It’s Monday! What are you reading?
I have been sharing a reading photo of the week each week. Now that it is summer, I am not surrounded every day with little readers so . . . I am choosing moments from the year not previously shared. Always my favourite? Buddy reading laughter!
From the classroom 2014/2015 archives:
Join Jen from Teach Mentor Texts and Kellee and Ricki from Unleashing Readers and share all of the reading you have done over the week from picture books to young adult novels. Follow the links to read about all of the amazing books the #IMWAYR community has read. It’s the best way to discover what to read next.
On the blog:
For Top Ten Tuesday: Ten MG and YA authors I read the most
Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday: Natural Mysteries, Solved
A special Celebration post about updated allergy testing
Sunday Reflections: The power of observation
Books I read and loved:
Night Animals by Gianna Marino
This book is absolutely adorable. The perfect book for reading aloud at a story time for younger listeners. The perfect bedtime book to remind all soon to be sleepers that they are brave. A wonderful read aloud for any classroom to appreciate how clever and beautiful picture books can be.
Bad Bye, Good Bye written by Deborah Underwood and illustrated by Jonathan Bean
Oh how I was impressed with this book. The illustrations were incredible. Maybe my favourite so far from Bean. And the sparse text – full and powerful and conveying so much emotion. Moving is hard. Plain and simple. For kids, it’s a different kind of hard. As a child who moved 9 times before my 7th birthday, I get it. Would pair beautifully with Neville written by Norman Juster and illustrated by G. Brian Karas
It’s Only Stanley by Jon Agee
Odd, quirky and “rhyme”y.
Ben Draws Trouble by Matt Davies
I LOVED Ben Rides On when it first came out. So I have been waiting for this title. And it didn’t disappoint. It captures the joy of drawing, the dynamics of worry and the power of being noticed.
Piper Green and the Fairy Tree written by Ellen Potter and illustrated by Qin Leng
Well, I would like to start by saying that I want to go back in time and be Piper Green. I want to ride a boat to school. I want to eagerly anticipate fresh baking each morning. Quirky little brothers? Yes, please. And a teeny school, absolutely! And I could write paragraphs on how much I want a fairy tree. I am SO excited to share this title with my new class. I predict it will get a lot of love. The perfect early chapter book series. Well written with dynamic characters, gorgeous illustrations and just the right amount of text.
Reading in the Wild by Donalyn Miller with Susan Kelley
I have actually been reading this book for over a year. I have read many parts multiple times. Finally, this summer, I sat down and read it cover it cover. Of course, there is much here that I celebrate. I also really appreciate how Donalyn is so honest about her journey as a teacher. I know there is more figuring things out to come and that we will all benefit. But what she has figured out already? So wise, so wonderful and so full of celebration of books and readers.
Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson
I can’t believe I had never read this book. Now, I see why so many insist it is an absolute must read title for high school classrooms. Brave. Upsetting. Necessary.
Updates on my 2015 Reading Goals:
2015 Chapter Book Challenge: 46/80 complete
Goodreads Challenge: 286/415 books read
#MustReadin2015: 15/24 complete
Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge: 54/100 titles
Diverse Books in 2015: 31/50 books read
Up next? I am reading Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli