Incredible 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.

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.

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.

Tomecek Steve and Sachiko Yoshikawa took a non-fictional approach when they wrote down Stars. They are more factual on the composition of stars and their behavior during the day and night. The child understands why some appear bigger and brighter than others. It is ideal for kids beyond four years of age.

Zoo in the Sky is the title given to the work of Christian Balit and Mitton Jacqueline. It dwells on constellations but simplifies them for children to understand. Each image has an accompanying short story that includes sky positioning and behavior at different times during the day. Their approach is factual yet interesting for four year old children.

Ann Rockwell has a collection of pictures with accompanying statements describing space and the particular star. The title of the book is Our Stars. She describes other sky objects like meteors and moons through simple language that is very easy to understand. The material best fits children who are beyond five years of age.




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