The Museum of Very Bad Smells: A Dare to Scratch 'n' Sniff Mystery by Monica Arnaldo
Children's Books, Published, Community Melissa Rooney Children's Books, Published, Community Melissa Rooney

The Museum of Very Bad Smells: A Dare to Scratch 'n' Sniff Mystery by Monica Arnaldo

The Museum of Very Bad Smells will, no doubt, be interesting to children for the first read or two. It will also, no doubt, be disappointing to children who open the book to find that the smells “don’t work.” For this reason, you may want to purchase the book in a store where you can test it out, rather than online.

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Mouse on the River by Alice Melvin: A Review
Children's Books, Published, Travel, Community Melissa Rooney Children's Books, Published, Travel, Community Melissa Rooney

Mouse on the River by Alice Melvin: A Review

Mouse on the River is—in a word—delightful. This is not just a book that you’ll read once or twice. It is a book that children will want to read over and over again, with pictures they will scrutinize repeatedly on their own, and that will, no doubt, remain on many of their bookshelves until they are adults and have children of their own.

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Mix A Pancake by Christina Rossetti and Monique Felix: A Review
Children's Books, Children, Published, Poetry Melissa Rooney Children's Books, Children, Published, Poetry Melissa Rooney

Mix A Pancake by Christina Rossetti and Monique Felix: A Review

Mix a Pancake, the latest book illustrated by Monique Felix for Creative Editions, an imprint of The Creative Company, is a kitten-filled visual feast akin to the Little Golden Books that have lined children’s bookshelves since 1942. This comes as no surprise, given that The Creative Company, itself, was founded just 10 years earlier, in 1932. 

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See This Little Dot by Jane Yolen and Laetitia Devernay: A Review
Children's Books, Children, Published Melissa Rooney Children's Books, Children, Published Melissa Rooney

See This Little Dot by Jane Yolen and Laetitia Devernay: A Review

True to its mission of pairing clear and compelling written content with “the most brilliant illustrations,” Creative Editions—an imprint of The Creative Company, founded in 1932—can be proud of their next thought-provoking and eye-catching creation in Jane Yolen’s and Laetitia Devernay’s newest picture book, See This Little Dot.

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Home Is Where the Heart Is (Emma Dodd's Love You Books)

Home Is Where the Heart Is (Emma Dodd's Love You Books)

“Home Is Where the Heart Is features a mother cat and her young kitten, who live in a house that clearly has human owners. The story uses simple and repetitive words to describe what “home” means to all of us, emphasizing the security that notion provides even when we are far away from our physical house and/or one another.”

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This Book Is Banned: A Hilarious Picture Book about Censorship and Free Speech

This Book Is Banned: A Hilarious Picture Book about Censorship and Free Speech

“Let’s face it. Without their caretakers' insistent input, most children do not know that books are being made unavailable to them at their schools. It’s debatable whether adult caretakers who oppose book bans even want them to. But the adult-child combination who reads This Book Is Banned together will have fun discussing the issue of “banning” in the hypothetical, thanks to the busy and engaging illustrations and text that await them.”

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See the Ghost: Three Stories About Things You Cannot See
Education, Children's Books, Published, Children Melissa Rooney Education, Children's Books, Published, Children Melissa Rooney

See the Ghost: Three Stories About Things You Cannot See

“Though it is meant to be read by early elementary students, middle-grade students will enjoy reading this book to their younger siblings and classmates, thanks to the clever trickery within its pages. For the same reason, See the Ghost makes a good, non-baby-ish picture book to share with reading-challenged students in middle-school and beyond.”

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Mom’s Hugs and Kisses: A Review
Children's Books, Published, Children Melissa Rooney Children's Books, Published, Children Melissa Rooney

Mom’s Hugs and Kisses: A Review

Like Nancy Tafuri’s All Kinds of Kisses and Steven Henry’s picture book by the same name, Loupy’s story describes the different kisses given by numerous animals, in this case through a puppy protagonist who requests and receives others' kisses throughout the day. In the end, of course, “the best kiss of all is the kiss he gets from his mother.”

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What to do with a Stick, by Jane Yolen: A Book Review
Inspiration, Children's Books, Published, Children Melissa Rooney Inspiration, Children's Books, Published, Children Melissa Rooney

What to do with a Stick, by Jane Yolen: A Book Review

My 1st review for New York Journal of Books is Jane Yolen's What To Do With A Stick. JY’s Owl Moon is one of my absolute favorites - I take it to elementary writing residencies. The story being written by one of my current Winston Salem students centers on a stick, which I is surely no coincidence…

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FrazierTales Collection Volume 1 by Mark and Chris Frazier is Vivid and Easy-to-read
Children, Relationships, Children's Books Melissa Rooney Children, Relationships, Children's Books Melissa Rooney

FrazierTales Collection Volume 1 by Mark and Chris Frazier is Vivid and Easy-to-read

Today I review Frazier Tales Collection Volume 1, written by Mark and illustrated by Chris Frazier. It’s a hardcover volume of three illustrated children’s stories, so it’s a good value for money. And there are a lot of illustrations, all of them quite detailed and of the quality garnered by Ren and Stimpy or Rocko’s Modern Life, both Nickelodeon series…

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Jump the Moon: A Children’s Picture Book Review

Jump the Moon: A Children’s Picture Book Review

This morning I had the pleasure of reading Kathy Simmers’ and Marjorie van Heerden’s children’s picture book, Jump the Moon, about the mystical bond that forms between “the girl with the long blond hair” and the misbehaving pony she is charged with for a summer. The book is based on a true story involving the author’s daughter. I rode horses throughout my adolescence (was president of the riding team at my college), so the subject of Jump the Moon immediately spoke to me.

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