Recommended children's booklists sorted by age or topic

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Resources & Printables

Printable Reading Lists and Posters

We love seeing our printable resources being used in schools and libraries around the world. 

From our popular Year Group Recommended Reads checklists and display-ready Branching Out posters to summer bingo activities and Christmas gift guides, there’s plenty of reading inspiration to download and share with your community.

Our top three popular printables include:

Recommended Read Posters

Year Group Checklists

Branching Out Posters

 

printables

Summer Reading Bingo

A reading bingo challenge to keep children motivated to read over the summer holidays.

summer-reading-bingo-2023

Christmas Book Gift Guide

From festive favourites and glorious gift books to timeless bedtime stories and curious information books, we’ve selected our top recommendations of book gifts grouped by age!

This month the Centre for Literacy in Primary Education (CLPE) released their 5th annual Reflecting Realities Survey of Ethnic Representation within UK Children’s Literature, which identifies and evaluates representation within picturebooks, fiction and non-fiction for ages 3–11. The newly published report can be viewed here and you can read more about the methodology behind the report here. This year’s report is illustrated by Diane Ewen.

CLPE Reflecting Realities 2022 report - summary of findings

The latest summary of findings shows an increase in the number of children’s books published featuring a minority ethnic character from 4% in 2017 to 20% in 2021.

Minority representation in children’s books is up significantly from the 4% reported in the inaugural report in 2017. Furthermore, the percentage of children’s books published featuring a main character from a minority ethnic background has increased from 1% to 9% in the same time period. While the increase is cause for celebration – it still needs to be considered in the context that 33.9% of children of primary school age in England are from a minority ethnic background, and there is much work still to do.

The survey also indicates that minority representation in Fiction remains low and lags significantly behind increases in Picturebooks and Non-Fiction. Of the three text types reviewed, Fiction is the one that has seen the slowest and smallest incremental year-on-year change with 11% of Fiction books published featuring minority ethnic characters. Given that the large majority of non-fiction books for the 3-11 age range are illustrated, this disparity can perhaps be attributed to an illustrated work being both easier to identify and to ensure presence than in Fiction.

 
 
 the quality of presence and portrayals has varied quite significantly within and across publishing houses, and gives examples of a handful of exemplary titles in terms of authentic character portrayal. The report indicates a desire to strive for quality, balance and consistency across the publishing industry.The report writers also comment that the quality of presence and portrayals has varied quite significantly within and across publishing houses, and gives examples of a handful of exemplary titles in terms of authentic character portrayal. The report indicates a desire to strive for quality, balance and consistency across the publishing industry.

Recognising the importance of teachers, booksellers, librarians, book champions and organisations that are doing excellent work on the ground on a day-to-day basis, the report writers offer a checklist of key questions for those involved in children’s publishing, curation and book selection:

Determining Meaningful Presence

  • Do the characters of colour featured in the books we publish/stock reflect the UK population and the world at large, not as a tick box exercise but as a meaningful and accurate representation of the interconnected, diverse society within which our children are growing up?

  • Are characters of colour central to a broad range of narratives?

  • Do characters of colour exist across a range of genres and within both fiction and non-fiction?

  • Are there a variation and balance of themes explored in the titles in which characters of colour feature?

  • Have you been attentive to the position that a character of colour holds in the narrative? What position does the character hold? What is the dynamic within the cast? What is the extent of their agency and contribution to the plot?

  • Have careful research and consideration been exercised to ensure respectful, nuanced and layered portrayals of characters of colour?

  • Are characters of colour well developed and authentically portrayed? How effectively are their being and personality conveyed?

Ensuring Breadth and Balance

  • Are readers able to encounter varied portrayals of characters of colour, depicted with a range of personalities and represented as experiencing a full spectrum of emotions in the books you produce/ stock?

  • Is the content of our titles balanced, allowing for cultural specificity without reducing characterisations to derogatory stereotypes or one-dimensional shorthand?

  • Have we assessed the balance of our output/ stock to ensure that characters of colour are not predominantly defined by their struggle, suffering, exceptionalism or ‘otherness?

Valuing the Creatives

  • Is there a sustained investment in both established and new authors from a range of backgrounds who are able to paint characters and worlds with the integrity that the subject matter deserves? Does your output/ stock reflect this diversity of talent?

There is still some way to go before UK children’s books more accurately reflect the reality of the school population of England, but the speed of change serves to reinforce the benefit and tangible impact of the survey and a wide range of other initiatives across the publishing, charity and literature sectors. It is the intention of CLPE and their partners to continue to publish this survey, at least for the next five years.

CEO of CLPE Louise Johns-Shepherd, says:

‘We are delighted to see the upward trend in numbers, we are determined that it won’t be a ‘trend’ that disappears or that dips. We will continue to do this work and to support ongoing dialogue within the publishing industry because we believe in the power of children’s literature to change lives and we believe inclusive representative casts of characters in children’s literature make books better.’

