April 16 – National Stress Awareness Month

About the Holiday

Stress Awareness Month has been held every April since 1992, when it was founded by the Health Resource Network. The holiday aims to help people identify the stress factors in their own life as well as to assess how all members of their family are handling various pressures. The goal is for everyone—either individually or together—to look for ways to manage their feelings while adding positive changes to their life. Talking about pressures with kids and doing simple activities with them can often help lessen the load. Sharing today’s book is a wonderful place to start!

A Cup of Quiet

Written by Nikki Grimes | Illustrated by Cathy Ann Johnson

“You ever hear of smiles?” The young narrator’s talking about the two-week “summer camp” she gets to spend with her grandmother every June. In that breathless excitement of children, she reveals the visits give her and her Grandma time to “stitch sock puppets and put on shows, bake Martian Cake that tastes like banana bread and play tea party in the garden with my dolls.” But today, they’re acting out a story—that is until Grandpa’s hammering and loud music become just too much.

Illustration © 2025 by Cathy Ann Johnson, text © 2025 by Nikki Grimes. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

Grandma flops into her chair with an “Ugh!” and tells her granddaughter she’s “thirsty for a cup of quiet.” This elicits a giggle and a bit of disbelief, but Grandma’s done with the noise and leads her granddaughter outside to the porch swing. But the city outside their house is just as noisy as Grandpa inside. A trip to the backyard garden is needed. Here, Grandma may be happy, but the narrator is getting fidgety.

Illustration © 2025 by Cathy Ann Johnson, text © 2025 by Nikki Grimes. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

Grandma gives her the side-eye and then hands her “an invisible cup” with instructions to “‘walk around the garden and fill this up with any sounds you hear.'” Up for this imaginative challenge, the girl first visits the rose bushes, where a bee is working and “snap[s] up a handful of his buzzing and drop[s] it in the cup.” On the ground below she sees a lizard and “spoon[s] up” the sound of its “scuttling across a dried leaf.” She begins paying more attention to the nature around her and listening harder to fill her cup.

Illustration © 2025 by Cathy Ann Johnson, text © 2025 by Nikki Grimes. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

A sudden thunderclap precipitates a downpour, but before she runs inside with Grandma, the narrator adds the first pings of raindrops on the roof to her nearly full cup. After drying off and changing, it’s finally time to enjoy a long sip from that make-believe cup. Ahhhh! So “‘refreshing!'” Her granddaughter thinks so too. Still, she has an observation: “‘… your quiet is awfully noisy!'” Grandma smiles and says, “‘I know, but Nature’s noise is peaceful, and I love that.'” Her granddaughter agrees—”You ever hear of perfect?”

Illustration © 2025 by Cathy Ann Johnson, text © 2025 by Nikki Grimes. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

Nikki Grimes invites readers to join in with a grandmother and granddaughter for a day of “summer camp” where love abounds. The easy banter between the two and affectionate gestures—such as Grandma’s playful tug on her granddaughter’s braid and the jump-into-her-arms hug the girl gives her grandma—immediately envelope both child and adult readers in this pair’s warm relationship. Grimes’ inventive call to interact with nature and find comfort there will have kids carrying their own imaginary cups to fill and spark other creative games and activities no matter where they live. 

Cathy Ann Johnson’s collage-style, mixed-media illustrations sweep readers into the creative and close-knit atmosphere of Grandma’s house during a week-long visit by her granddaughter. The vibrancy of the pair’s connection is shown through the colorful textures of the fabrics they use for crafting. The allure and importance of nature is likewise emphasized through the vivid greens and swirling motion in the grandmother’s back garden as well as the shimmering beauty of the creatures from which the girl collects sounds. The grandmother and granddaughter’s close bond is evident through their hugs, the way they sit close together (even touching hands while sitting in separate garden chairs), and the care Grandma provides after the rainstorm. The grandmother’s expressions are amusing in their honesty, and the look of wonder in the granddaughter’s eyes is inspirational.

Lyrical, playful, and full of love, A Cup of Quiet is a warm hug of a read aloud that adults and kids will love sharing again and again. The book is a must addition to school library, public library, and home collections.

Ages 3 – 7

Bloomsbury Children’s Books, 2025 | ISBN 978-1547610730

A Talk with Nikki Grimes

Photo Credit Marchel Hill

New York Times bestselling author Nikki Grimes was inducted into the Black Authors Hall of Fame in 2023. Her honors include the CSK Virginia Hamilton Lifetime Achievement Award, the ALAN Award for significant contributions to young adult literature, the Children’s Literature Legacy Medal, and the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. Author of the Coretta Scott King Award-winner Bronx Masquerade, and five Coretta Scott King Author Honors, she won the Printz Honor and Sibert Honofor her memoir Ordinary Hazards. Her latest titles include Garvey’s Choice:The Graphic Novel, a School Library Journal 2023 Best Book; Lullaby for the King, one of Book Riot’s 25 Best Christmas Books of All Time; and A Walk in the Woods, recipient of 8 starred reviews, and 11 Best Book listings for 2023, including the New York Times, NPR, and Smithsonian Magazine. Ms. Grimes lives in Corona, California. You can visit her at nikkigrimes.com.

Today, I’m honored to be talking with Nikki Grimes about the inspiration behind A Cup of Quiet, how she develops her characters, the joys and challenges of writing for multiple age groups, and much more!

A Cup of Quiet is a perfect book for adults and children to share, not only for outside noise but for times when life gets overwhelming.  Tell us about the inspiration for this story and a little about its journey to publication.

There’s a certain quality of quiet in nature that I’ve always found soothing. I need silence for my work because it allows me to concentrate fully when I write. But nature’s quiet is different. It’s rich with sound, but most of it requires you to pay close attention. To pick up the whir of a hummingbird’s wings, you have to be still, and you have to strain to hear it. The stillness that’s required is soothing, and the sounds you become attuned to are a healing balm. I wanted to write a story that celebrated those sounds, and the beauty of that kind of quiet.

