Here are 100 books that This Old Dog fans have personally recommended if you like
This Old Dog.
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Ever since I was a young girl, I always turned to writing to work through anything that was happening in my life, ranging from the first time I experienced loss to my parentsā divorce. I have since published three childrenās books on tough topics as I have aimed to provide parents, children, and teachers with tools to discuss loss and change. My most recent book, Goodbye, Gus is specifically about the loss of a pet. My dad died when I was 21, and that was the first death (other than my dogs) that I ever experienced. I was able to experience first-hand the fact that the loss of my pets helped prepare me to cope with grief, and I also learned that we can all focus on what we did have and hang on to those memories forever.Ā
I am recommending Dog Songs as a dog lover and as a poet. Two of my favorite things are dogs and poetry, and Mary Oliver combines the two in her beautiful celebration of the love between humans and dogs. I think this is a great choice when people are grieving, as the magic of the canine/human connection is conveyed in these poems, providing a source of beauty and comfort for the reader. All of her selections emphasize that unique love that we have with our pets, reminding us to enjoy lifeās precious moments.Ā
'The popularity of [Dog Songs] feels as inevitable and welcome as a wagging tail upon homecoming' Boston Globe
In Dog Songs, Mary Oliver celebrates the special bond between human and dog, as understood through her connection to the dogs who across the years accompanied her on her daily walks, warmed her home and inspired her work. The poems in Dog Songs begin in the small everyday moments familiar to all dog lovers and become, through her extraordinary vision, meditations on the world and our place in it.
Dog Songs includes visits with old friends, like Oliver's most beloved dog Percy,ā¦
In 1894, Annie Cohen Kopchovsky set out to ride her bicycle. Not to the market. Not around the block. Not across town. Annie was going to ride her bike all the way around the worldābecause two men bet no woman could do it. Ha!
This picture book, with watercolor illustrationsā¦
Iām passionate about animals. When I was starting out in my 20s, I worked as a vet tech and a dog trainer and fully intended to make a career in animals. But along the way my other love, art, joined the dance. Itās only natural Iāve found ways to combine my two loves, like, illustrating a veterinarian's advice column for Family Dog magazine, and writing, Donāt Lick the Dog, and Nanny Paws, both inspired by my own beloved dogs.
A dog and a cat are left behind when Hurricane Katrina strikes. Rescuers dub them, āThe Bobbiesā because of their bobbed tails. The two are inseparable, and the dog Bobbie is fiercely protective of the Bobbie cat, who we later learn is totally reliant on him for her survival. The Bobbies are rescued, and weāre reminded how many āhelpers,ā as Mr. Rogersā mother would say, there are in the world.
from Newbery award winning author Kirby Larson comes a remarkable true story of the devotion, friendship, and survival of two pets left behind in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. In the tradition of Owen and Mzee, this beautiful picture book is a testament to the spirit that defined post-Katrina rescue missions.
During Hurricane Katrina, evacuating New Orleans residents were forced to leave their pets behind. Bobbi the dog was initially chained to keep her safe, but after her owners failed to return, she had to break free. For months, Bobbi wandered the city's ravaged streets-dragging her chain behind her-followed byā¦
Iām passionate about animals. When I was starting out in my 20s, I worked as a vet tech and a dog trainer and fully intended to make a career in animals. But along the way my other love, art, joined the dance. Itās only natural Iāve found ways to combine my two loves, like, illustrating a veterinarian's advice column for Family Dog magazine, and writing, Donāt Lick the Dog, and Nanny Paws, both inspired by my own beloved dogs.
Adopters of elderly animals are everyday saints. In, My Old Dog, we get to meet some dog saints (including George Clooney), and the sweet oldsters theyāve opened their hearts and homes to. This is a tenderly written book ā and Iām not surprised: Laura Coffey has one of the biggest, most generous hearts Iāve ever known. Loriās photos will make you weep, smile, and go, āAw.ā Thereās a poignant foreword by Neko Case, and in the chapter, How You Can Help, wonderful advice from Dr. Marty Becker, and trainer and behaviorist, Mikkel Becker.
āNo Dog Should Die Alone" was the attention-grabbing ā and heart-stirring ā headline of journalist Laura T. Coffeyās TODAY show website story about photographer Lori Fusaroās work with senior shelter pets. While generally calm, easy, and already house-trained, these animals often represent the highest-risk population at shelters. With gorgeous, joyful photographs and sweet, funny, true tales of āold dogs learning new tricks,ā Coffey and Fusaro show that adopting a senior can be even more rewarding than choosing a younger dog. Youāll meet endearing elders like Marnie, the irresistible shih tzu who has posed for selfies with Tina Fey,ā¦
Real Princesses Change the World
by
Carrie A. Pearson,
Real Princesses Change the World is an inspirational and diverse picture book that highlights 11 contemporary real-life princesses and four heirs apparent from around the world.
