In honor of the epic snowstorm burying my corner of the world (and pretty much all of the Eastern United States) I am reposting this list from February 9th, 2013.
The Mole Sisters and the Way Home
Picture Book
Ages 2-5
By Roslyn Schwartz
32 pages
Annick Press
2003
The Mole Sisters are two of my favorite characters in children’s books. They’re sweet, funny, playful and irresistibly adorable. See my review of the whole series here.
The sisters are headed home when it starts to snow. And snow. And snow. Making their way through the drifts, they are diverted into a wonderful, magical cave, where they add themselves to some prehistoric cave paintings.
Not to fret, the sisters make it home safely and warm themselves by a cozy fire.
Picture Book
Ages 2-6
by Ezra Jack Keats
32 pages
Viking
1962
1963 Caldecott Medal Winner
This timeless classic is a simple story about a young boy as he plays and experiments with the snow that has covered his world overnight. Follow the boy in his trademark red suit as he experiences the wonder and possibility of freshly fallen snow.
An interesting and important note: The Snowy Day was the very first full-color picture book to feature a black child protagonist.
Picture Book
Ages 2-6
by Wong Herbert Yee
32 pages
Square Fish
Reprint 2007
A young girl heads out into the snow when she notices some mysterious tracks. As she follows the prints over a bridge, across a pond, through some woods and right back to her home she realizes that the footprints are hers from the day before. She settles in at home for some cookies and tea.
Tracks in the Snow celebrates one of the best parts about playing in the snow, coming back to a warm house for some delicious treats.
Picture Book
Ages 2-6
by Kate Messner
Illustrated by Christopher Silas Neal
44 pages
Chronicle
2011
While out cross-country skiing, a young girl and her father discuss the world of activity under the snow. There’s voles running through tunnels, frogs sleeping in the mud and black bears hibernating.
Simple cut paper illustrations perfectly highlight the contrast between the frozen white world above and the living earthen world below.
For those that are curious, the back of the book offers facts about all the animals and their winter activities. Interestingly, the area between the packed snow and the ground is called the subnivean zone.
Picture Book
Ages 2-6
by Lita Judge
40 pages
Atheneum
2011
Pure joy fills this mostly wordless picture book. The only text is reserved for the sound effects made by the happy animals and their new-found toy.
A small red sled has been left outside and various woodland creatures take turns going for rides, until the owner of the sled finally returns.
Picture Book
Ages 2-6
by Ruth Krauss
Illustrated by Marc Simont
36 pages
HarperCollins
1949
1950 Caldecott Honor Book
Though technically a book about spring, the book begins under the cover of snow with all the animals sleeping. Soon they are waking up and sniffing. What is it they smell?
They emerge from their burrows and start running and sniffing. They stop, and laugh, and dance! There, in the midst of all the snow and white and cold, a burst of color appears in the form of a beautiful yellow flower.
The delicious, buttery yellow of the flower is the only bit of color in an otherwise black and white picture book.
Picture Book
Ages 2-6
By Philip C. Stead
Illustrated by Erin E. Stead
32 pages
Roaring Brook Press
2012
This is not only one of my favorite books from 2012 but it’s also turning out to be one of my favorite picture books of all time. See my full review here.
Picture Book
Ages 2-8
by Marie Louise-Gay
32 pages
Groundwood Books
2000
Gay’s watercolor illustrations are active, unrestrained and bursting with color.
It’s Sam’s first snowstorm! He and his big sister Stella head outside to play and explore. Sam, ever full of questions, wants to know what snowmen eat and how many snowflakes are in a snowball. Stella, the helpful big sister, always responds with clever and ever so slightly true answers.
Picture Book
Ages 2-8
By Uri Shulevitz
36 pages
FSG
1998
1999 Caldecott Honor Book
One of my favorite picture books ever! See my full review here.
Picture Book
Ages 3-8
By P.D. Eastman and Roy McKie
61 pages
Random House
1962
“Snow is good for making tracks…And making pictures with your backs.”
A simple story, told in rhyme, joyfully relating some of the many pleasures of snow. P.D. Eastman is also the author of Go, Dog. Go!, Are You My Mother? and many other Cat in the Hat Beginner Books.
Picture Book
Ages 3-8
By Stephen Gammel
32 pages
Silver Whistle/Harcourt Brace
1997
Gammel’s incredible illustrations make this a stand-out picture book. Colorful washes in every shade of blue are soon obscured by blowing white snow that seems to drip from the page.
Old Man Winter has woken up in a bad mood; he hates going to work. He jumps in his truck, flies through the sky, and spreads the ice and snow all morning long.
As he heads home for lunch, he falls into the deep snow and is rescued by a little girl.
