Read aloud for family fun this winter
The days are getting shorter and the nights are getting colder. Does
the idea of gathering everyone together for some quality family time
sound good? Don’t reach for that TV remote. Grab some hot chocolate
and a great book to read aloud instead. Sound like a daunting task?
Look no further than the Newport Beach Public Library.
The younger listener may enjoy “Come Along, Kitten,” by Joanne
Ryder. A big yellow dog invites a tiny kitten to come exploring. This
is a simple, rhyming picture book with endearing illustrations. With
its encouragement of independence and exploration, this title will
have broad appeal with the younger set. Another rhyming picture book
is “A Hug Goes Around,” by Laura Krauss Melmed. A cozy house set in a
valley is the scene for this whimsical story in which the mishaps of
family life are fixed by a hug.
To help ease your preschool aged child into the winter season try
“Snowmen at Night,” by Caralyn Buehner. A child wonders why a snowman
looks droopy the morning after it was made and decides that snowmen
must play all night. The rhyming text describes snowmen having
snowball fights, ice-skating and playing tricks on each other all
night long.
Planning on any holiday traveling? Read “Are We There Yet?,” by
Dandi Daley Mackall. Anyone who has ever had to sit in the backseat
for a family trip will love this story. It’s a funny look at a
driving trip that includes car claustrophobia, shrinking backseats,
books, luggage, toys and a dog.
The school age set may enjoy hearing you read “When Lightning
Comes in a Jar,” by Patricia Polacco. While attending a present day
family reunion the narrator looks back on visits to her Gramma’s
house and remembers storytelling, eating Jell-O and catching
fireflies in a jar. Need a little more humor in your household? Reach
for “Mary Had a Little Ham,” by Margie Palatini. This is the rags to
riches story of Stanley Snoutowski, a pun about a pig that moves to
New York City to become an actor. All of the struggling and hardship
pay off when Stanley appears in “Pork Chop on a Hot Tin Plate” and
Hamlet (of course). This is a laugh-out-loud read!
Longer books are great read aloud choices. Read a chapter or two
each night before bed. “The Great Googlestein Museum Mystery,” by
Jean Van Leeuwen is a funny story that follows three mice as they
take a vacation away from their home at Macy’s department store. They
discover many things about the world of humans at the famous
Guggenheim Museum of modern art. They realize that the blobs of jam
on a canvas are not food, but art! Read more to find how they get
themselves out of tricky situations.
Maybe it is time to throw a mystery into the equation. Try the
“Malted Falcon: From the Tattered Casebook of Chet Gecko,” by Bruce
Hale. Follow the antics of fourth grader Chet Gecko and his sidekick
mockingbird partner Natalie Attired as they solve two mysteries. If
you like wordplay and lots of excitement, this mystery is for you.
Ready to start reading aloud? Here are a few guidelines. Relax and
read a book that you enjoy. Be animated while you read; use different
voices for animals and characters. Interact with your child; let them
help turn the page and try to guess what happens next in the story.
Most of all enjoy this special time together. Make sharing books a
regular part of your day.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Bonnie McLaren. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
https://www.newportbeach library.org. For more information on these
titles or other selections, please contact the Newport Beach Public
Library at (949) 717-3800, option 2.
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