2 New Perfect Pet Picture Books

Cover image for The Passover Pet Surprise by Ana María Shua, illustrated by Ángeles Ruiz. Features children and a dog outside a bird cage with two birds inside.

The Passover Pet Surprise by Ana María Shua, illustrated by Ángeles Ruiz

  • Publisher: NorthSouth Books
  • Publication Date: March 3, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9780735846081

Jordanita and her family are spending Passover in Argentina. What she loves most is how many pets her aunt, uncle and cousins own.  When they get there, they spend time with all the animals. The turtles and dog join in on the water fight. Even the pet parrots are moved to the garden to watch the fun. The family gathers for Passover dinner and they talk about freedom. When Jordanita spots the birds, she thinks about freedom and knows just what to do. In the morning, when the parrots are missing, she has to admit what she did to her entire family, learning that taking care of animals can sometimes mean not letting them go free. 

Shua tells the story of this big merry Jewish family with such warmth and love. It’s like being invited to share their table with them. The jolly chaos of a holiday spent together is captured on the page both in the text and illustrations. Those illustrations are filled with small details and show clearly the diversity within their family. I particularly appreciated that there was no neat ending about the parrots returning to their cage.

A diverse title ideal for Passover collections. Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Cover image for The Rare Bird by Elisha Cooper. Features a white cat leaping against an orange sky with mountains and trees below.

The Rare Bird by Elisha Cooper

  • Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
  • Publication Date: February 24, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9781250364395

The Rare Bird was flying through the forest, knocking leaves off the trees. While the pictures tell a very different story than the text, a cat leaping through the living room. Rare Bird climbed on a rock, which was actually the dog. Rare Bird did all sorts of birdy things, which also in the real world matched cat activities. Even his dreams were filled with bird thoughts. At night, he was read a story about other animals and became an Elephant! 

Cooper brilliantly allows his text and images to directly contradict one another. Children will love seeing the ways in which the cat’s life and imagined bird activities overlap as curtains are ripped, boxes are napped in and the dog slumbers on. Cooper’s text is flatly narrative like a nature program while the images are jaunty and humor-filled. 

A delight of catty attitude. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Phoenix by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley – Book Recommendation

Book cover for Phoenix by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley. Image of a girl facing a black and white horse.

Phoenix by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley

  • Publisher: Dial Books
  • Publication Date: March 3, 2026
  • Reviewed from NetGalley e-galley
  • ISBN: 9780593859865

When Harper discovers that her dad cheated on her mom with her best friend’s mother, her world implodes. Her parents are getting a divorce and Harper just can’t go to school where everyone seems to know what happened. Harper and her mother pack up and leave, moving to a new town and a tiny house that is part of a horse farm. Now Harper has to start all over again, but she is so sad about what has happened that she doesn’t know how to move on or change anything. Harper has never been around horses but finds that she understands them. When Phoenix is literally dumped at the farm, Harper decides to rescue him after one look in his eyes. Phoenix is underweight, underfed and had been left for dead, but with slow steps, Harper starts to rescue him and herself.

Bradley, author of award-winning books like The War That Saved My Life, shows herself to be a horse girl through and through. Readers will love the horse focus of the book, Harper discovering her love for them and how horses form a bridge forward. Among the lovely horse moments, Bradley demonstrates her writing skill as she weaves in Harper’s grief over her family’s changes, the difficulty of friendships in middle school, micro and macro aggressions, and just a touch of dog love too. Strong and confident writing as well as a deep horse-filled humanity make this a must-read.

Definitely worth the ride. Appropriate for ages 8-12.

3 New Gorgeous Gardening Picture Books

Cover image for Goldfinches by Mary Oliver, illustrated by Melissa Sweet. Features two goldfinches against a pink sky sitting on thistles.

