By Janine Schall, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, TX
Over half the world’s population speaks more than one language. While many people naturally become multilingual by growing up in multilingual communities, others deliberately learn a second or third language later in life. People learn new languages for many reasons, including to maintain connections to heritage and family, in order to navigate a new country, and to communicate with new friends and communities. Sometimes people even invent their own ways to communicate! In this collection of picturebooks, we find a dozen different examples of people learning a new language or finding a way to communicate.
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In English, of Course by Josephine Nobisso & Dasha Ziborova (il.), 9780940112070, Gingerbread House, 2002.
A recent immigrant from Italy uses her limited English and the linguistic support of a teacher to tell her class a funny story.
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Playing Loteria/El Juego de Lotería by René Colato Laínez & Jill Arena (il.), 9780873589192, Cooper Square Publishing, 2006.
A small boy visits his grandmother in Mexico and uses the game of lotería to facilitate communication.
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Six Dots: A Story of Young Louis Braille by Jen Bryant & Boris Kulikov (il.), 9780449813379, Knopf Books for Young Readers, 2016.
In this biography, Louis can’t find books he can read after losing his sight so he develops a writing system for the blind.
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Stolen Words by Melanie Florence & Gabrielle Grimard (il.), 9781772600377, Second Story Press, 2017.
When a Cree girl discovers that her grandfather was forbidden to speak his language as a child, she finds a Cree language book so he can relearn it.
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The Language of Angels: A Story about the Reinvention of Hebrew by Richard Michelson & Karla Gudeon (il.), 9781580896368, Charlesbridge, 2017.
Based on a true story, in 1880s Jerusalem Ben-Zion and his father work to revitalize Hebrew as an everyday language.
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The Playgrounds of Babel by JonArno Lawson & Piet Grobler (il.), 9781773060361, Groundwood, 2019.
As children gather around a storyteller one boy offers to translate her story about the Tower of Babel for a boy who can’t understand her words.
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Dr. Esperanto and the Language of Hope by Mara Rockliff & Zosia Dzierżawska (il.), 9780763689155, Candlewick Press, 2019.
Based on a true story, Leyzer Zamenhof hopes the world will be more peaceful if everyone can understand each other by using a universal language he creates and calls Esperanto.
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The Day Saida Arrived by Susana Gómez Redondo, Sonja Wimmer (il.) & Lawrence Schimel (trans.), 9781733121255, Blue Dot Kids, 2020.
The friendship between a little girl and her new classmate from Morocco deepens as they learn each other’s language.
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Gibberish by Young Vo, 9781646141104, Levine Querido, 2022.
Recent immigrant Dat heads to his first day of school not understanding a word that anyone says until a kind classmate begins using art as a communication tool.
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Luli and the Language of Tea by Andrea Wang & Hyewon Yum (il.), 9780823446148, Neal Porter Books/Holiday House, 2022.
Set in a preschool, immigrant children from around the world find a surprising language connection & a cultural bond when Luli brings a pot of tea to class.
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Mina Belongs Here by Sandra Niebuhr-Siebert, Lars Baus (il.) & Polly Lawson (trans.), 9781782508113, Floris Books, 2023.
On her first day Mina doesn’t understand the noisy children at her new school but over time the strange sounds begin to make sense.
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Spanish is the Language of my Family by Michael Genhart & John Parra (il.), 9780823450046, Holiday House, 2023.
As Abuelita helps Manolo prepare for a Spanish spelling bee, her stories about how speaking Spanish was prohibited inspires pride in the strength and beauty of his language.
WOW Dozen features a list of 12 global books for children and adolescents around a theme, topic, issue or personal favorites. Each Dozen consists of ten newly-published titles with two older “must have” books. Please share or recommend additional books that fit the theme in the comments section or on social media using #WOWDozen. Use the printer icon in the upper left corner of this post to print or save this list as a PDF.
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- Themes: Andrea Wang, Boris Kulikov, Dasha Ziboroca, Day Saida Arrived, Doctor Esperanto and the Language of Hope, Gabrielle Grimard, Gibberish, Hyewon Yum, In English Of Course, Janine Schall, Jen Bryant, Jill Arena, John Parra, JonArno Lawson, Josephine Nobisso, Karla Gudeon, Language of Angels, Lars Baus, Lawrence Schimel, Luli and the Language of Tea, Mara Rockliff, Melanie Florence, Michael Genhart, Mina Belongs Here, Piet Grobler, Playgrounds of Babel, Playing Loteria, Polly Lawson, Rene Colato Lainez, Richard Michelson, Sandra Niebuhr-Siebert, Six Dots, Sonja Wimmer, Spanish is the Language of My Family, Stolen Words, Susana Gómez Redondo, Young Vo, Zosia Dzierzawska
- Descriptors: WOW Dozen
I just purchased a lovely new book that fits perfectly with this theme. It’s called “My Dog Just Speaks Spanish” and is written/illustrated by Andrea Caceres. It’s a gentle story about language diversity and communication, with Spanish words naturally incorporated throughout the text. Highly recommended!