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Books recommended for young readers by Ilene Abramson, senior librarian, children’s literature, Los Angeles Public Library
It can be exciting to dig around in the dirt, as these books on archeology will show.
Preschool: “Teeny Tiny,” by Jill Bennett, illustrated by Tomie dePaola
Repetitive language and adorable pictures help make this teeny-tiny ghost story a teeny-tiny classic.
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Kindergarten to second grade: “Stone Girl, Bone Girl,” by Laurence Anholt, illustrated by Sheila Moxley
True story of Mary Anning, the 12-year-old who in the 19th century uncovered a 165-million-year-old fossil that helped accelerate the science of paleontology.
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Third grade: “The Bone Man: A Native American Modoc Tale,” by Laura Simms, illustrated by Michael McCarthy
Scary story about a giant skeleton that can be destroyed only by a brave child.
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Fourth grade: “Stories on Stone,” by Jennifer Owings Dewey
This is a folksy introduction to the rock art of the Anasazi culture.
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Fifth and sixth grades: “The Mystery of the Mammoth Bones,” by James Cross Giblin
Follow the adventures of 18th century Renaissance man Charles Willson Peale as he searches for the remains of an extinct animal.
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Seventh and eighth grades: “The Bone Detectives,” by Donna M. Jackson, photographs by Charlie Fellenbaum
When a body is reduced to nothing but a skeleton, the forensic anthropologist steps in to make an identification by DNA or dental clues.
Storytime
Some of the books to be read on KCET’s “Storytime,” weekdays at 12:30 p.m.
* “The Empty Pot,” by Demi
An emperor gives each of his children a flower seed to grow in a test of honesty. Themes: responsibility, nature.
* “The Grasshopper and the Ants,” retold by Margaret Wise Brown
While a grasshopper sings and dances all summer, the ants work hard to store food for winter. Themes: sharing, responsibility, music.
* “Going Home,” by Margaret Wild
Waiting to leave the hospital, Hugo is treated to visits from animals at the zoo next door. Themes: imagination, homesickness, friendship.
Book Events
Selected visits at Los Angeles Public Library branches.
* Wednesday: Erica Silverman, author of “Raisel’s Riddle”; 4 p.m., Woodland Hills Branch Library, 22200 Ventura Blvd.
* Thursday: Caroline Arnold, author of “Children of the Settlement Houses”; Granada Hills Branch Library, 10640 Petit Ave.
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