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What's new and novel in children's books


November 18, 2011

Best of Children’s Books 2011: For the Very Youngest Readers

Children's books for the youngest readers. Photo by Ryan R. Reed

This year’s selection of children’s books, as always, reflects the dazzling output of artists and writers who range into realms of past and present, dream and documentary account, memoir and reportage, fiction and fact.  In these pages, we are transported everywhere from  a hilltop village in Italy to the White House in 1941, Alaska at the height of a blizzard, a hamlet in Kenya, and rural India of 500 years ago.

We begin with page-turning choices for the very youngest children.  (Thereby adhering to one of our fundamental mantras: it’s never too early to begin with books.)

Maisy’s Amazing Big Book of Learning by Lucy Cousins
A cleverly constructed lift-the-flap book delivers an irresistible primer on everything from shapes and colors to numbers and opposites. Cousins constitutes a force of nature for the preschool set.

Good Little Wolf by Nadia Shireen
A droll and wackily original take on the eternal good vs. evil dilemma gives one beneficent lupine the last laugh. A stand-out debut.

The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse by Eric Carle
From the author who created A Very Hungry Caterpillar, a window on a painter’s technicolor vision of the world.

Simms Taback’s Farm Animals by Simms Taback
The beloved illustrator’s barnyard bestiary—consisting of fold-out critters hidden under giant flaps—is sure to become a well-thumbed favorite.

Ten Little Caterpillars by Bill Martin Jr, illustrated by Lois Ehlert
A paean to the magic of transformation and an inventive introduction to the mysterious world of Lepidoptera.





2 Comments »

  1. Yay! Smithsonian recommendations for kids book is back! I always enjoyed the annual feature — and was thrilled when my first children’s book Generation Fix, made the list. My latest, FOR THE LOVE OF MUSIC: THE REMARKABLE STORY OF MARIA ANNA MOZART (Random House/Tricycle) came out in Feb. 2011 and got starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Kirkus. The Oregonian called it “a masterpiece.” Can it be considered for the list? How?

    Looking forward to reading more. Liz Rusch

    Comment by Elizabeth Rusch — November 21, 2011 @ 7:52 pm


  2. Thank you Smithsonian for supporting “real” books. As the owner of a small book store, The Queen Bee in historic downtown Ogden, UT, I’m always excited to connect with other people who love books. There’s something about the tactile, verbal, visual, and overall sensual experience of paper and ink that will NEVER be replicated or replaced by an e-reader.

    Comment by Teri Zenger — November 23, 2011 @ 9:47 pm


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