pictures with the word underneath. Because of Pat the Bunny’s famed textures and interactive pages, though, it can get a special place on the list, doubling as an increasingly peculiar curiosity of an earlier age of children’s books.

 

Richard Scarry’s Best Storybook Ever – Richard Scarry

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

This classic combines scores of stories, from gentle alphabet pages to funny mystery stories. All are illustrated in Scarry’s trademark drawing style or his lush painting style. A wonderful world of content, to be soaked up for hours.

 

Ride a Purple Pelican – Jack Prelutsky & Garth Williams

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 2/5.

A series of delightful, often geographic, poems that will stick with you for years after. Williams’ acclaimed illustrations lend a memorable vividness to the nonsense verses.

 

Rosebud – Ludwig Bemelmans

 

Illustrations: 2/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Rosebud, a rabbit, is incensed with the portrayal of his kind in the world and seeks to rectify it. His clever little plan is amusing, and Bemelmans’ illustrations are very funny. The lesson of brains over brawn is always welcome.

 

The Runaway Bunny – Margaret Wise Brown & Clement Hurd

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

The dream-team managed to outdo themselves on this gorgeous, moving masterpiece of children’s literature. The theme, of a parent’s unwavering love for their child, is conveyed with warmth and feeling.

 

The Sleepy Little Lion – Margaret Wise Brown & Ylla

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 2/5.

File this one under ‘weird and wonderful.’ It is also quite charming – a sleepy lion cub wants to see the world, but is just too sleepy. Full of odd twists and turns, it makes for a precious bedtime story.

 

The Snowy Day – Jack Keats

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 2/5.

A nice introductory book on snow and snow days. The modernist illustrations are captivating, and there is a sweet little story of a boy’s exploring his snowy world.

 

Stella and Roy – Ashley Wolff

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

 

This presents a nice take on the tortoise and the hare, and is benefitted by relatable child characters and some genuinely funny storytelling and dialogue. The gentle ending teaches a good lesson about sportsmanship.

 

The Very Hungry Caterpillar – Eric Carle

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 2/5.

 

Carle made a cottage industry of his finger-paint-style illustrations, but this simple counting book remains the favorite, thanks to its fun flaps and holes. Those seeking a more robust story will enjoy The Very Quiet Cricket.

 

What Was That? – Geda Bradley Matthews & Normand Chartier

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 4/5.

How do we explain the sounds in the night that keep us up? This book dispels those normal fears for children, and has a bonus second lesson at the end regarding the perils of jumping into bed with mom and dad.

 

Where’s Spot? – Eric Hill

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 1/5. Lesson: 1/5.

The popular lift-the-flap series can provide lasting entertainment for young children. Spot provides a recognizable child (in dog form) that kids can connect to. There are many more books in the series, if your child enjoys the flaps.

 

Where the Wild Things Are – Maurice Sendak

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 4/5.

This popular story tells of Max, who is a typical childish troublemaker, wanting to be a ‘wild thing’ on a monsters’ island. The lesson comes that perhaps he doesn’t want to be a real monster after all.

 

Captivating Illustrations

 

An Alphabet of Old Friends and the Absurd ABC – Walter Crane

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 2/5.

Gorgeous pictures from the late 19th century Golden Age of children’s illustration. The alphabet focuses mostly on Mother Goose characters. That said, these are dated rhymes and sometimes odd for modern readers.

 

Animalia – Graeme Base

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 1/5.

This alliterative alphabet book presents extraordinarily lush imagery to each page, bursting with things that start with that page’s letter. Engrossing in detail, this is a work that can provide hours of entertainment and build vocabulary.

 

The Butterfly Ball and the Grasshopper’s Feast – Alan Aldridge & William Plomer

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

The psychedelic artist, Aldridge, hits a highwater mark in striking imagery with this, his most accessible children’s book. The rhyming poems present a host of intriguing characters all on their way to the festivities.

 

Dragon Feathers – Andrej Dugin and Olga Dugina

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

A splendid, surreal, take on traditional European medieval imagery: a cross between a book of hours and a Dali painting. The classic quest narrative is well-told, and there are even some morals to be gleaned from the trials.

 

The Fox Went Out on a Chilly Night – Peter Spier

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 1/5.

Spier’s illustrations conjure up an intricate, real world. His other children’s books won awards – such as his pleasant telling of Noah’s Ark – but this one has the best story, which is a fun, catchy song.

 

How Dog Began – Pauline Baynes

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 3/5.

 

This beautiful book invokes cave paintings, but with far more finesse to create a memorable series of images. The story, of the first wolf pup to be raised as a dog, is endearing, and a nice little lesson on prehistory.