Goldfinches by Mary Oliver, illustrated by Melissa Sweet

  • Publisher: Viking Books for Young Readers
  • Publication Date: March 3, 2026
  • Reviewed from pdf received from publisher
  • ISBN: 9780593692417

Mary Oliver’s poem “Goldfinches” is transformed into a child-friendly picture book that invites readers out into fields filled with thistles and birds. The poem speaks to the beauty of nature from the beauty of the “coin of reddish fire” in the thistles to the way the goldfinches build their “silver baskets” of nests. Through the poem and Sweet’s art, readers will experience the way that thistles and birds work together to form a cycle of life. The art also shows people spending time in nature, quietly making notes and sketches, observing it all. 

Sweet has so beautifully captured Oliver’s poem, bringing into a new format that pays homage to her words while inviting a new generation of readers to discover her. Oliver’s work is stunning with its vivid renderings of nature, speaking to the way nature impacts us if we are just willing to slow down and notice. Sweet’s art is a glorious dance of color palettes, taped small notes, and marvelous sweeps of field and sky. 

The entire book is a gust of fresh air across the mind. Appropriate for ages 4-9.

Cover image for Tiny Garden by Deborah Underwood, illustrated by Jax Chow. Features a boy sitting in front of a rising sun with a dog and a watering can.

Tiny Garden by Deborah Underwood, illustrated by Jax Chow

  • Publisher: Abrams Books for Young Readers
  • Publication Date: March 3, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9781419774911

Andrew loved plants, but big gardens and trees were overwhelming. So he planted his own small garden in his front yard. Soon he had a colorful tiny plot. Others didn’t understand what he was doing. But the very small animals in the area soon found the very small garden. First was a tiny moth who rested there, then a tiny earthworm snuggled in. A hummingbird visited for nectar sips. The tiny garden was a tiny gathering place. 

The text of this picture book celebrates Andrew’s connection with plants and nature while also pointing out the patience it takes to plant, water and eventually see the results of your work. From the first glimpse of the tiny garden in illustrations, children will immediately understand that this is an Andrew-sized garden and it’s just the right size. The animals who visit are cleverly depicted and there is a sense of calm joy throughout the book. 

A lovely little look at nature and gardens. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Cover image for The Weedy Garden by Margaret Renkl, illustrated by Billy Renkl. Featuring a child in a yellow shirt riding a bicycle down a path with gardens on each side.

The Weedy Garden by Margaret Renkl, illustrated by Billy Renkl

  • Publisher: Greenwillow Books
  • Publication Date: February 24, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9780063432819

Venture into this wonderful riotous and weedy garden with a variety of animals who live there. The bumblebees carry pollen from flower to flower. The squirrel searches for a lost nut in the leaves. The monarchs find the butterfly weed for their eggs. The toad waits for bugs to fly close enough to eat. The rabbits snuggle together in their nest. Then there is a child, sitting in clover listening and watching too.

The text of this picture book is designed to be shared aloud. Just a single line of prose under each double-spread of illustrations. For more information on the creatures that live in the garden and planting gardens that welcome wildlife, readers can turn to the back of the book. The illustrations capture the wildness of the garden with all of its native plants and creatures. Done in collage, they are bright colored and captivating. 

A visit to a rich garden with lots of animal residents. Appropriate for ages 3-6.

2 New Nonfiction Picture Books Featuring Great genius

Cover image for Copland: A Story About America by Veronica Mang. Featuring Copland at a large black piano with dancing girls, flowers and a horse leaping.

Copland: A Story About America by Veronica Mang

  • Publisher: Viking Books for Young Readers
  • Publication Date: February 24, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9780593693711

This picture book biography of Aaron Copland starts in 1900 when Aaron is born to his Russian immigrant parents. He grew up in an apartment above his family’s store in Brooklyn, listening to the horses clomp on the streets. He also listens to music, jazz and piano. Aaron decides to become a musician and heads to Paris where he is taught to take his ideas and turn them into symphonies. Aaron’s music evolves as he tries to capture what is happening in America during the 1930s. He tries to make music that sounds like America. Soon people can hear his music in movie theaters and at the ballet. His music reflects America with its wide melodies and space to dream. 

