<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Featuring fanciful art and rollicking text, this exuberant story celebrates reading as it follows a diverse group of children who read wherever and whenever they can. Sometimes, they even read together, in a special fort they've built. Full color.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>These kids all love to read--alone or together, on a bus or in a parade. And every time they open a book, they open up a whole new world, too! </b> <p/><b>"A delightful tribute to reading anything and everything all the time. . . . There's something for everyone." --<i>Booklist</i></b> <br><b>"A chipper, colorful celebration of the limitless possibilities for what, where, and when one can read." --<i>Publishers Weekly</i></b> <p/> Learning to read is a big accomplishment, and this exuberant picture book celebrates reading in its many forms. In lively rhyme, it follows a diverse group of word-loving children who grab the opportunity to read wherever and whenever they can. They read while waiting and while sliding or swinging; they read music and in Braille and the signs on the road. And, sometimes, they even read together, in a special fort they've built. The colorful, fanciful art and rollicking text will get every child more excited about reading! <p/><b><i>Selected for the 2020 Illinois Reads program.</i></b><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"After a class of diverse students selects books at the library, peppy rhyming verse by Degman (<i>Norbert's Big Dream</i>) and whimsical digital-and-watercolor illustrations by Tentler-Krylov (<i>Read-Aloud Classics: Peter Pan</i>) integrate the chosen titles' settings and subjects into the children's lives, underscoring the ease and joy with which readers are transported by books ('Hooray! I know how to read on my own!'). A girl reading <i>My Big Book of Animals</i> affectionately pets a moose sticking its head into her subway car while a dazzling menagerie looks on; a reader floating in a swimming pool filled with sea creatures pores over <i>Shark Facts</i>. Also spotlighted are more realistic scenarios: a boy grocery shopping with an adult peruses <i>The Kid Chef</i>, and a guitar-toting kid flips through a songbook at a music store. Welcome inclusions are a girl reading a book in Braille as she flies on a magic carpet over an exotic city ('I read with my fingers across bumpy lines'), pictured alongside a child communicating with a sibling in sign language ('I read with my voice or my hands, using signs'). A chipper, colorful celebration of the limitless possibilities for what, where, and when one can read." --<i>Publishers Weekly</i> <p/> "Just read! It could be a command, a suggestion, or a declaration of accomplishment. Either way, this lively book is a delightful tribute to reading anything and everything all the time. The solitary act of reading is recast as a venture into worlds of people and lives far different from our own: 'I read with an astronaut, pirate or farmer / I read with a clown or a knight wearing armor.' Jaunty rhyming couplets bounce around the pages as the children in the illustrations read books, magazines, hand signs, road signs, maps, sheet music, and Braille. Vibrant watercolor illustrations are used to full effect, so that washes of blue transport a girl reading about sharks into a tropical seascape, and a boy reading about tigers sees the big cat's fiery coat leaping from a pile of fall leaves. The diversity of reading material is matched by the diversity of readers, contexts, and interests. There's something for everyone; there's no holding back--just read!" --<i>Booklist</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Lori Degman is the author of <i>1 Zany Zoo </i>(Simon & Schuster), <i>Cock-a-Doodle Oops! </i>(Creston Books), <i>Norbert's Big Dream </i>(Sleeping Bear Press), and the upcoming <i>Like a Girl </i>(Sterling). Lori was a teacher of deaf and hard-of-hearing students and is now a full-time author. She lives near Chicago, IL, with her husband, two grown sons (when they come to visit), and pets. <p/> Victoria Tentler-Krylov grew up in Saint Petersburg, Russia, and studied architecture and urban design at Cooper Union and Columbia University. Victoria's artwork has been published by Pink Giraffe Books in Russia and by <i>Spider</i> magazine, <i>The Wall Street Journal, The Boston Globe, </i> and <i>Flutter Magazine</i> in the US. Her first book, a picture-book read-aloud of <i>Peter Pan</i>, was published by Quarto. She lives with her family just outside Boston, MA. Visit Victoria online at cargocollective.com/victoriakrylov.
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