Kids Book of The Day:
Take the Dog Out!
A humorous picture book with fun illustrations, repetitive text, and sight words for the beginning reader.
“Take the Dog Out!” is a humorous picture book about a family who is too busy to take their dog outside. When the family ignores the barks, baking pans fly through the air, coffee splashes on the carpet, and Grandma gets wrapped in a cloud of toilet paper. Eventually, the family decides a walk outside is what they ALL need. Count the barks, find the dog bones, and look for the color red on each page.
“Take the Dog Out!” is a Readers’ Favorite 2014 Gold Medal Winner, an International Book Awards Finalist, a USA Best Book Awards Finalist, a Book Readers Appreciation Group Medallion Honoree, and a Global Ebook Award Nominee.
Today’s Book of The Day is sponsored by this week’s Kids’ eBook of The Week:
Zip Zilch: Nobody’s a Nothin’ Book 1
If you don’t want to be noticed, you certainly will be. Just ask Zip.
A 2023 AFCW CAROL AWARD finalist, Zip Zilch: Nobody’s a Nothin’ Book One, is a fast-paced, hilarious new entry into the middle school (and beyond) genre.
Corey “Zip” Zilch didn’t want all this attention, but it came, ready or not, starting when the Scuds pushed him into Weasel Creek. Oh, and they tossed his books in with him for good measure.
That’s when everything let loose.
His mom’s reaction was to treat him like a baby
His water-soaked schoolbooks wouldn’t open in class
The principal pelted him with dictionary words
He was forced to step between the Scuds and Sarah (that takes guts!)
And with all of this, his dad didn’t have a clue. About anything.
But, hey, life wasn’t all bad.
Seventh grade gave him a new start. Sarah and her friend Hu became his best buds, he discovered cross country running (and he was good!), he found a coach who treated him like a man, he became part of a team, and he (amazingly) survived the (ick!) health-conscious school lunches.
So far, he hadn’t discovered the identity of the prankster mucking stuff up for the team, nor realized the bully danger in the boys’ room, or how to talk to girls, or how hard it would be to win at least one race.
Zip didn’t have it all figured out, but why should he? That’s what middle school is for.