Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Children’s Books

Reviews of and essays about children’s books from The New York Times.

Reviews of and essays about children’s books from The New York Times.

Highlights

    1. A Picture Book Paean to the Golden Age of LPs

      Kids don’t need to know what zydeco is, or that Mandy and the Meerkats are a nod to Diana Ross and the Supremes, to dig this spoof of vintage vinyl.

       By

      From “Animal Albums From A to Z.”
      From “Animal Albums From A to Z.”
      CreditCece Bell

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Picture Books

More in Picture Books ›
  1. Can Reading About Trauma Help Kids Cope?

    Two new picture books dive into refugee childhoods.

     By

    From “The Mango Tree.”
    CreditEdel Rodriguez
  2. A Long-Forgotten TV Script by Rachel Carson Is Now a Picture Book

    In “Something About the Sky,” the National Book Award-winning marine biologist brings her signature sense of wonder to the science of clouds.

     By

    From “Something About the Sky.”
    CreditNikki McClure
  3. Picture Books About the Way We Look

    A story of gross beauty from David Sedaris and Ian Falconer, a scabrous tale from Beatrice Alemagna, and more.

     By

    From “Pepper & Me.”
    CreditBeatrice Alemagna
  4. José Saramago’s Childhood Memoir Inspires Companion Picture Books

    The Nobel laureate’s “Small Memories” is a mix of peasant life, boyhood adventure and wide-eyed wonder.

     By

    From “The Silence of Water.”
    CreditYolanda Mosquera
  5. Voices of Peaceful Protest

    How John Lewis and Coretta Scott King embodied the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy while each creating their own.

     By

    From “Fighting With Love.”
    CreditJames E. Ransome
  1.  
  2. Whose Folk Tale Is It Anyway?

    A comics collection’s sibling narrators and a graphic novel’s hapless heroine change their stories as they go along.

    By Sabrina Orah Mark

     
  3.  
  4.  
  5.  
  6.  
  7.  
  8.  
  9.  
  10.  
  11.  
  12.  
  13.  
  14.  
  15. Advertisement

    SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
  16.  
  17.  
  18.  
  19. Holiday Gift Books for Children

    From a 200th-anniversary edition of Clement C. Moore’s Christmas Eve tale to lightheartedly loopy poems for every day of the year.

    By Catherine Hong

     
  20.  
  21.  
  22.  
  23.  
  24.  
  25. An Embarrassment of Witches

    Jewish magic, Southern conjure magic and Scottish magic abound in new middle grade novels by Laurel Snyder, Eden Royce and Elle McNicoll.

    By Marjorie Ingall

     
  26. Advertisement

    SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
  27.  
  28.  
  29. Kate DiCamillo Is Not Afraid of the Dark

    As a new novella and a new edition of “The Tale of Despereaux” remind us, her stories demand a lot from young readers, but the rewards can be magical.

    By Adam Gidwitz

     
  30. The Ghost in the Mirror

    In spooky stories by Ben Hatke, Remy Lai and the team of Rebecca Stead and Wendy Mass, the secrets of the undead lead perilously close to home.

    By Soman Chainani

     
  31.  
  32. Reading Sad Books Is Good for Your Kids

    The books in Peter Brown’s “Wild Robot” trilogy were the first to wallop my son with the mix of tragedy and joy that define great art and also real life.

    By Craig Fehrman

     
  33.  
  34.  
  35.  
  36. Finding Her Voice Was Just a Rowboat Journey Away

    Harakka Island, a creative community off the coast of Helsinki, Finland, helped the illustrator Marika Maijala come into her own as an artist. “I don’t know where my art ends and my life begins. The border is fleeting.”

    By Johanna Lemola and Saara Mansikkamaki

     
  37. Advertisement

    SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
  38. Unusual Suspects

    These mysteries run the gamut, from quirky Gothic to small-town cozy to chilly Nordic noir.

    By Robin Stevens

     
  39.  
  40. Late to the Reading Circle

    “Writing for kids had long been an ambition of mine, but until recently I didn’t know it had long been an ambition.”

    By Bruce Handy

     
  41. The Dean of Deadpan Finds His Muse

    The title character in Jon Klassen’s new chapter book, “The Skull,” is the personification of his unique brand of expressionless humor.

    By Ransom Riggs

     
  42. How Do You Spell Discrimination?

    MacNolia Cox speaks only one sentence in a picture book about her trip to the 1936 national spelling bee. Zaila Avant-garde, the 2021 champ, writes volumes.

    By Cynthia Greenlee

     
  43.  
  44.  
  45.  
  46.  
  47.  
  48. Advertisement

    SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
  49. Labors of Love

    In new novels by the National Book Award finalists Gary D. Schmidt and Brandon Hobson, adolescent boys navigating parental loss find strength in ancient mythology.

    By John Schwartz

     
  50.  
  51. Banned Bunnies

    In 1959, the picture-book nuptials of a black rabbit and a white rabbit caused intense debate across the nation.

    By Cynthia Greenlee

     
  52.  
  53. A Medium and Her Message

    In Gavriel Savit’s new fantasy, set at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, an orphan girl who performs sham séances finds she may have true powers after all.

    By Laurel Snyder

     
  54.  
  55.  
  56.  
  57.  
  58.  
  59. Advertisement

    SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
  60.  
  61.  
  62.  
  63.  
  64.  
  65. Not the Same Old Stories

    These old people don’t exist only for their grandchildren, if they have any, and they don’t dispense wisdom or soup.

    By Marjorie Ingall

     
Page 6 of 10

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT