<rss version="2.0">
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        <title>
            <![CDATA[ Frontlist | 2021 Spring Preview: Kids’ books, from babies to teens ]]>
        </title>
        <link>
            <![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/%20https://www.frontlist.in/public/index.php/2021-spring-preview-kids-books-from-babies-to-teens ]]>
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        <description>
            <![CDATA[ <h2><span class=s1>This season’s books for children – from babies to teens – feature big-name authors and illustrators, anticipated debuts, and a fluffle of bunnies.</span></h2>
<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>PICTURE BOOKS</span></h3>
<em><strong>The Rock from the Sky</strong></em>
Jon Klassen
Candlewick Press/Penguin Random House Canada, April

Jon Klassen is back – not that he really went away. It’s just that it’s been four years since he released his last solo work, the final book in his bestselling Hat trilogy. (This Is Not My Hat was the first book to receive both the Caldecott and the Kate Greenaway medals.) Since then, he’s only done collaborations, illustrating books with his friend and author Mac Barnett among others. Recent standouts include the chapter book Skunk and Badger, written by Amy Timberlake. This spring, Klassen has a new story to tell about animals that look and feel very similar to the Hat cast (in fact, the two main characters in The Rock from the Sky both sport stylish bowlers). This 96-page picture book, in which a turtle finds a good spot to sit and tries to persuade his armadillo pal to join him, is a meditation on friendship, fate, finding your comfort zone, and trusting your gut.

<em><strong>The Girl Who Loved Giraffes</strong></em>
Kathy Stinson and François Thisdale, ill.
Fitzhenry &amp; Whiteside, April

Before Jane Goodall and Dian Fossey, there was Anne Innis Dagg, a Canadian zoologist who followed her childhood dream to go to South Africa to study giraffes despite the many obstacles she faced as a female scientist in the 1950s.
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>I Sang You Down from the Stars
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Tasha Spillett-Sumner and </span><span class=s1>Michaela Goade, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Owlkids Books, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In this baby book from Indigenous creators Tasha Spillett-Sumner and illustrator Michaela Goade, a new mother collects gifts – a white feather, cedar and sage, a stone from the river – that will give her newborn strength and a connection to tradition and community.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Oakley the Squirrel: The Search for Z
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Nancy Rose
</span><span class=s1>Workman Publishing/Thomas Allen &amp; Son, June</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>This unique alphabet board book introduces babies and toddlers to the iconic squirrel photography of Nova Scotia’s Nancy Rose. Thanks to the retro aesthetic, playful language, and nutty protagonist, this one’s bound to please tots, older children, and parents.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>No More Plastic
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Alma Fullerton
</span><span class=s1>Pajama Press, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Using diorama art made from plastic waste, Alma Fullerton tells the story of Isley, who convinces her family to adopt a zero-waste lifestyle after coming across a beached whale who died from ingested plastic. <em>No More Plastic</em> is a love letter to the oceans and its inhabitants, as well as a call to action.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>When Mom’s Away
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Layla Ahmad and Farida Zaman, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Second Story Press, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In this COVID-19 picture book, the protagonist’s mom is a busy doctor, who must quarantine in the garage. Meanwhile, the young girl does online schooling, has outdoor visits with her grandparents, and joins her neighbours in showing support for front-line workers like her mom.</span></p>
<p class=p1><strong><span class=s1>Bunny tales
</span></strong><span class=s1>In <em>Hare B&amp;B</em> (Running the Goat, Books &amp; Broadsides, April), the latest from Bill Richardson and illustrator Bill Pechet, eight bunny siblings rent out their parents’ bedroom. It’s a rousing success – until a coyote checks in. ● Marketed as <em>The Runaway Bunny</em> for a new generation, <em>Happy Dreams, Little Bunny</em> (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers/Hachette Book Group Canada, Feb.) is a lyrical bedtime story from debut author-illustrator Leah Hong, a visual arts graduate of Emily Carr University. ● <em>On the Other Side of the Forest</em> (Greystone Kids, March) – written by Nadine Robert, translated by Paula Ayer, and featuring Beatrix Potter–esque illustrations by Gérard DuBois – is a heartwarming tale of a rabbit father and son and their decision to venture into the scary forest behind their house.</span></p>

