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Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Suggest Kids Books to Adults [Especially the Scary Ones]

Back in January of 2020 I made this resolution here on the blog:
2020 Resolution: I will read more middle grade novels. Over the last couple of years I have noticed [and written about] how impressed I am with Middle Grade right now. I volunteer at the elementary school library 2x a month and help to catalog their titles. This library has an excellent and diverse collection which has exposed me to more authors and titles from this reading level. I am going to be more active about reading those books and not just reading about them. As I said in my review of the latest Jason Reynolds book, I think every adult should read that book, but also, more middle grade in general. Not only are the books excellent, this is what today's children are reading and it will shape them and our future. You want to understand the future, you want to fix the dumpster fire of a world we are living in? The best place to start is with the youth of today. I always try to have a resolution that revolves around reading in an area that I think needs more attention and that I am also less well versed in, so this fits the bill. I no longer have young children and I need to stay connected to this age group. This resolution will help me achieve that overall goal.

Little did I know that there would be a pandemic and not only would children be home 24/7 but also, that we could all use a little pick me up.

I love middle grade books. In this post from 2018 I explain why middle grade books are a great suggestion for adults always, but I would argue that now, during these unprecedented times, middle grade novels are the right length and have the right tone for more readers than many adult titles. Middle grade books have  drama, are issue oriented, and extremely thought provoking, but they also have resolved, [mostly] happy endings. We can all use those happy endings.

I have also gotten better versed in middle grade horror offerings through my work with Summer Scares. I have learned that not only are these book very good, but they are also a great entry to the genre for adults who are intrigued by the idea of horror but then utterly terrified when they read it. 


One of the best introductions to horror period, for any age, are the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark books by Alvin Schwartz. These stories have terrified generations of readers [me and my kids included], but yesterday, an official update was released. Edited by Jonathan Maberry, 
Don’t Turn Out the Lights: A Tribute to Alvin Schwartz's Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, this is a diverse and inclusive collection of stories for kids by today's best horror authors. 

But we have digressed. Middle grade books in any genre are the perfect read right now. NPR agreed and focused their Summer Reading survey on this exact topic. Now, they argue that they did it to find books for kids and parents to enjoy together, which is fine, but I am arguing that all of these books can also be enjoyed by parents, like myself, with no young children under foot. It is never too late to read kids books. Never.

Below I have the link to the full NPR list and the introduction to the piece. 

 

It's been such a strange, lost summer. Camps and schools and activities have shut down during the pandemic, leaving kids and caregivers stuck at home and climbing the walls — and sometimes the garden fences.

With that in mind, we decided that this year's summer reader poll should be all about keeping kids occupied. We asked you to tell us about your favorite kids' books, from board books for babies to great read-alouds to early chapter books and even a few books for older readers. And thousands of you answered.

As with all our summer polls, this one isn't a straight-up popularity contest. (Otherwise it would have been nothing but 100 Mo Willems books — and we love Mo Willems, but that wouldn't have been the most useful list.) Rather, it's a curated list built from your recommendations and picks from our expert panel of judges — a fantastic group of authors, librarians, publishers and all-around book nerds. And instead of a ranked list, it's grouped into categories that we hope will help you find just the right books for the kids in your life.

Now, we understand that half the fun of a list is arguing about what didn't make it on — and our judges had to make some hard choices. But there was one easy decision: A few years ago, we did a summer list based on All Things Considered's Backseat Book Club of great reads for kids from 9 to 14. This year's list is focused on younger readers, but we did include a few books for older kids. So if something appeared on the Backseat 100, we didn't include it here. That means no Charlotte's Web, no Matilda and no Little House books (though we've got some wonderful suggestions for Little House fans, like Linda Sue Park's Prairie Lotus).

We want this list to be a tool for discovery, which means we had to walk a delicate path when it comes to books that are undeniable classics — we knew all hell would rain down on us if we left out Where the Wild Things Are or The Very Hungry Caterpillar. But we decided you probably didn't need our help to discover Dr. Seuss, Richard Scarry or The Little Engine that Could, so those didn't make it onto the list.

And as always, we had to decide which work to pick from creators who were nominated multiple times. Readers may remember the Nora Roberts Rule, which came about during 2015's romance poll: No one gets on the list twice UNLESS they're as titanic a figure in their field as Roberts is in romance; we included her in that list under both her own name and her pen name, J.D. Robb.

This year brought an interesting twist. Since many books on the list have both authors and illustrators, we eventually decided that authors could appear only once, but we didn't mind seeing illustrators again. (Hello, Christian Robinson and Vashti Harrison!) And generally, when someone appeared more than once in the nominations, we went with whichever title was more popular with voters (so Kevin Henkes' Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse beat out Kitten's First Full Moon).

You'll also see there's a section of books for older readers. We wanted to recognize that a lot of kids read ahead of their age groups — and also, there have been so many great books that came out since we put together the Backseat 100 list in 2013 that it seemed a shame not to include a few of them here.

We hope you and the kids in your life will have as much fun poring through this list as we had putting it together! We had a blast recalling old favorites and discovering new classics (and a shoutout to our gracious judges, who let me sneak in one of my all-time childhood faves, Paul Goble's gorgeous The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses).

To make things easier, we've split up the list into categories: Picture PerfectBaby's BookshelfConversation StartersFamily LifeAnimal (and Monster) FriendsFolktales and Fairy TalesFun to Read Out LoudNonfictionEarly Chapter Books, and Older Readers. Happy reading!

Click here for the list

Also click here to meet the panelists who worked on the list.

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