
Raindrop Rollby April Pulley Sayre ( public library) Listen to the Rain by Bill Martin and John Archambault, illustrated by James Endicott ( public library) Mushroom in the Rain by Mirra Ginsburg, illustrated by Jose Aruego ( public library) Come On, Rain! by Karen Helle, illustrated by Jon J. Rain showers, rainy days, after-rain puddles and all things rain, rain, rain: Schaefer, illustrated by Jane Wattenbern ( public library) Water Dance by Thomas Locker ( public library) All the Water in the World by George Ella Lyon, illustrated by Katherine Tiloston ( public library) Water Can Be…by Laura Purdie Salas, illustrated by Violeta Dabija ( public library) Water is Water: A Book About the Water Cycleby Marianda Paul, illustrated by Jason Chin (public library) This is the Rain by Lola M.
#Raindrop cake foggy full
What Will the Weather Be Like Today? by Paul Rogers, illustrations by Kazuko ( public library) On the Same Day in March by Marilyn Singer, illustrated by Frane Lessac ( public library) Boom Boom by Savinder Naberhaus, illustrated by Margaret Chodos-Irvine ( public library) Weather Words by Gail Gibbons ( public library) If Frogs Made Weather by Dane Marion Bauer ( public library) Maisy’s Wonderful Weather Bookby Lucy Cousins ( public library) Inside, Outside by Lizi Boyd ( public library) – Full book review HERE Whatever the Weather by Karen Wallace (public library)Ī look at various forms of water and the phases of the water cycle: These books focus on a variety of weather and season: Since we’ve been experiencing a lot of weather changes with the seasonal transition where I live, I put together a list of favorite children’s books that are both fiction and nonfiction about weather. Regardless of where you live, learning about weather elements is a fun way for children to take notice of and apply weather to their everyday world. Some of us live in places where the weather is consistently the same throughout the year, and some of us live in places where there is a wide range of weather – especially during seasonal transition. “What will the weather be like today?” It’s one of the first questions we think of when we wake in the morning.
