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Beyond Sesame Street

A mom’s favorite urban kids books. It's relatively hard to find good books that tell the story of the typical daily experience of a child—and a parent—traffic, crowds, and, well, city life. Here are a few favorites.

Cascadia Scorecard News
December 2006

A mom’s favorite urban kids books
By Kristin Kolb-Angelbeck

When I became a parent three years ago, I started noticing how many kids books are about farms and animals I’ve, honestly, never seen in my 32 years. It was relatively hard to find good books that tell the story of the typical daily experience of a child—and a parent—traffic, crowds, and, well, city life.

I lived in a duplex in central Vancouver, BC, when I became a mother, and I wanted to read stories to my daughter that resembled the world she was absorbing—books about living in an apartment and riding the bus and navigating busy neighborhoods, not Old MacDonald or a Big Bad (probably endangered) Wolf.

I’m still on a quest for the best city books for kids. But here’s my starter list, largely for the toddler set.

Urban kids book-Wow City 105Wow! City! By Robert Neubecker

This richly illustrated book tells the story of a little girl and her father exploring Manhattan: They take the subway, ride the bus, walk through Central Park, watch people, and even a see a parade in Chinatown. Even though Izzy is only a toddler, it reminds me of how I felt when I first visited New York at age 17: “Wow!” There’s even a mysterious dog hiding in every picture—similar to the “Where’s Waldo?” game. Neubecker is a frequent contributor to Slate.

Urban kids book-Madlenka 105Madlenka by Peter Sis

Peter Sis is a one of the absolute greats of contemporary children’s literature (honest—he’s a MacArthur "genius grant" recipient). His illustrations are masterful, intricate, and gorgeous. Among his recent works are challenging biographies of Darwin and Galileo, told in about 200 words with rich diagrams and drawings.

Madlenka tells the tale of Sis’ daughter, who marks the occasion of losing her first tooth with a walk around her city block. But her journey is really a trip around the world—she celebrates with a Latin American grocer, a French baker, an Indian immigrant who sells newspapers at his kiosk, and more.

The subsequent Madlenka’s Dog, wherein our heroine walks her imaginary dog around her block (and around the world again), is equally wonderful.

Urban kids book-Apt 3 105Apt. 3 by Ezra Jack Keats

Ezra Jack Keats wrote several books about city life. My favorite is Apt. 3, the story of two brothers exploring the mysterious noises of their apartment building—snoring, fighting, babies crying, and a harmonica playing. Their adventure leads to a new and unusual friendship.

Urban kids book-Hello Hello 105Hello Hello By Dan Zanes

A great tale of neighborhood diversity Hello, Hello, is one of Dan Zanes’ original songs put to print with fun illustrations of a city neighborhood filled with different animals, like moths and roosters and raccoons, greeting each other in Mandarin, Farsi, Spanish, German, Japanese, English—you name it. Zanes is known as the “the Elvis of the toddler set” with an empire of books and CDs and even a spot on Sesame Street.

Urban kids book-Picturescape 105Picturescape by Elisa Gutierrez

This local Vancouver author offers no text, just dreamy illustrations of a trip to the Vancouver Art Museum and the imaginings of a child viewing Emily Carr’s paintings of British Columbia for the first time. This is pure Cascadia in lush images of longhouses, fjords, kayaks, and the intensity and excitement of downtown Vancouver. I found this book at Magpie, a treasure-filled magazine store on Commercial Drive in Vancouver.

Tell us about some of your urban kids favorites below!

We need some Northwest urban kids books!

Posted by patrick_pdbd_com at 12/05/2006 at 02:42 PM
Peter Sis is a true master of the form. His books are mind-boggling.

I have two recommendations, though upon looking at them I realize they are both Manhattan-based. It's great to have some choices for urban kids, but we need some Northwest ones! I can imagine some books exploring the urban natural spaces that exist within our cities here, such as Lake Washington, Ravenna Park, Oaks Bottom, and so on. Perhaps I have my work cut out for me...