In the early stages of the book, I’d go out to my garden and listen carefully, and I’d make mental notes of all that I heard that day. I’d jot everything down until I had a good list of sounds to play with.

My main character lived in the city and didn’t spend much time out in nature there, though she occasionally went to the park. But every summer, she’d travel out of the city for long visits with her grandmother who had a garden, and whose house was surrounded by trees, and greenery.

The story grew from there, and I knew immediately that I wanted Bloomsbury to publish the book, and I also knew intuitively who I wanted to illustrate—namely Cathy Ann Johnson. This teaming has proven to be perfect, all around.

If I had a cup to fill with quiet today, I’d add my cat’s little sleepy, dreamy purrs, the whoosh of cars passing my house, the rustle of squirrels in the trees, and a drop of water from my bubbling teapot. What would you put in your cup of quiet today?

I would put a bee’s buzz, the wind rustling leaves of a tree, the whir of a hummingbird’s wings—all the sounds I chose for A Cup of Quiet. Those are some of the sounds I listen for, and pay attention to, whenever I immerse myself in nature.

Cathy Ann Johnson’s mixed-media illustrations are a wonder of color, motion, humor, and the love between grandmother and granddaughter. What was your first impression when you saw her illustrations? Do you have a favorite spread?  Why is it a favorite?

First, I was over the moon for the grandmother! She had energy, and spunk, and style. I loved her!  And I loved her colors. Then, as I saw the book’s interiors, I was absolutely thrilled! Cathy Ann’s images, and their movements, were as lyrical as my own words. Our partnership on the page was the proverbial match made in heaven. I would be loath to choose a favorite spread.  Each one has its own magic.

A Cup of Quiet starts out “You ever hear of summer camp?”—a disarming introduction to the child narrator that’s so true to the way kids approach conversation. The dialogue in all of your work sings in this way with the kind of honesty, humor, emotion, and depth that makes your characters seem almost physically with the reader.  I’m curious about your process in developing your characters and stories.

My characters begin with a voice. I’ll hear a scrap of dialogue in my head—nothing extensive, just a few lines. The inspiration might come from the catalog of voices I’ve stored in memory over a lifetime of listening to people around me, or it might be the voice of a particular person in my life whose voice is special or one that has simply stayed with me for a long time. Either way, the voice feels familiar. I’ll jot down that scrap of dialogue as reference, then I’ll begin developing a character sketch and that character’s backstory. I never know how much or little of the backstory I’ll use, but that information guides me as I write. To nail the voice, I have to pay close attention. I climb into the character’s skin and look at the world from his or her perspective and write from that place, attuning myself to that character’s age, birth place, geographical region, quirks, fears—all of it guides me as I make decisions about what that character will say, how they’ll respond to various stimuli that shows up in the plot. If I step wrong, the character will bristle and call me out on it, almost audibly. “Do not put those words in my mouth! I would never say that!” or “I don’t speak like that!” It’s kind of eerie, actually. Characters can be very bossy!

You write books for all ages, from picture books to middle-grade to young adult. Can you talk a bit about the joys and challenges of each? What is one message you want readers in each age category to take away from your books? 

Each age format comes with its own set of limitations, constrictions, and also its own range of possibilities. I love mixing it up. Writing for different age groups keeps me on my toes. The picture book gives you very little room to develop character and plot, while, say, a young adult novel gives you so much unlimited space that you run the risk of overwriting, and of getting lost in the weeds of your plot, or tangled in the layers of your story. Being consistent with your tense or bookending your story in a way that is controlled and satisfying and that feels organic, is much more challenging in the long form of middle grade or YA storytelling.

Language choices are tricky, and different with each age group as well. You walk the line between accessibility and sophistication, between simplicity and complexity. The same variance is true of the emotional components appropriate for each age group as well. For those reasons, I think it’s wise to focus on one genre at a time until you work through the quirks of that genre and figure out a process that works for you. Then, by all means, go on and experiment with the next! It’s tough work, but I like that. For me, easy is boring!

As for your question about messages, I don’t write messages. I write stories. And a well-written story offers a number of ideas a reader might take away. It all depends on the particular reader. We bring ourselves to the page, as readers. Our own experiences, personalities, and what we need at a particular point in time, color what we see, what we notice, and what we ultimately take from a story. Of course, as the creator, I have a certain idea, or theme, I intend to weave into my story—and, by the way, it’s hard to know whether or not I’ve always succeeded—but I don’t worry about whether the reader will pick up on the specific note I had in mind. What matters to me is that, somewhere in the many layers of my story, readers find something valuable with which they resonate. Quite often, the things they find come as a surprise to me, but that’s okay. So long as they walk away with something of value to them, that’s all I can ask for.

While I read through your website, your generosity in sharing so much of your life really stood out.  I’m sure young readers and writers would love to know about when you first began writing and how you were recognized for your talent, having your first public reading when you were 13.  Could you share a little of our writing background with us?  What advice would you give to children and young adults who love to write and want to pursue it?

As I reference in my memoir Ordinary Hazards, and elsewhere, I started writing in earnest when I was six years old, and I did so because I would have burst, otherwise. I was so filled with the emotional and mental poison of anger, and pain, and confusion. I was desperate to get my feelings out, somehow. So, I began to pour those feelings onto a page. That’s how my writing began, but as I reached my teens, the idea of possibly pursuing writing as a career took root. I was encouraged by my father, by my sister, by the friends I dared share my poetry with, and later, by a couple of teachers.  At the same time, though, I also had peers who laughed me off the block for daring to dream of such a thing at all. But I decided early on to surround myself with other young people who nurtured dreams and goals of their own. Everyone else, I cut out of my circle. I refused to absorb the negativity of naysayers.

