Every time I clean up the junk that accumulates around my
computer desk I find a good book that I meant to review ages ago. This time around I have uncovered A Parent’s Guide to the Best Kids’ Comics,
“Choosing titles your children will love”.
The reason I started this website in the first place seven
years ago was that comics (under the name Graphic Novels) were gaining a fair
bit of respectability in education but there was little information to guide
adults who had never picked up a comic before.
There was a growing list of titles to choose from but few voices giving
their opinion on what was appropriate or quality. Soon after I started Comics in the Classroom a number of comic sites popped up which
centered on comics for kids, which was a great help for parents, teachers and
librarians (not to mention those who are trying to make a living at making
comics for kids). Lots of people had the
same good idea at the same time.
I say all that to say this, Scott Robins (a former kids' comics blogger from way back) and Snow Wildsmith
have recently published a guide to comics that makes the choosing of titles
easier than ever. They have reviewed 100
of the best in-print comics available for young readers from pre-K through
Grade 8 (plus a list of 750 titles at the end of the book). The sections (Pre-K-1, 2-3, 4-5, and 6-8) are
colour coded by grade level, there are “Educational Tie-Ins” and “Heads Up”
sections in each entry. I like that
Robins and Wildsmith recognized that pointing out any questionable parts of the
book was important. Some adults want all
comics to be sanitized and others figure that all comics are fine even when
they are not (comics=kids). Here is a
Heads Up example: “Explores the concept of death through metaphor”, The Snowman by Raymond Briggs.
My first reaction when I went through the book was “Hey, I
wouldn’t have put that comic in that grade level section!” (or something to
that effect), but that doesn’t diminish the book at all. For one thing, the book does usually err on
the side of caution. Bone is in the grade 6-8 section, and although I have books
1-3 in my own grade 4 classroom there is smoking and minor use of alcohol, and,
as the series goes on the tone gets darker and may be too much for some readers
(sort of like how the Harry Potter books start out sort of light and get darker
and darker as the series reaches the end).
Also, If I wanted to complain about where some of the books are places I
should keep it too myself and write my own book.
A
Parent’s Guide to the Best Kids’ Comics is a good resource for
librarians, comic shops and parents. It is
attractive, well organized and on sale now.
· Paperback: 256 pages
·
Publisher: Krause Publications (May 31, 2012)
·
ISBN-10: 1440229945
·
ISBN-13: 978-1440229947
·
$16.99 (us), $17.99 (can)
-Scott Tingley
Comment below or contact me at: comicsintheclassroom at gmail.com