I'm celebrating Picture Book Month!! Are you? 
There's a lovely post at Picture Book Month by Alma Flor Ada in where she talks about why picture books are important for children. The bond it creates between adult and child and that picture books can be enjoyed by the very young as well as the older more sophisticated child reader. Each day of the month a different picture book champion weighs in on why they think picture books are important.
The Bear in the Book written by Kate Banks (also an agency sister with Hen & Ink Literary) and illustrated by Georg Hallensleben is a beautiful representation of storytelling between parent and child, where a little boy listens to a story being read by his mother and metaphorically speaking he's so caught up in the story that he enters the world of the bear. He identifies with the words and pictures he sees playing out over the pages. Excerpt below:
Snowflakes began to fall across the pages of the book.
The snow sat snugly in the boughs of the trees.
The boy could almost feel it.
"Snow is cold," he said. He nestled closely against his mother.
"I like snow," he said.
Winter settled like a big hush," read the boy's mother.
"And the big black bear slept."
"Shh," said the boy.
It's picture book storytelling at it's best! And the vivid artwork by Hallensleben is extraordinary like watching a painting come to life. It's a tribute to fostering a love of reading in children at least that's the conclusion I'm drawing, and I say Bravo!
I showed you one of my new favorite picture books now it's your turn. Celebrate picture book month with me by leaving a comment below listing one of your favorite picture books.
Happy Picture Book Month! Happy reading!
- Current Mood:
determined


Comments
As for my favorite picture books? There are too many to name. Right now I always reach for Bear Snores On by Karma Wilson, Tell Me About Your Day Today by Mem Fox, Goodnight Moon, and Where the Wild Things Are, and Be Quiet, Mike! by Leslie Patricelli because they all have amazing rhythm and are a pleasure to read aloud. I could recite any of them in my head all day long. Oh, No, Little Dragon by Jim Averbeck, The Baby that Roared! by Simon Puttock, and There's Nothing Like a Puffin by Sue Soltis are also lots of fun, with great little details and some cute surprises. Plus almost anything by Sandra Boynton, whose books are so playful.
I'm sure there are tons more, but those are the ones that immediately come to mind. And, yes, I know you said to name one, but that's like asking a mother to pick her favorite child. Well, a mother with more than one child. Which I'm not. But you know what I mean. :-D