Joan M Hellquist’s Piki Goes to College is both an endearing story and an important learning resource for children and adults alike.
Browsing: Disabilities
One Big Canvas The Children’s Book Review Autism is a highly prevalent and often misunderstood neurological disability. The ‘One Big…
Dedicated Review: Katy Has Two Grampas reminds readers that is it okay to be different and it’s okay to explain ourselves to others.
Leigh’s Wheelie Adventures: Squishy Sand manages to be a book that is more about the shared experiences of friendship and determination than about disability.
Brigid Kemmerer discusses A Curse So Dark and Lonely, a NYT Bestseller.
There have been a number of Beauty and the Beast retellings, but author Brigid Kemmerer’s dark and progressive take on the classic is unique and exhilarating.
This is an endearing tale with a valuable message which goes beyond the usual sentimentality of Christmas spirit to encourage genuine caring for oneself and for others: it’s a beautiful story.
Six Dots is not only a story about braille – it is also a story about reading, and about the power of education and the support and love of family.
The Schneider Family Book Award is given to books that embody an artistic expression of the disability experience, announced by the American Library Association.
“How Katie Got a Voice (and a cool new nickname)” celebrates that which makes us all unique, but also highlights how sometimes a little help is needed to show us how much we are alike.