| All About You (Catherine Anholt)
When you wake up in the morning, how do you feel? Happy, tired, sad? Noisy, quiet, glad? This book invites very young children to think and talk about themselves and their world (Pre K)
What Makes Me Happy (Catherine Anholt)
Children describe in rhyming verse their feelings and what makes them feel different ways (Pre K)
Tell Me Something Happy Before I Go to Sleep (Joyce Dunbar)
Willa has trouble falling asleep until her brother reminds her of all the happy things that await her in the morning (Pre K)
Mean Soup (Betsy Everitt)
Horace feels really mean at the end of a bad day, until he helps his mother make mean Soup (Pre K)
Sometimes I Feel Like a Mouse: A Book About Feelings (Jeanne Modesitt)
A child imagines becoming a variety of animals while experiencing different feelings a howling wolf for sad, a soaring eagle for proud, a stomping elephant for bold, and others (Pre K)
When I Feel Angry (Cornelia Maude Spelman)
A little rabbit describes what makes her angry and the different ways she can control her anger (Pre K)
Misery Moo (Jeanne Willis)
A pessimistic cow is so resistant to a lamb's attempts to cheer her up that the previously happy-go-lucky lamb starts to feel just like the miserable cow (Pre -2nd)
C is for Curious: An ABC of Feelings (Woodleigh Hubbard)
Presents an alphabet of emotions, from angry to zealous (K 1st)
Kinda blue (Ann Grifalconi)
Sissy feels lonely and blue until her Uncle Dan cheers her up by explaining that everything, even corn, needs special attention every now and then (K 2nd)
Thinking About Colors (Jessica Jenkins)
Looking at the colors in a paint box, children discuss the feelings and symbolism associated with different hues (1st 2nd)
Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day (Judith Viorst)
On a day when everything goes wrong for him, Alexander is consoled by the thought that other people have bad days too (1st 2nd) |