I encourage young people who have a heart for writing to read voraciously, and to read across genres.  Every genre has something to teach you, and the quality of your writing reflects the quality, variety, and breadth of your reading. So read, read, read.  

Next, write, write, write because writing is a muscle. You have to exercise that muscle if you want to become strong. There is no shortcut to excellence. And if you’re not going to pursue excellence, why even bother? Excellence is what your readers deserve. Remember: the world doesn’t need mediocrity, no matter what field you choose to pursue.

In addition to your many awards over the years, you received the Children’s Literature Legacy Award in 2017 and the Coretta Scott King-Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement Award in 2022. In 2023 you were inducted into the Black Authors Hall of Fame.  What does this recognition mean to you?

Recognition is affirmation, and who doesn’t appreciate that?  But an artist should never be satisfied to sit on their laurels. I use this recognition as fuel to keep pushing forward, to continue to stretch myself as an artist to try genres I’ve never attempted before, to explore forms of poetry I find challenging. Doing so keeps me alive, and grown, and excited about the work I’ve been doing professionally, now, for nearly 50 years. That way, even as I get old, my work never does!

What books of yours can readers look forward to next?

I have a new Dyamonde Daniel chapter book coming out in June.  It’s titled Loser, and it’s about healthy and unhealthy competition, and where to draw the line, especially when you’re competing with your best friend.

I also have a new picture book on the horizon, titled Stronger Than, a collaboration with Choctaw author, Stacy Wells and illustrated by E. B. Lewis, who I’ve worked with before. In this story, a Black Choctaw boy discovers the history of one ancestor who survived the Trail of Tears, and another ancestor who survived the Tulsa Race Massacre. Through their stories, he learns that he comes from stronger stock than he knew, and this knowledge helps him overcome one of his worst fears. I’m excited about both books, for very different reasons.

There are a few more books in production, as well, but it’s too soon to talk about those.

Is there a question I didn’t ask that you wish I had?  What would your answer be?

No. I think I’m about talked-out, for the moment!  This has been fun, though. And I hope you and the young readers in your life enjoy A Cup of Quiet.

Thank you so much, Nikki! It’s been terrific chatting with you! I wish you a wonderful spring and summer of nature’s refreshing quiet.

You can purchase A Cup of Quiet from these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop (discounted books and support for your local independent bookstore)

Picture Book Review

April 11 – National Humor Month

About the Holiday

There may be no more infectious sound than the giggle or guffaw of a good laugh. Laughter is therapeutic and can make tough times a little easier. Established in 1976 by comedian and author Larry Wilde, National Humor Month celebrates all things funny and raises awareness of the benefits of laughter and joy. The health benefits of an optimistic outlook are well documented, and lightheartedness also improves communication skills and boosts morale. Kids, it seems, are born with the ability to see and appreciate the silliness and fun in life. Today’s book is sure to keep your kids giggling!

Thanks go to Flamingo Books for sharing a copy of It Started with a P with me!

Review by Dorothy Levine

It Started with a P

Written by Brittany Pomales | Illustrated by Andrew Joyner

 

When King Liam awakens from a petrifying dream, he protests that a problem starting with the letter P will properly ruin his party. But what was it? King Liam is positively puzzled, so he proclaims, “Everything that starts with the letter P must go.” Thus, his royal advisor Cedric proceeds to “purge the palace of Ps,” pitching pepperoni pizzas from the window, propelling pigeons from the parapet and pronouncing all pants (long, short, old, new, smarty, scaredy, fancy, and even his own) prime lunch for Percival the goat.

Illustration © 2025 by Andrew Joyner, text © 2025 by Brittany Pomales. Courtesy of Flamingo Books.

Everything is going according to plan when poof—people begin to arrive. “People?! No, that won’t do,” King Liam proclaims, and everyone is hastily pushed off the pier into paddle boats. Finally, it seems the palace is P-free. Or so it seems . . . until the king pops up from his seat crying, “Palace!” and realizes there’s one more P from which to flee.

Illustration © 2025 by Andrew Joyner, text © 2025 by Brittany Pomales. Courtesy of Flamingo Books.

The king packs and paddles away to a deserted island where there are “No pals. No presents. No party.” Plopped down on his own, King Liam has some time to ponder. It isn’t long before he remembers (and realizes he has become) the P from his dream—a party pooper! He decides it’s time to prove he can pivot from his party-pooping, plundering patterns; there is still time to prepare a pretty playful and peaceful party for all.

With the help of a princess, some piranhas, and his previous party guests, King Liam’s party is once again popping, or puffing one might say, as he blows out the candles on his birthday cake. And when one little candle flame just won’t perish . . . what does he do? Prepare to laugh and groan as the king predictably prompts another rash proceeding that will make you want to say “pfffff!”

Illustration © 2025 by Andrew Joyner, text © 2025 by Brittany Pomales. Courtesy of Flamingo Books.

It Started with a P punctuates a problem-solving tale with perfect alliteration and perfunctory placed humor. Brittany Pomales packs in the P’s along with a story that will have children and adults laughing aloud. The story playfully pokes at rash decisions that one may feel inclined to make when faced with big emotions and shows the silly consequences of post-tantrum decisions.

Andrew Joyner’s illustrations pack a punch with color, and P-named details for readers to point out (even ones not included in the text). In some scenes the story is portrayed simply through the pictures—like when we see a frame-by-frame recollection of the King’s past “King-size” meltdowns. Red and yellow seethe from the king as he preposterously shouts, and the parrot and royal assistant match with their feathered green-and-orange looks. The silliness of the drawings adds another layer to an already humorous tale.