 

King Bidgood’s in the Bathtub and He Won’t Get Out – Audrey & Don Wood

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 2/5.

If not for the brilliant pictures, this repetitive little tale would be fairly stale – a nice concept, but not much else. Luckily, the artwork does mor than elevate, creating a classic addition to a child’s bookshelf.

 

Mel Fell – Corey R. Tabor

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 2/5.

With a simple conceit – to turn the book on its side – Mel Fell engages in novel storytelling, tracing the seemingly ill-fated descent of a baby bird who plummets from their nest (not to worry – this is a children’s book, and in the end, all is well).

 

Mermaid Tales from Around the World – Mary Pope Osborne & Troy Howell

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

A collection of global mermaid stories which are each illustrated – gorgeously – in the style and era of the story. An excellent gathering of lore, this is a rich book, to be cherished and poured over.

 

Night of the Gargoyles – Eve Bunting & David Wiesner

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 2/5.

How do gargoyles view the world, and what would they talk about if they could congregate in the shadowy night? Sumptuous language tells the tale, buoyed by Weisner’s expressive illustrations of stony resentment.

 

The Polar Express – Chris Van Allsburg

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 3/5.

One of the most beloved Christmas classics, Van Allsburg’s illustrations are in their best form in this tale of a magic train to the North Pole. Fans of the style should check his other well-known works: Jumanji or The Mysteries of Harris Burdick.

 

The Porcelain Cat – Michael Patrick Hearn & Leo & Diane Dillon

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 4/5.

For all the Art Nouveau fans out there, here is a lovely rendition of the classic sorcerer’s apprentice tale, coupled with a series of trials. Leo and Diane Dillon have won many an award, but this is a unique style for the pair.

 

Rules of Summer – Shaun Tan

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

Tan’s surreal artwork hits its apex in this vaguely ominous summer world inhabited by two brothers and a host of strangeness. Yet the enduring – if sometimes fraught – relationship is the centerpiece, and provides a subtle, wonderful lesson.

 

Scary, Scary Halloween – Eve Bunting & Jan Brett

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 3/5.

An excellent combination: Bunting’s storytelling is just the right amount of spooky for little kids, and Brett’s clever illustrations elevate the story, providing a mini-mystery that children will have fun revisiting.

 

The Skylighters – Graeme Garden & Neil Canning

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

This is the story of the funny little people who paint the sky – in stunning painted illustrations. A nice set of explanations and rich vocabulary make for an excellent meditation on the cloudy world.

 

Topsy Turvy – Monika Beisner

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Pure and simple nonsense – usually told through simple juxtapositions: the dog walks the little girl, the clouds and sheep switch places, the fish goes fishing, etc. Yet it’s the unnerving illustrations that sell the concept, and makes them hit home.

 

Tuesday – David Weisner

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 1/5.

The nearly wordless story of frogs inexplicably getting to spend a night flying is tremendous fun. Weisner has fun with their quirky choices and expressive faces. Fans of his style can check out The Three Pigs, Flotsam, and June 29, 1999.

 

Where’s Waldo? – Martin Handford

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 2/5.

If the definition of good illustration can be to create a world you get lost in, then the Waldo books, with their simple, immersive premise, are top-notch. Full of amusing hidden images and sometimes simple stories, Waldo provides hours of entertainment for kids.

 

Zoom – Istvan Banyai

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Another simple premise told through wonderful, wordless images. As we zoom out our perspective on the world shifts page after page, leading to a nicely poignant finale.

 

Great Stories and Laughs

 

Angelina Ballerina – Katharine Holabird & Helen Craig

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

What to do with a child who is passionate to the point of obsession? In this story, Angelina simply can’t stop dancing, in ways that are problematic for her home. Gentle, but not saccharine, the lesson of how to nurture young people is well-told.

 

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs – Judi & Ron Barrett

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

A good, ripping yarn about a town where the sky provides their food – and all of the consequences of living in such a land. The illustrations are marvelous, making the work a well-known classic.

 

The Church Cat Abroad – Graham Oakley

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Hilarious illustrations enhance a rich, fun, and funny story of a church cat (with his mice pals) getting stuck in the South Seas. Both the droll text and the laugh-out-loud pictures make for a wonderful read.

 

The Discovery of Dragons – Graeme Base

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

Base’s paintings are always a treat, but this book, chronicling European, Asian, and tropical dragons is a standout for older children. The main stories and frame narrative are amusing, as are the comic-style recaps on every page.

