Below are some new books that have been added to the MCS library collection. Come and check them out!
The Tortoise and the Hare, by Jerry Pinkney (Grades PreK-3)
This companion to the Caldecott Medal-winning The Lion & the Mouse
is Jerry Pinkney's most stunning masterpiece yet. Even the slowest
tortoise can defeat the quickest hare, and even the proudest hare can
learn a timeless lesson from the most humble tortoise: Slow and steady wins the race!
Here is a superbly rendered journey from starting line to finish that
embodies the bravery, perseverance, and humility we can all find inside
ourselves. ~Amazon
Flood, by Alvaro Villa (Grades K-3)
Villa’s wordless picture book is a haunting look at a family whose home
might be wiped out by a storm. Anyone who has lived through a hurricane
will catch their breath at Villa’s unnerving watercolors, generously
laid out across long, horizontal spreads. Familiar, nervous moments are
found on every page: Dad preparing the windows while the kids,
oblivious, play on the floor. The ominous glow of a weatherman
delivering his warning soliloquies. Rain-battered volunteers surrounding
the house with sandbags. And, of course, the worried family deciding to
drive away, waving farewell to their brave, lonely house. The inability
to know what nature has in store is quietly gut-wrenching—until a
devastating spread depicts the interior of the house as storming with
water, furniture being tossed like sticks. Villa’s sole, but
significant, misstep is the too-quick turnaround: a single spread of
house repair leads to the family enjoying a perfectly restored home. A
worthwhile reminder that things are darkest before dawn, though not
quite up to the visceral truths that make the rest of the book so
moving. ~Daniel Kraus, Booklist
Splat the Cat: I Can Read Series, by Rob Scotton (Grades 1-3)
Splat the Cat Sings Flat
Splat the Cat with a Band and Clang
Splat the Cat: The Rain is a Pain
Splat the Cat: Good Night, Sleep Tight
Splat the Cat and the Duck with No Quack
Splat the Cat Takes the Cake
Splat the Cat: The Name of the Game
The Dark, by Lemony Snicket (Grades 1-4)
Laszlo is afraid of the dark. The dark lives in the same house
as Laszlo. Mostly, though, the dark stays in the basement and doesn't
come into Lazslo's room. But one night, it does. This is the story of how Laszlo stops being afraid of the dark. With emotional insight and poetic economy, two award-winning talents team up to conquer a universal childhood fear. ~Amazon
Volcano Rising, by Elizabeth Rusch (Grades 3-6)
Elizabeth Rusch explores volcanoes in their entirety, explaining how
they re not all as bad as they re made out to be. Using examples of real
volcanoes from around the world, Rusch explains how some volcanoes
create new land, mountains, and islands where none existed before, and
how the ash helps farmers fertilize their fields. Simple,
straight-forward prose provides readers with the basics, while a
secondary layer of text delves deeper into the science of volcanoes.
Susan Swan s bright and explosive mixed-media illustrations perfectly
complement the subject matter they depict volcanoes in all their
destructive and creative glory. Complete with a glossary and list
of further resources, Volcano Rising is a unique look at a fierce, yet
valuable, scientific process. ~Amazon
Bailey School Kids Series, by Debbie Dadey and Marcia Thornton Jones (Grades 2-5)
15 of the best Bailey School Kids stories including:
Vampires Don't Wear Polka Dots
Mermaids Don't Run Track
Leprechauns Don't Play Basketball
Ghosts Don't Eat Potato Chips
Genies Don't Ride Bicycles
Cupid Doesn't Flip Hamburgers
Bogeymen Don't Play Football
Angels Don't know Karate
Aliens Don't Wear Braces
The Abominable Snowman Doesn't Roast Marshmallows
Unicorns Don't Give Sleigh Rides
Ogres Don't Hunt Easter Eggs
Zombies Don't Play Soccer
Werewolves Don't Run for President
Werewolves Don't Go to Summer Camp
I Survived the Battle of Gettysburg, by Lauren Tarshish (Grades 4-6)
Lauren Tarshis presents a
highly personalized narrative of the Battle of Gettysburg. The story
follows former slave Thomas and his little sister Birdie as they fall in
with Union forces and make their way north. The Union army rolls toward
its epic clash in a small Pennsylvania town, and Thomas becomes a
unwitting participant in one of the most formative events in American
history. Tarshis writes with sharp, clear, emotional language: “There
they were, rebel soldiers ready to charge. There were thousands of
them—men in front on horseback, waving gleaming swords.” Back matter
includes common questions and answers about the Civil War, along with
the text of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. Others in the I Survived
series include high-interest topics such as Pearl Harbor and September
11. ~Erin Anderson, Booklist
The Mouse with the Question Mark Tail, by Richard Peck (Grades 4-6)
There is a basic philosophy underlying this sweet mouse-out-in-the-world
story: “For every human on earth, there is a mouse doing the same job,
and doing it better.” A tiny, unnamed mouse, with notched ears and a
tail that falls naturally into the shape of a question mark, attends the
Royal Mews Mouse Academy, taught by toothy headmaster B. Chiroptera.
But after being bullied by other mice and driven by the essential
question of his identity, the mouse leaves the academy and hatches a
rather unformed plan to visit ancient Queen Victoria, awaiting her
Diamond Jubilee, in the hopes that the all-knowing monarch can tell him
who he is. Along the way to Buckingham Palace, he rides in the ear of a
horse named Peg (it’s very waxy), falls into a punch bowl (it’s very
pink), and meets a cast of mice—and bats—who serve the queen. Murphy’s
black-and-white illustrations, with pulled quote captions, add charm in
spades, and there’s one tipped-in full-color illustration in each of the
book’s three main parts. ~Anne Kelley, Booklist
True Stories of the Revolutionary War, by Elizabeth Raum (Grades 4-6)
Step back in time and experience the Revolutionary War through the
stories of the people who lived through it. Witness the first reading of
the Declaration of Independence. Experience the horror of a sneak
attack. Watch a mother risk her life by spying for the colonists. True
Stories of the Revolutionary War doesn't just tell you the tales of war.
It drops you into the thick of combat. ~Amazon