Have you heard of a STEM-aligned real-life princess who is an engineer and product developer? Or a princess who is a computer expert? Anā¦
Iām passionate about animals. When I was starting out in my 20s, I worked as a vet tech and a dog trainer and fully intended to make a career in animals. But along the way my other love, art, joined the dance. Itās only natural Iāve found ways to combine my two loves, like, illustrating a veterinarian's advice column for Family Dog magazine, and writing, Donāt Lick the Dog, and Nanny Paws, both inspired by my own beloved dogs.
I love and grieve hard. Sometimes debilitatingly so. When I lost my first cat, Olif, I couldnāt go in my studio for a year. Without my best boy in there with me, just crossing the threshold triggered a kind of PTSD, and Iād buckle under the grief. I finally saw a therapist and got the help I needed to move forward.
Books can help us with our grief too, and Going Home is one thatās helped me. Glancing through it now, I see Iāve opened straight to the chapter, āGuilt.ā Yea, that oneās insidious, isnāt it. Katz covers them all: All the thoughts that needle and jab, all the emotions that drown, then drain us. Maybe, Going HomeĀ will help you too. Hold it on your lap where your beloved once was. And I will too.
In this invaluable guide and touchstone, New York Times bestselling author Jon Katz addresses the difficult but necessary topic of saying goodbye to a beloved pet. Drawing on personal experiences, stories from fellow pet owners, and philosophical reflections, Katz provides support for those in mourning. By allowing ourselves to grieve honestly and openly, he posits, we can in time celebrate the dogs, cats, and other creatures that have so enriched us. Katz compels us to consider if we gave our pets good lives, if we were their advocates in times of need, and if we used our best judgments inā¦
It doesnāt matter that Iām a former journalist who has also most recently worked at Sesame Workshop (yes, that Elmo!) and Mattel (Fisher-Price, Barbie, Thomas & Friends, etc). When my kiddo shouts, āMommy! I need a bum bum wipe!ā my duty is to get to that doodie ASAP. Ah, parenthood...is there anything more humbling?Ā Someday, my kids might think itās cool that I wrote for old-school magazines (!) and interviewed celebrities (!!) and lived in NYC for 15 years (!!!). But for now, Iām proud I get to read my silly little childrenās book to them any time they ask. Or any book for that matter because books are magic!
Chances are your kiddo is either totally obsessed with Paw Patrol or just hasnāt ever seen it. There doesnāt seem to be an in-between. So, never mind that this book has kid characters who say things like, āWe like our diapers just fine.ā Instead, just let the plucky crew of puppies hypnotize your kid into going to the bathroom. The puppies are on a mission to help kids view potty as an exciting adventure, from overcoming fears to making bubbles from the hand soap. Itās...pawsome!
This potty-training board book features Nickelodeon's PAW Patrol!
Nickelodeon's PAW Patrol is here to help toddlers say, "Bye-bye, diapers!" Filled with encouragement from Marshall, Skye, and the rest of the amazing team, this sturdy board book will guide boys and girls ages 1 to 3--and their parents!--through the adventures of potty training.
Iāve alwaysbeen fascinated by childrenās language development and am a word hound. For over five decades Iāve been a teacher, teacher trainer, school founder/director, mentor, founder/executive director of a large childrenās museum; author of 6 classic textbooks on how children think and learn, and author/self-publisher of one of my many story-poems. My passions are writing, studying new findings in brain development, and launching top-quality schools in underserved urban areas. Between 1969 and 1990, I founded six schools, five still running, three as private non-profit schools and two as essential entities (one called the āsafety-net") in their public school systems. The MELC is the only U.S. school accredited by Reggio's founders.
At Gianni Rodare Scuola for 3-month to 3-year-olds, I watched 2 to 3-year-olds draw, a year-long project described in the book The Little Ones of Silent MoviesĀ by Loris Malaguzzi and Tiziana Filippini: The authors explain:
āChildren are born with āinsuppressible, vital, eager urges to build conversational friendships... Words that come later are not a sudden event born from nothing but emerge from a submerged silent laboratory of attempts, trials, and experiments in communication using tools children constantly improve through long preparation. The resultsāwords and drawingsāshow the strong desire to communicate and interact, basic traits of children.ā
I love this book because its text explains and drawings show the roots of language. It inspired me to observe babies more closely and introduce paints and markers.
