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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Christmas books, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 8 of 8
1. Book of the Week--We Were There


Christmas is here, and I present to you one of my favorite Christmas picture books. It's fairly recent, and I think it has probably flown under many radars. But that's okay, because that fits the message of the book. It's Eve Bunting's We Were There, and it tells the Nativity story from the point of view of the lowliest, ugliest, creatures of the dark--the scorpion, the snake, the bat, the toad, the spider, and (my personal favorite) the rat. While the beautiful sheep and cow and donkey stood by the glow of the Christ child, the forgotten creatures watch from the shadows. But they, too, followed the star, and they too worship. And of course, they are as precious to Him as the beautiful animals. The story is told in prose and is illustrated with outstanding paintings by Wendell Minor. This is a handsome, thoughtful reminder of why we celebrate Christmas in the first place.

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2. More Poetry for Christmas

Looking for some Christmas poetry? Here are some suggestions for you.

Try the Web sites of the Poetry Foundation and the Academy of American Poets. Both sites have a selection of poems for the holiday.

Poems that can be found at poetryfoundation.org include the following:
  • A Visit from Saint Nicholas by Clement Clark Moore
  • Christmas at Sea by Robert Louis Stevenson
  • The Oxen by Thomas Hardy
  • Skating in Harlem by Cynthia Zarin
  • Christmas Bells by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Poems that can be found at poets.org include the following:

  • little tree by e. e. cummings
  • Sonnet in the Shape of a Potted Christmas Tree by George Starbuck
  • Christmas Tree Lots by Chris Green
  • Christmas Eve: My Mother Dressing by Toi Derricotte

Looking for some collections with Christmas poems for children? See if you can find the following books in a local book store or the public library.

THE OXFORD TREASURY OF CHRISTMAS POEMS
Compiled by Michael Harrison & Christopher Stuart-Clark
Oxford University Press, 1999

This illustrated anthology of fifty-four poems contains a number of traditional works, including The Twelve Days of Christmas; Away in a Manger; Oh, Would You Be a Shepherd Boy?; Joseph and the Angel; and It Was Poor Little Jesus, an American spiritual. There are poems by Eleanor Farjeon, Elizabeth Coatsworth, Elizabeth Madox Roberts, and Langston Hughes. Although there are three poems by Jane Yolen in this anthology, most of the contemporary poetry selected by Harrison and Stuart-Clark was written by British poets whose names are less familiar to Americans.

CHRISTMAS PRESENTS: HOLIDAY POETRY
Selected by Lee Bennet Hopkins
Pictures by Melanie Hall
HarperCollins, 2004

This slim volume containing twelve Christmas poems is An I Can Read Book. Except for the excerpt from Away in a Manger, all of the poems were specially commissioned for this book. The poems are short—and many are rhythmic and rhyming.

The book opens with a poem entitled Waiting, in which a child speaks about her anticipation of the arrival of Christmas.

From Waiting
by Maria Fleming

And I go on waiting…
and waiting…
Waiting’s the worst.
Because Christmas is coming
and I’m ready to BURST.


There’s a lovely mask poem by Rebecca Kai Dotlich in which the poet speaks in the voice of the holiday.

From Soon
by Rebecca Kai Dotlich

I am tinsel.
I am plums.
I am jingle bells,
tin drums.
I am Santa’s
midnight sleigh.
Soon I will be
Christmas Day.

The anthology ends with a poem about a snow globe—also written by Maria Fleming.

From Snow Globe
by Maria Fleming

In here, it’s always
Christmas Day,
where a tiny Santa
rides a tiny sleigh…

Shake it,
and it snows and snows,
and Christmas never
ever

goes.


Christmas Presents is a nice little package of holiday poems for beginning readers. It’s also a fine book to read aloud to very young children.

IT’S CHRISTMAS
Written by Jack Prelutsky
Illustrated by Marilyn Hafner
HarperCollins, 1995

Let’s not forget Jack Prelutsky’s book It’s Christmas. Originally published in 1981, it is still in print today. This collection of rhythmic, rhyming poems about a Christmas tree, a letter to Santa Claus, Christmas cards, singing carols, and presents has real child-appeal. The poems in this book are fun to read aloud.

Click here to take a peek inside this book.


DO RABBITS HAVE CHRISTMAS?
Written by Aileen Fisher
Illustrated by Sarah Fox-Davies
Henry Holt, 2007

This posthumous collection of winter and Christmas poems written by one of America's finest children's poets is topnotch!

