Looking for Nonfiction Monday?

Hooray!  You've found it.  Please leave me a comment with a link to your Nonfiction Monday post, and I'll update this post to include your links as the day goes on.  Or just click through to read other people's posts about nonfiction for kids.  Either way, thanks for visiting bookstogether!  I hope you'll come back soon.

Welcome to first-time Nonfiction Monday participants!

Zoe at Playing by the book is all about flags today, with a post titled Vexillology (that is, the study of flags).  Playing by the book features all sorts of great books for kids and the projects they inspire Zoe and her kids to create--today, it's a regatta!

Mandy at Enjoy and Embrace Learning reviews Z is for Zookeeper, which is about the changing role of zoos (not just the animals in them).  Her daughter is meeting author Roland Smith at school today.

Paula at Pink Me reviews some Really, Really BIG Questions about Life, the Universe, and Everything, Dr. Stephen Law's attempt to reach the youngest philosphers.  42?

Mid-morning edition (or, We're glad you're back, too!)

100 Scope Notes recommends DK's Children's Book of Art, which is beautifully laid out (see the post for a look at the inside).

Sarah at In Need of Chocolate reviews Life on Earth: The Story of Evolution by Steve Jenkins.  She mentions a timeline of the development of life on earth as if it were taking place during a 24-hour day.  When do humans show up?  Read her post (and the book) to find out.

Tricia at The Miss Rumphius Effect is in today with Nic Bishop Marsupials.  I'm glad to see that Bishop is training his lens on some furry animals and wonder what Tricia's favorite, the bilby, looks like.

Roberta at Wrapped in Foil enjoyed reading Nic Bishop Butterflies and Moths, which is a Cybils nonfiction picture book nominee this year.

Lynn and Cindy's post at Bookends comes with a warning:  do not read while eating!  It's about Crust and Spray: Gross Stuff in Your Eyes, Ears, Nose and Throat by CS. Larsen.

The Wild About Nature blog reviewed two titles this week, Marsh Music and Marsh Morning, both written by Marianne Berkes.  The marsh is the place to go for music, it seems.

Abby (the) Librarian has a review of Sacred Mountain Everest by Christine Butler-Taylor, all about our relationship with Everest and about the mountain itself.

The NEW Lori Calabrese Writes! reviews How We Are Smart by W. Nikola-Lisa and Sean Qualls. Learn all about multiple intelligences and the different ways people are smart.

Shirley at SimplyScience has DK's Open Me Up (and an activity to go along with it).

Mid-afternoon edition

Jennie at Biblio File is in with Show and Tell by Dilys Evans:  not really for kids, but for adults who like picture books.  One of the picture book artists profiled in this book (and highlighted by Jennie) is Denise Fleming, whose medium is...paper.

Anastasia at Picture Book of the Day is reading The Obama Family in Pictures by Jane Katirgis, just in time for Election Day tomorrow.

Amanda at a Patchwork of Books has a review of A Really Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson, which emphasizes science and natural history.

And for their very first Nonfiction Monday post, the Z-Kids and their dad Aaron Zenz of Bookie Woogie have interviewed author Patricia Newman about "Nugget on the Flightdeck," an exciting book about life aboard an aircraft carrier (illustrated by Zenz himself).  Bookie Woogie features the kids' commentary  and fan art for every book they review.

Late evening news

Jone is in with a review of Bubble Homes and Fish Farts by Fiona Baycock, another Cybils nonfiction picture book nominee with a great title and unusual focus on the uses of bubbles in the natural world.

And Bookmoot is back in the saddle with Texas Bluebonnet List Picture Book Biographies.  There are two biographies on the list this year: Surfer of the Century and The Fantastic Undersea Life of Jacques Cousteau.

One more:  Doret at The Happy Nappy Bookseller has Sweethearts of Rhythm by Marilyn Nelson and Jerry Pinckney.  It's the story of the greatest all-girl swing band in the world, and you'll never guess who tells it.

Thanks for participating in Nonfiction Monday this week, everyone!

[The Tuesday Edition:  3T News and Reviews looks at books from Lerner's history and Visual Geography series.]

Welcome to Nonfiction Monday

Welcome to Nonfiction Monday at books together! I'm delighted to be hosting today (as always). Please leave me a comment with a link to your post for Nonfiction Monday; I'll update this post to include your links at various times throughout the day. Thanks for visiting, and for participating in this edition of Nonfiction Monday.

Good Morning!

Sarah N. of In Need of Chocolate posted about Crinkleroot's Guide to Knowing Butterflies and Moths, one of her family's favorite books about butterflies.

Kim Hutmacher reviews The DesertAlphabet Encyclopedia at The Wild About Nature Blog.

Fuse #8 reviews The Day-Glo Brothers: The True Story of Bob and Joe Switzer's Bright Ideas and Brand New Colors by Chris Barton.