<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>MIDDLE-GRADE FICTION</span></h3>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Street Belongs to Us
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Karleen Pendleton Jiménez and </span><span class=s1>Gabriela Godoy, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Arsenal Pulp Press, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>When their Los Angeles neighbourhood is torn up by construction, best friends Alex and Wolf launch an exhilarating street war in the chaos. This summer story explores Mexican-American identity and history, as well as the power of friendship and imagination.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Shaman’s Apprentice
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Zacharias Kunuk and Megan Kyak-</span><span class=s1>Monteith, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Inhabit Media, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Based on an award-winning short film of the same name by director Zacharias Kunuk (<em>Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner</em>), this book follows a young female shaman-in-training who takes a dangerous journey below ground.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Lone Runner
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Dirk McLean
</span><span class=s1>Lorimer, Feb.</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>This older middle-grade sports story, set in Scarborough, Ontario, follows a Black cross-country runner who goes from solitary athlete to team player when she connects with her school’s diverse track and field team.<span class=Apple-converted-space>   </span></span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Tremendous Things
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Susin Nielsen
</span><span class=s1>Penguin Teen Canada, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Wilbur is in Grade 9, and he’s a triangle player in the school band. When a ukulele exchange student from Paris is billeted with his family, Wil hopes to up his cool factor – with the help of a <em>Queer Eye</em>–ish intervention – to impress her.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>What’s in It for Me?
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>LS Stone
</span><span class=s1>Rebel Mountain Press, March</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Two 15-year-old friends have summer adventures volunteering – one building a school in Africa and the other at an elephant refuge in Thailand – and end up finding themselves facing down child soldiers and rampaging elephants, respectively.</span></p>

<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>YOUNG ADULT</span></h3>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Some Other Now
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Sarah Everett
</span><span class=s1>Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/</span><span class=s1>Raincoast Books, Feb.</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Nigerian-born, Edmonton-based Sarah Everett is a master of teen drama. Her third novel has some <em>This Is Us</em> feels as three teens – two brothers and the girl caught between them – struggle with family loyalty and falling in love.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Blood Like Magic
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Liselle Sambury
</span><span class=s1>Margaret K. McElderry Books/</span><span class=s1>Simon &amp; Schuster, June</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Trinidadian-Canadian author Liselle Sambury describes her stories as “messy Black girls in fantasy situations.” It’s a fitting précis for Sambury’s debut YA novel. In <em>Blood Like Magic</em>, Voya, a teen witch living in a near-future Toronto, must kill her first love to save her family’s magic. Here’s the issue: Voya has never had a boyfriend, so she must first find a guy, fall in love, and then sacrifice him. To get a preview of Sambury’s wit and style, it’s worth checking out her YouTube channel, where she vlogs about her writing experiences. Episodes include “The Truth About Modest Advances,” “That Time I Wrote a Problematic Book,” “Reading My Writing from When I Was a Teenager,” and “Actually Plotting My Worldbuilding for Once.” </span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Life and Deaths of Frankie D.
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Colleen Nelson
</span><span class=s1>Dundurn, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In the latest from Winnipeg kidlit veteran Colleen Nelson, we meet Frankie, who was found in an alley as a child and has no memory of her past. Now, at 17, she’s having dreams of a 100-year-old carnival sideshow and must figure out the connection to her younger self.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Wild Bird
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Leanne Bough
</span><span class=s1>Red Deer Press, Feb.</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Set in Victoria in 1861, <em>Wild Bird</em>’s heroine, Kate, is looking for meaningful work in a society that sees women as managers of the home. Leanne Bough’s third novel also explores the interactions between West Coast settlers and Indigenous people during the time period.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Story of My Life Ongoing by CS Cobb
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Candas Jane Dorsey
</span><span class=s1>Inanna Publications, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In this coming-of-age story set in 2007, Edmonton author Candas Jane Dorsey introduces Corey Cobb, a rare intersex character in YA novels. Gender choice has never been a big deal for Corey, until their supportive dad dies and Corey is sent to live with a disapproving mother.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>My Indian
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Saqamaw Mi’sel Joe and Sheila O’Neill
</span><span class=s1>Breakwater Books, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>When Scottish-Canadian explorer William Epps Cormack wrote about his 1822 journey across Newfoundland in search of Beothuk camps, he referred to his guide solely as “My Indian.” Co-authors Saqamaw Mi’sel Joe and Sheila O’Neill now tell the story from the perspective of said guide, young Mi’kmaq hunter Sylvester Joe.</span></p>