Click here to read my review of Do Rabbits Have Christmas?.

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3. Christmas Books in Verse

I have a stack of new Christmas picture books here that I had hoped to review for Wild Rose Reader by this time—but Thanksgiving and Robert’s Snow and preparations for Christmas have taken up much of my time in the past couple of weeks. Jules has some fine reviews of holiday picture books here and here and here at 7-Imp. You may want to read her impression of a sampling of Christmas titles that were recently published.

For today’s post, I thought I’d provide readers with a list of Christmas picture books that are written in verse. Except for Bear’s First Christmas, the books were published prior to 2007. I reviewed three of the books previously at Blue Rose Girls. All of the books are still in print.


THE JOLLY CHRISTMAS POSTMAN
By Janet & Allan Ahlberg
Little, Brown, 1991

In this sequel to The Jolly Postman, the postman goes about delivering mail to different fairy tale characters on the day before Christmas.

Once upon a Christmas Eve
Just after it had snowed,
The Jolly Postman (him again!)
Came down the jolly road…


Jolly Postman’s got a load of holiday tidings and packages in his mailbag—including a Christmas card for Baby Bear from Goldilocks and her baby sister; Beware!, a “hazardous” board game for Miss R. Hood from Mr. Wolf; and a jigsaw puzzle for Humpty Dumpty of himself from all the King’s men (and horses)—so Humpty can be put together again. At his final stop, the postman shares a cup of tea with the Clauses and receives a present himself. Not only that, Santa transports the postman and his bicycle back home in his sleigh.

In the final illustration, the Jolly Postman is settled into his armchair near the fireplace, his dog sleeping at his feet.

A Jolly Postman, warm and snug,
A postman’s dog upon the rug.
A clock that’s chiming in the hall.
A Merry Christmas—one and all!

The Jolly Christmas Postman would make a “jolly’ gift for some young child.

SNOWMEN AT CHRISTMAS
Written by Caralyn Buehner
Pictures by Mark Buehner
Dial, 2005

Snowmen at Christmas is the sequel to the popular bestseller Snowmen at Night. Although I think the text isn’t quite as strong in the sequel, this book is still a delight. In fact, I’d say it’s a visual feast for readers’ eyes. Mark Buehner’s illustrations are luminescent—street lanterns and strings of Christmas lights actually seem to glow on the pages. The outdoor scenes are infused with color. In some pictures, the sky and snow radiate shades of orange, pink, or purple—imbuing pictures of a cold winter night with warmth.

In this fanciful story, a young boy imagines how snowmen might celebrate Christmas. As he falls to sleep, the snowman in his front yard is shown slipping away. All the snowmen are on the move. They “glide down snowy avenues” and pass by shop windows “framed with twinkling lights.” They gather in the center of town and start their holiday celebration. They trim the square with icicles and holly. They enjoy frosty treats like ice cream and snow cones. Snow children play games.

Then the dancing begins:
To the tune of a fiddle,
All the snowmen line up,
And sashay down the middle.


Soon a snowman Santa appears on his flying toboggan and distributes presents. After Santa rides off, all the snowmen circle round a large Christmas tree and “sing songs about snow/and the birth of a King.” Finally, the snowmen, young and old alike, grow tired from their night of merriment.

The children are sleepy,
The grown-ups are yawning,
The snowmen go home
Just as Christmas is dawning.

By the time people arise early on Christmas morning, all of our frosty friends are back in place. They look no different from the previous day except that…

Their smiles are more tender,
Their eyes softly shine,
As the snowmen dream dreams
Of their Christmastime.


Mark Buehner’s art in Snowmen at Christmas is radiant! This picture book would be great even if it had no text. Pair this book with Raymond Briggs’ classic The Snowman.

CHRISTMAS TREE!
By Wendell and Florence Minor
Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins, 2005

Christmas Tree! is the first picture book collaboration between award-winning artist and illustrator Wendell Minor and his wife Florence. In her rhyming verse, Florence asks readers to imagine what kind of Christmas trees they would like to be. Her text is simple and spare. She doesn’t get too specific with her language. Wendell gets whimsical with his art, and his paintings provide the details—and images of what readers might picture in their heads.

Here are two excerpts from the book along with descriptions of the illustrations that are paired with them. So, readers, would you like to be...

A tree so
high it would
touch the sky?


