
YALSA is once again gathering nominees for the Best Books for Young Adults list. Enjoy the short list that is currently there and anticipate many more great titles to come.

YALSA is once again gathering nominees for the Best Books for Young Adults list. Enjoy the short list that is currently there and anticipate many more great titles to come.

Dinosaur Dinosaur by Kevin Lewis, illustrated by Dan Kirk.
This is the great author, illustrator team that created My Truck Is Stuck! Here the reader meets a little boy dinosaur who is filled with spunk and action. From the minute he gets up he is roaring and stomping. The book follows him through his day from breakfast to bedtime. Kids will see their own lives reflected right back at them but with dinosaur characters that they will love. Lewis’ rhymes add fun to the reading and Kirk’s illustrations are as bright and bold as ever. This one is a winner to share with young dinosaur lovers.

The Night Pirates by Peter Harris, illustrated by Deborah Allwright.
The night pirates is a refreshing take on pirate stories where a little boy is in bed and seeing strange shadows. The shadows are actually “tough little girl pirates” who take the little boy on their sailing house to an island where the rough adult pirates guard their treasure chest. The approaching house and the yelling children scare the pirates away and the children sail off in a golden house filled with treasure. The little twist at the end is lovely as is the slow change from an adventure story to a bedtime story. Share this one with pirate girls and boys.

Ah, another wonderful Minerva Louise book! Minerva Louise and the Colorful Eggs by Jane Morgan Stoeke, continues in the same tradition as the early books. The simple text combined with clear pictures that project well to a group, make these books perfect for sharing with a group. This book is an Easter story where Minerva Louise, a perpetually confused but friendly chicken, finds colored eggs scattered around the farm. She rounds up the other hens and tells them about the eggs outside “some of them are so cold they’re turning blue.” But when the hens go out to look, all of the eggs are gone. Then they see the farmers (people) gathering the eggs and know that it is fine, they are used to farmers gathering eggs. The story ends with Minerva Louise happily sitting atop a basket of Easter eggs.
Share this one for Easter or spring storytimes. The humor, text, and pacing are all perfect for sharing with toddlers and preschoolers. Even kindergarteners will enjoy the humor.

Corydon & the Island of Monsters by Tobias Druitt (a mother and son writing team) is one of my favorite books of the year so far. Corydon is a boy who was born with one goat’s leg, complete with hair and hoof. Because of this, he is considered a monster and driven from his village, tied to a stake where he is left to be a sacrifice. He is saved from dying by two Gorgons who realize that he has a larger destiny in the world. Corydon lives in the hills outside of the village with a flock of sheep and goats that he has stolen from the village, playing songs on his pipe. But then he is kidnapped by a gang of pirates who have a zoo of monsters. There he meets the Minotaur, Medusa, and the Sphinx among other monsters. After a time, he is able to escape and free the other monsters with the help of the same Gorgons that saved him. The monsters go off into the island to live separately, except for Corydon and Medusa who move into the Gorgons’ cave. But while life is blissful for awhile, there is trouble brewing when the sole surviving pirate reports to the king what happened. The king’s son, Perseus, is a vain and stupid man who decides that taking revenge on the monsters is a great way to become the hero he has always thought he was. Of course, Perseus is not really the king’s son, but rather the son of Zeus, so he asks his real father for help. Given gifts and finally able to round up a huge but ragtag army, Perseus heads off to kill the monsters on the island.
I will leave it there because this is an incredible book whose twists and turns are amazing and gripping. I wouldn’t want to spoil the fun of the journey for anyone. Let me just say that the fact that the monsters are the heroes in the book and that the heroes are the villains is lovely. I also enjoyed the fact that Zeus is rather distant and forgetful, while other gods vary in their level of understanding and involvement. You never really know what a god is going to do, which lends a level of complexity to the story.
Give this one to any kid who enjoys mythology, but be prepared to discuss it with them later because this book will turn everything they have ever read on its head. Even while doing that, it makes Greek myths more alive than any novel I have ever read.

BookLetters lets you sign up for free book-related newsletters. They have ones for adult books and bestsellers, and they also have newsletters for picture books, chapter books, teens and children’s authors. The newsletters are very short and filled with new titles that may be of interest. This is a quick and easy way to find out about more new books.

Tell Me What You See by Zoran Drvenkar is a strange book, in a good way. In the middle of a Christmas snowstorm, Alissa and her best friend, Evelin make the pilgrimage to her father’s grave. Alissa falls down a hole into a crypt where she finds a child’s casket with a strange plant growing out of it. When she opens the casket, she finds that the plant is coming straight from the child’s heart. She pulls out the plant and against her will, eats it. Evelin runs to get her father and they recue Alissa from the crypt. But Alissa starts to act strangely after eating the plant. She can see people who no one else can see, her abusive boyfriend has become even more obsessive after kissing her, and she breathes life into a tiny kitten.
Written by a German author and set in modern-day Berlin, this is a modern gothic teen novel. The book is a puzzle, a strange ride of a novel that is impossible to put down until the puzzle is solved. And unlike some puzzling books, the ending is very satisfying.
Share this with teens who like dark books filled with mystery and don’t mind a lot of strange things going on in their books.
Read*Write*Now! is the site for the American Initiative on Reading and Writing. The site offers information for parents and teachers on how to create fun reading activities for children. The website is filled with reading readiness activities and ideas.
Kirkus Reviews has a handy Spring & Summer Preview that includes both adult titles and ones for children and teens. This is an easy way to get a glimpse of some of the hotter children’s titles coming out this year.