Friday, October 31, 2025
Sunday, September 28, 2025
Book Review #117
Author: Ken Shelf
Photographer: Rachel Weill
Publisher: Ten Speed Press
Publication Date: November 13, 2018
ISBN: 978-1984856562
Genre: Nonfiction
Topic: Succulent care and design
I Gave This Book 5 Roars!π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦
Why 5 Roars?
This guide makes succulents simple and approachable for beginners, including older children who are inspired by Sutton’s story and want to try growing their own. The photography is inviting, the instructions are clear, and the projects range from very easy to creative challenges.
Critical Analysis:
Shelf’s writing is straightforward, encouraging even the most hesitant beginner to get started. The strength of this book is how it balances plant care basics (light, soil, irrigation) with creative design projects (terrariums, outdoor water-saving gardens, wreaths). The photography by Rachel Weill adds visual appeal, which makes it easier to follow instructions while also sparking inspiration.
Accuracy:
The book provides practical advice for growing succulents indoors and outdoors, from watering techniques to container tips.
Organization:
The layout is clean and logical: plant-by-plant guides, followed by DIY projects that grow in difficulty.
Design:
Bright photographs and step-by-step layouts make this a hands-on guide rather than just a reference book.
Style:
Accessible, upbeat, and beginner-friendly, perfect for families, classrooms, and anyone who wants to bring a little greenery indoors.
Connections:
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Ideal to pair with Sutton the Succulent Finds a Home in a Classroom Unit: read Sutton’s story, then try growing a real succulent.
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Can be used in science lessons (plant biology, water conservation, adaptation).
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Encourages responsibility and patience in children caring for plants at home.
Book Review #116
Author: Madison Alexander
Illustrator: Victoria Mikki
Publisher: Little Succulent Press
Publication Date: September 9, 2025
ISBN-13: 979-8218802936
Reading Level: Ages 4–8
Main Character: Sutton, a little succulent with a big heart.
Plot: Sutton longs to find where she belongs. Along her journey, she discovers that being different doesn’t mean she doesn’t fit in; it means she has her own special place to grow.
Settings: The different places Sutton tries to grow before discovering the perfect home.
Genre/Theme/Style: Picture book / Themes of resilience, confidence, patience, and self-acceptance.
I Gave This Book 5 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦
Why 5 Roars?
The message is timeless yet especially fitting for September, when children are navigating new classrooms and friendships. Sutton’s story provides comfort and courage, reminding readers that their uniqueness is their strength. It also speaks to us about learning to grow wherever you are at in life.
Critical Analysis:
Alexander’s narrative gently affirms the struggles kids feel when they don’t quite fit in. Using a succulent as the central figure is a brilliant metaphor: a plant known for resilience and thriving in surprising conditions. Victoria Mikki’s art enriches the text with expressive illustrations that make Sutton feel alive, tender, and hopeful. The balance of text and imagery ensures accessibility for read-alouds or independent reading.
Excerpt:
"On a warm, golden morning, the wind whisked a lonely leaf through the air and dropped it right into Ruth, the gardener’s blooming flower bed. The leaf wasn’t just any leaf. It was thick and smooth, with a dewy green surface that glistened in the sunlight."
Connections:
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Perfect back-to-school read to foster discussions about differences and belonging.
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Can tie into science lessons about plant diversity and adaptation.
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Pairs well with other picture books on self-acceptance, such as The Day You Begin by Jacqueline Woodson or Stand Tall, Molly Lou Melon by Patty Lovell.
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
Library Card Sign-Up Month - September
Get Your Superpower This September!
Did you know a library card is like having a superpower in your pocket? With one little card, you can check out stacks of books, read e-books on a tablet, listen to audiobooks, and even explore fun online games and homework help.
September is Library Card Sign-Up Month, and we’re celebrating all the kids who join the adventure! If you don’t have a card yet, stop by your local library and sign up; it’s free and only takes a few minutes. Do you already have a card? Use it to discover a new favorite story, learn amazing facts, or borrow a book you’ve been waiting to read.
Your library card is your ticket to explore, imagine, and grow. Let’s see how many new readers we can welcome this September!
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Book Review #115
The Universe In You: A Microscopic Journey
Author/Illustrator: Jason ChinPublisher: Neal Porter Books (Holiday House)
ISBN: 9780823446230
I Gave This Book 4 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦
Why 4 Roars?