In the illustration that accompanies this verse, Wendell paints the Statue of Liberty holding a lit Christmas tree aloft in her right hand instead of her torch.

Or a tree
so small it would
fit in the wall?


For this verse, Wendell illustrates four mice clustered around a star-topped tree made of cheese in their mouse hole. In some other illustrations, we see a huge Christmas tree balloon floating down a street in a city parade, a flock of white geese forming the outline of a holiday tree on a background of blue sky, and a tree decorated with carrots, apples, and sugar cubes—a tree just perfect for horses.

This book could be used as inspiration for an art lesson. Young artists could imagine themselves to be different kinds of Christmas trees. They could also picture themselves as trees in unique settings--shining out from a lighthouse or set at the top of a sailboat mast--the way Wendell does in this book.

A SMALL CHRISTMAS
By Wong Herbert Yee
Houghton Mifflin, 2004

Fireman Small is back to save the day—or should I say Christmas Eve—for Santa Claus. The diminutive fireman has been very busy chopping down a Christmas tree for Mayor Mole at the tree farm and putting up holiday lights and decorations in the city. By the time the stores close on Christmas Eve, Fireman Small is exhausted. He heads back to the firehouse, gets into bed, and pulls the covers over his head.

Around midnight, he hears a jingling of sleigh bells…then a CRASH! Santa has fallen head first into a coal bin and is covered with soot. Fireman Small washes Santa’s suit and tosses it into the dryer. When he removes Santa’s red suit from the dryer, he sees that it has shrunk! Then he finds Santa Claus fast asleep in his bed. Fireman Small wonders:

What about all the good girls and boys?
Who will deliver the rest of the toys?
Though Fireman Small should be snuggled in bed,
He races up to the rooftop instead.
Dressed in Santa’s suit, he hops in the sleigh.
But the reindeer refuse to fly away!

Now what is Fireman Small supposed to do? Why, he delivers all the presents in his fire truck instead! When Santa’s sack is empty, Fireman Small finally heads back to the firehouse and goes to bed. He arises on Christmas morning to find Santa and the sleigh gone—but the jolly old man has left a present for his little helper…along with a note, which includes the following lines:

Thank you, Fireman Small,
You’re a fine substitute.
Please keep this token,
My now tiny red suit!


The small size of this book and Yee’s charming watercolor illustrations make this a cozy book for sharing with a little someone cuddled on your lap.

BEAR’S FIRST CHRISTMAS
Written by Robert Kinerk
Illustrated by Jim LaMarche
Simon & Schuster, 2007

A young bear finds a cave to hibernate in and settles down for the winter. He is awakened from his sleep by a mysterious sound. He leaves his cave to follow the sound. Along the way he meets and helps a number of other wild animals: a crow, a moose, a pheasant and her chicks. All the animals then follow the bear through the snow in hopes of finding a place where they can safely spend the night.

On the bear trudged till he saw, through more snow,
A lair or a burrow all lit by a glow.
Icicles hung from its top, sharp and bright.
Its sides had a space that was open for light.
And what’s this from inside? That wonderful sound!
After all of his trekking, its source had been found.


It’s not a lair or burrow that they animals have happened upon—it’s a house where a family is celebrating Christmas. The animals peer in through a window and see a room aglow with light—light from people’s faces and eyes and from a glorious Christmas tree. Then the family turns off the tree lights and goes off to bed. The animals don’t have a clue about the meaning of the lights and the music and the gladness they had witnessed this chill winter night.

As the animals trudge on, a spark inside them gives off an inner glow. Bear breaks a wide trail for moose who is carrying the pheasants on his back. The pheasants burst into song filling the air with sweet music. Finally, the animals arrive at bear’s “well-hidden den.” The animals hibernate in the safety of the cave until spring arrives. They are warmed with the memory of the light of the tree—a light that remains with them.

The text written in rhyming couplets is quite long. Nonetheless, this rhythmic tale scans well and is gorgeously complemented by Jim Lamarche’s illustrations. There’s a softness to LaMarche’s young bear, an endearing main character who is often depicted with a gentle, childlike expression. LaMarche varies the size of his pictures—some are double-page spreads, some are full-page spreads, and some are smaller spot illustrations. He also uses close-ups and changing perspectives to add visual interest to this quiet story.

Bear's First Christmas would be a good book to share with young children learning about hibernation.


