Welcome Home, Bear by Il Sung Na won’t be available for purchase until July, but Kirkus is already singing its praises in a Starred Review. They write, “The text is spare, usually only a sentence on each spread, but carefully and engagingly written. Listeners can’t help but sympathize with Bear in his frustration and rejoice when he finds the place that’s ‘just where he wanted to be.'” Look out for this sweet new story from the inimitable Na, in stores this summer.
Huy Voun Lee‘s activity kit, Origami Playhouse: Fold, Play, and Display, is on sale now! A do-it-yourself dollhouse for folding enthusiasts, Origami Playhouse is fun craft for families to work on together. The kit comes with beautiful papers and patterns to equip your own playhouse with furniture and accessories. Available for purchase here.
Sunday Shopping, written by Sally Derby and illustrated by Shadra Strickland, received a terrific review in The Horn Book Magazine. “Strickland’s bright, breezy acrylic, watercolor, wax pencil, and digital collage-style illustrations blend realistic portraiture with creative flights of fancy to evoke this weekly ritual, making manifest Evie and Grandma’s vivid storytelling in ways that will speak to young readers’ imaginations,” wrote The Horn Book.
The Horn Book Magazine has selected Poems in the Attic to appear in the May/June issue, accompanied by an enthusiastic review. “Each page turn is like opening that old box in the attic—you never know what is coming next,” said The Horn Book. Elizabeth Zunon’s illustrations of the book were also lauded, and The Horn Book wrote, “Pink-toned acrylic and oil illustrations are enhanced by cut-paper and fabric collage, allowing readers to imagine seeing the aurora borealis in Alaska, go hiking in Germany, or smell the cherry blossoms in Japan.”
The Canadian Children’s Book Centre (CCBC) has honored What Ship is Not a Ship?, illustrated by Josée Masse, on its Spring 2015 list of Best Books for Kids & Teens. The Best Books for Kids & Teens list is a semi-annual selection of the best Canadian children’s books, magazines, audio and video. More information on the CBCC and its awards here.
The Cooperative Children’s Book Center (CCBC) released its CCBC Choices list, which included Lend a Hand (by John Frank, illus. London Ladd), Little Melba and her Big Trombone (by Katheryn Russell-Brown, illus. Frank Morrison), Flora and the Penguin (by Molly Idle), The Hula-Hoopin’ Queen (by Thelma Lynne Godin, illus Vanessa Brantley Newton), and The Most Magnificent Thing (by Ashley Spires). CCBC Choices is an annual list of children’s books that are considered the “best-of-the-year” for various categories including “Understanding Oneself and Others” and “Historical People, Places and Events.” The complete list of books can be found here.