How Do Dinosaurs Learn Their Colors? and How Do Dinosaurs Play with Their Friends? by Jane Yole and Mark Teague are two more books in the ever-expanding collection of How Do Dinosaurs… books. The books retain the clever illustrations, straight-forward concepts, and format of the original. In Play with Their Friends, the book begins by showing how not to share and play nicely and then switches to having the dinosaurs demonstrate how they act if they are being good friends. Learn Their Colors is a pure concept book with colored items on each page. Both books are board books and little dinosaur lovers will enjoy seeing dinosaurs acting like people. Purchase where other books in the series are popular.
Released in September.
Month: August 2006
Rosoff Interview
The Guardian has a great interview with Meg Rosoff called Don’t call me lucky. Hopefully you have all read the amazing How I Live Now, which was Rosoff’s first novel. Her new one is just coming out, Just in Case. It is certainly on my too-be-read list and will be fast tracked as soon as libraries in the area purchase it. This article just serves to get me even more interested in reading more by Rosoff.
Learning.now

Learning.now is a very cool blog on the PBS TeacherSource website. The blog offers information on how new technology is affecting education. Look here for posts on Web 2.0 technologies and websites and their impact on what educators are able to offer students.
Great eBooks

DPP Store offers eBooks and has a nice selection of free children’s books under the category: Kid’s eBooks. Look for the year published as Out of Copyright and you will have found the classic kid’s lit. Books in this category include some of my favorites like books by Frances H. Burnett that I read time and again as a child, Heidi by Johanna Spyri, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm by Kate Douglas Wiggin, Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, and the list goes on. This is a great place to find classic books to load on computers or reading devices for kids to take on trips. Even better, how about reading aloud in the car some of the books that touched you as a child, just the titles of these take me right back to reading on a blanket out in the tall grass behind our house. Me and the grasshoppers and a great book separate from the larger world.
Happy Anniversary!
Tomorrow KidsLit turns three years old! I am so thankful for everyone who reads my words, who share their own, and who send me free books to review. 🙂
Seriously, thank all of you for being my readers and to all of my kidslitblog cohorts, thank you for making a community that is welcoming, warm and lots of fun to be a part of.
Keep on reading! And keep those kids reading too!
Anatopsis
Anatopsis by Chris Abouzeid has already been reviewed across the kidlitblogosphere. But I never got around to reading it until now despite all of the stellar reviews it received both online and in print. I am not going to provide a detailed review, but I will say that this fantasy for older elementary and teens is vibrant, unique and impossible to put down. The balanced nature of the magic in the novel is a unique feature as is the fact that magic takes an awful toll on the world around it. Anatopsis is a great heroine, who makes mistakes that cost her and the ones she loves dearly. Abouzeid’s writing is familiar and accessible. Amazingly, reading his writing is like returning to a favorite author although this is his first novel. His writing is simply, joyously readable.
Share this one with teens who enjoy fantasy. Good readers in elementary school can also be encouraged to read this because there is no content that is worrisome. Both boys and girls will enjoy the story.
Curled Up

Curled Up with a Good Book is a website filled with reviews for children, teachers, librarians and parents. The books reviewed range from picture books to chapter books to teen lit to activity books for teachers and parents. I haven’t seen this nice a selection of parenting and activity book reviews on any other site. Very nicely done.
Dizzy
Dizzy by Jonah Winter, illustrated by Sean Qualls.
Dizzy is a picture book biography of jazz great Dizzy Gillespie. It is an amazing combination of language and picture, reading like poetry and looking like art. It creates a mood, sustains it and teaches as it does it. Read this book aloud or at least aloud in your mind to hear the rhythm, the jazz of the writing as it glides, dances and plays along just as Dizzy Gillespie did.
This book caught me by surprise. I tend not to like picture books about musicians because I think they often fail at trying to match the brief story and illustrations to the music that made the person famous. But this one? This one is one of the best musician biographies I have seen. The illustrations add to the biography, informing readers of the time and place. The text is gorgeously rich yet very simple like jazz itself.
Nutmeg
Nutmeg by David Lucas is the story of a little girl who lives in a very dreary, grey world where all they ever eat is cardboard, string and sawdust. It is all very dull and their home is filled with piles of junk. Until Nutmeg decides that she is going to do the unheard of and go for a walk. On her walk, she finds a bottle floating in the grey water. Out bursts a bright blue genie surrounded by bursts of yellow, red and orange. He gives her three wishes and Nutmeg wishes for something different to eat for breakfast, lunch and dinner. So the genie gives her a magic spoon. That evening, the spoon cooked supper all by itself. A colorful supper of puddings, gelatins, pies, fruit, meat and more. Then in the middle of the night, the spoon stirs up more changes and Nutmeg’s life will never be grey and dull again.
Lucas has created a story that demonstrates the color and change that a little imagination and change from the norm can bring into your life. His writing is simple and easy to read, but very evocative of the mood of the story. His writing at the grey beginning repeats and grinds the way it has always been. Then the writing is almost wild as the genie appears. And finally as the story glides to a finish, the sentences are longer and the writing glides along as well. Add to this his illustrations that do the same thing, starting with greys and browns, changing to bright vivid primaries and finally ending with peaches, pinks, and hazy blues.
Share this one with children. They will immediately understand that it is about imagination and magic. It is a great read that offers few answers but is certainly worth the journey.