Ages 4 – 8

Flamingo Books, 2025 | ISBN 978-0593690833

About the Author

Brittany Pomales wrote this book. Unless you didn’t find it funny; in that case, someone else wrote it. When she isn’t writing books, Brittany is often playing with, singing to, or reading to her daughter along with her husband and dog in their Arizona home. She has celebrated over thirty birthdays. Thankfully, none have resulted in a celebration crisis—yet!

About the Illustrator

Andrew Joyner is the illustrator of the #1 New York Times bestseller Dr. Seuss’s Horse Museum as well as Duck and Hippo in the Rainstorm by Jonathan London and Roar for Reading by Beth Ferry. He is also the author and illustrator of The Pink Hat and Stand Up! Speak Up!. He lives with his family on the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia.

National Humor Month Activities

Plenty of P Activities

 

Prepare and paint a P-shaped Parrot Picture with instructions from ABCDee Learning and peruse their page for more P-themed craft activities!

You can purchase It Started with a P at these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop (discounted books and support for your local, independent bookstore)

Picture Book Review

April 10 – National Wildlife Week

About the Holiday

National Wildlife Week, dating back to 1938, is the National Wildlife Federation’s longest-running education program. The celebration was designed to connect budding conservationists of all ages to the awesome wonders of wildlife. Each year, we pick a theme and provide fun educational materials and activities for educators and caregivers to use with kids. This year’s theme is Keep an Eye on the Wild. Conservationists and animal lovers are keeping a lookout for wildlife in the most unexpected places as we learn how we can keep their habitats safe and live in harmony with our incredible wild neighbors. Whether you keep your eyes out for the wildlife living near you with a “critter cam” or by walking around and paying attention to your backyard, neighborhood, and wider area, being aware of the creatures around you can help them survive for generations to come. To learn more about National Wildlife Week and find fun activities aimed at connecting kids with wildlife, visit the National Wildlife Week Kids Page!

Finding Home: Amazing Places Animals Live

Written by Mike Unwin | Illustrated by Jenni Desmond

 

Finding Home begins: “Our planet is home to a mind-boggling number of different animals: at least 6,500 species of mammal, 10,000 species of reptile, 11,000 species of bird, and literally millions of insects. Every single one has its own home.” Just think of it! As your eye sweeps across any vista; as you walk across your yard, local playground, or favorite park, beach, or mountain trail, an untold number of creatures’ homes are within sight or underfoot. We know their names: Den. Nest. Burrow. Taxi (wait, what?). You’ll see, because in their astounding and gorgeous book, Mike Unwin and Jenni Desmond reveal that there is no such thing as a generic animal home.

Illustration © 2025 by Jenni Desmond, text © 2025 by Mike Unwin. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

Take “den,” for instance—a polar bear’s snow den. Unwin and Desmond take you right inside this winter home, where a mother polar bear and her two cubs (born here in the cold of January) welcome you. As you squeeze inside, don’t worry about being cold. The polar bear’s “thick fur keeps the temperature 77°F warmer than outside.” 

Next up is “nest.” These are bowls made from twigs, straw, and fluff and, sometimes, found objects like bits of paper or cloth, right? Well, yes—for some birds. But you won’t believe your eyes when you see what appears to be several haystacks lodged within a tree’s branches. This nest, constructed by a whole community of birds smaller than sparrows, can “grow as big as a car, weigh more than a ton, and last 100 years.” Like humans’ apartment buildings, the bird pairs that inhabit this nest look out for each other and help their neighbors. Kids will also be amazed by another type of bird that literally sews leaves together with “plant fiber and spider silk” to create their soft, deep nests.

Illustration © 2025 by Jenni Desmond, text © 2025 by Mike Unwin. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

And how about “burrows?” Yep, Unwin and Desmond showcase a couple of pretty spectacular burrows too. Take the aardvark’s home. You won’t see an aardvark during the day. While the sun is up, they stay below ground, sleeping and tending to their young. It’s only after sunset that these unusual, ant-eating animals (including two-week-old babies) make an appearance topside. This is when they do what they do best: sniff out anthills and termite mounds, dig them up, and have dinner. It takes a hearty meal to satisfy an aardvark: “One aardvark can eat an amazing 50,000 ants and termites in a single night!”

Now, about that “taxi.” Children will be wowed by two, very different types of animals who prefer moving from one area to another by hitching a ride on another creature, from whom they can get food and other necessities of life while helping their hosts as well. Of course, the variety of animal homes don’t stop at these four. Every page transports readers to a different part of the globe to witness creatures of the air, sea, and land living in the home of their choice.

Unwin ends this fascinating travelogue with a map showing different ways some of the animals in the book tend to the environment, protecting it and keeping it growing for themselves and humans. He also includes a caution, reminding readers that “all these habitats . . . fit together like jigsaw pieces to make up planet Earth. And just like a jigsaw needs all its pieces, a healthy planet needs all its animals and their habitats.” Sadly, humans have not been good stewards of Earth’s bounty. “Today, scientists and conservationists are working hard to put things right.” But everyone is needed to make sure our environment is cared for the way we care for our own families. “Only then will planet Earth truly be home, sweet home.”

Illustration © 2025 by Jenni Desmond, text © 2025 by Mike Unwin. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

Mike Unwin draws readers in with engaging storytelling that allows kids to easily understand how each animal goes about building their home and why it’s perfect for their lifestyle. Children also learn just as much about the animals as the homes they build, giving them deep and well-rounded knowledge of some of the most unusual birds, fish, mammals, and insects on our planet and how many of them benefit humankind. Unwin’s phrasing, vocabulary and conversational lilt make Finding Home a highly satisfying nonfiction read aloud for younger kids. Independent readers will eagerly dip into the book again and again to meet these intriguing creatures.