Mang beautifully puts words to what Copland was attempting to create with his music. His focus on access to music and keeping it relevant to the general public can be heard in his symphonies. This picture book is just as relatable, sharing that children can create their own music that reflects them too. The art is celebratory and approachable, often using flowers to show when the music is flowing and being shared. 

A celebration of America’s composer. Appropriate for ages 5-8.

Cover image for Houdini’s Library: How Books Created the World’s Greatest Magician by Barb Rosenstock, illustrated by Mar Delmar. Featuring Houdini hanging upside down in a straightjacket holding a book.

Houdini’s Library: How Books Created the World’s Greatest Magician by Barb Rosenstock, illustrated by Mar Delmar

  • Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers
  • Publication Date: February 17, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9780593570135

Harry Houdini was born Erik Weisz in Hungary, son of a rabbi with a large library of books. The family emigrated to America where they hit hard times after Harry’s father lost his job. Harry had to quit school and start to work. Eventually, the family was so poor they had to sell his father’s books. It was in another book that Harry eventually found magic. He worked hard and studied more books, hoping to make enough money to care for his family. He met his wife, who worked as his assistant, soon adding his famous escape artist routines to his act. As his acts grew more dangerous, his fortunes grew. He built his own personal library that grew so big that he hired his own librarian. Eventually, he was even able to replace his father’s lost books and add them to his collection. 

It is a very unique lens to view Houdini’s life through: his love of reading and books. Breaking the idea that Houdini was born in America and found magic easy, adds to his connection with books and shows how even the most famous and gifted magician needs resources and knowledge to continue improving. The text is playful in appropriate spots, serious in others and always leads back to books. The illustrations done in cutouts, layer compellingly and create depth on the page that is used cleverly to show light, height and plenty of books. 

A testament to the magic of books. Appropriate for ages 5-8.

2 New Funny Picture Books Focused on Friendships

Cover image for Bob Is the Biggest, Strongest, and Smartest by Jean Reidy, illustrated by Amy Jindra Hodgson. Features a large blue bear flexing his muscle and a small badger looking shocked behind him.

Bob Is the Biggest, Strongest, and Smartest by Jean Reidy, illustrated by Amy Jindra Hodgson

  • Publisher: Rocky Pond Books
  • Publication Date: February 24, 2026
  • Reviewed from pdf provided by publisher
  • ISBN: 9780593858943

Bob knows that he is the biggest, strongest and smartest bear in the world, and he made sure that everyone in the forest knew that too. Bob loved to talk about himself and brag endlessly about his brawn and his brains. Then Bill came to the neighborhood. Bill loved to ask others about themselves. He asked lots of questions and got lots of answers. Bob spent his time making fun of Bill and explaining that he was still the top bear. Everyone loved chatting with Bill and one another, so when blustery Bob showed up to ask who the “biggest, strongest and smartest Bear in the whole wide world” no one noticed. But Bill did, and Bill started asking Bob questions about himself. And it turns out that even braggy blowhards like Bob like to be asked about themselves and need a few friends too.

Told in an engaging way with speech bubbles and simple lines, this picture book shows that curiosity about others works far better than bragging or selling yourself to them. The contrast between Bob the Bear and Bill the Badger could not be more clearly drawn. I enjoyed that rather than a comeuppance in the end, Bob changed his ways and started finding out about others too. The illustrations are bright and merry, the speech bubbles colored to make them all the more clear for young readers. 

Bullying Bear meets bright Badger in this book. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Cover of Forty the Fortune Teller by Dew Daywalt, illustrated by Kevin Cornell. Features a paper fortune teller toy reaching for a potato chip being sucked in by gum. A basketball glares in the background and a purple cloud looks surprised.

Forty the Fortune Teller by Dew Daywalt, illustrated by Kevin Cornell

  • Publisher: Philomel Books
  • Publication Date: February 24, 2026
  • Reviewed from pdf provided by publisher
  • ISBN: 9780593691465

Forty is a paper fortune teller dropped on the ground when the school bell rang. She’s not sure what to do until she meets Chip, a partially eaten potato chip who plans to escape to Canada in order to not be completely eaten by the kids. When the two discover a bolt on the ground that has fallen off of the playground slide, they decide they must venture across the huge playground to fix it before someone gets hurt. But their journey is full of dangers, happily Forty’s fortunes seem to come true! Perhaps they can manage to get the bolt replaced before the bell rings for recess or the fortunes run out. 

