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Reading Challenges > 2024 November Reading Challenge

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message 1: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
Hello all,

November is National Picture Book Month, so your challenge is to read or listen to a picture book! There is some amazing art out there, and some really fun books. So I hope you all find something great.

Here are a few of my favorites that are newer:

The Quacken by Justin Colón The Quacken
Lucky Duck by Greg Pizzoli Lucky Duck
We Are Water Protectors (Caldecott Medal Winner) by Carole Lindstrom We Are Water Protectors:
We're Going on a Pumpkin Hunt by Mary Hogan Wilcox We're Going on a Pumpkin Hunt
Meowloween (Meowl-o-ween) by Diane Muldrow Meowloween

And here are some older ones that I adore:
I Really Want to Eat a Child by Sylviane Donnio I Really Want to Eat a Child
Pete's a Pizza by William Steig Pete's a Pizza
When I Get Bigger by Mercer Mayer When I Get Bigger
Wow! Said the Owl A Book About Colors by Tim Hopgood Wow! Said the Owl: A Book About Colors
Swim! Swim! by Lerch Swim! Swim!
Swim Swim Sink by Jenn Harney Swim Swim Sink

Do you have favorites you want to share?


message 2: by Deborah (new)

Deborah | 184 comments Here are some of my favorites:


Older Ones:
Make Way for Ducklings by Robert McCloskey
A Bag Full of Nothing by Jay Williams
The Monster at the End of this Book by Jon Stone
Cinder Edna by Ellen Jackson
The Twelve Dancing Princesses by Ruth Sanderson
Harvey Potter's Balloon Farm by Mark Buehner
You Are Special by Max Lucado

Newer Ones:
Watercress by Andrea Wang
LAST STOP ON MARKET STREET: A Magical Journey Through the City: New Illustrated Version 2024 by Muhammad Adeel
The Undefeated by Kwame Alexander

Do Comic/Graphic Novel's count? If so, I loved any Calvin and Hobbes or For Better or For Worse collection.


message 3: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn | 181 comments i can definitely handle this one. i think I will try to chose one. that is at least "new to me".


message 4: by Lisa (new)

Lisa | 57 comments i can actually do this one


message 5: by Linda (new)

Linda Nielson | 279 comments I am glad at this time of year for an easy one.


message 6: by Clancy (new)

Clancy Metzger (clancymetzger) | 22 comments I'm going to read Never Tease a Weasel by Jean Cinder Soule. It was my favorite book as a kid. :)


message 7: by Mary (new)

Mary | 43 comments I read picture books to children almost every day, so I have already completed this one today. I read Dandelions by Eve Bunting with my daughter.


message 8: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn | 181 comments I read The Most Boring Book Ever which is Brandon Sanderson's new picture book. Picked this up the other day but managed to save it for this challenge.


message 9: by Debbie (new)

Debbie (dashforcover) | 1219 comments Mary wrote: "I read picture books to children almost every day, so I have already completed this one today. I read Dandelions by Eve Bunting with my daughter."

Oooh! Keep track and give us a weekly update! It would be so fun to see all that you read!


message 10: by Brittany (new)

Brittany | 120 comments My 3-year-old daughter's current favorite book is Tyrannosaurus Wrecks!: A Preschool Story. So I've already read it multiple times this month. :)

Tyrannosaurus Wrecks! A Preschool Story by Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen


message 11: by Debbie (last edited Nov 06, 2024 10:55AM) (new)

Debbie (dashforcover) | 1219 comments I read one of the rare non-fiction Caldecott Medal winners, Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin ( Review ) as a nod to yesterday's snowfall.


message 12: by Greg (new)

Greg (danceyeah) | 289 comments I'm going to try to figure out how to listen to a picture book.


message 13: by Linda (last edited Nov 16, 2024 02:21PM) (new)

Linda Nielson | 279 comments I chose to read the 2024 Caldecott winner Big by Vashti Harrison by Vashti Harrison.
Great book on the power of words.
I also read with one of my students Wolf! Wolf! by John Rocco by John Rocco
This is a fun version of The Boy Who Cried Wolf
I also read Baboushka and the Three Kings by Ruth Robbins Baboushka and the Three Kings and Fry Bread A Native American Family Story by Kevin Noble Maillard Fry Bread: A Native American Family Story
I really liked the pictures in Fry Bread


message 14: by Debbie (new)

Debbie (dashforcover) | 1219 comments Greg wrote: "I'm going to try to figure out how to listen to a picture book."

The first time I read James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl it was as an audio book. Seriously. It was interesting but on my second reading of it, the physical book, I realized how very much you lose without the pictures. However, if you have read it as a physical book once, I can highly recommend the audio book! Never expected this response, did you?!!


message 15: by Greg (new)

Greg (danceyeah) | 289 comments Debbie wrote: "Greg wrote: "I'm going to try to figure out how to listen to a picture book."

The first time I read James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl it was as an audio book. Serio..."


I was not expecting that response, no!

Mostly I was just being snarky because the original post said "read or listen to a picture book"


message 16: by Mary (new)

Mary | 43 comments Debbie wrote: "Mary wrote: "I read picture books to children almost every day, so I have already completed this one today. I read Dandelions by Eve Bunting with my daughter."

Oooh! Keep track and g..."