With the impact of a museum exhibit, Jenni Desmond’s rich, full-bleed illustrations will take your breath away with their stunning realism and personality. Some animals peek out at the reader, while others busily go about their work oblivious to outside interest. From grassy hillsides to treetop canopies to sunny Africa and the snowy Himalayas, Desmond takes readers on an around the world tour like no other.

Gorgeous, educational, and nature nonfiction at its best, Finding Home: Amazing Places Animals Live is a must for all classroom, school, and public libraries as well as for nature- and animal-loving kids and families.

Ages 5 – 8+

Bloomsbury Children’s Books, 2025 | ISBN 978-1547615100

About the Author

Mike Unwin has written more than 30 books for both adults and children, including the Encyclopedia of Birds and Migration. He is also a regular contributor to publications such as BBC Wildlife and RSPB Nature’s Home. In 2013 Mike was voted UK Travel Writer of the Year by the British Guild of Travel Writers. Follow Mike on Instagram @mikeunwin.wildtravel.

About the Illustrator

Jenni Desmond is the illustrator of more than 20 books, including MigrationThe Wolves of Yellowstone, and The Blue Whale. Her books have been translated into over a dozen languages. In 2016 she was made a Maurice Sendak Fellow and her book The Polar Bear became a New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book of the Year. When Jenni is not in her studio, you’ll find her cooking, cycling and looking for adventure. Visit her at jennidesmond.com and follow her on Instagram @jennidesmond.

National Wildlife Week Activity

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-shark-fin-craft

Fintastic Shark Fun

 

Sharks are awesome creatures and even feature as a home to another animal in today’s book! Follow the directions below and to make your own shark fin. 

Supplies

  • 2 pieces of 8.5 x 11 gray cardstock paper
  • Ribbon
  • Tape
  • Scissors
  • Pencil

fin outline white

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-shark-fin

Directions

  1. Tape the top of the two pieces of paper together
  2. Fold them back together
  3. Measure an inch up from the bottom of the papers (the un-taped side) and trace a straight line across both papers
  4. Trace a shark fin outline onto your paper. The shark outline should stop an inch above the bottom
  5. Cut out the fin on both pieces of paper. If you should cut through the tape, re-tape the tops together
  6. Fold along the lines of both papers so the folds face towards each other.
  7. Tape the folds so the fin becomes a triangle
  8. Cut two slits parallel to the folded lines
  9. Thread ribbon through slits

You can purchase Finding Home: Amazing Places Animals Live from these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop (discounted books and support for your local independent bookstore)

Picture Book Review

April 9 – National Unicorn Day

About the Holiday

There may be no more beloved magical creature than the unicorn. Unicorns have been part of legend since ancient times, undergoing changes from an image of fierceness and power to a representation of strength and true love to today’s more glittery superstar. To celebrate today, learn more about the history of these mystical animals and check out the latest addition to the wildly popular unicorn-tastic Unicorn Diaries series!

Thank you to Scholastic for sharing a copy of The Secret of the Lost Gold with me.

The Secret of the Lost Gold (Unicorn Diaries #11)

By Rebecca Elliott

 

As the latest story in the Unicorn Diaries begin, Rainbow Tinseltail (Bo, for short) reveals that dark clouds and lightening foretell a storm, and over night winds, rain, and unipod-shaking thunder do sweep through Sparklegrove Forest, where the unicorns, gnomes, and other magical creatures live. In the morning, everyone wakes to find “a very big mess all across the forest.” It’s then that Mr. Rumptwinkle, the unicorn’s teacher at the Sparklegrove School for Unicorns (S.S.U.), cancels class for the day, instead sending his students out into the forest to see who needs help.

Illustration and text © 2025 by Rebecca Elliot. Courtesy of Scholastic.

They find that no one—from the fairies to the gnomes to the mermaids, dragons, and trolls—has escaped the storm unscathed. “But the great news was that no one was hurt.” The unicorns bring some friends home for hot tea and buttermoon biscuits as they all talk about how they can help rebuild. Edna Gnome remembers an “old Rebuild and Repair spell” from “long ago” that could restore the entire forest at once, but she needs “special ancient gold nuggets” to make it work. 

The next day, the unicorns head out for Queen Juniper’s castle to learn where to get the ancient gold only to discover that the castle has been damaged too. From Princess Greta, the unicorns learn that the gold has always been stored in a cave in the Dark Woods and is protected by a griffin named Edgar and from their werewolf friend Barry, they discover where the cave is: in the most dangerous part of the Dark Woods. 

Illustration and text © 2025 by Rebecca Elliot. Courtesy of Scholastic.

Undaunted (well, maybe a little) and brave, the unicorns continue their quest. Along the way they use their individual powers to outsmart a giant, calm upset night sprites, and cheer up “grumpy talking trees.” When they got to the cave, the unicorns were even able to befriend the griffin and retrieve the gold they needed.

Back at Queen Juniper’s castle, Edna makes the magic rainbow-colored dust and, as Bo writes, “Everyone worked together to rebuild our forest.” Queen Juniper held a royal ball with “scrumptious food, lots of desserts, and golden glitter fireworks” to celebrate. She even honored Edgar with a “majestic golden necklace as a special thank-you for protecting the forest’s gold.” And the unicorns? They earned their Treasure Hunt patches and made a new friend in Edgar!

Illustration and text © 2025 by Rebecca Elliot. Courtesy of Scholastic.

It’s easy to see why Rebecca Elliot’s Unicorn Diaries is so beloved by early and newly independent readers. Each book in the series is warm and welcoming, beginning with its first chapter, which introduces new readers to the unicorns and world of Sparklegrove Forest with an illustrated map; a fun-facts description of the book’s new featured magical being (the griffin, in this book); surprising details about unicorns (for instance, that their horn is perfect for carrying cotton candy and can be used as a flashlight and that a swish of their tail enacts their secret power); and information about their school.

