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152 pp.
| NorthSouth
| March, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-0-7358-4339-4$30.00
(3)
K-3
Translated by David Henry Wilson.
In this handsome volume, Swiss artist Fischer's sprightly line-and-wash illustrations accompany well-translated Grimms' tales. "The Musicians of Bremen," "Riff-Raff," and "Puss in Boots" (the Grimm version of the Perrault classic) are fully illustrated; "Rum-Pum-Pum" is a section filled with drawings from several stories; the last six tales each sport a single full-page illustration that highlights the whole story's actions. A short biography of Fischer is appended.
48 pp.
| Chronicle
| March, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-1-4521-6625-4$12.99
(3)
K-3
After explaining the different forms of the Japanese writing system, this square book features double-page spreads with between ten and twelve words arranged by subject, including animals, food and drink (mostly Japanese), colors, and numbers. Each word has a small retro-style illustration, the English translation, the kanji (originally adapted from Chinese characters), the kana (syllabic writing symbols), and the English transliteration. An attractive offering.
(3)
K-3
Illustrated by
Kayla Harren.
As a teenager in 1979 northern India, Jadav Payeng was concerned that many snakes died after flood damage to the eroding Brahmaputra River region. He planted twenty bamboo saplings...and ended up many years later with a protected 1300-acre forest teeming with animals. Hopeful and inspiring, this true-life ecological story is illustrated with evocative, verdant art. Appended with endnotes and a planting project.
232 pp.
| Pajama
| May, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-1-77278-081-9$17.95
(3)
4-6
In Jakarta, Indonesia, Nia's food-vendor widower father is mired in poverty and alcoholism while the young teenager cares for her little brother. When Nia survives a minibus accident, superstitious locals believe that she has miraculous powers, which aspiring-writer Nia uses to raise money for her schooling. Readers will cheer Nia's real powers--her storytelling talent and her resiliency--in this vividly set story. Glos.
(3)
4-6
Orca Footprints series.
An unusual book about urban innovations, full of engaging color photos from different countries, including many from the author's Canadian hometown of Victoria, British Columbia. Young people will get ideas for projects they could recreate in their own neighborhood--murals, street libraries, community gardens, knitted decorative tree coverings, and more--and may even be inspired to get involved in local politics. Reading list, websites. Glos., ind.
(3)
K-3
Illustrated by
Jaime Kim.
When everyone asks a light brown–skinned girl the titular question, she's confused: "I'm from here." Then Abuelo takes her on a dreamy tour, from South America's Pampas to a warm island to "this land where our ancestors...were in chains." Most importantly, though, she's from Abuelo's "love and the love of all those before us." Warm watercolor and digital art illustrates the overt but useful story.
(3)
K-3
Growing up in Russia, left-handed Anya is forced to use her right hand. But she refuses to use it for drawing, her special talent, and imagines she's in a secret society with famous left-handed or ambidextrous artists. When Anya immigrates to the U.S., she can use her left hand freely and becomes an artist herself--as demonstrated by this whimsically illustrated picture book based on the author/illustrator's childhood.
92 pp.
| Little
| June, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-0-316-52941-9$16.99
|
EbookISBN 978-0-316-52937-2
(3)
4-6
Illustrated by
Shamel Washington.
This browsable volume features an unusually diverse group of subjects from different eras, cultures, occupations, and sexual and gender identities. Each man (in chronological order by birth date), including John Stuart Mill, Alan Turing, Anthony Bourdain, Barack Obama, Lin-Manuel Miranda, and Kendrick Lamar, is represented by a one-page biography, with well-sourced quotes, and a bold digital portrait, often with an appropriate symbol.
32 pp.
| Prestel
| March, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-3-79137-378-2$16.95
(4)
K-3
Illustrated by
Vincent Bergier.
Sandy, a blue cat, leads readers through nocturnal adventures in NYC on dark-blue acetate overlays imprinted with clear windows allowing shapes from the digital pictures below to create strange nighttime images. Flip the acetate page to see a different, day-lit view of the city, guided by red squirrel Frankie, including Central Park, urban traffic scenes, and other sights. This French import's interesting concept isn't always successfully executed.
32 pp.
| Augsburg/Beaming
| March, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-1-5064-5206-7$16.99
(4)
K-3
Illustrated by
Sonya Abby Soekarno.
Accompanied by colorful cartoonlike illustrations, half-page first-person narratives introduce fifteen Old and New Testament women, including Eve, Hagar, Miriam, and Mary Magdalene. Each entry ends with the refrain: "God did great things for me--and I did great things for God." The relevant biblical verse is taken from the New International Version. The whole is slight, but religious or home settings may find this useful.
