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Children’s Picture Books (Week of February 5, 2012)

February 3rd, 2012 | Posted in Children's Books | The New York Times Bestsellers

1. Heaven is for Real for Kids: A Little Boys Astounding Story of His Trip to Heaven and Back

Heaven is for Real for Kids: A Little Boys Astounding Story of His Trip to Heaven and Back
  • Author :Todd Burpo
  • Release Date :November 8, 2011
  • Heaven is for real, and you are going to like it!

    Colton Burpo came back from his trip to heaven with a very important message: Jesus really, really loves children. In an effort to reach even more families with this eternally significant story, this runaway bestseller is now told from Colton-kid to kids! Children will receive the same comfort and assurance that so many adults have received from the trade book.

    Beautifully illustrated under Colton’s direction, he shares his experiences in first person and comments on things that will be important to kids. A letter to parents is included to guide them as they talk to their children about heaven. Scripture along with a Q&A section with answers from the Bible are also included in the book.

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    2 – 7 Books

    I Want My Hat BackGoodnight, Goodnight Construction SiteExtra YarnThe Bippolo Seed and Other Lost StoriesStuckThe Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse

    2. I Want My Hat Back

    I Want My Hat Back
  • Author :Jon Klassen
  • Release Date :September 27, 2011
  • A picture-book delight by a rising talent tells a cumulative tale with a mischievous twist.
    The bear s hat is gone, and he wants it back. Patiently and politely, he asks the animals he comes across, one by one, whether they have seen it. Each animal says no, some more elaborately than others. But just as the bear begins to despond, a deer comes by and asks a simple question that sparks the bear s memory and renews his search with a vengeance. Told completely in dialogue, this delicious take on the classic repetitive tale plays out in sly illustrations laced with visual humor and winks at the reader with a wry irreverence that will have kids of all ages thrilled to be in on the joke.ReadMore

    3. Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site

    Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site
  • Author :Sherri Duskey Rinker
  • Release Date :May 4, 2011
  • As the sun sets behind the big construction site, all the hardworking trucks get ready to say goodnight. One by one, Crane Truck, Cement Mixer, Dump Truck, Bulldozer, and Excavator finish their work and lie down to rest—so they’ll be ready for another day of rough and tough construction play! With irresistible artwork by best-selling illustrator Tom Lichtenheld and sweet, rhyming text, this book will have truck lovers of all ages begging for more.ReadMore

    4. Extra Yarn

    Extra Yarn
  • Author :Mac Barnett
  • Release Date :January 17, 2012
  • This looks like an ordinary box full of ordinary yarn.

    But it turns out it isn’t.

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    5. The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories

    The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories
  • Author :Seuss
  • Release Date :September 27, 2011
  • It’s the literary equivalent of buried treasure! Seuss scholar/collector Charles D. Cohen has hunted down seven rarely seen stories by Dr. Seuss. Originally published in magazines between 1948 and 1959, they include “The Bear, the Rabbit, and the Zinniga-Zanniga ” (about a rabbit who is saved from a bear with a single eyelash!); “Gustav the Goldfish” (an early, rhymed version of the Beginner Book A Fish Out of Water);  “Tadd and Todd” (a tale passed down via photocopy to generations of twins); “Steak for Supper” (about fantastic creatures who follow a boy home in anticipation of a steak dinner); “The Bippolo Seed” (in which a scheming feline leads an innocent duck to make a bad decision); “The Strange Shirt Spot” (the inspiration for the bathtub-ring scene in The Cat in the Hat Comes Back); and “The Great Henry McBride” (about a boy whose far-flung career fantasies are only bested by those of the real Dr. Seuss himself).
    In an introduction to the collection, Cohen traces the history of these stories, which demonstrate an intentional and significant change that led to the writing style we associate with Dr. Seuss today.  Cohen also explores these stories’ themes that recur in better-known Seuss stories (like the importance of the imagination, or the perils of greed).  With a color palette that has been enhanced beyond the limitations of the original magazines in which they appeared, this is a collection of stories that no Seuss fan (whether scholar or second-grader) will want to miss!ReadMore

    6. Stuck

    Stuck
  • Author :Oliver Jeffers
  • Release Date :November 10, 2011
  • An homage to everything tossed, thrown, and hurled in order to free a kite
    When Floyd’s kite gets stuck in a tree, he’s determined to get it out. But how? Well, by knocking it down with his shoe, of course. But strangely enough, it too gets stuck. And the only logical course of action . . . is to throw his other shoe. Only now it’s stuck! Surely there must be something he can use to get his kite unstuck. An orangutan? A boat? His front door? Yes, yes, and yes. And that’s only the beginning. Stuck is Oliver Jeffers’ most absurdly funny story since The Incredible Book-Eating Boy. Childlike in concept and vibrantly illustrated as only Oliver Jeffers could, here is a picture book worth rescuing from any tree.ReadMore

    7. The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse

    The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse
  • Author :Eric Carle
  • Release Date :October 4, 2011
  • “I am an artist…” begins Eric Carle’s vibrant tribute to the creative life. And just like an imaginative child, this is one artist who paints the world as he sees it – a red crocodile, an orange elephant, a purple fox, a black polar bear and a wonderful polka-dotted donkey. Filled with some of the most magnificently colourful animals of Eric Carle’s career, this is a book that celebrates imagination and the artist within us all. Inspired by the work of the great Expressionist painter Franz Marc, a founder of the artists’ group known as “Der Blaue Reiter” (“The Blue Rider”), who famously used abstract blue horses in his paintings. Marc’s vibrantly colourful paintings influenced generations of artists, and fired the imaginations of children’s book artists far and wide. Examples of Marc’s paintings and a short biography are included at the end of the book.ReadMore