<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>NON-FICTION</span></h3>
<p class=p1><strong><span class=s1><em>The Power of Style: How Fashion and Beauty Are Being Used to Reclaim Cultures</em>
</span></strong><span class=s1>Christian Allaire
</span><span class=s1>Annick Press, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Growing up on Nipissing First Nation reserve in Ontario, Ojibwe teen Christian Allaire was obsessed with fashion, even though he never came across any Indigenous models or designers. Now Allaire, a fashion and style reporter for <em>Vogue</em>, aims to write about clothes in a meaningful way.</span></p>
<p class=p1><strong><em><span class=s1>The Disability Experience: </span><span class=s1>Working Toward Belonging
</span></em></strong><span class=s1>Hannalora Leavitt and Belle Wuthrich, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Orca Book Publishers, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Author Hannalora Leavitt lost most of her vision when she was 12 due to cancer. In <em>The Disability Experience</em> she gets real about the societal impediments people with disabilities face in achieving their goals and celebrates those who’ve brought about change.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>City of Water
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Andrea Curtis and Katy Dockrill, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Groundwood Books, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>This non-fiction picture book makes clear that water conservation is essential through mind-boggling and fascinating facts about how water moves from the forests, mountains, lakes, and rivers into our homes and back out again.</span></p>
<p class=p1><strong><span class=s1><em>Forest Magic: A Guidebook for Little Woodland Explorers</em>
</span></strong><span class=s1>Sarah Grindler
</span><span class=s1>Nimbus Publishing, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>With this illustrated guidebook in tow, hikes and backyard adventures can be fun and educational. Young explorers are encouraged to use all their senses as they identify trees, plants, and animal homes. Plus, there are definitions (for the likes of “sapling,” “nurse log,” and “lichen”) to broaden your woodland vocabulary.</span></p>
&nbsp;

<em>Source: Quill &amp; Quire</em> ]]>
        </description>
        <language>en</language>
        <pubDate>Thu, 01 21, 2021 11:13 am</pubDate>
        <item>
            <title>
                <![CDATA[ Frontlist | 2021 Spring Preview: Kids’ books, from babies to teens ]]>
            </title>
            <link><![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/%20https://www.frontlist.in/public/index.php/2021-spring-preview-kids-books-from-babies-to-teens ]]></link>
            <description>
                <![CDATA[ <h2><span class=s1>This season’s books for children – from babies to teens – feature big-name authors and illustrators, anticipated debuts, and a fluffle of bunnies.</span></h2>
<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>PICTURE BOOKS</span></h3>
<em><strong>The Rock from the Sky</strong></em>
Jon Klassen
Candlewick Press/Penguin Random House Canada, April

Jon Klassen is back – not that he really went away. It’s just that it’s been four years since he released his last solo work, the final book in his bestselling Hat trilogy. (This Is Not My Hat was the first book to receive both the Caldecott and the Kate Greenaway medals.) Since then, he’s only done collaborations, illustrating books with his friend and author Mac Barnett among others. Recent standouts include the chapter book Skunk and Badger, written by Amy Timberlake. This spring, Klassen has a new story to tell about animals that look and feel very similar to the Hat cast (in fact, the two main characters in The Rock from the Sky both sport stylish bowlers). This 96-page picture book, in which a turtle finds a good spot to sit and tries to persuade his armadillo pal to join him, is a meditation on friendship, fate, finding your comfort zone, and trusting your gut.

<em><strong>The Girl Who Loved Giraffes</strong></em>
Kathy Stinson and François Thisdale, ill.
Fitzhenry &amp; Whiteside, April

