Archive for the ‘Early Elementary’ Category

Littlebat’s Halloween Story by Diane Mayr

October 11, 2010 - 1:33 pm No Comments

Littlebat and his mother live in the rafters of a library. He would also like to get a closer look at the pictures in the books that are being read to the children, but his mother has warned him that it is not safe for him to go to storytime. One day Littlebat leans a little too far out of his protective hiding place and falls right into storytime. You can imagine how well that went over! He does manage to fly back to safety and his mother tells him that there is one time of year that it might be safe for him to listen to storytime. He waits all through the spring and through the summer until fall arrives when he manages to make himself part of the decorations.

Cinderhazel: The Cinderella of Halloween by Deborah Nourse Lattimore

October 10, 2010 - 10:09 pm No Comments

Cinderhazel has the mean step-sisters and a godwitch. She also doesn’t have any way to get to the ball, but when her broom breaks, she gets there on a flying vacuum. There is also a prince-Prince Filthy Alarming. They end up living filthily ever after. This is a very cute story for all of those kids who are tired of the original version or are just looking for a cute and funny story.

How Many Seeds in a Pumpkin? by Margaret McNamara

October 7, 2010 - 4:25 pm No Comments

Mr. Tiffin’s class has three pumpkins-a small one, a medium one and a large one-and they are going to count how many seeds are in each pumpkin. First they get to makes estimates and then they get to count. There is a group counting by two’s, another group counting by five’s and another group counting by ten’s. As we were reading this book at our house we learned that the number of lines on a pumpkin can give you an indication as to how many seeds it has compared to another pumpkin…more lines=more seeds.

Excuse Me…Are You a Witch? by Emily Horn

October 7, 2010 - 4:13 pm No Comments

Herbert, the black cat, doesn’t have a home, so on cold days he likes to go to the nice warm library to read. One day he stumbles across a book called The Encyclopedia of Witches which tells him that witches wear striped stocking and pointed hats, they travel on brooms, they have cauldrons and they especially love black cats. Herbert goes on a quest to find a witch and stumbles across a few people who kind of match the description of a witch, but with no luck. After having so little luck and feeling very disappointed, he goes back to the library and finds a whole group of witch schoolgirls and their witch teacher.

Ten Timid Ghosts by Jennifer O’Connell

October 6, 2010 - 9:57 pm No Comments

This book has been read many times at our house. It’s a very cute story about a haunted house with ten ghosts and a witch that’s moving in and wants them out. The witch has all kinds of schemes to get the ghosts to leave and they work too, until one clever little ghost figures out her tricks and gets the others to reclaim “their” house. It has a cute ending, it rhymes and the story counts backwards from 10 to 1. It’s a perfect preschool book.

The Perfectly Horrible Halloween by Nancy Poydar

October 6, 2010 - 2:42 pm No Comments

Arnold cannot wait for his class Halloween party to get started. He practices walking like a pirate and acting like a pirate all day…he wants to win the “scariest costume” prize. When it’s time for the children to change into their Halloween costumes though, he can’t find his anywhere! He is so sad about it that he hides under the white drop cloth the children use when they paint. In a cute and unexpected twist to the story, the drop cloth ends up being his costume and he does end up winning the “scariest costume” award. Your children will love to see who ends up wearing Arnold’s pirate costume at the end of the story, too. This book so captures the anticipation children have on the day of Halloween and the disappointment when things don’t go as planned.

Who Will I Be? A Halloween Rebus Story by Shirley Nitzel

October 3, 2010 - 9:45 pm No Comments

A girl gets an invitation to a Halloween party and she is trying to use things she has around the house to make a costume. She comes up with a couple of different outfits, but neither one of them seems just right. Finally, thanks to her grandma, she ends up with a costume. I love this story because not only is it a rebus story (a rebus uses pictures to represent some of the words in a story) so it’s a great story for beginning readers, but it also a cumulative tale (which means parts of the story repeat throughout the story) which is also great for beginning readers and it rhymes.

I Need My Monster by Amanda Noll

October 2, 2010 - 1:29 pm No Comments

The monster that lives under Ethan’s bed has gone fishing and Ethan’s just not sure if he will be able to go to sleep without his monster. A substitute monster shows up, but he doesn’t have long teeth or scratchy claws, which is what Ethan is looking for, so that monster leaves. The next monster has long claws, but there is nail polish on them which is not AT ALL what Ethan was hoping for. The next monster turns out to be a girl monster which isn’t going to work out-she has a bow on her tail-that’s not scary! Ethan gets a few more substitute monsters, but they are just not scary enough. Luckily, it turns out that Ethan’s monster doesn’t really like fishing that much and he returns much earlier than expected.

Hallo-Wiener by Dav Pilkey

October 1, 2010 - 2:14 pm 1 Comment

Oscar is a wiener dog and all of the other dogs are always making fun of him. So it doesn’t help that one Halloween his mom makes him a bun costume so he looks like a hot dog with mustard. All of the other dogs are vampires and mummies and witches and poor Oscar has to trick-or-treat in his hot dog costume that makes him walk so slowly that by the time he gets to each house, all of the candy is gone.
It turns out to be the best Halloween ever though when a horrible monster (turns out to be a bunch ornery cats in disguise) chases the other dogs into a lake and Oscar is there to not only expose the cats, but to also save his friends. It turns out that his hot dog costume also makes a wonderful life raft. 🙂 My youngest son has read just about every single Halloween picture book that exists and this is one of his favorites.

Harriet’s Halloween Candy by Nancy Carlson

September 30, 2010 - 2:17 pm No Comments

Harriet comes home from trick-or-treating with TONS of candy, but she refuses to share any of it with her little brother. Okay, maybe one piece, but only one that she wasn’t going to eat anyways. Harriet decides to hide her candy in a new place every time she eats some just to make sure nobody eats any of it but her. However, she starts to run out of hiding places, so she sits down and starts to eat it ALL. After a while (when she is starting to not feel so well) she decides that perhaps sharing IS a good idea after all. There’s a cute little twist at the end of the story too.