Anyhoo, two other good urban-kids books that leap readily to mind are Kay Thompson's <a href="http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/partner?partner_id=29318&cgi=product&isbn=0743489764" target="_blank"><em>Eloise</em></a> books and Maira Kalman's <a href="http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/partner?partner_id=29318&cgi=product&isbn=0613359917" target="_blank"><em>Next Stop Grand Central.</em></a>

We need some Northwest urban kids books!

Posted by patrick_pdbd_com at 12/05/2006 at 02:44 PM
Peter Sis is a true master of the form. His books are mind-boggling.

I have two recommendations, though upon looking at them I realize they are both Manhattan-based. It's great to have some choices for urban kids, but we need some Northwest ones! I can imagine some books exploring the urban natural spaces that exist within our cities here, such as Lake Washington, Ravenna Park, Oaks Bottom, and so on. Perhaps I have my work cut out for me...

Anyhoo, two other good urban-kids books that leap readily to mind are Kay Thompson's Eloise books and Maira Kalman's Next Stop Grand Central.

urban kids books

Posted by lucys at 12/05/2006 at 03:12 PM
As an urban designer/planner I agree that I want my kids to read about where they live as well as places they don't. Here are a couple of books that came to mind in reading your article. (Though my kids are older they still like these!)
Knuffle Bunny by Mo Willems. This is a recent book which is ostensibly about a favorite stuffed animal. But the illustrations are black and white photographs of Park Slope Brooklyn overlaid with cartoons of a little girl and her parents as they walk to and from the laundromat.
Busy Day Busy People by Tibor Gergely. This is an older book, 1973, but available in places like Amazon. It follows people doing all kinds of jobs throughout the city: construction, stocking grocery stores, serving food at a restaurant, and working at a TV station. The employment is generally gender stereotypical, but that's an opportunity to discuss with kids -- even little ones.
Lastly, The Philharmonic Gets Dressed by Karla Kuskin shows all the different performers in an orchestra getting ready. Though if focuses on bathing, dressing, and travel, it all takes place in a city so they live in apartments and take cabs or walk. Very fun.

Lyle, Lyle Crocodile

Posted by lauren_adler at 12/06/2006 at 01:40 PM
I grew up reading the book Lyle, Lyle Crocodile, a story written in 1965 by Bernard Waber about a Crocodile who lives with the Primm family on East 88th Street in Manhattan. The story includes many elements of living in the City, although some may be a bit dated. Nonetheless, they harken back to a time when things were more cordial and simple. On a trip to a department store with Mrs. Primm, Lyle gets into trouble and is relegated to the Central Park Zoo. However, the story ends w/Lyle reunited at the Primm's house, where he finally becomes friends with their cat and next door neighbor, both of whom he was not friends with at the start of the book. As an adult re-reading the book, I also picked up on some references I wouldn't have noticed as a child (Lyle making Turkish coffee for Mrs. Primm). It's a really wonderful book and is fun to read as an adult.

Pike Place Market book & other city kid lit

Posted by christy at 12/08/2006 at 08:08 PM
For an urban NW kids' book, check out A Day at the Market by Sara Anderson about Seattle's Pike Place Market. It's a large board book with overlapping cutout pages. It's not my favorite to read, but it's very colorful, and it's fun to have a book about a special local spot. My kids also like Down in the Subway (NYC again) as well as the Architecture picture book series (Animal Architecture, Architecture Counts, etc.). Some of the classic Richard Scarry books that I grew up with have wonderful city scenes. The other Dan Zanes book, Jump Up!, is good too. And of course I want to raise a couple of nature lovers, so we don't always read about city livin'.

Larry Gets Lost in Seattle

Posted by dw at 01/07/2008 at 11:48 AM
This is a very sweet book, written in verse, about a dog (Larry) who gets separated then reunited with his owner. Along the way, he sees many of Seattle's iconic landmarks.
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