To view the full version of CLPE’s Reflecting Realities Survey of Ethnic Representation within UK Children’s Literature click here.

If you are interested in expanding your stock of diverse book titles, why not browse our diversity hub featuring booklists covering the primary age range?

diverse and inclusive booksWhere next? > Visit our Reading for Pleasure Hub

> Browse our Topic Booklists

> Go to our Diversity Booklists

> View our printable year group booklists.

> See our Books of the Month.

Seasonal Booklists

Booklists Sorted by Season, Month or Special Event

Whatever time of year or special occasion, there’s always a book to match! Our selection of children’s books for seasonal events and special days has been handpicked by experts to cover your bookish needs all year round. From Springtime stories and Autumn anthologies to classics for Christmas and picturebooks for the Paralympics, we’ve got recommended children’s books to help plan your special events and celebrations across the calendar year.

Top seasonal booklists this month...

Seasonal Booklists By Term...

Picturebook

A captivating picture book retelling by Shakespeare’s Globe for very young readers.

William Shakespeare’s comedy about four lovers’ mishaps in an enchanted forest is unforgettably re-imagined by Shakespeare’s Globe as a picture book for very young readers. With exquisite and detailed illustrations from the acclaimed artist Jane Ray, who has been shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Medal, this captivating retelling is a magical way to introduce children to one of the best-loved works of the world’s greatest playwright.

Picturebook

Violet’s world has changed. Her voice has gone from a giggle to a whisper. So when her teacher casts her in the school play, she is filled with worry. How will she ever stand in front of a crowd and overcome her shyness? With the love and support of her family, Violet must find her inner confidence and turn that whisper into a roar!

Chapter book

Hamlet could NEVER make his mind up about ANYTHING. And one time he actually went to school in just his pants and got sent home because he couldn’t decide what to wear. When Izzy (star of The Spy Who Loved School Dinners) is asked to tell her friends some HILARIOUS and SCARY stories she knows exactly where to look: Shakespeare, the king of SUPER dramatic stuff.

After learning about Macbeth (a STRONG solider who ate four bowls of porridge and twenty pieces of toast every morning) her friends want more. So Hamlet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Romeo and Juliet all get the Izzy treatment. There’s blood and guts, ghosty stuff, and plenty of people wandering around in their nighties.

The perfect introduction to the Bard!

Chapter book

I Was There… Ira Aldridge tells the exciting story of the African-American actor, Ira Aldridge, who rose to fame on the London stage. Brilliantly imagined, readers aged 7+ will love this first-hand account of a child’s experience of nineteenth-century London and the vibrant life of the theatre. Amazing black-and-white illustrations throughout bring the story to life.

 

Non-fiction

The life of William Shakespeare is vividly depicted, from his birth in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1564, childhood and schooldays, through an apprenticeship at his father’s glove-making shop, his marriage to Anne Hathaway, and then the move to London – where Will hones his skills as an actor-playwright for The Lord Chamberlain’s Men. When the newly-built Globe Theatre opens in 1599, Will Shakespeare is a key member of the company, and many of Shakespeare’s most famous plays are first performed here. By his death in 1616, William Shakespeare is acknowledged as the master playwright of his age – and ever since as one of the greatest writers of all time.

With lively graphic-novel descriptions of many of Shakespeare’s most famous plays, including A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Romeo and Juliet, Twelfth Night, Henry V, Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello and The Tempest, and drawing on the latest biographical research, this is the perfect introduction for children to the life and works of William Shakespeare.

Short story collection

Step on to a stage full of stories with this beautiful anthology of 12 stories from Shakespeare, rewritten to be accessible to children aged 7+. Including favourites such as The Tempest, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet and Othello, each story is stunningly illustrated by collage artist Alice Lindstrom.

Non-fiction

A fun, fact-packed introduction to the brain and nervous system for young science enthusiasts.

The brain – a wrinkly, spongy mass the size of a cauliflower that sits in our heads and controls everything we do! Discover what its made of, how it works and why we even need one in this fun, fact-packed introduction to the brain.

Inside the pages of this STEM book for children aged 7-9, budding young scientists will discover:

– An age-appropriate introduction to the brain, what it is, what it does, how it works, and how it evolved
– All about how scientists study the brain and nervous system
– Introduces concepts like how we think, what consciousness is, and how the brains of other animals are different
– Encourages young readers to develop an interest in STEM fields – including biology, medicine, and science
– Each page is filled with engaging photographs and artworks with easy to understand text

Filled with colourful illustrations and bite-sized chunks of information, this book covers all your questions on everything from the anatomy of the brain and nervous system, to how information is collected and sent around the body. Also, explore questions about the brain that we don’t know the answers to yet!

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Stone Girl Bone Girl

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