“You make it snow for me,” the young girl tells him. Reminded that his work does have a positive influence in the world, Old Man Winter’s mood shifts and he’s happy again.
She picks him up to make sure he’s ok and readers learn that Old Man Winter is a small, wooden doll.
Picture Book
Ages 3-8
By Olivier Dunrea
32 pages
Square Fish
2002
Just before publishing the magic that is Gossie (see my review here), Dunrea created It’s Snowing.
Baby is fast asleep when mama sees snowflakes falling outside. She wakes baby and bundles him up. The two go outside to see, touch, taste and smell the snow, and share some of the magic and natural beauty life has to offer.
Picture Book
Ages 3-9
by Raymond Briggs
32 pages
Dragonfly Books
1986
In this wordless picture book, a young boy wakes up to a snowy day and heads outside to build a snowman. Later that night, when the boy cannot sleep, he heads outside to find the snowman has come to life. The two have a night filled with adventure.
Beautifully soft watercolor panels fill this book with the frosty feeling of snow and cold.
Picture Book
Ages 3-9
by Jan Brett
32 pages
Putnam
1989
When a young boy asks his grandmother to knit him white mittens, she warns him that they will be hard to find if he drops them in the snow. As he goes out to play in the snow he immediately drops one of his new white mittens. Before long it becomes a cozy home to some woodland creatures seeking shelter.
Picture Book
Ages 3-9
By William Steig
32 pages
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
1986
Young Irene braves the wind, cold and blowing snow in this story of perseverance.
The dressmaker has finished the duchess’s gown for tonight’s ball but is not feeling well enough to deliver it. Though a big snowstorm is brewing, the dressmaker’s daughter Irene offers to bring the dress to the palace. Her mother is concerned but cannot make the trip herself and, reluctantly, allows her daughter to leave.
It’s tough going, but Irene is tougher and she completes her task despite the difficulties she faces on the way.
By the beloved author and illustrator of Sylvester and the Magic Pebble, the 1970 Caldecott Medal Winner.
Early Reader
Ages 4-8
by Cynthia Rylant
Illustrated by Mark Teague
48 pages
Blue Sky Press
2001
In the first chapter of this early reader, Poppleton and his new friend Patrick (a bird) make a fence out of icicles.
Next, Poppleton makes a clay bust of his good friend Cherry Sue.
In the final chapter Poppleton has forgotten his own birthday, but his friends have not. They all surprise Poppleton with home-baked goodies and a nighttime sleigh ride.
See my review of Poppleton here.
Picture Book
Ages 4-9
By Virgina Lee Burton
40 pages
Houghton Mifflin
1973
By the author and illustrator of the notable classics Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel (1939) and The Little House (1943 Caldecott Medal Winner).
Katy the red crawler tractor was a bulldozer in summer and a snowplow in winter. When a blizzard hits her hometown, all the people are depending on Katy to save the day, and she relishes the opportunity to show that she can do just that.
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
Picture Book
Ages 4 and up
By Robert Frost
Illustrated by Susan Jeffers
32 pages
Dutton Juvenile
Originally published in 1978
Revised edition 2001
Susan Jeffers beautiful illustrations of frosty New England scenes perfectly complement this famous wintry poem by Robert Frost. Capturing the silent beauty of a snowy night, her art offers answers to some of the questions raised in this well-known poem.
For readers interested in the science of snow, a few Non-fiction options.
The Story of Snow: The Science of Winter’s Wonder
Non-Fiction
Ages 4-10
By Mark Cassino
36 pages
Chronicle
2009
This excellent non-fiction picture book features illustrations as well as photographs of snowflakes and answers the questions about where snow comes from and how it’s formed.
Non-fiction
By W.A. Bentley
Ages 5 and up
80 pages
Dover
2000
This book features over eight hundred and fifty photographs of snowflakes taken by American photographer W.A. Bentley (1865-1931) during a fifty year period.
Though it’s common knowledge now that no two snowflakes are alike, this was not the case when Bently began his ambitious project. In 1865 he attached a bellows camera to a compound microscope and photographed what he referred to as “tiny miracles of beauty.”
It is because of his work that we can know of and experience the wonder, magic and uniqueness contained in each miniature frozen sculpture.
(See also Snowflake Bentley, the 1999 Caldecott Winner, by Jacqueline Woodson, illustrated by Mary Azarian.)
The Secret Life of a Snowflake: An Up-Close Look at the Art and Science of Snowflakes
Ages 8 and up
by Kenneth Libbrecht
48 pages
Voyageur Press
2010
The title says it all. Full of extraordinary photographs and detailed information about the cycle of a snowflake, this book is written by a scientist who studies snowflakes.
The universal love that children have for snow can be harnessed and redirected to foster a fascination for the fate of small frozen bits of water, crystals, and other scientific wonders.
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