Kids Books - Life
The Complete Franny K. Stein, Mad Scientist: Lunch Walks Among Us; Attack of the 50-Ft. Cupid; The Invisible Fran; The Fran That Time Forgot; ... The Fran with Four Brains; The Frandidate
By Jim Benton
I love it because it's unique, but I'm still trying to find; The Invisible Fran and The Frandidate!
How to Hug an Elephant #6 (Here's Hank)
By Henry Winkler, Lin Oliver
When Hank gets ditched by Nick the Tick on a field trip to the zoo, Hank is completely lost! Soon, Hank meets a nice zookeeper who is in charge of Elsie the Elephant. Hank uses his imagination to cheer Elsie up and finds out about her talents. Go soccer elephants!
Zip
By Ellie Rollins
Life hasn't been the same for Lyssa since her mom died. But when she discovers her Texas house will be bulldozed, Lyssa travels there on her scooter to save it. This story shares wonderful memories of Lyssa and her mom that remind me of my relationship with my own mom.
Coco: A Story about Music, Shoes, and Family
By Diana López
Mike
LOL I love movie COCO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.#1.
A Year of Mini Mysteries: 29 Tricky Tales to Untangle
By Kathy Passero
This book has some funny stories for every occasion. Unlike the revised Mini Mysteries book, there were brand-new stories instead of repeated ones with different illustrations. There is a set of stories for each season of the year: fall, winter, spring, and summer. Hope you enjoy it!
Adrift
By Paul Griffin
I found Adrift after a desperate search of my library for a book that might heal a bit of the heartbreak from the ending of the Throne of Glass series., and since it was short and had a decent-looking storyline, I grabbed it and started reading. You can't go wrong with a book about five teens stranded at sea with no hope of survival, right? WRONG. Don't get me wrong, I like a fast-paced book, but Adrift was had a blink-and-you'll-miss-it plot. It felt like the author just tossed the story upon you without a second thought for character development. It definitely would have done better as a longer novel. But I have to give Mr. Griffin credit; the story is what it claims to be and nothing less. It was realistic in gristly details and had an ending that just sums up how life goes: The main characters don't always get the girl, not everyone lives, and it's not always just forgive-and-forget. I found Adrift in the teen section, but anyone could read it. It's only 228 pages, so I didn't lose much, but this book didn't leave me feeling like I'd gained anything, either.
Sharks: And Other Dangers of the Deep (Smart Kids)
By Roger Priddy
the book tells you about the sharks in the ocean that haves good features and can eat a lot of animals. this helps you learn all about sharks.
Disney•Pixar Inside Out: So Many Feelings: Riley's World Inside and Out
By Disney Inside Out
Even though I don't own this book yet, I have read sneak peeks of it. It's basically an activity journal of Riley's perspective on the story and movie-related activities. There are lots of photos and doodles. There are even ticket stubs and pizza receipts from the movie. Very cute!









