Tag Archives: reading

World Read Aloud Day

February 3, 2021 is World Read Aloud Day. I’ll be celebrating four ways. First, by reading aloud to 14 classrooms in Oregon, Washington, California, Texas, Illinois, Kansas, New York, and Georgia. I wish it could be 100!

If your classroom or homeschool group didn’t get an author visit for World Read Aloud Day, here is a video of me reading a two and a half minute piece from A Whale of the Wild. The link is right here. If you are a fan of A Wolf Called Wander there’s also read aloud link for that one. It’s a slightly longer segment at just over four minutes

I want to celebrate World Read Aloud Day by giving away ten copies of the brand new paperback edition of A Wolf Called Wander to teachers and librarians who have done so much to bring this book into the lives of children. I couldn’t do it without you all and I’m very grateful. If you are a teacher or school librarian and would like a free signed copy of the new paperback, please use the contact me feature on this website and send me the name of your school, and the address where I should send the book. Because teachers in the east will see this message hours before teachers in the west I’ll give away half to books to folks in the eastern and central time zones and half to the mountain and pacific time zone. I hope that will be fair to everyone.

A Wolf Called Wander by Rosanne Parry Illustrated by Mónica Armiño

And finally wonderful local bookshop Annie Blooms set up a book page for me in honor of World Read Aloud Day. It will be up for a week. Use this link and you can get any of my books. Let me know who you’d like me to dedicate the book to and I’ll sign it and send it your way. Thank you for supporting the indie bookstores who have supported my writing for many years!

And what am I reading aloud these days you ask? Well, I’m reading one very old book and one brand new one. Roughing It by Mark Twain is both hilarious and a useful window into what it was like to travel across country by stage coach and live in a mining boomtown in the 1860s. In a word–messy. It was published in 1872. I’m also very excited about a debut book that came out in December of 2020, A Wolf For a Spell by Karah Sutton. It’s a rollicking fable with elements of Russian folk lore. It’s got Baba Yaga of course, plus a wolf that was just minding it’s own business, a dastardly villain, stout-hearted girls, and compassionate boys. Delicious!

A Wolf for a Spell by Karah Sutton illustrated by Pauliina Hannuniemi