
Ten-year-old Matt really wants a phone, but his parents won’t let him have one. When he finds one just lying on the sidewalk, he naturally picks it up and claims it for himself. But when Matt uses his new phone to take pictures, they show the crossing guard in front of his school as a monster. But that can’t be right…can it? Matt soon learns that: a) his lunch lady is also a monster (actually, an alien); b) an invasion of Earth is due to take place within the next few days; and c) the lunch lady is having cold feet (well, tentacles) about the whole thing and wants his help. Matt and his friend Marcela join forces with her to save the planet. Battles in their school cafeteria and high above the Earth’s atmosphere place them in very close encounters with alien pets and the business end of a gigantic oven. As the danger mounts, Matt and Marcela must ask themselves what they’re willing to risk to save their friends, their family, and their world.
J. A. Dauber is a professor of Jewish literature and American studies at Columbia University, where he has also served as director of its Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies. He lives right near there, with his family, so that he can walk to work and see if anyone has dropped anything. Like a phone. After all, you never know. He also wrote a YA novel about a teenage supervillain named Mayhem which won an award from the Children’s Book Council. Dauber received his undergraduate degree summa cum laude from Harvard and his doctorate from the University of Oxford, which he attended as a Rhodes Scholar.
Dauber has published many adult nonfiction and humor books—including Jewish Comedy and The Worlds of Sholem Aleichem, both finalists for the National Jewish Book Award. More recently he is the author of Mel Brooks: Disobedient Jew, American Comics: A History, and American Scary: A History of Horror, from Salem to Stephen King and Beyond.

With lush paintings and intricately constructed 3D artwork, bestselling and Caldecott Honor–winning author-illustrator Brian Lies introduces a sleepy kitten whose afternoon nap transforms into an epic journey through art, time, and history. Perfect for fans of They All Saw a Cat, Museum Trip,and Jumanji. Includes back matter.
In the warm, late afternoon sunlight, a girl sits on the couch reading a book. Her kitten dozes nearby. But when Kitten notices a mouse and dives after it, an epic chase through time, art, and history ensues. Is it a dream? That’s up to the reader to decide, but for the kitten, every leap and bound is full of suspense and makes for a masterpiece.
Caldecott Honor–winning and New York Times bestselling author-illustrator Brian Lies creates a truly unique picture book journey that invites young readers through the galleries of an art museum as well as through time, space, and history. As the cat and mouse leap from one page to the next, they are portrayed in the style of masterful artworks from history—an ancient Egyptian relief, an illuminated manuscript, a stained-glass window, a ceramic dog—each painstakingly and lovingly re-created in its original media by Brian Lies. When the sly mouse gets away, Kitten finds himself lost and alone. Will art help him find his way home?
The visual showstopper by an award-winning and bestselling picture book creator offers readers a page-turning cat and mouse chase, an introduction to famous works of art throughout history, an epic adventure story, and a homecoming. Back matter includes information about how each of the illustrations in the book was created, notes on the original artworks featured in the book, and an afterword inviting young readers to make, create, and build things. This is a delightful book for young children!
About Brian Lies
Brian Lies is the New York Times bestselling creator of Bats at the Beach, Bats at the Library, Bats at the Ballgame, Bats in the Band, and the Caldecott Honor book The Rough Patch. He has written and/or illustrated dozens of other acclaimed books for children. He lives with his family in a small seaside town in Massachusetts, where he tends a big and thriving garden.