Before Jane Goodall and Dian Fossey, there was Anne Innis Dagg, a Canadian zoologist who followed her childhood dream to go to South Africa to study giraffes despite the many obstacles she faced as a female scientist in the 1950s.
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>I Sang You Down from the Stars
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Tasha Spillett-Sumner and </span><span class=s1>Michaela Goade, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Owlkids Books, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In this baby book from Indigenous creators Tasha Spillett-Sumner and illustrator Michaela Goade, a new mother collects gifts – a white feather, cedar and sage, a stone from the river – that will give her newborn strength and a connection to tradition and community.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Oakley the Squirrel: The Search for Z
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Nancy Rose
</span><span class=s1>Workman Publishing/Thomas Allen &amp; Son, June</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>This unique alphabet board book introduces babies and toddlers to the iconic squirrel photography of Nova Scotia’s Nancy Rose. Thanks to the retro aesthetic, playful language, and nutty protagonist, this one’s bound to please tots, older children, and parents.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>No More Plastic
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Alma Fullerton
</span><span class=s1>Pajama Press, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Using diorama art made from plastic waste, Alma Fullerton tells the story of Isley, who convinces her family to adopt a zero-waste lifestyle after coming across a beached whale who died from ingested plastic. <em>No More Plastic</em> is a love letter to the oceans and its inhabitants, as well as a call to action.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>When Mom’s Away
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Layla Ahmad and Farida Zaman, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Second Story Press, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In this COVID-19 picture book, the protagonist’s mom is a busy doctor, who must quarantine in the garage. Meanwhile, the young girl does online schooling, has outdoor visits with her grandparents, and joins her neighbours in showing support for front-line workers like her mom.</span></p>
<p class=p1><strong><span class=s1>Bunny tales
</span></strong><span class=s1>In <em>Hare B&amp;B</em> (Running the Goat, Books &amp; Broadsides, April), the latest from Bill Richardson and illustrator Bill Pechet, eight bunny siblings rent out their parents’ bedroom. It’s a rousing success – until a coyote checks in. ● Marketed as <em>The Runaway Bunny</em> for a new generation, <em>Happy Dreams, Little Bunny</em> (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers/Hachette Book Group Canada, Feb.) is a lyrical bedtime story from debut author-illustrator Leah Hong, a visual arts graduate of Emily Carr University. ● <em>On the Other Side of the Forest</em> (Greystone Kids, March) – written by Nadine Robert, translated by Paula Ayer, and featuring Beatrix Potter–esque illustrations by Gérard DuBois – is a heartwarming tale of a rabbit father and son and their decision to venture into the scary forest behind their house.</span></p>

<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>MIDDLE-GRADE FICTION</span></h3>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Street Belongs to Us
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Karleen Pendleton Jiménez and </span><span class=s1>Gabriela Godoy, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Arsenal Pulp Press, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>When their Los Angeles neighbourhood is torn up by construction, best friends Alex and Wolf launch an exhilarating street war in the chaos. This summer story explores Mexican-American identity and history, as well as the power of friendship and imagination.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Shaman’s Apprentice
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Zacharias Kunuk and Megan Kyak-</span><span class=s1>Monteith, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Inhabit Media, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Based on an award-winning short film of the same name by director Zacharias Kunuk (<em>Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner</em>), this book follows a young female shaman-in-training who takes a dangerous journey below ground.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Lone Runner
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Dirk McLean
</span><span class=s1>Lorimer, Feb.</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>This older middle-grade sports story, set in Scarborough, Ontario, follows a Black cross-country runner who goes from solitary athlete to team player when she connects with her school’s diverse track and field team.<span class=Apple-converted-space>   </span></span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Tremendous Things
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Susin Nielsen
</span><span class=s1>Penguin Teen Canada, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Wilbur is in Grade 9, and he’s a triangle player in the school band. When a ukulele exchange student from Paris is billeted with his family, Wil hopes to up his cool factor – with the help of a <em>Queer Eye</em>–ish intervention – to impress her.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>What’s in It for Me?
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>LS Stone
</span><span class=s1>Rebel Mountain Press, March</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Two 15-year-old friends have summer adventures volunteering – one building a school in Africa and the other at an elephant refuge in Thailand – and end up finding themselves facing down child soldiers and rampaging elephants, respectively.</span></p>