 

Don’t Spill It Again, James – Rosemary Wells

 

Illustrations: 2/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

An older and younger sibling deal with a sometimes-fraught relationship through catchy little poems. In one story, the younger child spills the groceries, in another they take a train ride together – helping children navigate the very real emotions of exasperation.

 

The Eleventh Hour – Graeme Base

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

Another superb offering for older kids – a whodunnit rich with puzzles, clues, and deduction. Very advanced, this can be fun for adults of a similar knack as well, and can entertain for ages.

 

Eloise – Kay Thompson & Hilary Knight

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

Eloise is the definition of willful and spoiled – unapologetically. Her madcap life in the Plaza Hotel in New York City is a child’s fantasy: from cahoots with the bellhops to a pet turtle who eats raisins.

 

Fables – Arnold Lobel

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

This collection features very amusing, slightly warped, modern-day fables featuring Aesopian animals. A few miss the mark, but overall it’s a delightful series, with award-winning illustrations from Lobel, of Frog and Toad fame.

 

Five Minutes’ Peace – Jill Murphy

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Another tremendous book for building up that all-important understanding that your parents are people too. The funny tale tells of a mother elephant who just wants five minutes to herself, and how hard that is to achieve with three youngsters.

 

Goldilocks and the Three Bears – James Marshall

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

A wryly funny take on the old classic, which injects much-needed humor into a tale that is otherwise bland. Marshall, known for the hippos George and Martha and the Stupid family, also provides fun illustrations.

 

The Happy Hocky Family – Lane Smith

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

An essential book, full of wonderful weirdness, laugh-out-loud drawings and stories, and comical lessons. Smith is one of the funniest children’s authors out there, and this is arguably his finest work.

 

How to Make Friends with a Ghost – Rebecca Green

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Warm and charming, and full of puns and humor, this presents a how-to guide on befriending ghosts. Not remotely scary, it has a strong message, unsurprisingly, about navigating friendship.

 

I Want My Hat Back – Jon Klassen

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

This hilarious book takes an amazing left turn at the end, and features great deadpan humor. Seemingly a repetitive classic of encountering different animals, Klassen inverts the trope in a delicious way.

 

In a Dark, Dark Room – Alvin Schwartz & Dirk Zimmer

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

The girl with the green ribbon is a cultural touchstone, and the many fun, short, stories can invoke the willies for young readers – a fine example of how it can be nice to feel scared.

 

The Island of the Skog – Steven Kellogg

 

Illustration: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5

Brimming with humor and a superlative example of Kellogg’s well-known illustration style, a group of mice head to the South Seas only to find it seemingly inhabited by a monster.

 

The Jolly Postman – Janet & Allan Ahlberg

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 1/5.

Engrossing entertainment for hours is provided by this novel picture book that consists of opening letters and reading them, and even has a mini-book inside. The sequels in the series are just about as delightful as the original.

 

Little Monster’s Mother Goose – Mercer Mayer

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

Mayer’s early works are far bolder – and funnier – as seen in this haywire production of Mother Goose rhymes. Beyond the amusing pictures the rhymes themselves do dole out some useful wisdom (e.g. “One thing at a time, and that done well, is a very good thing as many can tell.”)

 

Madeliene – Ludwig Bemelmans

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

It’s hard to say just why this book is so renowned – the sum is clearly more that its parts. On the surface it’s a simple story of a young girl who gets her appendix out, but somehow manages to be so much more.

 

Make Way for Ducklings – Robert McCloskey

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

The beloved, award-winning classic tells of a mother duck who must navigate her ducklings through Boston. The really charming part is the consideration shown by the humans who make way for her.

 

Patrick’s Dinosaurs – Carol & Donald Carrick

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

Dinosaurs would have been, in reality, absolutely terrifying – unlike their cuddly depictions in so much children’s lit. This memorable book rectifies that, as a younger brother daydreams just how unsettling the prospect of dinosaurs juxtaposed with modern times would be.

 

The Salamander Room – Anne Mazer & Steve Johnson & Lou Fancher

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

A beautiful example of a young child’s imaginative mind. After finding a salamander, a boy dreams up how he will transform his room into a perfect home for it.

 

Stellaluna – Janell Cannon

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

Equal parts heart and humor, this is a nice take on the ugly duckling – only with bats and birds instead of ducks and swans. The expressive faces of the creatures makes it a cut above other retellings.

 

The Stinky Cheese Man – Jon Scieszka & Lane Smith

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 1/5.

In the world of American children’s lit, this postmodern warped takes on fairytales is a landmark – it changed the books that came after. Riotously funny and bizarre, kids will like the numbskullery, and parents the playful meta commentary on kids’ books.

