It's a fact – children's non-fiction is worth discovering
For some young readers, real-world stuff – science, history, nature and more – is far more appealing than made-up stories. Please share your finds
Whenever literacy, the joys of reading, and the need to inspire children with a lifelong love of books are discussed, story and character are frequently found centre-stage. I have no beef with this – I am still thrilled, scared and moved by the stories I was first read and that I first read for myself, and in love with (or secretly pretending to be) a lot of my favourite characters. But this focus on fiction risks leaving out a large part of the story. Non-fiction and reference books deserve considerably more acclaim and recognition for the work they do in making children into readers.
Although I’m not a fan of generalising by gender, many boys, especially at the emergent reader stage, are keener to pick up science and non-fiction books offering satisfying chunks of fact than to immerse themselves in longer-form stories. Girls, too, like a break from relentless princess-and-pony narratives; and all of them enjoy stunning adults with memorised trivia. Whether it’s the usual suspects – dinosaurs, space, food – or something a bit more esoteric, such reading is a grand alternative to the stories which leave some new readers cold. There are good early readers from Dorling Kindersley and Orion, and Egmont is getting in on the action, too – Dr Mike Smith’s The Hot Book and The Cold Book, aimed at older readers, are full of science, history and wildlife knowledge, focused on fascinating extremes of temperature.
Continue reading...







The Guardian's Blog
- The Guardian's profile
- 9 followers
