Welcome to the Horn Book's Family Reading blog, a place devoted to offering children's book recommendations and advice about the whats and whens and whos and hows of sharing books in the home. Find us on Twitter @HornBook and on Facebook at Facebook.com/TheHornBook
(*Note on this post’s title: I’ve had so-called "clickbait" on my mind since I've been listening to podcasts about the effects of social media on journalism and politics. I thought I’d try it out. Wow. It’s annoying, but it is a little bit of a thrill to get sensationalistic for a moment. Anyway...back to the post.)
Award winners. Yeah, yeah, sometimes great books never get awards, and sometimes a book you think is lousy gets a big sticker. But it’s generally a good place to start. For one, watch which books win the (just announced!) Youth Media Awards from the American Library Association. If you want more, here’s a list that I made for my students in a graduate course I teach for the University of Tennessee’s School of Information Sciences. This course is about picture books, and I ask the students to read approximately three-hundred picture books during our time together. I give them this list as a way to know where to find picture books that have won awards or have been deemed the “best.” (Note #1: This means the list is picture-book focused. You won’t see awards for, say, teen titles on here. Note #2: Any professionals in the field who see this list and see errors or gaping omissions, please email me. I have thick skin. The list is by no means perfect.)
Where you are right now, the Horn Book’s site. You’re in great hands. Explore. Subscribe to the magazine. They won’t let you down. They did not pay me to say that. [Editor’s note: true.] Also, I cannot recommend enough Martha Parravano’s and Roger Sutton’s A Family of Readers. Worth every penny. I buy it for new parents all the time.
Actually, it’s not a surprise at all that reading aloud to my daughters brings us closer. I made a habit when they were very young of the three of us cuddling up every afternoon after school to read. We plop down on the couch or my big bed and get comfy, and I read to them. Whether we’re reading something lighthearted or something more somber in tone, conversations about life and people and how to behave in this complicated world inevitably pop up. As Katherine Paterson says in The Invisible Child, good stories don’t set out to teach virtue; they set out to tell a story. But many stories, “draw [readers] into the mystery of human life in this world.” I don’t mean to say that I stop and make lessons out of things (ew), but a good story definitely can spark a good conversation about these mysteries — either during or after our read. I learn more about them, and they learn more about me. This is also secretly helpful to me as a parent, since both girls loathe that whole Tell-Me-About-Your-Day thing.
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Christina Jane Stuck
I love this article! Just this morning, I stopped to read to my son (he's only 3.5) from Humphrey's Really Wheely Day because he asked me to. I was like if we are late we are late. Reading with your kids is firstmost to build a bond. I can't get over that. It's such a simple way to be together.Posted : Jan 25, 2017 07:11