52 Weeks of Fun Themed Recipes the Whole Family Can Make Together
Ashley Craft
September 16, 2025
$30.00 | hardcover | 978-1-57715-522-5
Ashley Craft’s Weeknight Wonders brings the family together to cook fun themed dishes celebrating holidays and cultures from around the world. From the best-selling author of The Unofficial Disney Parks cookbook series comes a cookbook that gathers the family in the kitchen and around the dinner table. Weeknight Wonders shares 52 weeks of holiday- and culture-themed dinners, with 3 family-friendly recipes per theme—for a total of 156 recipes! This cookbook offers a treasure trove of opportunities to involve kids in the meal preparation process and make lasting memories together. Travel the world, celebrate holidays, and learn new techniques through exciting and easy-to-make recipes that even the littlest chefs can accomplish, with helpful tips for Little Helping Hands (3+), Big Kids in the Kitchen (7+), Tweens on the Scene (11+), and Budding Sous-Chefs (17+). Let the kids have fun picking the theme they want for the upcoming week, gather the ingredients, and get cooking together! Make all 3 recipes at once or spread the celebration over the course of the week. Spice up the weekday meal plan, include picky eaters, introduce new cultures and flavors, and bond with your family over delicious meals with Weeknight Wonders. About the Author: Ashley Craft began writing cookbooks in 2020 and is the best-selling author of the Disney and Universal Parks cookbooks. Her books have sold over 700,000 copies and reached the top 10 on bestsellers of USA Today and the Wall Street Journal. Her first book, The Unofficial Disney Parks Cookbook, was ranked fifth in all books on Amazon. Besides Ashley’s passion for Disney and Universal theme parks, she also loves cooking at home with her kids. Currently ages 11, 9, and 6, her kids are constantly clamoring to be helpers with whatever meal is in production. In 2019, she began The Cool Kids Cooking Club online to have a fun way to include her kids in the meal preparation process and start an online community of kids and their parents making the same meals at the same time. It was a success for everyone who participated, and she was able to see her children eating better and trying new foods for the first time. |

On Sale September 16, 2025 | ISBN: 9781419786754 | Hardcover, 32 pages
- Creator of DRAGONOLOGY: Amanda “A.J.” Wood is the brains behind the best-selling novelty “Ology” series, which have sold over 19 million copies worldwide, and includes DRAGONOLOGY and WIZARDOLOGY!
- Exciting Experiments: The book’s fun and accessible experiments use common items and ingredients found in most homes
- Blend of science and magic: Perfect for little wizards and budding scientists to do with the whole family
- Reminiscent of “Ologies” series: With interactive flaps and engaging illustrations, this feels like a worthy keepsake alongside “Dragonology” and “Wizardology.” This book is a lot of fun! I highly recommend it!

When eager Clay asks his elisi (grandmother) for help to be named star of the week at school, he’s surprised by her answer: No one person is more important than his family and his community. But is Clay still important at all?
This contemplative exploration of community, individualism, and responsibility—accentuated with traditional beadwork in the art—is a moving invitation to consider an indigenous perspective of one’s place in the world and how we all light up our sky, together.
I learned a new word from reading this book. Gadugi is a Cherokee word which refers to how working together and helping each other makes the whole community stronger. It is the belief that our community – our world – is stronger when each of us works for the common good instead of individual glory, when we care for our elders and our young people, when we care for and take care of one another. I now love this word!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Art Coulsonis a writer of Cherokee, English, and Dutch descent and comes from a family of storytellers in all three traditions. A Navy brat, Art traveled the world, attending fourteen schools on three continents before graduating high school. Art served as the first executive director of the Wilma Mankiller Foundation in the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma after an award-winning twenty-five-year career in journalism. A 2023 McKnight Fellow in Children’s Literature, Art is the author of twenty books, graphic novels, and plays, including Chasing Bigfoot, Bank Street Best Book of 2020 The Reluctant Storyteller, All the Stars in the Sky, and Look, Grandma! Ni, Elisi!, which was named a best STEM children’s book by the National Science Teaching Association. Find out more at ArtCoulson.com.
Winona Nelson is a fine artist and illustrator of comics and children’s books. She’s the illustrator of If You Lived During the Plimoth Thanksgiving by Chris Newell, which was a School Library Journal Best Book of the Year, and All the Stars in the Sky by Art Coulson. Her fine art, which often focuses on the stories and history of her tribe, the Ojibwe of Minnesota, as well as on gender and diversity, has been featured in galleries across the country. She lives in Pennsylvania with her artist beau Anthony and their gentleman cats, Diego and Tod.
Self Disclosure: I received free copies of the above books to feature. Cover images were also provided, and additional information.