40 pp.
| Random
| April, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-1-5247-1952-4$17.99
|
LibraryISBN 978-1-5247-1953-1$20.99
|
EbookISBN 978-1-5247-1954-8
(3)
K-3
Illustrated by
Jamey Christoph.
When police raided Greenwich Village's Stonewall Inn in June 1969, its LGBTQ+ patrons decided to stand up, heralding that "a new day was dawning for the gay rights movement." The text is engagingly narrated by the nineteenth-century-constructed building itself while handsome digital illustrations show the historic changes in architecture and occupants. Appended with a photo gallery, historical note, and participant interview. Reading list, websites. Glos.
48 pp.
| NorthSouth
| March, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-0-7358-4338-7$17.95
(3)
K-3
This story, translated from the Spanish, is a fictionalization of the early-twentieth-century incident when young cousins Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths took photos of (what they claimed were) fairies in the woods of Yorkshire, England. Fanciful multimedia illustrations catch the mood of the story, engagingly (and a bit unreliably) narrated by Frances. An endnote discusses the historical event.
180 pp.
| Candlewick
| January, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-1-5362-0067-6$16.99
(3)
4-6
Illustrated by
Uma Krisnaswamy.
In this volume of original trickster tales set within a frame story and inspired by Indian folklore, Prince Veera and his friend Suku, a farmer's son, enjoy holding court when the king is not available. Time after time, the pair acts logically and kindly--and metes out appropriate justice, often with a humorous comeuppance for the villain. Traditional black-and-white illustrations are sprinkled throughout.
296 pp.
| HarperCollins/Harper
| February, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-0-06-265294-2$16.99
(3)
4-6
Still actively grieving her brother's accidental death, Rain and her parents make a radical change, leaving Vermont for New York City's Washington Heights. Rain adapts to sixth grade in a new school, joins a track team, and meets new friends. Her efforts to keep her parents from splitting up fail, but Rain's personal strength grows throughout this beautifully written contemporary novel.
105 pp.
| Heyday
| February, 2019
|
TradeISBN 978-1-59714-403-2$18.00
(3)
4-6
Fighting for Justice series.
Illustrated by
Laura Freeman.
Enslaved midwife and herbalist Biddy Mason was brought to California in 1851 by her masters; she later sued for her freedom, bought land, and became a community leader. Illustrated free-verse poems (with some fictionalized elements) alternate with factual chapters documenting Mason's life, historical context, and the early Los Angeles African American community. Stylized illustrations accompany the verse; archival images appear throughout. Bib., ind.
(3)
PS
Illustrated by
Rafael López.
López has adapted the well-known spiritual to invoke a humanistic theme: "We've got everybody everywhere in our hands." His exuberant mixed-media illustrations include digital elements and convey the happiness of a diverse set of international children and animals frolicking in all kinds of environments. Musical notation appears at book's end. Also available in a bilingual English/Spanish edition.
254 pp.
| Barron's
| June, 2018
|
TradeISBN 978-1-4380-5023-2$16.99
(3)
4-6
In this companion to Morpurgo's Greatest Animal Stories, the popular English author selects twelve classic "magical" stories, mostly tried-and-true folktales and all European except for the Japanese "Yoshi the Stonecutter." With many different retellers and illustrators, beginning comments from Morpurgo before each story, and a handsome open format, this collection is good for both storytime or individual reading.
281 pp.
| Soho Teen
| January, 2018
|
TradeISBN 978-1-61695-847-3$18.99
|
EbookISBN 978-1-61695-848-0
(3)
YA
High-school senior Maya, daughter of a Muslim Indian-American family in suburban Chicago, longs to find her own romantic partner and attend NYU film school, in defiance of her parents. Her family problems are also affected by increasing hate crimes against Muslims after 9/11. Maya's convincing first-person narrative touches on intercultural teen dating, school life, generational conflict, and current social issues.
40 pp.
| Abrams
| August, 2018
|
TradeISBN 978-1-4197-3161-7$17.99
(3)
K-3
Illustrated by
Julie Morstad.
During a girl's immigration to America, she loses her favorite flowered dress, handsewn by her mother. Years later, she spots the same dress in a shop and buys it for her own daughter. A warmhearted, quietly told story, with expressive, delicate-lined illustrations showing the girl's Mediterranean-looking island home, the child's shipboard experiences, and the imagined travels of the dress.
(3)
K-3
Illustrated by
Daniele Fabbri.
Bezalel, an Israelite slave in Ancient Egypt, collects unusual things. When the Exodus begins, the boy insists on bringing his Beautiful Things Box with him. When God asks Moses to build a mishkan, a house filled with beautiful things, Bezalel is the only one ready to provide treasures. Soft paintings convey a sense of wonder in this unusual retelling of a biblical story (discussed in the author's note).