Jessika von Innerebner, author-illustrator of Kevin the Unicorn: It’s Not All Rainbows, teaches us how to draw the fabulous Kevin—a unicorn who now knows that not every day has to be perfect.
Year: 2019
Here are some multisensory tips—which help stimulate the brain and develop the sensory system—to encourage your child to recommend a book.
Great for reading in October and beyond, the books on this list span all ages and range from fun to freaky. You’ll find stories about monsters, pumpkins, skeletons, pirates, witches, ghosts, and more, for toddlers through teens and everyone in between.
Which five words best describe Pippa’s Night Parade?
Lisa Robinson: Imagination-Creativity-Monsters-Books-Fashion
Author-Illustrator Bethan Woollvin is back with her third hilariously twisted fairy tale: HANSEL & GRETEL.
If a tale of both imagination and intellect appeal to you, The Boy Who Was Fire will likely have you thinking deeply.
Travel the world with this colorful and unique history atlas that’s easy enough for even young grade-schoolers to use.
Written as a ‘Dear Diary’ picture book, Thor the Troublemaker is about a French bulldog that loves his family—even if they do have a few too many rules.
Giovanna combined her passions for books, social change, and French Bulldogs in the first children’s book, Thor the Troublemaker.
The following worldly tales have been written by foreign authors and translated into English. Each of the books offers authentic and unique storytelling that will surely cultivate global thinking in your young readers.