Gift Guide2007

From toys that stand the test of time to board games that are anything but boring, we found the best products for each grade that will build your child's brain as well as being chock full of fun. Our list of loot is kid-tested, teacher approved, and full of options for any family, so get wrappin'!

showing products 1 - 16 of 45
"Every Day Is a Birthday" by Brady Rymer

"Every Day Is a Birthday" by Brady Rymer

Parents who shop in the alt rock section will feel right at home with Brady Rymer, a former roots-rock musician who's made the switch to children's music. The title track, describing all the kooky ways birthdays are celebrated across the world, is an instant favorite. Rymer shared the stage with ...

Reviewed for Kindergarten, 2007
The Thief Lord

The Thief Lord

Mix the magic of Harry Potter with a taste of Oliver Twist, and you'll have some notion of the yarn that awaits young readers with this book. Two orphaned brothers arrive in Venice, attempting to escape from the nasty couple who want to adopt them. They're sheltered by a band of young urchins and ...

Reviewed for Middle School, 2007
Or Give Me Death: A Novel of Patrick Henry's Family

Or Give Me Death: A Novel of Patrick Henry's Family

Students know Patrick Henry as one of our founding fathers. But to his kids, he was just dad. This book tells the story of Henry's family from the perspective of his two eldest daughters, growing with an absent father and a mentally ill mom. Although fiction, the text is grounded in historical ...

Reviewed for Middle School, 2007
Beginner's Origami: Birds, Beasts, Bugs, and Butterflies

Beginner's Origami: Birds, Beasts, Bugs, and Butterflies

For a fusion of art, math, and pure manual dexterity, it's hard to match Origami. With proper adult guidance, even very small children can make simple shapes. But older kids can still learn a great deal by practicing this ancient art, especially as they move into the increasingly abstract math ...

Reviewed for Fifth Grade, 2007
Howl's Moving Castle

Howl's Moving Castle

This novel was made into a movie. Which means that most kids will skip it. That's a shame, because the book packs a potent punch of wonderful characters, outrageous plot twists, and dry humor. Sophie Hatter is a bookworm, and she knows from her reading that as the eldest of 3 daughters, she's bound ...

Reviewed for Middle School, 2007
Hisss

Hisss

The goal of this game is to build the most reptiles from a stack of severed snake cards (some heads, some tails, and some middles). Here's how it works: the whole pile of tiles are fanned out on the floor and players take turns picking a card and trying to match it to a piece with the same color. ...

Reviewed for Kindergarten, 2007
Monster Maker Card Game

Monster Maker Card Game

Everybody loves a goofy monster. In this combination puzzle/card game kids race to see who can collect the right parts cards to make their monster whole. Players can pick from the deck, the garbage pile, or trade cards with other players. The act of trading is a great lesson in taking turns, ...

Reviewed for Second Grade, 2007
Mazeways: A to Z

Mazeways: A to Z

In this picture book, the alphabet goes maze-y! But these aren't just any old mazes, they are colorfully illustrated worlds that delight the imagination. Let kids' fingers do the walking, as they trace their way through each challenge, from A to Z. There are also hidden objects to find in the ...

Reviewed for Kindergarten, 2007
Nate the Great

Nate the Great

Nate the Great, a pancake loving, Sam Spade spouting, grade school private eye has a bravado perfect for this age set, who don't want books for "little kids" anymore. Still, underneath the swagger, the short chapters and simple words are just right for blossoming readers. Case closed. (Yearling, ...

Reviewed for Second Grade, 2007
The Declaration

The Declaration

It's the year 2140 and old age is a thing of the past. All but a few citizens of this brave new world have signed a declaration, promising not to bring any children into the world, in exchange for longevity drugs that keep their bodies working indefinitely. Children born without permission, known ...

Reviewed for High School, 2007
The Marvelous and Fabulous Me Quiz Book

The Marvelous and Fabulous Me Quiz Book

Is your daughter a perfectionist? A peacemaker? An introvert? This kit will help her find out. A fun take on the ever-popular personality test, which kids of this age group tend to love, this box packs in more than fifty quizzes to give girls insight into what makes them tick. Some of the quizzes, ...

Reviewed for Fifth Grade, 2007
The Beach

The Beach

This national bestseller, written by its author at the ripe old age of 26, was a pretty mediocre movie. But it's a riveting book. With the pacing of a thriller and themes teens can relate to (the dark side of peer pressure, the quest to be original, the search for meaning in life...), the book is ...

Reviewed for High School, 2007
Life of Pi

Life of Pi

Piscine Patel is a normal 16-year-old boy whose biggest problem is his odd name, until his zookeeper father decides to move the family to Canada. A harrowing shipwreck leaves Pi floating on a lifeboat in the Pacific Ocean with a wounded zebra, a potted hyena, a seasick orangutan, and a 450-pound ...

Reviewed for High School, 2007
Toss Your Cookies

Toss Your Cookies

Essentially a fun-fueled kiddie version of the well-known card game "Gin," Toss Your Cookies has winning players crowing "Snickerdoodle!" An easy-to-play game that is long on silliness and smiles, children build matching, sorting, and memory skills while passing (or sometimes tossing) ...

Reviewed for Second Grade, 2007
The BFG

The BFG

Considered one of Dahl's most imaginative works, The BFG tells the story of the Big Friendly Giant who blows good dreams into the bedrooms of children. One night he takes an orphan girl named Sophie from her bed and brings her to the world of Giants. The other Giants, with names like ...

Reviewed for Fourth Grade, 2007
Step to It!

Step to It!

This game mixes fun and learning in an irresistible package. Players lay out a set of cards with pictures on them (for younger learners) or letters (for those on the road to reading), and then lay out a set of footprint cards-- each with a number written on it. Players pick from the deck to ...

Reviewed for Preschool, 2007

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