This picture book offers a graphic novel feel that makes it marvelously modern while focusing on timeless schoolyard elements of playground equipment, basketballs, potato chips, gum and fortune tellers. The text is superb silliness, leaning hard into the fortunes being whacky and then coming to life. Readers will delight in realizing they have no idea what is coming next. The illustrations create a friendly vibe, using interesting perspectives that add to the wild situations the story has created. 

A mad and magical playground adventure. Appropriate for ages 4-6.

I’m So Happy You’re Here: A Celebration of Library Joy by Mychal Threets – Book Recommendation

Cover image for I’m So Happy You’re Here: A Celebration of Library Joy by Mychal Threets, illustrated by Lorraine Nam. Features Mychal Threets in the middle of the page standing in a library, holding a pile of books and waving. Children are around him using the library as well as a small dog.

I’m So Happy You’re Here: A Celebration of Library Joy by Mychal Threets, illustrated by Lorraine Nam

  • Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers
  • Publication Date: February 3, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9798217026029

Mychal is well known for his inspiring take on libraries that he shares widely and with great joy. His first book embraces a child’s experience at their library, explaining openly that the library is a place they will always belong. No matter what their family or home looks like. He looks beyond books to the other services that children can experience at the library like board games, cooking and story time. The book finishes with getting your own library card and hoping you will come back to the library soon. 

Written in simple and welcoming prose, this picture book shines with Mychal’s signature approach to welcoming diverse patrons and children to our libraries. It is perfect to share with young field trips visiting the library for the first time as well as with new families visiting. Even children who have been coming to the library for years will see themselves welcomed afresh to their library. The illustrations are simple and welcoming too, filled with bright colors and diverse faces. 

Welcome to the library!  Appropriate for ages 2-5.

2 New Picture Books Celebrating Spring

Book cover of Is It Spring? By Kevin Henkes. Features two squirrels looking out from a hole in a tree with snow and blooming branches.

Is It Spring? By Kevin Henkes

  • Publisher: Greenwillow Books
  • Publication Date: February 24, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9780063469259

Told in questions and answers, this picture book celebrates the changing of the seasons. Spring is at its most elusive here, as it appears like it’s arrived due to the flowers, the buds on the trees, and the birds returning. But the wind can turn icy and the clouds return. The animals stay cozy in their homes. Late snow falls on the flowers. Then, change comes again with bright sunshine that melts the snow and the animals leave their dens. Now it is spring. 

Henkes, a Wisconsin book creator, captures the essence of a northern spring in his latest book. As always, his book is wonderfully approachable for even the youngest of children, showing how changeable weather and seasons can be while longing for the warmth of a new season to arrive. Readers will love the various small animals that experience spring’s arrival as well as one small child who is longing for the sun to come. 

A warm and lovely look at spring’s changeability. Appropriate for ages 1-4.

Cover image of Welcome, Uncle Nowruz!: A Persian New Year’s Story by Rashin Kheiriyeh. Features a family with Uncle Nowruz around a new year table filled with food.

Welcome, Uncle Nowruz!: A Persian New Year’s Story by Rashin Kheiriyeh

  • Publisher: NorthSouth Books
  • Publication Date: February 24, 2026
  • Reviewed from pdf provided by publisher
  • ISBN: 9780735846173

Nane Sarma lived in Iran. Every spring, her friend Uncle Nowruz would arrive to announce the arrival of spring. Yet she always managed to miss his visit. This year she invited her grandchildren to help her welcome Uncle Nowruz. They cleaned the house, purchased items for the Haft-Seen table, and bought new clothes. Nane cooked the traditional meal, set the beautiful table and gathered with her grandchildren. But she was so exhausted by all the work, she fell fast asleep and the children couldn’t wake her! When Uncle Nowruz arrived and welcomed spring, Nane kept right on sleeping.

