Kevin Galpin’s picture book, The Young Flower, is a beautifully illustrated, thought-provoking lesson on self-worth and appreciation.
Browsing: Mountain Arbor Press
A Party without H is an ingenious story about words, literacy, and inclusion, perfect for beginner readers and especially for elementary school classrooms.
To be “grown-up” is what every child wants: grownups, it sometimes seems, have all the fun and make all the rules. Herschel Khan’s Knowing is Growing acknowledges this childish preconception charmingly.
The stories in It’s Okay! provide neat illustrations of mindfulness concepts and give young readers concrete examples of how to manage their emotions in different scenarios.
In No Night-Night, author Zena Bailey-Harris writes a simple story with a surprising twist: it is simultaneously translated into American Sign Language (ASL) through the use of ingenious illustrations.
I Don’t Wanna Wear a Crown, by Janet Farrar Byington, helps little girls imagine all of the possibilities about their lives, and outlines some great choices.
Squeaky and the Stinky Mouse is a picture book for beginning readers that chronicles the important lessons a mouse learns about being kind and helping others.