 

The Talking Eggs – Robert D. San Souci & Jerry Pinkney

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

Good fairy tales have weird, nonsensical elements that bring home the wonder of the fantastical world. The Talking Eggs does this masterfully, aided by renowned illustrator Pinkney’s depictions of the peculiar sights encountered by a sweet girl, rewarded for her kindness.

 

The True Story of the Three Little Pigs – Jon Scieszka & Lane Smith

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

If Stinky Cheese Man is just too much, try this retelling from the Big Bad Wolf’s perspective. Milder, but still a bit edgy, it is a good example of the dream team’s collaboration.

 

One Monster After Another – Mercer Mayer

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 1/5.

Full of strange creatures, this is a very fun example of an escalating problem (think, the old woman who swallowed a fly), rife with unexpected twists and turns to keep it engaging.

 

The Vanishing Pumpkin – Tony Johnston & Tomie de Paola

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 2/5.

If, like me, you find de Paola’s Strega Nona’s ending to be off-putting, try this fun Halloween tale with a happier ending. The repetition is actually fun – which is rare for a kids’ book.

 

 

What Do You Do with a Kangaroo – Mercer Mayer

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 4/5.

Another amusing Mayer story, a little girl finds her day is beset with wild beasts making ludicrous – and very funny – demands. A nice example of a piling-on story for kids.

 

Why Mosquitos Buzz in People’s Ears – Verna Aardema & Leo & Diane Dillon

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 3/5.

The award-winning cumulative tale from West Africa is a good introduction to folktales of the ‘just-so story’ variety. The Dillons’ illustrations are vivid and captivating, and supremely illustrate the story’s message.

 

Important Lessons and Learning

 

Aesop’s Fables – Charles Santore

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Lush paintings for each tale raise this retelling of Aesop’s tales to a new level. It’s good for kids to know the basic fables, just for cultural literacy, but the lessons are still useful, too.

 

Anansi and the Moss-Covered Rock – Eric A. Kimmel & Janet Stevens

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Anansi is a popular trickster from West Africa, and here is a nice introduction to him, and to that fable trope. Even better, there’s a good lesson on how the trickster spider gets his comeuppance.

 

Animalia – Barbara Berger

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

This collection of tales from around the world is a great source of powerful meditation and wisdom, drawing from sources as widespread as Daoism, Christianity, and European fairy tales.

 

The Berenstain Bears Get the Gimmies – Jan and Stan Berenstain

 

Illustrations: 2/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

This popular series of morality books delas with the everyday problems in childhood: boys bullying girls, too much screen time, lying to coverup a bad mistake. This one, on tantrums, is a great introduction, and a real highlight of the classic 1980s set.

 

The Boy, the Mole, the Fox & the Horse – Charlie Macksey

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

An instant classic. As the boy encounters the titular creatures, each imparts different wisdom – and the interactions between each creates new lessons and understandings. The ink drawings and calligraphy also create a unique visual language for the story-telling.

 

Cat and Rat – Ed Young

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A nice introduction to the Chinese zodiac, with young’s painted illustrations at their most freeform. Also a good little fable on why cats and rats are now enemies.

 

Chickens Aren’t the Only Ones – Ruth Heller

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 5/5.

One of a set of four educational books: egg-laying and live-birth animals, and plants with and without seeds. Heller introduces scientific terms in pleasant rhymes, and also did a series on animal camouflage called How to Hide a… that is a great next stop for fans.

 

The Great Kapok Tree – Lynne Cherry

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A moving introduction to the importance of the rainforest, and conservation generally. As a logger sleeps he is visited by all the species that depend on the tree he is about to cut down.

 

Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins – Eric Kimmel & Trina Schart Hyman

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Two rockstars joined forces to create a classic. Hyman’s gorgeous illustrations capture the range of amusing to terrifying for the goblins, and Kimmel’s captivating story makes for an outstanding introduction to Hanukkah traditions, and Jewish culture generally.

 

Horton Hears a Who! – Dr. Seuss

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

“A person’s a person, no matter how small” has become one of the most famous lines from any Dr. Seuss book. Horton, a real mensch (even as an elephant) stands up to bullies to defend the personhood of the unseen. Still a good lesson for today’s times.

 

How Much is a Million? – David M. Schwartz & Steven Kellogg

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A wizard shows kids how much is a million, a billion, and a trillion. Kellogg’s illustrations help to visualize, as much as possible, the enormity of these vast, difficult to conceive-of, numbers.

 

How the Grinch Stole Christmas! – Dr. Seuss

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

This Christmas classic is beloved for good reason: the central moral that Christmas (and life) is about more than presents (and material objects, generally). With a compelling main character and story, it is one of Seuss’ finest.