Nowruz marks the Persian New Year and celebrates spring’s arrival. This picture book celebrating the Persian traditions related to Nowruz has the feel of a folktale thanks to its structure and pacing. The entire book is a celebration of spring’s arrival combined with a merry story about Nane falling asleep after making all the preparations. It is an excellent glimpse of Persian culture. The illustrations are filled with bright colors of pinks, reds, golds and blues. It creates a jolly feel as the family welcomes spring back. 

Don’t sleep on this one. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

3 New Nonfiction Picture Books That Take Risks

Book cover for Marie’s Magic Eggs: How Marie Procai Kept the Ukrainian Art of Pysanky Alive by Sandra Neil Wallace, illustrated by Evan Turk. Features Marie Procai in the middle of the cover creating a design on an egg with a large red Ukrainian egg behind her.

Marie’s Magic Eggs: How Marie Procai Kept the Ukrainian Art of Pysanky Alive by Sandra Neil Wallace, illustrated by Evan Turk

  • Publisher: Calkins Creek
  • Publication Date: February 10, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9781662680694

Marie learned to make Ukrainian decorated eggs with the Baba in Ukraine. They used beeswax and sketched stories on the eggs which were then painted in colors created from local plants. Marie followed her brothers when they moved to North America. Marie lived in Minneapolis after discovering her favorite uncle was there. When spring came, Marie longed to make pysanky and slowly found a way to create the colors and tools she needed. Marie married and her tools grew better thanks to her husband. Eventually, Marie started to sell tools and teach people how to create this art. Her Ukrainian Gift Shop became the largest supplier of pysanky kits in the world and her eggs were displayed at the White House. All a tribute to her heritage and her Baba.

This dynamic tale mixes tradition with new opportunities. Throughout the book, Marie is shown as a woman with her own ideas, her own way of approaching things and an undying connection to her Ukrainian heritage and culture. The book shares just enough information about creating pysanky to give young readers a sense of the detail and skill that go into each one. The art by Turk is amazing given that it uses resist, just like pysanky does, for the art. The result is an Easter egg of a book that has a rustic and colorful feel. 

A bright inspiring look at a female entrepreneur who used her heritage to create a business that speaks on behalf of Ukrainian heritage. Appropriate for ages 5-8.

Book cover for Seven Million Steps: The True Story of Dick Gregory’s Run for the Hungry by Derrick Barnes and Christian Gregory, illustrated by Frank Morrison. Featuring Dick Gregory running past red rock formations.

Seven Million Steps: The True Story of Dick Gregory’s Run for the Hungry by Derrick Barnes and Christian Gregory, illustrated by Frank Morrison

  • Publisher: Amistad Books for Young Readers
  • Publication Date: February 3, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9780063357525

To raise awareness of the problem of hunger in America, Dick Gregory pledged to run 3,500 miles across the United States from Los Angeles to New York City in two and a half months. At first, there were journalists, famous people and others cheering. But soon there was just the quiet of the road. He ran 50 miles a day, seeing America in a new way. At every stop Gregory spoke about why he was running. Running farther, Gregory was joined by local people who met him to run with him for a bit, supporting his cause, even Muhammad Ali came along. There was pain, so much effort and finally success as he entered New York on the Fourth of July. 

Told in second person, this book invites you to experience the decisions that went into Gregory’s run as well as the run itself. The text is near poetry, flowing across the page in stanzas that have rhythm that begs to be read aloud. It shares information clearly and with a particular point of view that insists that you look and think about what was accomplished. The art by Morrison is marvelous, filled with the long legs of runners, the vibrancy of brown and Black skin, and playing with perspectives to make the art sing along with the words.

A thrilling and inspiring look at activism in action. Appropriate for ages 5-8.

Book cover for Twelve Daring Grays: A Whale Migration Adventure by Nora Nickum, illustrated by Elly MacKay. Features a pod of whales near the surface of the water.

