The New York Times bestseller that teaches children what it means to be kind.
Pat Zietlow Miller is a children's book lover and one of the
contributors at Picture Book Builders, a blog that highlights
exemplary picture books and explains why they work. Her picture
books include the award-winning Sophie's Squash, Sophie's Squash Go
to School, Wherever You Go, Sharing the Bread, and The Quickest Kid
in Clarksville. Pat lives in Madison, Wisconsin, with her husband,
two daughters, and two pampered cats.
Jen Hill is the illustrator of several picture books, including
Diana's White House Garden by Elisa Carbone, Spring for Sophie by
Yael Werber, and Doing her Bit by Erin Hagar. She is a graduate of
the Rhode Island School of Design and lives in Brooklyn, New York,
with her husband and her intern, Little Bee, who is very helpful
for a cat.
[A] lovely exploration of empathy and thoughtfulness.
*Publishers Weekly*
These days, it seems more important than ever for books to show
young people how to act with thoughtfulness, civility, and
kindness.
*The New York Times Book Review*
The precisely worded, hopeful text offers ideas to ponder, while
the artwork places them within kidfriendly contexts, such as a
multiracial classroom and a neighborhood park. Nicely designed for
drawing out children’s ideas and opening a discussion on kindness,
this picture book works well one-on-one or read aloud in a
classroom, for the expressive pictures are still effective from a
distance. A thoughtful picture book.
*Booklist*
The book presents the powerful message that small acts of kindness
matter, and that they can build with other acts of kindness to make
a difference . . . A valuable addition on this topic [that] will
promote conversation about what it means to be kind.
*School Library Journal*
Here’s a thoughtful and thought-provoking look at what it means to
be kind and how kindness can spread.Throughout the author leaves
space for readers/listeners to reflect on the narrator’s words,
which never once become preachy. Jen Hill’s illustrations are
enormously appealing capturing so well the feelings of Tanisha, the
narrator, their classmates and the wider community.
*https://redreadinghub.blog/2020/07/22/be-kind/*
This thoughtful story explores what children can do to be kind.
*Red*
This is such a thoughtful and reflective book that children and
adults can both learn a lot from
*Stories for Little Ones*
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