<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>YOUNG ADULT</span></h3>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Some Other Now
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Sarah Everett
</span><span class=s1>Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/</span><span class=s1>Raincoast Books, Feb.</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Nigerian-born, Edmonton-based Sarah Everett is a master of teen drama. Her third novel has some <em>This Is Us</em> feels as three teens – two brothers and the girl caught between them – struggle with family loyalty and falling in love.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Blood Like Magic
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Liselle Sambury
</span><span class=s1>Margaret K. McElderry Books/</span><span class=s1>Simon &amp; Schuster, June</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Trinidadian-Canadian author Liselle Sambury describes her stories as “messy Black girls in fantasy situations.” It’s a fitting précis for Sambury’s debut YA novel. In <em>Blood Like Magic</em>, Voya, a teen witch living in a near-future Toronto, must kill her first love to save her family’s magic. Here’s the issue: Voya has never had a boyfriend, so she must first find a guy, fall in love, and then sacrifice him. To get a preview of Sambury’s wit and style, it’s worth checking out her YouTube channel, where she vlogs about her writing experiences. Episodes include “The Truth About Modest Advances,” “That Time I Wrote a Problematic Book,” “Reading My Writing from When I Was a Teenager,” and “Actually Plotting My Worldbuilding for Once.” </span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Life and Deaths of Frankie D.
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Colleen Nelson
</span><span class=s1>Dundurn, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In the latest from Winnipeg kidlit veteran Colleen Nelson, we meet Frankie, who was found in an alley as a child and has no memory of her past. Now, at 17, she’s having dreams of a 100-year-old carnival sideshow and must figure out the connection to her younger self.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>Wild Bird
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Leanne Bough
</span><span class=s1>Red Deer Press, Feb.</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Set in Victoria in 1861, <em>Wild Bird</em>’s heroine, Kate, is looking for meaningful work in a society that sees women as managers of the home. Leanne Bough’s third novel also explores the interactions between West Coast settlers and Indigenous people during the time period.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>The Story of My Life Ongoing by CS Cobb
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Candas Jane Dorsey
</span><span class=s1>Inanna Publications, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>In this coming-of-age story set in 2007, Edmonton author Candas Jane Dorsey introduces Corey Cobb, a rare intersex character in YA novels. Gender choice has never been a big deal for Corey, until their supportive dad dies and Corey is sent to live with a disapproving mother.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>My Indian
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Saqamaw Mi’sel Joe and Sheila O’Neill
</span><span class=s1>Breakwater Books, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>When Scottish-Canadian explorer William Epps Cormack wrote about his 1822 journey across Newfoundland in search of Beothuk camps, he referred to his guide solely as “My Indian.” Co-authors Saqamaw Mi’sel Joe and Sheila O’Neill now tell the story from the perspective of said guide, young Mi’kmaq hunter Sylvester Joe.</span></p>

<h3 class=p1><span class=s1>NON-FICTION</span></h3>
<p class=p1><strong><span class=s1><em>The Power of Style: How Fashion and Beauty Are Being Used to Reclaim Cultures</em>
</span></strong><span class=s1>Christian Allaire
</span><span class=s1>Annick Press, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Growing up on Nipissing First Nation reserve in Ontario, Ojibwe teen Christian Allaire was obsessed with fashion, even though he never came across any Indigenous models or designers. Now Allaire, a fashion and style reporter for <em>Vogue</em>, aims to write about clothes in a meaningful way.</span></p>
<p class=p1><strong><em><span class=s1>The Disability Experience: </span><span class=s1>Working Toward Belonging
</span></em></strong><span class=s1>Hannalora Leavitt and Belle Wuthrich, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Orca Book Publishers, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>Author Hannalora Leavitt lost most of her vision when she was 12 due to cancer. In <em>The Disability Experience</em> she gets real about the societal impediments people with disabilities face in achieving their goals and celebrates those who’ve brought about change.</span></p>
<p class=p1><em><strong><span class=s1>City of Water
</span></strong></em><span class=s1>Andrea Curtis and Katy Dockrill, ill.
</span><span class=s1>Groundwood Books, May</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>This non-fiction picture book makes clear that water conservation is essential through mind-boggling and fascinating facts about how water moves from the forests, mountains, lakes, and rivers into our homes and back out again.</span></p>
<p class=p1><strong><span class=s1><em>Forest Magic: A Guidebook for Little Woodland Explorers</em>
</span></strong><span class=s1>Sarah Grindler
</span><span class=s1>Nimbus Publishing, April</span></p>
<p class=p1><span class=s1>With this illustrated guidebook in tow, hikes and backyard adventures can be fun and educational. Young explorers are encouraged to use all their senses as they identify trees, plants, and animal homes. Plus, there are definitions (for the likes of “sapling,” “nurse log,” and “lichen”) to broaden your woodland vocabulary.</span></p>
&nbsp;

<em>Source: Quill &amp; Quire</em> ]]>
            </description>
            <category>Articles</category>
            <author>
                <![CDATA[ Frontlist ]]>
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            <guid>2</guid>
            <pubDate>Thu, 01 21, 2021 11:13 am</pubDate>
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