You can read reviews of the following books in my Poetry Friday: Christmas Stories in Verse post at Blue Rose Girls.

MR. WILLOWBY’S CHRISTMAS TREE
By Robert Barry
Doubleday, 2000

SANTA’S STUCK
Written by Rhonda Gowler Greene
Illustated by Henry Cole
Dutton, 2004


MERRY CHRISTMAS, MERRY CROW
Written by Kathi Appelt
Illustrated by Jon Goodell
Harcourt, 2005

4 Comments on Christmas Books in Verse, last added: 12/19/2007
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4. Picture Book Review: The Best Christmas Ever

My daughter is a social worker for the Department of Social Services. Last week, she asked my husband and me if we would “adopt” a DSS family for Christmas. We told her we’d be happy to. So…Tuesday evening my daughter and I went shopping for clothes and toys and dolls and video games and sports equipment. We buzzed around the store from department to department with our shopping list and a big cart. By the time we hit the checkout counter, our cart was overflowing.

Because the holiday has become so commercialized, shopping for gifts lost its luster for me many years ago. I will admit, though, that I really enjoyed spending a couple of hours Christmas shopping with my only child. This time I knew my night out shopping could help to make Christmas special for a family of children that might otherwise go without presents. It was also a special night of mother-daughter bonding.

The Christmas season can be difficult for families who have come upon hard times—for parents who can’t afford to buy their children presents. There are lots of working families who struggle to get by from week to week. There are many families in need because of an illness or death of a parent…or because a parent in the military has been away from home for an extended period of time…or because a parent has lost his/her job.

With all this in mind, I thought I would write a review of a holiday book about a family that has no money to spend on presents yet still manages to have “the best Christmas ever.”


THE BEST CHRISTMAS EVER
Written & illustrated by Chih-Yuan Chen
Heryin Books, 2005

It’s been a hard year for Little Bear’s family. Father Bear’s business failed and he couldn’t find work. There’s barely enough money to buy food—surely none for Christmas presents. A few days before Christmas, Mother Bear busies herself making decorations with Little Bear’s old clothes. Little Bear's older brother and sister decorate the windows in hopes that Santa Claus will see them. Father Bear goes out in search of branches from which he constructs a Christmas tree. Then he hangs ornaments on the tree and dusts it with white flour, which sifts “down to the branches below like fresh snow.” Little Bear also goes about his "holiday" business...unnoticed by the others.

For Christmas Eve, the Bear family has a tasty dinner that mother has made with a fish father caught. Then everyone goes quietly off to bed. Little Bear, who is unable to sleep, asks his father to tell him some Christmas stories. After Father Bear is finished with his stories, Little Bear reassures him: “Santa Claus brings us presents every year—he won’t forget this time.”

And sure enough, there is a present for each member of the family under the tree on Christmas morning. When Brother Bear unwraps his gift, he finds his own kite that had gotten stuck in a tree. The hole in it has been repaired and it’s now as good as new. Sister Bear’s gift is the umbrella she had left behind at the park. She is thrilled to have it back. Mother’s present is the missing button from her favorite dress—and Father’s is the hat that had blown off his head on the day he went in search of branches for their Christmas tree. Little Bear’s gift is his favorite baseball glove. It’s all clean and shiny and looks brand new.

After the excitement of opening presents is over, Sister Bear discovers tiny footprints in the flour under the tree. Whose could they be? They’re too small to have been made by Santa Claus—unless Santa is a dwarf! Father and Mother laugh. They know who made the footprints. They joke that the prints weren’t left by “Father” Christmas—but rather by “Toddler” Christmas. The family spends the rest of the holiday “discussing the mysterious gifts, and of course, the mysterious visit from “Toddler Christmas”. Some perceptive young readers may spot clues in Chen’s illustrations that will help them deduce that Little Bear was the one who found the lost objects and left them as presents under the tree.

With spare, uncluttered illustrations, Chih-Yuan Chen supports his tender story of a family fallen on hard times—a family that prepares for Christmas as best it can by improvising when there is no money to buy a tree or decorations or presents. Rather than bemoan their fate, family members busy themselves with holiday projects—and Little Bear, in particular, helps to make this the most memorable Christmas ever. This quiet, touching tale of a family finding joy in a “homemade” Christmas is memorable, too.

Here is how the story ends:

All those old familiar things,
newly presented, had rekindled
many fond memories.

And it was thus, that the Bears
had themselves…
the best Christmas ever.




