Sunday, March 1, 2026

February

FEBRUARY is love your library month! Show your library love by getting a library card if you don't have one; using your library card if you do; attend library programs; and write a thank you letter to your local library staff letting them know that you appreciate them. 
And the books I loved this month -- The Witch's Table by Melinda Beatty was a great read. A World Without Summer by Nicholas Day was very enlightening and eye opening - also a great historical non-fiction that was easy to read and understand. March is coming in like a lamb here in Texas. What books are you reading?

 

                                  The Pigeon WON'T Count to 10! by Mo Willems  Bundle Up, Penelope Rex! by Ryan T.  Higgins 

 Someone Just Like You by Helen Docherty Maybe Just Ask Me! by Katie Mazeika The Witch's Table by Melinda Beatty Field Trip to Dinosaur Valley by John Hare A Scrub in the Tub by Jan  Thomas Dim Sum Palace by X. Fang When Cherry Blossoms Fall by Katrina Goldsaito  Rumpelstiltskin by Mac Barnett A Book of Loves by Cynthia Rylant Bored by Felicita Sala Clara and the Man With Books in his Window by María Teresa Andruetto  A Cure for the Hiccups by Jennifer E. Smith M Is for Mango by Atinuke Mr. Willowby's Head Over Heels Christmas by Robert Barry The Day the Books Disappeared by Joanna Ho  Chicka Chicka Peep Peep by Julien Chung 

 The Fairy Fashion Show by Bea Jackson Grumpy Monkey Get Your Grumps Out by Suzanne Lang Worm and Butterfly Are Friends Always by Kaz Windness Stop That Mop! by Jonathan Fenske 

 Playing at the Border by Joanna Ho The Spy in the Museum by Erin Mcguire Butt or Face? Volume 3 by Kari Lavelle I'm Longer than You!: An Epic Contest of Measurement Book Cover  A World Without Summer by Nicholas  Day  

 How to Say Goodbye in Cuban by Daniel Miyares Froggy by Paige Walshe Fresh Start by Gale Galligan 

 Unsettling Salad! by Aaron Reynolds The Winter of the Dollhouse by Laura Amy Schlitz

Beth Is Dead by Katie Bernet    

 So Sorry for Your Loss by Dina Gachman History Matters by David McCullough 

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