Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2024 Read Harder Challenge
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Task 11: Read a picture book published in the last five years
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Mary Beth
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Dec 13, 2023 06:56PM
Here is a thread to discuss books you’re considering or suggesting for Task 11: Read a picture book published in the last five years.
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My daughter works with young children and we both love picture books. Here is what we came up with off the top of our heads: Dim Sum Palace by X. Fang - reviewers compared it to In the Night Kitchen, but in the setting of a Chinese dim sum restaurant.
Wombat Said Come In by Carmen Agra Deedy Australian animals surviving the wildfires by welcoming and sharing.
When Spring Comes to the DMZ by Uk-Bae Lee - my favorite of these - beautifully designed with some gatefold pages, tender and meditative story of lost homes and reclaimed habitats.
We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga by Traci Sorell "The word otsaliheliga (oh-jah-LEE-hay-lee-gah) is used by members of the Cherokee Nation to express gratitude. Beginning in the fall with the new year and ending in summer, follow a full Cherokee year of celebrations and experiences." I liked this one a lot.
We Are Water Protectors by Carole Lindstrom illustrated by Michaela Goade
Watercress by Andrea Wang
I Eat Poop.: A Dung Beetle Story is a hilarious picture book about acceptance with some neat bug facts! My students loved it.
Karen wrote: "My daughter works with young children and we both love picture books. Here is what we came up with off the top of our heads: Dim Sum Palace by X. Fang - reviewe..."
Thank you so much Karen!!
Karen wrote: "My daughter works with young children and we both love picture books. Here is what we came up with off the top of our heads: Dim Sum Palace by X. Fang - reviewe..."
Absolutely second your suggestions! I've read all of them except Wombat Said Come In, and I loved them all. I'll have to see if my library has that one for me to try.
I read a lot of recently released picture books for my own pleasure, there's so many wonderful ones to go through these days. I have a stack checked out of the library right now, but I'm hoping to have them all finished before 2023 is out, so I'll have to see what else is available if I do get through them all. Wombat Said Come In really does seem cute! I also have some picture book eARCs that could wait until January.
Meatballs for GrandpaThis author is a friend of mine, and this is her first book, coming out in March.
I know there are always people who are a bit salty about picture book categories, so I came back to recommend some picture books that work for this task that are longer and/or more mature. If you're a "I'm an adult without children so it's weird if I read picture books and I don't want to" kind of person, these are my suggestions for you, basically.-Inconvenient Skin / nayêhtâwan wasakay (IndigLits) by Shane L. Koyczan, published in 2019 (this is an eighty page poem in picture book format that unpacks Canada's colonial legacy with illustrations from Indigenous artists and Cree translations included)
-If I Go Missing by Brianna Jonnie, published in 2019 (Brianna Jonnie wrote a letter to the police and government in Winnipeg essentially asking to be treated humanely if she went missing because of the awful ways MMIWG2S are treated compared to white missing people, and this 64 page book is an adaptation of that letter with full illustrations)
-I Will See You Again by Lisa Boivin, published in 2020 (56 page picture book for adults that explores the death of the author's brother, her grief, and the strength she found in memories, dreams, and Dene tradition)
-The Skull by Jon Klassen, published in 2023 (this is a spooky Tyrolean folktale that clocks in at over a hundred pages. It's fully illustrated and is sort of between a picture book and a chapter book and definitely works as either)
Little Golden Books has an entire biography collection, profiling historical and pop culture figures, if that interests anyone
I read to my kids a lot, so I finished this one almost without even noticing :) The most recent one I read to them that I enjoyed was This Book Is Not for You! - it's by Shannon Hale, the author of (among other things) the wonderful Princess in Black series, and I've read that she's had a lot of boys saying that series is just for girls or wondering if they're allowed to read it, so this book felt like a response to that
This excellent Cinderella retelling was published last year. She has a fairy dogmother, and while the MC is white, the prince, princess, king, and queen are all darker skinned. Cinderella--with Dogs!
I've been meaning to pick up The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy. It first pubbed in October 2019, so I think it should work!
I have a copy of Evelyn Del Rey Is Moving Away, published in 2020, that I picked up last fall but haven't read yet. Looks like 2024 is the year for it.
This is a great opportunity to read some of the best children's books from the Goodreads Choice Awards of the past few years: https://www.goodreads.com/choiceaward...https://www.goodreads.com/choiceaward...
https://www.goodreads.com/choiceaward...
Here's hoping they bring that category back for 2024!
Nancy wrote: "I read to my kids a lot, so I finished this one almost without even noticing :) The most recent one I read to them that I enjoyed was This Book Is Not for You! - it's by Shannon H..."
This books seems so fitting given the nature of this challenge and what it wants to achieve!
Nancy wrote: "I read to my kids a lot, so I finished this one almost without even noticing :) The most recent one I read to them that I enjoyed was This Book Is Not for You! - it's by Shannon H..."
I just requested that my library buy that book! Thanks for the suggestion!
I stopped at the local library and asked my favorite children's librarian for recommendations, and then sat down and read the following books, all of which were delightful!Gustavo, the Shy Ghost
The World Belonged to Us
Rainbow: A First Book of Pride
Kimchi, Kimchi Every Day
Cape
When Aidan Became A Brother
LdyGray wrote: "I stopped at the local library and asked my favorite children's librarian for recommendations, and then sat down and read the following books, all of which were delightful