This book sparks wonder while delivering real science in a kid-friendly way. It’s beautifully illustrated, thoughtfully written, and clearly meant for curious kids.
However, I had to keep reminding myself that it was a picture book. There are small amounts of text, but I actually would have preferred a little more text or none at all. There are reference pages in the back of the book, but these seem very different from the rest of the book... almost like an afterthought.
Critical Analysis: Jason Chin has a gift for turning complex science into visual experience. His illustrations take readers through layers of scale, from cells to molecules to atoms, making the invisible world vivid and understandable. It's really about the scale!
Accuracy: It is grounded in current biology and physics. The facts are presented and clarified further in the back of the book.
Organization: The structure follows a journey inward, moving from skin to cells to the tiniest particles that make up matter. It’s organized cleanly and builds curiosity with each turn of the page.
Design: The book uses watercolor illustrations that stretch across full spreads, covering each concept without overwhelming the reader.
Style: Clear and engaging. The second-person voice pulls readers in and helps them see science as personal and relevant.
Awards:
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ALA Notable Children’s Book
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Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor
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NSTA Outstanding Science Trade Book
Connections: Use with units on cells, atoms, or human biology. Could be paired with Your Place in the Universe (also by Chin) or as a companion to science journals, classroom discussions on scale, or art projects about “what’s inside.”
Book Review #114
Author: Rebecca Stead
Publisher: Wendy Lamb Books / Random House
ISBN: 9780375850868
Reading Level: Ages 10–13 (Grades 5–8)
Main Character: Miranda, a sixth-grade girl living in 1970s New York.
Plot: When You Reach Me follows Miranda as she navigates friendship shifts, mysterious notes, a break-in, and a tangle of time-travel clues. As summer winds down and school approaches, Miranda’s world becomes more layered and uncertain but also more interesting.
She receives strange anonymous messages that predict the future and hint at a tragedy she might be able to prevent. Alongside that mystery is the very real challenge of figuring out who she is becoming and what it means to let go or hold on.
Settings: 1970s Manhattan apartment buildings, corner stores, and city sidewalks.
Genre/Theme/Style: Realistic Fiction + Light Sci-Fi, Mystery, Growing Up, Time Travel, & Retro Vibes.
I Gave This Book 5 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦
Why 5 Roars? It’s smart, layered, and thrilling. Perfect for readers who want something thoughtful to wrap up the summer, especially kids who’ve outgrown chapter books but still crave stories that have meaning.
Critical Analysis: The book weaves together a coming-of-age story with a science fiction twist that never overwhelms the emotional depth. Themes of forgiveness, independence, and time (literal and emotional) give it staying power. It’s a cool puzzle kids will want to solve.
Connections: Pairs beautifully with books like Harriet the Spy (city kids with notebooks), Tuck Everlasting (big questions about time), and The Westing Game (puzzling plots). Could also spark great conversations about what readers would do if they could send a message to their past or future selves.
Book Review #113
Publisher: Roaring Brook Press
ISBN: 9781596437111
Reading Level: Ages 4–8
Main Character: Amos McGee, a kindhearted zookeeper.
Plot: In A Sick Day for Amos McGee, gentle Amos takes the
time each day to care for his animal friends at the zoo, playing chess with the
elephant, reading stories to the owl, and wiping the rhino’s runny nose. But
one day, Amos is too sick to come to work. His friends decide to return the
favor with a surprise visit to his house.
Settings: A cute little house and a friendly zoo.
Genre/Theme/Style: Children’s fiction, friendship, kindness,
gentleness, uplifting, animals,
sickness, empathy, germ prevention, & zoos.
I Gave This Book 5 Roars! π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦
Why 5 Roars? This is a perfect wind-down book. It’s quiet,
sweet, and deeply comforting, the kind of story that settles kids down before
bedtime or after a long summer day. It's also a great reminder for germ prevention
before little ones go back to school.
Critical Analysis: The story values everyday kindness and care for our friends, making it an emotional classic. Erin Stead’s illustrations are delicate and full of character.
Connections: Great for SEL (social-emotional learning),
especially themes like empathy, patience, and caring for others. Could be
paired with The Rabbit Listened by Cori Doerrfeld or used in classroom
discussions about helping friends.

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