Children’s books for Earth Day

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Earth Day is April 22, and the theme of this year is “our power, our planet”, asking everyone to take measures to protect our planet at the moment. The first day of the earth took place on April 22, 1970 and now the events are celebrated on a national scale. These five children’s books celebrate nature and invite children to notice and fall in love with the planet and each living being. These are perfect readings for Earth Day and beyond.


SMASHERS HISTORY: Earth Day and the Environment by Kate Messner
The 10th book of History Smashers Non-FRICTION MIDDLE GRADE SERIES describes not only how the day of the earth began, but also the centuries of environmental activists that preceded it, and the militants who followed. Using a combination of illustrations, comics and photographs, Messner’s approach is both accessible and complete. I particularly appreciate the emphasis on the way in which bipococum communities have been disproportionately affected by environmental problems. It is an excellent non-fiction reading for the 8th and over, both in and outside the class.


Black Beach: a community, a black tide and the origin of the Earth Day by Shaunna & John Stith & Maribel Lechuga
Image books who want to know more about the origins of the Earth Day should read Black beachA fictitious report of events leading to the day of the earth. The young Sam and his class are devastated by looking at their parents and their community try to clean after a oil spill off the coast of Santa Barbara. It seems that no one cares about environmental disasters like this, but people outside their community hold a remark, including the Gaylord senator Nelson, the founder of Earth Day. The rear includes a calendar and more details on how the day of the earth has become.


Wilder child by Nicolette Sowder and Myo Yim
This book of images is a simple and lyrical ode to children who love nature, the “glorious moss makers” who play in the rain, look at worms and spiders with wonder, and climb trees and rocks and all they can find. It is also a call for action, because wild children will become wild adults who will understand why it is so vital to protect the environment and invoke others to do the same. The illustrations are magnificent: warm, joyful and welcoming.


We jump together by Christopher Silas Neal
Many image books by Christopher Silas Neal celebrate nature, but his most recent adopts a unique approach by showing the interconnection between human and animal life, encouraging empathy and imagination. Neal represents two mothers and two children in illustrations side by side: one human and the other a humpback whale. The whale and human children both pass the lively tracks (of fish and cars), dive deeply (in water and underground in a metro) and, always, remain near their mothers. Their parallel lives converge at the end. The writing is sparse but poetic and the illustrations with expressive blue tones. It is a very neat book of images.
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Birds by Jennifer Ann Richter
This gentle novel of intermediate level shows that even the children of the city can love and appreciate nature. Nyla likes birds and can barely keep it cool when her teacher announces the next major class project: a bird observation competition with a suburban school, amateur ornithologists of the city vs amateur ornithologists. Whoever sees the most birds wins, but Nyla, a Philly girl, worries about the chances of her class. How can they compete with children surrounded by nature, when its class is surrounded by concrete?
Here are some lists of additional books for children of nature!
TIt follows you from the reimbursement.
This week, we highlight an article that made our type of editor -in -chief Vanessa Diaz feel. Now, even five years after her publication, Vanessa is still salty American dirt. Read the rest for an extract and become an All Access member to unlock the full message.
Imagine it: The United States, January 2020. A book with a pretty blue and white blanket made the rounds on the Internet Bookish. Blue ink forms a beautiful hummingbird pattern on a creamy background, a bird associated with the solar god Huitzilopochtli in Aztec mythology. Black barbed wire, both delicate and threatening, cuts the motif into a grid resembling an arrangement of the Talavera tiles. The whole is catchy, ostensibly Mexican in sensation and evocative of the borders and the experience of migrants.
The book tells the story of a bookstore owner in Acapulco, Mexico, who is forced to flee his house when a cartel of drugs assassinates everyone in his family, with the exception of his young son in a quinceañera. She and the boy are forced to become migrants and embark on a treacherous journey north towards the American border, to escape the cartel and to befriend the other migrants along the way. The book is praised not only as the “IT” book of the season, but as THE History of immigration. He obtains the treatment of Oprah and is rented by everyone from Salma Hayek to the Grande Sandra Cisneros, who called him “The great novel by Las American.“”
It’s been more than five years, and this book is always the scourge of my existence.
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