
Welcome to the launch of metomi.com, your online source of great reads and activities for young readers! We are reading about one of our favourite creatures, the dinosaur! From brilliantly coloured dinosaurs to groovy prehistoric dancing ones, we've got great children's book suggestions for every child! Check out our Fun Stuff page for children too, for a Dress-up T-Rex and a wonderful Dino Digger game. Happy reading and do check out our Children's Library page for more great books!
Title: How Do Dinosaurs Get Well Soon?
Author: Jane Yolen
Illustrator: Mark Teague
This children's book is short on words but cleverly written and illustrated. I was looking for French book recommendations and chose it from the Toronto Public Library recommended list. I was absolutely delighted to have found this book. My daughter had been learning about dinosaurs in class and the book immediately resonated with her. We both enjoyed the French version even though we are both novices in French; the English version is equally good. The illustrations so perfectly depict what an imaginary sick day for a young dinosaur would be like, in a wonderfully humorous and subtle way. There is no simplification of dinosaur names for the sophisticated young reader (depicted on the inside cover of the book) but that also seems to add to the enjoyment of the book. This children's book is one in a series of 'How do' dinosaur books written by Jane Yolen and I look forward to reading the others with my daughter and son (who also enjoys reading about 'dino-roars').
Title: When Dinosaurs Came With Everything
Author: Elise Broach
Illustrator: David Small
Both our children really enjoyed this book! While in town to run a few errands, a boy and his mother discover that there is definitely something going on...because everywhere they go, dinosaurs literally come with everything! Everyone from the baker to the movie theatre are offering dinosaurs with each visit - dinosaurs with donuts, dinosaurs with movie tickets - well, you get the idea! The boy, who likes running errands as much as most children do (our kids will complain about everything before we run errands) realizes that on this day, errands are not such a bad thing. The illustrations complement the text nicely, giving young readers a thrilling sense of this special day! Great for a young generation that loves dinosaurs and the parents who love reading about them!
Title: Dancing Dinos
Author: Sally Lucas
Illustrator: Margeaux Lucas
We really enjoyed this book! The simple rhyming, flowing text teams nicely with the hilarious illustrations of a boy and his new dinosaur friends! In Dancing Dinos, a boy reading a dinosaur book is surprised to find that the dancing dinosaurs can leap right out of the page, and into his house! We follow their adventure through the house as the dancing dinos start having a bit too much fun, creating quite a mess! That is, until they run into the boy's father! As the father wonders about what he just witnessed (dinosaurs in the kitchen, just not your everyday sight!), the dinos scurry back up the stairs, to the boy's room and dance right back onto the pages of their book! A delightful read that had our preschooler laughing! There are other Dancing Dino books and we are looking forward to reading the others!
Title: Saturday Night at the Dinosaur Stomp
Author: Carol Diggory Shields
Illustrator: Scott Nash
We purchased this children's book from bookcloseouts.com (currently not available on the site) and it not only became a quick favourite, but publisher Candlewick Press also became a source of good children's reads. The catchy rhyme and vivid, funny illustrations of dinosaurs getting ready for a night out of dancing, good music and fireworks from nearby volcanoes makes it a joy to read and reread. You may find yourself getting into it a bit more than you thought! There's also some fancy dino dance footwork on the first page (and repeated on the last page) that your child may enjoy imitating, as my daughter did (and still does!). Really a joy to read.
Title: Usborne Dinosaur Stencil Book
Author: Alice Pearcey
Illustrator: Tetsuo Kushii
Designer: Helen Wood
One of my daughter's friends gave her an Indigo gift card for her third birthday last year, and this was the children's book she selected. Usborne is another favourite publisher for us, lots of reads that get children to work their imaginations on favourite topics. Another sophisticated dinosaur book, the illustrations are detailed and museum quality. There is some text but the purpose of the book is to provide young dinosaur fans with fairly durable, cardboard stencils with which to draw their own creative versions of the more popular (and less known but equally interesting) dinosaurs. It's when your child starts calling out the names (correctly!) at the museum's dinosaur exhibit that it really hits you (in a good way!).
Title: Chirp Discover Dinosaurs (Nov 2007 issue)
Author: Chirp Magazine
Illustrator: Various
My daughter is on her second subscription to Chirp thanks to her great aunt Tina. Chirp is a local favourite that really gets it when it comes to what children think is hip and happening. For a year and a half now the children's magazine has come up with clever activities around great themes like dinosaurs. You will have to buy the back issue direct from their online site but it's an affordable and fun read that will get reread several times more before being retired. We actually started on some used back issues that Tina picked up at a local bookstore, so there's always an option for reuse (if you can keep them in good condition, a difficult task given there are so many children's activities to scribble on and cut out!) This issue of Chirp was one of our favourites.
Title: Edwina, The Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct
Author/Illustrator: Mo Willems
We really enjoyed this children's book about a dinosaur who is the town sweetheart, doing good deeds and baking cookies for the townspeople. Everyone loves Edwina and nobody seems to acknowledge nor care that the idea of a dinosaur in a modern-day setting is impossible. All except of course one little boy, who is more interested in being right about his "Dinosaurs are Extinct" theory than to appreciate the wonder that is Edwina. There is a suspenseful moment when Edwina finally understands what the boy is trying to tell everyone, and then a funny moment followed by a happy ending. The illustrations in this children's story really complement the story nicely.