My mother was rarely without pen and paper in hand. She wrote stories ā true stories. After suffering a stroke she wasnāt able to compose the long enchanting novels she used to, but nevertheless kept writing. The stroke made it difficult for her to tell her special stories to her adored young grandson.Ā So we became creative. I took photos of her daily life with us. Brooke Dahmen drew beautiful illustrations from these photos. With her grandsonās and my help, grandma wrote true and heartfelt captions for the illustrations. All created in gratitude for the joys of senior living and the kind helping hands of a child.
A board book with simple illustrations and words.Ā A child will easily see him or herself in the pages and begin to understand that oneās varying mood changes or expressions are all just fine.Ā Through each expression a child is loved and treasured.Ā So, express yourself!Ā You got this!
A rhyming story of unconditional love with adorable illustrations of a toddler and a teddy bear who declare "I love you through and through!"
I love your hair and eyes,Your giggles and cries...A toddler and his teddy bear illustrate a young child's happy side, sad side, silly side, mad side, and more!Babies and toddlers will feel loved all over when they hear this declaration of adoration and affection. A perfect first book for toddlers with sturdy cardstock pages and a padded cover with rounded corners for safe handling by little ones.
When offered a plot at the community garden, I thought it would be fun to invite other families to learn to grow food together. As a science teacher, I knew that for toddlers, digging in the dirt and growing plants for food could plant seeds for a life-long love of exploring nature, hands-on science inquiry, environmental stewardship, and joy in healthy eating. As we gardened, I noticed what questions children and their parents had, and how we found the answers together. I wrote the picture book How to Say Hello to A Worm: A First Guide to Outside to inspire more kids and their parents to get their hands dirty.
āWhen I was very small, planting peas in the garden with my grandfather, I felt like a sorcerer's apprentice being initiated into a realm of magic. Carron Brown'sSecrets of the Vegetable Garden brings me back to that age of wonder by setting up mysteries to solve. Holding pages up to the sunlight reveals the answers to mysteries and riddles, and shows us what is secretly happening: potatoes growing under the earth, or seeds forming inside a fruit.
What is hidden in the world around us? For ages 3 and up, the uniquely designed Shine-A-Light series of books uncovers the facts behind a diverse range of places and topics through hidden images that are revealed by light. First, view a full-colour scene and read about what is pictured - but what else is there? Shine a torch behind the page, or hold it up to the light, to reveal what is hidden. Turn the page to read fun facts about the hidden image in black and white. A world of surprises awaits!
Iāve alwaysbeen fascinated by childrenās language development and am a word hound. For over five decades Iāve been a teacher, teacher trainer, school founder/director, mentor, founder/executive director of a large childrenās museum; author of 6 classic textbooks on how children think and learn, and author/self-publisher of one of my many story-poems. My passions are writing, studying new findings in brain development, and launching top-quality schools in underserved urban areas. Between 1969 and 1990, I founded six schools, five still running, three as private non-profit schools and two as essential entities (one called the āsafety-net") in their public school systems. The MELC is the only U.S. school accredited by Reggio's founders.
Kornei
Chukovsky, leading Russian childrenās poet, in his book From Two to Five, describes childrenās āwhimsical, elusive thinkingāoriginal, picturesque, amusing
speech.ā "Children two to five are
earthās most inquisitive creatures with questions evoked by the mindās tireless
need to comprehend its surroundings.ā I know of no other author who so brilliantly
captures childrenās own words. I read this book over and over for inspiration.
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1963.
An engaging picture book for children that celebrates what it means to be American!
What does it mean to be American? Does it mean you like apple pie or fireworks? Not exactly. This patriotic picture book is perfect for Memorial Day, Independence Day, Election Day, or any day you wantā¦
My passion has always been caring for and educating young children. I spent over 20 years in the classroom as a child care professional and much of that time was with toddlers. I discovered that the stereotype of the terrible twos was truly misguided. I chose books that will shed new light on why toddlers behave the way that they do. These books will show the reader what an important time this is in a childās growth and learning. I believe that these books will help convince you that toddlers are not terrible; they are terrific!
This book is part of a trilogy that offers valuable insights and strategies for caring for young children. Readers will gain an understanding of toddler development and behavior. The author also covers techniques for promoting positive connections with adults and responding to the childās individual needs.
Understand the complex yet amazing toddler years as you help children develop new skills One- and two-year-olds are in the midst of developing and exploring their skills to communicate, move purposely, and assert their independence and individuality. As their teacher, you have great patience, energy, and creativity as you work with their on the go approach to life. Use this professional development workbook to help navigate the complex toddler years and gain a better understanding of their growth and development. You will improve your interactions with them by responding to their individual needs, find out how to create a routineā¦