I didn't track all of the picture books that I read this week, but my daughter and I just read Finding Winnie: The True Story of the World's Most Famous Bear. We both loved it!

One that the students in my elementary school library enjoyed this week was Walter Finds His Voice: The Story of a Shy Crocodile


message 17: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
Greg wrote: "Mostly I was just being snarky because the original post said "read or listen to a picture book"..."

Greg, I wrote it that way, because we definitely have audiobooks of picture books! For example, you could listen to the picture book The Very Eric Carle Treasury as an audiobook on Libby. We also have a Read/Listen collection, where the books come with an integrated MP3 player.

It is doable!


message 18: by Debbie (last edited Nov 15, 2024 08:36AM) (new)

Debbie (dashforcover) | 1219 comments Another thing most don't think about until it confronts them. Losing your eyesight. I met a lady who has macular degeneration. I helped her look something up on her phone. Reading is so hard, she explained, because macular degeneration progresses by blocking bits of your vision. Imagine having a tv and, randomly, a group of 50 pixels go dark somewhere on the screen. A week later another group of 50 go dark somewhere else on the screen but not near the first group. And every week some group of 50 somewhere. When it's your eyes and not a TV, you can see, you can read, BUT what's visible is so broken up it's hard to decipher. And, eventually, trying is just too wearing. I did not know that about macular degeneration.

She was sad because her vision was so bad her Doctor told her she needed to start using a white cane. He had told her people would treat her more nicely, be more patient. She saw it, though, as a flag of weakness. And then something popped into my head. Something I'd not thought of. I told her the other thing the cane brought her, once she learned to use it well, was freedom. She could go anywhere she wanted. It's not a flag of weakness but a flag of strength! It's you holding it up and saying 'Look at me! I can walk anywhere I want! I have freedom!" As she left, she was smiling and she thanked me for the positive view.

Being a religious person, I have a belief where those ideas to tell her came from. They are ideas that had never crossed my mind even though I'd met and talked to, even helped people with white canes. (They don't work so well when snow obliterates the barrier between sidewalk and grass.) But I was grateful for the experience. And the perspective as I may one day be told by the Dr. that I need a white cane. I'll stand at the door of the grocery store, hold the cane over my head and in my best imitation of Mel Gibson cry out "Freedom!" And I'll still read picture books. ;-)


message 19: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn | 26 comments I read Unicorns Are the Worst! byAlex Willan with my granddaughter who loves unicorns. She wasn't sure about the title, but she loved the book. We had to read it several times.


message 20: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
Can you believe that November is more than halfway over? I sure can't! It feels like it should still be the beginning of October!

Make sure you pop in and let us know if you've finished reading a picture book this month!


message 21: by Mary (new)

Mary Jane | 1 comments I read Am I Different? by Johnathan Aubrey. It was illustrated by Ben Rowberry. The book tells about how the young author learned to ride his bike despite the challenges he faces with cerebral Palsy. He wrote the book to inspire and encourage children to have the courage to do hard things. I met Johnathan at a book signing at The Printed Garden Bookstore in Sandy, Utah and was impressed. it would be a good book to share with the young readers in your life.


message 22: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
Oh, you know what I should not have left off my suggested titles?

The Book with No Pictures

This is an EXCELLENT book to read aloud. As long as you're enthusiastic. :D


message 23: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
At the Taylorsville Branch, we've got a special display of Award Winning Picture Books to help celebrate International Picture Book Month. If you want to pick out some in person, consider visiting the Taylorsville branch!


message 24: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
(Also, can you believe there's only one more week of November!)


message 25: by Alicia (new)

Alicia (aliciakay85) | 3 comments I read my daughter Edwina, The Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct by Mo Willems to my daughter. We all love Mo Willems at our house!


message 26: by Deborah (new)

Deborah | 184 comments I read Little Toot today.


message 27: by Darin (new)

Darin | 121 comments I read Fox is Coming by James Patterson and The Most Boring Book Ever by Brandon Sanderson. Enjoyed both!


alisonwonderland (Alison) | 70 comments Right before the election, I read ‘Kamala Harris: Rooted in Justice’ by Nikki Grimes, and today I kicked off my holiday reading with ‘A City Full of Santas’ by Joanna Ho.


message 29: by Linda (new)

Linda Nielson | 279 comments Do we have a new reading challenge for December?


message 30: by Greg (last edited Dec 03, 2024 10:40AM) (new)

Greg (danceyeah) | 289 comments I got to it late, but I still got to it. I read The Day the Crayons Quit by Drew Daywalt.

9/9 for 2024


message 31: by Brittany (new)

Brittany | 120 comments Can we please get the December challenge soon? Thanks so much! I look forward to this every month! <3


message 32: by Audrey (new)

Audrey (niceyackerman) | 673 comments I totally forgot to do it! It was too easy, and I kept procrastinating.


message 33: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
Thank you all for being patient, the December challenge is up!


message 34: by Elizabeth (new)

Elizabeth (bethsmash) | 1224 comments Mod
Carolyn is our prize drawing winner for November's reading challenge for reading by Unicorns Are the Worst! by Alex Willan.

Congratulations!


message 35: by Teresa (new)

Teresa | 255 comments Congratulations Carolyn!


message 36: by Deborah (new)

Deborah | 184 comments Congratulations!


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