Thursday, June 19, 2014

Childrens Book About Child Stars

By Ina Hunt


The mind of children requires literature that is engaging and interesting to keep them attentive. Getting childrens book about child stars is the best way to introduce them to space science at the early age. There are a collection of books available in the market from where one can make a choice.

Roaring Rockets is an incredible title targeting children around the age of three years. It is authored by Tony Mitton and specializes on rhymes for the tender age. It gives a story about a trip to the moon through a very interesting perspective. It is funny to read and very interesting for the teacher, parent or guardian who is leading the child.

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.

Molly and Franklin Branley combined their imagination to come up with The Big Dipper. This is an ideal way to introduce children to constellations and other objects in the sky. Children are able to identify small and big dippers, great and little bears and the North Star, among others.

Ransom James and Holt Lenny coauthored How Many Stars in the Sky for the imaginative children minds. Children reading the book fall in love with the idea of gazing into the skies for hours for the fun of it. The father and son in this story make a trip to the countryside in order to enjoy the open skies. The children are not bored by the fact that they need to name or spot constellations.

Children at the young age would be excited by the idea of traveling to space. This imaginative phase inspired Faith McNulty and Kellogg Steve to pen down the title If You Decide To Go To the Moon. This forms part of fantasy from page one to the last sentence. The child enters into the space travel mood at the first sentence.

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.

Our Stars is the choice of title for the largely pictorial and illustration collection by Ann Rockwell. Each picture or illustration is accompanied by a description on the star and relative position in the sky. Other objects like meteors and the moon are explained. A very simple language is used in this regard. This title is ideal for children at the age of five years and more.




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