Childrens Book About Child Stars

By Ina Hunt


Introducing children to space travel and the wonders of the skies requires carefully selected literature. Only some childrens book about child stars can fit the tender age. This means that not all titles available in shelves can fit this purpose. Each age requires a different approach and a different title for that matter.

Children at three years and above will enjoy the Roaring Rockets authored by Mitton Tony. It is interesting to young ears because of the rhymes. The approach adopted by the writer to tell the story of traveling to the moon is very interesting. It also is very enjoyable to the parent, teacher or guardian taking the child through the pages.

Papa, Please Get the Moon for Me is written by Carle Eric and aimed at introducing children to a waxing and waning moon. The best age is when the kids are three of more years. The simple presentation and pleasant language used by the author makes it ideal and interesting for that age.

Branley Franklin and Molly came together to write The Big Dipper. This is a perfect introduction to constellations in the skies. It teaches children to identify big and small dippers from other formations they can see above. They begin to identify the great and little bears as well as North Star at an early age.

James Ransom and Lenny Holt came together and gave children the title How Many Stars in the Sky. This is the best selection for the imaginative mind of children since they begin to look forward to long sky gazing hours. It does not dwell on the fact that they have to identify constellations or the phases of the moon. This is a story of a father who drives his son to the country for the sole purpose of gazing at the skies.

Space travel excites children at a tender age. This is the inspiration behind IF You Decide To Go To The Moon as written by Kellogg Steve and Faith McNulty. It is fantasy from page one and the first sentence. The child gets into a space suit at the first sentence and is engaged throughout as though he or she is an astronaut.

Yoshikawa Sachiko and Steve Tomecek are not interested in fiction. They choose to present facts in a manner that will elicit genuine interest in children at four years or more. This is through the book Stars, which explains where they disappear to during the day and why they reappear at night. Children get to learn in a simple language why some sky objects appear brighter than others.

Mitton Jacqueline and Christian Balit use a lot of illustrations to deliver the idea of constellations to young children. They penned down a collection of short stories with accompanying illustrations about sky positions. They also describe their behavior across seasons in an interesting yet factual manner.

Rockwell Ann picks a pictorial approach in her book Our Stars. The pictures are paired with tagging statements that describe each star in relation to other objects in the sky. She touches on the moon and the behavior of meteors through very interesting and simple language that can be understood by all. The nature of materials used in this book fits children above the age of five.




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