Chih-Yuan Chen is also the author and illustrator of On My Way to Buy Eggs and Guji Guji—one of my all-time favorite picture books. You can find out more about this talented author and illustrator in Rising Star: Chih-Yuan Chen at the website of The Bulletin for the Center for Children’s Books.

2 Comments on Picture Book Review: The Best Christmas Ever, last added: 12/20/2007
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5. Poetry for Christmas

DO RABBITS HAVE CHRISTMAS?
Written by Aileen Fisher
Illustrated by Sarah Fox-Davies
Henry Holt, 2007


If you are looking for a collection of Christmas poems for young children, you’d be hard-pressed to find a book better than Aileen Fisher’s Do Rabbits Have Christmas?. Fisher (1906-2002) was the second children’s poet to be honored with the prestigious NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. Most of Fisher’s poetry focuses on the natural world and on common childhood experiences. Her rhythmic, rhyming poetry is often written from a childlike perspective; her meter near flawless.

The poetry included in Do Rabbits Have Christmas? was selected from Fisher’s earlier works that were originally published from 1946-1991. The book’s fifteen poems take readers from late fall to early winter and the Christmas holiday. The young girl pictured in many of the illustrations appears to be the person “telling” the poems.

Fall Wind, the book’s first poem, is about a wild wind that has trees swishing, dipping, swaying, tossing, and falling leaves racing away. It’s a wind that brings news that winter’s on its way.

From Fall Wind

Everything is on the run—
willows swishing in the sun,
branches full of dip and sway,
falling leaves that race away…

all the sky is full of song:
“Winter’s coming. Won’t be long.”

Animals—rabbits, mice, chickadees, and a pet cat—factor in many of the poems. Snow Stitches is about a plucky little mouse “whose footprints show/like stitches in the new white snow.” In My Christmas Tree, a child decorates a “spruce/in the cold white wood” with a star of gold and suet balls for little chickadees. In Christmas in the Country, the girl talks to wild animals.

Christmas in the Country

Run, little wild ones,
over the snow,
peek through the trees
where yourselves won’t show,
look at the lights
on our Christmas tree,
brighter than any
stars you’ll see!


The illustration that accompanies this poem shows a family of rabbits outside a house trimmed with icicles. The rabbits, looking at the Christmas tree in a window, stand in the warm glow of light that shines out through the window.

The poems in this book may be for very young children…yet many are rich with imagery and figurative language. In Sparkly Snow, Fisher compares snowflakes to diamonds strewn on the ground by a reckless millionaire. In Frosty Window, window panes grow forests with “tall white ferns/and trees, and rivers/with twists and turns.” In the child’s imagination, the window has become a wintry wonderland “with flowers of ice” and she wishes she could “walk in a place that nice.”

In the poem December, the little girl tells of the things she likes about the last month of the year.

From December

I like days
with a snow-white collar,
and nights when the moon
is a silver dollar,
and hills are filled
with eiderdown stuffing
and your breath makes smoke
like an engine puffing .


The little girl, wondering in one poem if rabbits also have Christmas, imagines that the animals can celebrate under little spruces “where snow has made pompoms/with silvery handles/and frost has made tinsel/and icicle candles.”

There’s a delightful poem entitled Before Christmas in which the little girl tells of all the things she and her family do before the big holiday: sing, write cards, shop for and make presents, wrap gifts, frost cookies, buy and decorate a tree…"but most of all/we wait…and wait." The poem captures the anticipation a young child feels while eagerly awaiting Christmas.

Sarah Fox-Davies doesn’t break new ground with her artwork for this book. Fox-Davies, known for her wildlife illustrations, uses a palette of soft colors that do not overwhelm the text. The illustrations complement Fisher’s poems with more traditional looking art that hearkens back to an earlier time—a time when Fisher wrote many of the poems included in this book. Fox-Davies’ rabbits and mice and chickadees are both charming and realistic. Do Rabbits Have Christmas? would make a fine holiday gift for a young child or a family with young children.

I can attest to the child-appeal of Fisher’s poetry. I used to share many of the poems in this book with my students when I was an elementary school teacher.

Click here to learn more about Aileen Fisher.


Tricia has the Poetry Friday Roundup at The Miss Rumphius Effect.

