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1. PJ Library

By Abby in Editorial

Have you ever heard of Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library? This literacy program brings free books each month to preschool kids all across the country so that regardless of income, thousands of kids have good books to read. Dolly’s wonderful idea—plus a family Seder where the kids received Jewish-themed books—inspired Harold Grinspoon, a Massachusetts philanthropist. He founded the PJ Library to help families strengthen their Jewish identity.

Every month, the library (“PJ” as in pajamas—for cozy bedtime reading) sends a book with Jewish content to Jewish families with kids aged six months to seven years. The neat thing is that these books, too, are all free—interested families just need to sign up when PJ comes to a participating community.

The Harold Grinspoon Foundation works with local funding partners to provide the books (and one CD of songs each year). The PJ Library is now in over one hundred twenty-five communities coast to coast and in Canada and serves more than sixty thousand families. In four years, the library has given away more than two million books!

We’re delighted that the PJ Library has included several Albert Whitman picture books in its offerings. These include Linda Glaser’s simple and charming Hoppy Hanukkah! and Hoppy Passover! in which two young bunnies observe the holidays with their family; Barbara Reid’s Fox Walked Alone, an unusual take on the Noah’s Ark story, with stunning plasticene art; and Frances Harber’s The Brothers’ Promise, a retelling of a Talmudic tale of brotherly love.

Take a look at some of these great stories. And you don’t have to be Jewish to enjoy them!

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2. Nonfiction Monday: Garbage Helps Our Garden Grow

I love April! I really enjoy seeing so many posts about the earth and recycling and composting and all that good stuff that helps our children learn about how to take care of the planet we live in.

Garbage Helps Our Garden Grow: A Compost Story is perfect for this time of the year. Written by Linda Glaser and photographed by Shelley Rotner, the reader is given a simplified story of how a compost pile can help a garden (and help reduce our waste sent to landfills).

From start to finish, the process of a compost pile is explained in very basic sentences, accompanied by clear, bright, and really nice photographs. Kids will learn what goes in the bin and what stays out, how to turn and moisten, and how worms can move the process along. Once the compost is ready, readers are shown how to add it to the garden and what the end result can be.

I really liked the addition of real children in the photographs (always a plus for non-fiction) and thought the story was excellent. The learning points were made easily, not forced, and kids will find that this reads like a story and not an "educational" book.

Overall rating: 5 out of 5

Great for an Earth Day display or to start off a family compost project.

Garbage Helps Our Garden Grow: A Compost Story
Linda Glaser
32 pages
Nonfiction
Millbrook Press
9780761349112
April 2010
Review copy received from publisher


A nice picture book to accompany this book is Compost Story: An A to Z Recipe for the Earth by Mary McKenna Siddals and illustrator Ashley Wolff.

A nicely illustrated alphabet of composting, complete with rhyming and an author's note at the end.


To learn more or to purchase, click on the book cover above to link to Amazon. I am an Associate and will receive a small percentage of the purchase price. Thanks!

4 Comments on Nonfiction Monday: Garbage Helps Our Garden Grow, last added: 4/27/2010
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