BOOKS WITH RHYME, ALLITERATION AND OTHER WORD
PLAY
“Kit” indicates that the book is also available in a kit with an audio
cassette.
Cahoon, Heather. Word Play ABC. Walker, 1999.
Visual puns for each letter: C, crock-pot, shows a little crocodile in
a
pot.
Chinese Mother Goose Rhymes = [Ju tzu ko t´u] selected and edited by
Robert Wyndham ; pictures by Ed Young. Philomel Books, 1989, c1968.
A collection of nursery rhymes translated from Chinese; also includes
the rhymes in Chinese characters.
Degen, Bruce. Jamberry. Harper, 1983.
A story about a boy and a bear with lots of berries and rollicking
inventive rhymes. Kit.
De Paola, Tomie. Andy: Thats My Name. Prentice Hall, 1973.
Children play with huge letters to make different words from ANDY:
candy, dandy...
de Regniers, Beatrice Schenk, et. al. Sing a Song of Popcorn.
Scholastic, 1988.
High quality poems and excellent illustrators. Word/sound-play poems
include “Galoshes,” and “Eletelephony” which starts, “Once there was an
elephant/Who tried to use the telephant...”
Dodds, Dayle Ann. Wheel Away. Harper, 1989.
The bicycle wheel gets away and rolls, ba-da-rump, pa-da-rump,
pa-da-rump-pump-pump through the noisy town.
Dragonwagon, Crescent. Alligator Arrived with Apples: A Potluck
Alphabet
Feast. Macmillan, 1987.
Amazing, amusing Thanksgiving. Anne Shelbys Potluck (Orchard, 1991)
does the same thing with people instead of animals.
Edwards, Pamela. Four Famished Foxes and Fosdyke. Harper Collins, 1995.
A fascinating fancy rife with Fs.
Ehlert, Lois. Eating the Alphabet: Fruits and Vegetables from A to Z.
Harcourt Brace, 1989.
Bright bold beets, beans, bananas, etc.
Evans, Dilys. Monster Soup and Other Spooky Poems compiled by Dilys
Evans. Scholastic, 1992.
Good creepy poems (some pictures may be too creepy for the younger
kids).
Golick, Margie. Wacky Word Games. Pembroke, 1995.
Silly rhymes, tricky riddles and wacky word games challenge children of
all ages.
Gordon, Jeffie Ross. Six Sleepy Sheep. Puffin, 1991.
Sheep try alliterative activities such as slurping celery soup in their
efforts to fall asleep.
Guarino, Deborah. Is Your Mama a Llama? Scholastic, 1989.
Easy rhyming guessing game.
Hopkins, Lee Bennett. Blast Off! Poems About Outer Space, selected by
Lee Bennett Hopkins. An I Can Read Book. Harper, 1995.
A good selection, most in rhyme.
Hort, Lenny. The Seals on the Bus. Holt, 2000.
A new twist on the old “Wheels on the Bus.”
Hutchins, Pat. Dont Forget the Bacon! William Morrow, 1976.
Words play tricks on a forgetful shopper. Also available as a Mulberry
Big Book.
Kuskin, Karla. Roar and More. Harper, 1990.
Rhymed text invites children to make animal sounds.
Lindbergh, Reeve. The Day the Goose Got Loose. Viking Penguin, 1990.
Chaos on the farm in tumultuous drawings and fine rhymes.
Martin, Bill, Jr. and John Archambault. Chicka Chicka Boom Boom.
Scholastic, 1989.
Alphabet scat.
Martin, Bill, Jr. and Egielski, R. “Fire! Fire!” Said Mrs. McGuire.
Harcourt Brace, 1971.
Everyones name rhymes with an exclamation for help, but not all the
missus are victims. Some are female firefighters, police, newscasters,
etc.
Martin, Sarah Catherine. Old Mother Hubbard and Her Wonderful Dog.
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1991.
James Marshalls zany pictures enliven this old rhyme which can inspire
new verses.
Las Nanas de abuelita : canciones de cuna, trabalenguas y adivinanzas
de
Suramérica = Grandmothers nursery rhymes : lullabies, tongue twisters,
and riddles from South America compiled by Nelly Palacio Jaramillo ;
illustrated by Elivia Savadier. Holt, 1994.
A collection of traditional South American nursery rhymes in Spanish
and
English.
Perkins, Al. Hand, Hand, Fingers, Thumb. Random, 1969.
Bright and Early
Books for Beginning Readers.
Very easy, lots of rhyme and rhythm.
Pomerantz, Charlotte. If I Had a Paka. Mulberry, 1993.
For this stylish picture book, Pomerantz has written poems in English
which incorporate words from eleven other languages: Swahili,
Vietnamese, etc. She also has a rhyming/alliteration story, Piggy in
the
Puddle.
Prelutsky, Jack. The Baby Uggs Are Hatching. Mulberry, 1982.
Huge fun with rhyme, alliteration, and endearingly awful monsters.
Raffi. Down by the Bay. Crown, 1987.
This song invites new verses.
Sandburg, Carl. Rootabaga Stories. Harcourt, 1922.
218 pages of fanciful stories full of wordplay and tonguetwistings:
“The
checker pigs had checker bibs on, the striped pigs had striped bibs on.
And the polka dot pigs had polka dot bibs on.”
Shapiro, Arnold L. Mice Squeak, We Speak: A Poem by Arnold L. Shapiro,
illustrated by Tomie de Paola. Putmans, 1997.
Different animals make different sounds, but I speak/say/talk.
Shaw, Nancy. Sheep in a Shop. Houghton Mifflin, 1986.
The rhymes come fast and faster, the sheep are a disaster. Kit. Also
Sheep in a Jeep, Sheep Out to Eat, etc., kits not available.
Silverstein, Shel. Falling Up. HarperCollins, 1996.
These poems are favorites with children. Several can be used with Im
All Ears songs: “Mollys Folly”(p. 157) and “Pinocchio” (p. 46) with
“Name Game,” “Complainin Jack” (p. 9) with “Down by the Track,” and
“Kanga Ruby” (p. 97) for general wordplay.
Watson, Clyde. Father Foxs Pennyrhymes. Thomas Y. Crowell, out of
print.
All rollicking rhyme and rhythm here, no free verse. If this isnt in
your library, some of the rhymes can be found set to music in Father
Fox's Feast of Songs by Clyde Watson (Boyds Mills Press,
1992).
From Im All Ears: Sing into Reading Music and Activity Book by Nancy
Schimmel and Fran Avni. StarFish Music, 2000.
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