The Secret of the Lost Gold, the 11th book in the series, is a perfect addition to Elliot’s unicorn lore. Full of imagination; friendship; high-stakes, yet solvable challenges; magic; and humor, the story will captivate readers with its positivity, gentle suspense, and underlying message that they have the power to be brave and to take action to give back to their communities. The diary format of the book allows Elliot to combine larger-size, easy-to-read text with colorful illustrations that provide a natural, confidence-building bridge from picture books to text-only chapter books.

Whether your child is a fan of the Unicorn Diaries series or just discovering this magical world of reading, The Secret of the Lost Gold is a book you’ll want to add to your child’s home bookshelves. For classrooms, school, and public libraries, this latest trip to Sparklegrove Forest is a must.

Ages 5 – 7

Scholastic, 2025 | ISBN 978-1546127161

About the Author/Illustrator

Rebecca Elliott has illustrated many children’s books, including Kiss, Kiss Good Night. She wrote and illustrated the New York Times bestselling Owl Diaries series, the Unicorn Diaries series, Just Because, and Zoo Girl, which was nominated for the Kate Greenaway Medal. She lives with her family in the countryside of Suffolk, England.

National Unicorn Day Activity

Unicorn Coloring Pages

 

Kids’ll have fun grabbing some crayons and glitter and making magical moments with these Unicorn Coloring pages! 

Happy Unicorn Coloring Page | Unicorn Leaping Over Rainbow | Unicorn Reading a Book

You can purchase The Secret of the Lost Gold from these booksellers

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Picture Book Review

April 3 – Find a Rainbow Day

About the Holiday

As the old proverb goes, “April showers bring May flowers,” but all that rain brings something else—rainbows! The science behind rainbows was first discovered in 1693, when scientists realized that this phenomenon is caused by light from the sun being refracted through raindrops and causing a dazzling show. Today, I wish you a rainy day and happy rainbow hunting! A perfect place to find rainbows every day and in amazing places beyond the sky is in today’s book!

A Universe of Rainbows: Multicolored Poems for a Multicolored World

 

By Matt Forrest Esenwine | Illustrated by Jamey Christoph

 

Rainbows are a universally loved natural phenomenon. The excitement of seeing a rainbow arcing across the sky never goes away no matter how old you get. And a double rainbow? For some people, seeing one of those can be like glimpsing a celebrity. In the 22 poems that make up A Universe of Rainbows, Matt Forrest Esenwine and 19 other poets reveal that you don’t always have to wait for rain to be awed by the brilliance of this spectrum of colors as they abound in nature: on land, in waters, on plants and animals, and even in the depths of space.

Illustration © 2025 by Jamey Christoph, text © 2025 by NIkki Grimes. Courtesy of Eerdmans Books for Young Readers.

Nikki Grimes leads off this lyrical odyssey that invites readers to travel around the world and beyond to discover rainbows in many forms. In Grimes’ “Rainbows of Light,” she channels the disappointment of a child facing a rainy day with “. . . No hopscotch. / No soccer. / No softball / no skip rope. . . .” The child “. . . curse[s] the rain” until they “catch the storm’s apology: / sun-drenched strips of color / arch across the sky— / A rainbow! / Oh! My!” 

You might think that rainbows occur in nature only during the day, but Joyce Sidman, reveals otherwise in her intricate and arresting pantoum “Along the Zambezi.” Sidman animates a moonbow, entreating readers to take a moment to look as “This dancer will not leap for long / over the span of Victoria Falls,” where “. . . a full moon crowns the darkened hill” while “. . . Mist swirls up in silver shawls, / bending moonlight’s slanting spill.” 

Illustration © 2025 by Jamey Christoph, text © 2025 by David L. Harrison. Courtesy of Eerdmans Books for Young Readers.

Rainbow seekers do not always need to look toward the sky to find the glorious hues of rainbows. In his rhythmic “Reflections on the Pool,” David L. Harrison nimbly combines assonance and consonance to introduce kids to the surprising Morning Glory Pool in Yellowstone National Park. Harrison describes how this hot spring—a “miracle of nature . . . / Blessed with bacteria tinted blue”—once appeared as vividly blue, but now, because of human interference, is developing a “rainbow of colors” as other types of bacteria take over. Together the poem and sidebar provide a concrete example of the value of conservation and a gripping entry into further study or research. 

Readers also learn about a uniquely dressed tree, Rebecca Kai Dotlich’s “skirted pinwheel” of a flower, two varieties of birds, and incredible creatures of the sea and land that shimmer and glimmer with the colors of a rainbow. In “Elegant Danger,” Matt Forrest Esenwine exposes the “captivating beauty / with radiant appeal” of the peacock mantis shrimp that has “An appetite of titans. / Attitude of steel.”  into space to float within the Rainbow Nebula with poet Georgia Heard. 

Each poem is accompanied by a short and fascinating side bar offering more information about the natural phenomena that inspired the work.

Back matter includes a list of recommended books and websites where readers can find more information about the rainbows described in each poem as well as a glossary.

Illustration © 2025 by Jamey Christoph, text © 2025 by Janet Wong. Courtesy of Eerdmans Books for Young Readers.

For the twenty award-winning writers who’ve contributed to Matt Forrest Esenwine’s debut poetry anthology, unique rainbows occurring in nature have inspired a wide range of contemplation and poetic form. Some are awe-struck, others hold a touch of humor, and still others are conversational. One thing they all have in common is an ability to transport readers to another place or just the right moment to witness one of life’s most astonishing sights. Through each poem, readers learn facts but they also discover how to observe with curiosity, appreciate the miraculous, and commit to preserving our natural wonders. 

