This view shows all of the books in this age group that have been selected in years past and nominated for the current year (but not yet selected). The nominations are marked by a "Nomination(not yet selected):" label.
Children can practice counting and colors in both English and Spanish as they read this luminously illustrated tale of a sleepless child trying to remove the sheep overtaking the bedroom.
Bright, bold illustrations coupled with a simple rhyming narrative demonstrate the pleasures of tossing toys from a crib or highchair. Lap-sitters and early readers will delight in joining Baby Rabbit’s exclamation, “Overboard!”
Thelonius Monster and eleventeen other monsters relish his fly pie recipe, a sticky sweet creation composed of prey from a dumpster, a sewer, and a pile of manure. Impeccable rhymes and exuberantly scruffy illustrations produce a delightful read-aloud.
Blues and grays shift to soft yellows when household objects sway and come alive, and a sleeping child awakens in the night as music drifts into a “sleepy sleepy house.”
Single-word questions cleverly illustrated with brilliantly colored, die-cut pages create the concept of opposites. Lifting a flap turns the black bat into a white ghost and the sun-filled day into a starlit night.
In the latest installment of this beginning reader series, Mr. Putter tries to be Mrs.Teaberry’s good neighbor by serving tea to her knitting club. Frenzy and fun ensue when his cat Tabby arrives.
Mia’s friendship with the new girl Shaketta begins after they sit on a playground bench together to tie their shoelaces. Soft watercolors invite the reader into this warm, funny story.
Watercolor and ink illustrations grace the gentle humor of this beginning reader. The trio of stories starts with the day Ben’s dad takes him to the pet store and ends with a happy hug.
Nancy adores the color fuchsia, thinks lace socks improve her soccer, and wishes her family understood how to be fancy. But she discovers that plain can be just right, too, in this exuberantly illustrated story about individual differences and familial love.
Twenty six turbo-charged do-gooders display their super powers in alphabetical order (“D is for DANGER MAN. HE DOESN'T HAVE A DOG but he DOES DARING DEEDS EVERY DAY”) on over-sized pages that barely contain the explosive comic book illustrations.