5 Comments on Poetry for Christmas, last added: 12/14/2007
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6. Picture Book Review: Christmas Magic

CHRISTMAS MAGIC
Written by Sue Stainton
Illustrated by Eva Melhuish
Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins, 2007


Here’s a Christmas picture book with glitter on the front cover, a diminutive and playful Santa Claus character who looks like a little elf, and a mystery to be solved: The magical reindeer bells are missing! Where, oh where, could they be? All the animals of the forest have a treasure hunt to find them—just as Santa had planned.

The forest creatures—including reindeer, a rabbit, a squirrel, a fox, a mouse, an owl and other birds— set off on their quest. They look high and low for the missing bells. They follow footprints in the snow. They listen for the jingling of reindeer bells. They even play tricks on each other. And they travel deeper and deeper into an ever-darkening forest in their search until…

All is quiet, all is black. They are lost.

They have not gone this far into the forest before. Ever.
The trees seem to close in behind them. Silence.


The animals become frightened. Then the moon comes out and lights up the forest. Surprise! That’s when they see a huge evergreen tree bedecked with red bows…and the missing reindeer bells! Music fills the forest. An excited Santa jumps out from behind the tree and does a cartwheel in the snow. He throws Christmas magic into the sky that sparkles all around them. The happy animals laugh and dance and look up at a night sky lit with shooting stars and moonbeams.

Christmas Magic is a slight mystery with a spare text. It is a book best for reading to just one or two young children who could look for and point out the little clues left for readers in the illustrations: a mitten in the snow and glimpses of the red tassel of Santa’s hat and the glow of his lantern.

Melhuish’s child-friendly illustrations suit this light-hearted holiday tale. Her art captures the playfulness of the story characters. Pictures of the creatures and Santa playing tricks and cavorting in the snow are set against a white background. Other pictures, set against a purplish-blue night, evoke a kind of wintry forest wonderland. The double-page spread of the animals lost deep in the forest is spooky—lit only by pairs of eyes staring out from the darkness.

I’ve been told by my friends who run a children’s book shop that they have gotten good feedback from customers about Christmas Magic. It appears that young children enjoy the story and especially like the illustrations. One of them has read it to her grandsons who are captivated by the spooky illustration of the animals lost in the woods.

Click here to see inside the book.

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7. Another Tasty Book Walk

Bookwalksm

Cay Gibson is giving away a copy of her new book, Christmas Mosaic, An Illustrated Book Study for Advent and Christmas! She has extended the deadline to tomorrow (Monday) morning, so hurry over to the Cajun Cottage and leave your name & address in her comments! There are other prizes, too.

Christmas Mosaic is a treasury of activities and commentaries on Christmas-themed picture books. Cay, author of the hugely popular Catholic Mosaic, has worked her magic again to put together a rich booklist for Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany. More than 80 of the 200 titles have been annotated with recipes, craft ideas, and more.

She has also included essays by:

Alice Gunther
Karen Edmisten
Kathryn Faulkner
Margot Davidson
Dawn Hanigan
Elizabeth Foss
Jennifer Miller
Gwen Wise

Sounds delightful, doesn't it? Yet another book I can't wait to read!

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8. Christmas & Hanukkah Books

On Beyond Rudolph: Christmas with the Animals from The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
(Click here for the pdf version.)

Holiday High Notes from The Horn Book

Christmas Picture Books from Through the Looking Glass Children’s Book Review

Christmas Holiday Recommended Reading: Kids Books for Christmas from Apples 4 the Teacher

From Kids Reads
Celebrating Christmas
2006 Holiday Roundup (Christmas & Hanukkah)
2005 Holiday Roundup (Christmas & Hanukkah)
2004 Holiday Roundup (Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa)
2003 Holiday Roundup (Christmas, Hanukkah, & Kwanzaa)
Christmas Stories in Verse from Blue Rose Girls (Reviews of Mr. Willowby’s Christmas Tree; Santa’s Stuck; and Merry Christmas, Merry Crow)
Winter Lights & Christmas Trees from Blue Rose Girls (Reviews of Winter Lights: A Season in Poems & Quilts and A City Christmas Tree)
Christmas Printable Books from Enchanted Learning

November-December 2007: Holidays Around the World from CBC Magazine

Hanukkah Read Up!: A list of great Hanukkah books of the last few years recommended by the Sydney Taylor Book Award Committee of the Association of Jewish Libraries
Hanukkah Books: Book lists and book reviews from Wild Rose Reader

2 Comments on Christmas & Hanukkah Books, last added: 12/2/2007
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