Jamey Christoph’s multi-media illustrations mesmerize with brilliant color that tantalizes like a magic spell, slipping through ice crystals, hiding in plain sight, turning pools of water and majestic trees into artists’ palettes, and clothing creatures of the air, sea, and land. You might be tempted to think that these natural phenomenon can’t possibly be so vivid in real life, but take a look (these poems encourage further research) and you’ll find that Christoph’s full-spread images mirror their inspirations. Beautiful and stirring, each page welcomes you to linger awhile.

Encompassing riveting writing by award-winning poets, spellbinding illustrations of natural phenomena, and nearly endless applications for science, writing, and art study and discovery, A Universe of Rainbows: Multicolored Poems for a Multicolored World is a must for school and public library collections as well as for any reader who loves inspired writing and nature.  

Ages 6 – 10

Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, 2025 | ISBN 978-0802855718

About the Author

Matt Forrest Esenwine is a children’s author and poet whose books include The Thing to Remember about Stargazing (Tilbury House), Once Upon Another Time (Beaming), and A Beginner’s Guide to Being Human (Beaming). His work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and featured in numerous anthologies. Also a voiceover actor and commercial copywriter, Matt lives in Warner, New Hampshire, with his family. Visit his website at mattforrest.com.

About the Illustrator

Jamey Christoph has illustrated over twenty books, including The Great Lakes (Knopf), Stonewall (Random House), and Outside My Window (Eerdmans). His books have been named to many best-of-the-year list, including from the CBC and NYPL. Jamey lives in New Hampshire with his husband and their crazy dogs. Visit Jamey’s website at jameychristoph.com and follow him on Instagram @jameychristoph.

National Find a Rainbow Day Activity

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-rainbow-magnet-craft

Mini Rainbow Magnet

 

If you’re stuck on rainbows, you can make this mini rainbow to stick on your fridge or locker!

Supplies

  • 7 mini popsicle sticks (or cut regular popsicle sticks in half)
  • Paint in red, orange, yellow, green, blue, Indigo, violet (ROYGBIV)
  • Adhesive magnet
  • A little bit of polyfill
  • Paint brush
  • Glue or hot glue gun

Directions

  1. Paint one popsicle stick in each color, let dry
  2. Glue the popsicle sticks together side by side in the ROYGBIV order, let dry
  3. Roll a bit of polyfill into a cloud shape and glue to the top of the row of popsicle sticks
  4. Attach the magnet to the back of the rainbow

You can purchase A Universe of Rainbows from these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop (discounted books and support for your local independent bookstore)

Picture Book Review 

April 2 – International Children’s Book Day

About the Holiday

Each year since 1967 Hans Christian Andersen’s birthday has served as the date for Children’s Book Day. The International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY), a non-profit organization founded in Zurich, sponsors the day to promote a love of reading. Seventy-five National Sections around the world alternate in hosting the event. The host for 2025 is The Netherlands, and this year’s theme is “The Freedom of Imagination.” Each year a prominent author and illustrator from the sponsoring country prepare materials used to raise awareness of books and reading. Rian Visser wrote this year’s message and the poster was designed by Janneke Ipenburg. To learn more about the initiative, download digital materials, and learn about how children can enter the international drawing competition, visit the IBBY website. Today’s story that tells the tale of a young girl writing a story is a perfect example of the eternal power and influence of children’s books.

Written and Drawn by Henrietta

By Liniers

 

Henrietta’s mom gives her a new box of colored pencils, which Henrietta says is “as close as you can get to owning a piece of the rainbow.” She sits down to draw her own book and titles it “The Monster with Three Heads and Two Hats.” She begins with an illustration of a little girl, Emily, in bed at night. “I’m scaring myself…,” she thinks. Her thought is played out in her next page which shows Emily asking her stuffed rabbit if it will sleep with her because she’s scared of an unexplained Creak, Creak.

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-written-and-drawn-by-henrietta-three-headed-monster

Copyright © 2025 by Liniers. Courtesy of TOON Books.

“Hmm…What’s that noise?” ponders the young writer. Her fears make it to the page—Creeak…Creeak…Thump…Crash…Boom. What are those noises, my favorite? Emily asks, her eyes now wide. The Noises! They’re getting closer!!

Henrietta knows that in a good story something always happens “suddenly,” and so she draws a mysterious hand and a mysterious foot emerging from Emily’s wardrobe. The plot thickens and finally the full terrifying monster with three heads pops out of the wardrobe.

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-written-and-drawn-by-henrietta-in-bed

Copyright © 2025 by Liniers. Courtesy of TOON Books.

They acquire names from Henrietta’s imagination—Huey, Dewey, and Louie Bluie. . She is stuck for a bit as to how to go on, then gives Emily a question: What were you doing inside my wardrobe? The monster answers that it is looking for a hat. Emily joins them in their search, entering her wardrobe. She’s aghast to find that it is full of…clothes! (The wardrobe had been made in Narnia, the well-read Henrietta tells her cat, Fellini).

When the monster and Emily wonder which way to go, they meet a direction-giving mouse, and the story takes off—even Henrietta can’t wait to see what happens. She draws a huge pile of hats (she’s learned about “hat-o-logy” from the encyclopedia—the printed version!). The creature’s two heads with hats begs the third head to choose a hat before “the monster” shows up. Emily is terrified again—Another monster? What has Henrietta concocted this time? A monster with one head and three hats! This horrible beast suddenly appears and chases the crew through the wardrobe. Everyone is shouting Aaaaaaaaaaa—even the author.

celebrate-picture-books-picture-book-review-written-and-drawn-by-henrietta-wardrobe

Copyright © 2025 by Liniers. Courtesy of TOON Books.