Jennifer reviews Sea Cows, Shamans, and Scurvy by Ann Arnold at Jean Little Library.

Lori Calabrese reviews Swifter, Higher, Stronger by Sue Macy at Lori Calabrese Writes!

Shirley posts on Not a Drop to Drink at SimplyScience.

[We're off to pick strawberries and will update at lunchtime. Thanks again!]

Lunchtime

The ACPL Mock Sibert Blog has posted its first reading list of non-fiction books to be considered fortheir Mock Sibert Award, to be awarded in January, 2010.

Amanda of A Patchwork of Books has a review up of What's Inside?

Robin ofThe Book Nosher is posting about I, Matthew Henson: Polar Explorer.

This past week on INK: Interesting Nonfiction for Kids -- "Out of a Tunnel" by Cheryl Harness; "Let's Give 'Em Something To Talk About" by Linda Salzman; "Just The Facts, Ma'am" by Susan E. Goodman; "Figs" by Barbara Kerley; "Some Observations on the History and Future of Informational Books" by guest blogger Jean Reynolds; and "Writing Children's Nonfiction Made Simple" by Steve Jenkins.

[Thenext round of posts will go up later this afternoon. Time to eat the strawberries!]

Afternoon and Evening

There haven't been any additional posts this afternoon, but there should be plenty to keep you busy here. I'll round up one more time tonight, just in case. Thanks for visiting!

Nighttime

On Wendie's Wanderings this week, Wendie has done a review of Melissa Stewart's new series, A Rainbow of Animals.

Nonfiction Monday is here today

Welcome to Nonfiction Monday at books together! I'm delighted to be hosting today. Please leave me a comment with a link to your post for Nonfiction Monday; I'll update this post to include your links at various times throughout the day. Thanks for visiting, and for participating in this edition of Nonfiction Monday.

Good morning!

At Just One More Book!, Mark and Andreachatted about two non-fiction children's books this week: Dr. White and There's a Babirusa in My Bathtub.

Great Kid Books reviews two nonfiction books for young dog lovers in Puppy Love.

Jennifer of Jean Little Library reviews White Owl, Barn Owl by Nicola Davies.

In honor of Read Across America, Lori Calabrese takes a look at "The Seuss, the Whole Seuss, and Nothing but the Seuss!"

After lunch

MotherReader has a book review of Unite or Die.

Jen Robinson is in with a review of Bubble Homes and Fish Farts.

Anastasia Suen has a fiction/nonfiction pair plus activities inHappy Birthday, Dr. Seuss!

Valerie at Not Enough Acres Farm posted about a cute nonfiction polar bear book.

Another title (Eleanor, Quiet No More) is up on the ACPL Mock Sibert blog! (From Mandy.)

At Book Scoops, the Doublescoop of the month (where Cari and Holly review a book together) is Nic Bishop's Spiders.

Abby (the) Librarian has a post about seeing three history book authors (Sally M. Walker, Larry Day. and Candace Fleming) at an event last week in History Night at Anderson's Bookshop.

Amanda at A Patchwork of Books has three books today, all on dogs and cats.

Jone shares something professional:  a great book for library media specialists about how to teach comprehension in the library.

Evening

Tricia highlights the NSTA's list of Outstanding Science Trade Books for 2009 at The Miss Rumphius Effect.

Kimberly at lectitans posted about Karen Kingston's Clear Your Clutter with Feng Shui (not a kid book, says Kimberly, but kid-friendly).

Jennie kicks off Graphic Novel Week at Biblio File with a review of Journey into Mohawk Country.

Claire at StoryForce posts about Students on Strike: Jim Crow, Civil Rights, Brown, and Me.  The voice in this one is so strong, says Claire, that "teenagers today will feel like they are marching, too."

Nonfiction Monday: Script and Scribble

Script and Scribble: The Rise and Fall of Handwriting by Kitty Burns Florey (Melville House, 2009) is part memoir, part history, part examination of handwriting's place in an increasingly digital world.  Like Florey, I identify with my own script (13); and I found the whole thing fascinating (okay, I might have skipped the chapter on graphology).

The section on handwriting programs in Chapter 5, "Is Handwriting Important?" is particularly relevant to parents whose children are learning cursive in school.  I'm now convinced that it doesn't make sense to teach kids to print and then a few years later switch them to cursive.  Just teach them a sixteenth-century Italic hand right from the start, I say!  [Note that this is not as crazy as it sounds; the Portland (OR) Public Schools have been using the Getty-Dubay Italic Handwriting System for 24 years.]

Any anecdotal evidence re:handwriting programs?  Our county uses Handwriting Without Tears: I don't like it.

[Nonfiction Monday is at Charlotte's Library.  Thank you, Charlotte!]