 

How to Get Rid of Bad Dreams – Nancy Hazbry & Roy Condy

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Told through a variety of nightmares, this helps children come to understand the concept of lucid dreaming – where you can take control of the situation and turn the tables on the ghosts, trolls, and so forth.

 

The Icky Bug Alphabet Book – Jerry Pallotta & Ralph Masiello

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Scientific-quality illustrations of insects (and arachnids) accompany the fun facts about the creepy crawlies, all in the context of an ABC book. Even better, there is some good, sly, humor thrown in.

 

The Keeping Quilt – Patricia Polacco

 

Illustrations: 1/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A nice story about keeping traditions alive in a Jewish family as they pass a quilt down through the generations. Good for exposing kids to Jewish culture, and concepts of heritage.

 

The King’s Equal – Katherine Patterson & Vladimir Vagin

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Patterson is best known as a children’s novelist (Bridge to Terabithia) and this work slightly challenges the “no chapter book” rule. But the story is so well-told, and the lesson so important, I found myself rereading it frequently as a child. Another preference: Vagin’s illustrations are far more captivating than later editions done by Curtis Woodbridge – which are fairly bland.

 

Ladder to the Sky – Barbara Juster Esbensen & Helen K. Davie

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

This presents an Ojibway story, and a good introduction to the vast world of Indigenous American stories in general. The story is compelling, and explains the importance of living in balance with nature, as well as dealing with the difficult topic of death.

 

Last Stop on Market Street – Matt de la Pena & Christian Robinson

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Few books are as award-winning, and with good reason. The story’s focuses on kindness and charity, and the importance of gratitude and imagination all mingle together so deftly. A must-own work for any family.

 

The Lorax – Dr. Seuss

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

The great book on conservation, ecology, and the uselessness of buying thneeds. Powerful, and accompanied by some of Seuss’ best illustrations, The Lorax remains haunting with each read.

 

The Magic School Bus Inside the Body – Joanna Cole & Bruce Degen

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A tour of the insides of our bodies, bursting with facts, is a great introduction to both basic physiology for kids and the Magic School Bus series of educational fieldtrips led by the indomitable Ms. Frizzle.

 

Miss Rumphius – Barabara Cooney

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Cooney’s story of a young girl trying to live up to her dreams is marvelous, and moving. Most important, of course, is her goal to make the world a more beautiful place – and how she accomplishes it.

 

Oh, the Places You’ll Go! – Dr. Seuss

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Since becoming a graduation staple, the oomph behind the message has been diluted somewhat – which is a shame, because if you take the time to read it, it still can be moving, and the lesson of perseverance is as powerful as ever.

 

The Seven Silly Eaters – Mary Ann Hoberman & Marla Frazee

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 2/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Parents are people too! From the prolific Hoberman, a tale of seven children who all demand to eat only one thing – wearing out their poor mom. Of course it all works out in the end, but a decent cautionary tale about pickiness.

 

The Sneetches – Dr. Seuss

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 4/5. Lesson: 5/5.

The title story deals with racism and tolerance, and is followed by good lessons about stubbornness and overcoming fears… And one really random story about too many kids named Dave.

 

The Story of Ferdinand – Munro Leaf

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A must-own tale of a bull who grows up and, unlike the other little bulls, doesn’t want to fight. Good for both kids who see themselves in Ferdinand, and those who need to learn that those other bulls are nice.

 

The Tale of Peter Rabbit – Beatrix Potter

 

Illustrations: 5/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

Good, old-fashioned, ‘don’t disobey your parents or else’ advice shown through the famous rabbit that sneaks into Mr. McGregor’s garden. For fans, other great Tales include Squirrel Nutkin and Tom Kitten, and many more besides.

 

What Do You Do, Dear / What Do You Say, Dear – Maurice Sendak

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

In these companion texts, overly polite manners are displayed in ridiculous situations. The contrast of the deadpan responses and actions with settings provides plenty of amusement. Note that some of the scenarios (such as sharing a peace pipe) are dated.

 

Yertle the Turtle – Dr. Seuss

 

Illustrations: 3/5. Story: 3/5. Lesson: 5/5.

This trio of stories really rests on the anti-monarchical/dictatorial tale of Yertle, which is tremendous. The other two offerings, about the foolishness of envy and boasting, are fine, but not as memorable.

 

Zen Shorts – Jon J. Muth

 

Illustrations: 4/5. Story: 5/5. Lesson: 5/5.

A giant panda moves in next door and three children each learn some wisdom from him, shared in pleasant, easy-to-relate-to stories. A nice introduction to some Asian philosophical concepts.




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