Emily and the first monster lose the tremendous beast, ask the direction-giving mouse how to escape, and burst out of the wardrobe just in time. Henrietta thinks the story should have a happy ending, and before the monster with three heads and now three hats flies out the window, they give Emily a present. What could it be? Henrietta is so curious! It’s a wonderful hat, of course!

The End

“Now,” Henrietta says, “to find a publisher!”

This classic Toon Book by Liniers is a wonder as it reveals the inner-workings of children’s imaginations and the spontaneous nature of their brilliant creativity. Henrietta’s thought process as she conjures up her story is shown in neat comic-style panels with speech bubbles, while her story is depicted in colorful kid-like drawings and dialogue written in all capital letters. This interplay between the young artist/writer and her work enhances the fun, suspense, and surprise of this story-within-a-story. 

Ages 5 and up

TOON Books, an imprint of RAW Junior, LLC, 2015 | ISBN 978-1935179900

International Children’s Book Day Activity

CPB - Comic Panel

Create Your Own Story

 

It’s so much fun to let your imagination fly! Use this printable Comic Style Page to create a story as unique as you are!

You can purchase Written and Drawn by Henrietta from these booksellers

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Picture Book Review

April 1 – Reading Is Funny Day

About the Holiday

Funny stuff abounds on April 1st, so why not share funny books too? Books that elicit giggles are not only entertaining but contribute to a lifelong love of reading and help kids see the world in a new, positive, and even quirky way. To celebrate today, read some laugh-out-loud books with your kids and find new ones to add to your home, classroom, or library shelves. Today’s featured book is a perfect place to start!

Thank you to Bloomsbury Children’s Books for sending me a copy of We Are the Wibbly!: A Tadpole’s Tail for review.

We Are the Wibbly!: A Tadpole’s Tail

Written by Sarah Tagholm | Illustrated by Jane McGuinness

 

A sweet, pink-cheeked frog egg heartily addresses whoever is gazing down upon the frogspawn with a warm welcome: “We are eggs.” Then they add a little: “We are egg friends.”  They become loquacious: “We float and are all very relaxing. It is niceable.” You can feel it, right? Bobbing along within the pond grass? But suddenly confusion reigns. Our little egg watches the other eggs become “longish,” and then—”What! What! What!”—they become longish. And it’s not even a minute later that—”OH MY CRIKEYS!” everyone is “bursting out of the Wibbly” except them. 

Illustration © 2025 by Jane McGuinness, text © 2025 by Sarah Tagholm. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

They try to call the others back, but it’s too late. Despite not wanting to, they break out of the wibbly too only to find that there’s so much more room now and, instead of relaxing, their friends are “water-flying.” They begin waggling their tale the same as everyone else and jet off too, only not as fast. Perhaps harkening back a moment or so to their younger self, they sharply regret the loss of doing relaxing: “We are too OLD for relaxing.” But they don’t have time for such reminiscences since a “hunger-muncher” is on the prowl. The extra impetus speeds up this little tadpole’s water-flying, and they’re happy to feel at last that “we are the same!” 

Always exceedingly alert if but a bit behind, the excitable tadpole suffers and then exults as the group and finally they themselves grow legs and arms. They become smug as they watch the others lose their tails “because now, I am the fasterest and my tail is not doing a shrinking!” They dart away, not realizing that they are also becoming a frog. 

Illustration © 2025 by Jane McGuinness, text © 2025 by Sarah Tagholm. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

When a passing water beetle points the baby frog to “the Up” during their search for their friends, they break the surface of the water only to . . . “OH MY CRIKEYS! The Up is BAD!” . . . come face to face with a “furry danger-monster.” But this intrepid frog musters all their courage to “do a water-flying to get away” and discovers “air-swimming,” much to the astonishment of their friends who are watching nearby. The friends are all so impressed that they want to “do air-swimming” and beg to be taught. Leading the way, our newly minted, rosy-cheeked frog proudly proclaims, “Now we ARE the same! WE ARE FROGS!” 

A factual account of the four steps of the frog life cycle follows the story.

Illustration © 2025 by Jane McGuinness, text © 2025 by Sarah Tagholm. Courtesy of Bloomsbury Children’s Books.

Who knew kids and frogs have so much in common? Sarah Tagholm, that’s who! As Tagholm taps into the idiosyncrasies of a frog’s metamorphosis, she also reassures human youngsters that everyone grows and develops at their own pace while encouraging them to accept challenges and embrace new experiences. Tagholm’s quirky and playful language bounces and zips from one unexpected development to the next, compressing time into hilarious juxtapositions as the little egg/tadpole/frog tries to keep up. Both kids and adults will laugh out loud at this young hero’s endearing pronouncements and cheer their eventual full assimilation into the group.

Adorable, expressive, and comical, Jane McGuinness’s lovely mixed-media illustrations, punctuated by her dynamic typography, buoyantly captures all the silly fun of Sarah Tagholm’s story while also clearly and empathetically depicting the emotions of the lovable narrator. Readers will have a blast diving into each frothy page to witness the transformation of these little tadpoles along with the snails and other creatures that call the pond home.

A tremendously joyful and rewarding read aloud that will instantly become an often-requested favorite, We Are the Wibbly! A Tadpole’s Tail is combined entertainment and learning at its best and a must for all home, classroom, and library collections. 

Ages 2 – 6

Bloomsbury Children’s Books, 2025 | ISBN 978-1547615742

Reading is Funny Day Activity

Hop Along Matching Game

 

Hop along now and help these frogs! Each of these fantastic frogs has a twin, but they’ve gotten separated. Can you spot the identical pairs? Print out the Hop Along Matching Game and draw a line between the pairs.

You can purchase We Are the Wibbly!: A Tadpole’s Tail from these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop (discounted books and support for your local independent bookstore)

Picture Book Review