Twelve Daring Grays: A Whale Migration Adventure by Nora Nickum, illustrated by Elly MacKay

  • Publisher: Candlewick
  • Publication Date: February 10, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9781536234701

Every February, gray whales travel from Baja California to the Arctic. The trip is 6,000 miles and takes them 2 months. In their midst are 12 whales with a different plan. All of them eat almost nothing along the trip and some die along the way. When they reach Washington State, the 12 whales change course and head to the Salish Sea. The whales must wait for the tide to rise so they can reach the mudflat safely. Still, the water is very shallow where they must forage for the ghost shrimp to help them survive their journey. They stay for days, devouring the shrimp and leaving whale-sized divots in the sand. They set out on their trip north again, heading to the rich Arctic waters and then traveling back to California again to have their calves. Perhaps those calves too will take the dangerous detour to the Salish Sea.

Nickum has created a nonfiction picture book that reads beautifully, welcoming children to the story of these brave animals as they find a new way to survive a dangerous migration. The prose is presented almost like poetry on the page, offering beautiful moments of wonder at what the whales can do when they turn off and then eat in such shallow waters. MacKay’s art is incredible. She uses paper, ink, colored filters and light to create images that shine on the page. Each of the images is amazing, but I’ve never seen anything like what she has created to show the whales in shallow water. Incredible.

Breathtaking story and illustrations make this a journey worth taking. Appropriate for ages 4-8.

2 New Picture Books Featuring Moms

Book cover for Arctic Adventure: A Tundra Tale by Jyoti Rajan Gopal, illustrated by Alexandra Cook. Features a little arctic fox and a large arctic fox sitting nose to nose with two humans in a boat in the background.

Arctic Adventure: A Tundra Tale by Jyoti Rajan Gopal, illustrated by Alexandra Cook

  • Publisher: Feiwel & Friends
  • Publication Date: January 6, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9781250385444

As Little Fox follows her mother into the cold winter morning, she knows that the sun won’t appear now for weeks. At the same time, a child joins her mother to help photograph the Arctic. Both mothers clean up their children and then start exploring. The moon stays in the sky, reindeer head to the mountains to graze, then a polar bear arrives. The families explore the ice floes and meet a narwhal and a whale. As they play, a storm begins to brew, sending icy snow and brisk winds. The two little ones are lost together until their mothers find them both. That night, after the storm, the northern lights fill the sky.

The combination of the fox family and human families exploring the Arctic setting near one another works particularly well in this enticing picture book. Just right for winter storytimes, children will love seeing the animals while also seeing the beauty of the landscape. The mixed media illustrations are marvelously angular and dramatic, showing the ice ridges, the glow of the northern lights and the merry adventurers in the epic space.

A cold and gorgeous Arctic adventure. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Book cover for Bread Is Love by Pooja Makhijani, illustrated by Lavanya Naidu. Features a brown-skinned mother and two small children looking at the table where the title is written in flour.

Bread Is Love by Pooja Makhijani, illustrated by Lavanya Naidu

  • Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
  • Publication Date: February 10, 2026
  • Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley
  • ISBN: 9781250906885

Mama bakes bread every weekend and the young narrator and her little sister help. Bread is only made of four ingredients: flour, water, salt and starter. The starter is sourdough, gloopy, alive and sour smelling. Everyone helps with mixing the ingredients together. Then they must wait for the bread to rise. It takes patience to make bread. Once risen, the dough is shaped into bread. But it must rest again overnight, just like the children. Sometimes the bread will come out beautifully but other times it isn’t quite right. This time it deflated, but it still tastes good!

I’m a dedicated sourdough bread maker and also make bread every weekend, so this book spoke to me. I love the family working together to make bread but best of all I appreciate the fact that the loaf doesn’t turn out quite as they may have dreamt it would. That’s part of bread making that simply has to be embraced. The entire process teaches children about patience, imperfection, and the joy of being able to eat the results. The illustrations in this book are wonderfully welcoming and warm. They feel like a warm loaf of bread straight from the oven.

A yummy love-letter to bread making. Appropriate for ages 1-4.