2024 Gift Guide Kicks Off: Novelty & Nonfiction Books

November 21, 2024 Comments Off on 2024 Gift Guide Kicks Off: Novelty & Nonfiction Books

It’s that time of year again, and I’m excited to kick off my Kids & Teens Holiday Gift Guide! This year’s guide will have five installments (Novelty & Nonfiction, Picture Books, Short Chapter Books, Elementary Books, and Books for Tweens & Young Teens), with over 65 recommendations for ages 2-15. As always, the focus is on books that published this fall, so you can be sure the young readers in your life won’t already have them. Every year, in preparation for this guide, I read hundreds of books with the aim of finding something for every kind of reader (and every kind of gift giver). This year, my amazing colleagues helped me vet what to read, particularly in the elementary and teen spaces.

We begin, as we do every year, with the showstoppers: these are the novelty or nonfiction books with mega gift appeal. Readers are born in browsable books like these: the fact that you don’t have to read them from cover to cover—you can flip through and pause wherever you fancy—puts readers in the driver’s seat of their own experience. At a time when we are seeing an unprecedented decline in kids reading for fun, owing largely to a decline in stamina, we should be embracing books whose very format is inviting, not intimidating. Reading is reading and nonfiction and novelty books prove that again and again.

If you’re inclined to purchase, I hope you’ll consider supporting my work as the buyer for Old Town Books, a delightful indie in Alexandria, VA, which this fall got a gorgeous new space for kids and teens (now you know the reason why I’m quieter on this blog than I used to be). If you can come in person, I promise you’ll feel like you’ve stepped into the magic of storytelling. If you can’t, I hope you’ll still let us ship you books. And if you don’t choose either of those routes, I hope you’ll support an indie bookstore near you, because bookstores will only remain places of discovery, passion, and expertise in our communities so long as we support them with our wallets. Thank you, kindly.

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The Stuff That Doesn’t Grow on Trees

October 2, 2014 § 5 Comments

"The History of Money" by Martin JenkinsOne of the most enjoyable afternoons I spent with my son this past summer had nothing to do with summer. It didn’t involve beaches or roller coasters or ice cream. It didn’t cost a cent, although it was all about money.

JP turned seven last week, and we had been telling him for awhile that we would begin giving him an allowance on his seventh birthday. Then, last June, it occurred to me that the kid had no practical knowledge of money, an inauspicious beginning to forging a lifetime relationship with the stuff that doesn’t grow on trees. I decided to make it my Goal of Summer 2014 to teach him, not only how to count and sort coins and bills, but also about how money came to exist in the first place—and how it has changed over time. Like most of my endeavors in parenting, this one started with a book.

The timing turned out to be perfect, because Candlewick happened to send me a copy of their newly published 52-page chapter book titled The History of Money: From Bartering to Banking (Ages 7-12), with text by Martin Jenkins and  cartoonish illustrations by Satoshi Kitamura. From page one, JP was riveted. The book reads as a kind of anthropological, time-travel narrative, beginning in the early age of man when “nobody had any money.” « Read the rest of this entry »

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