

Sign up for every-other-week-dadcraft in your inbox bi-weekly via our newsletter.I am super happy that I picked up this series. You battle against the absentee dad crisis when you read with your kids…and employ other of our favorite dadcraftsmen tools. You’ll find your groove quickly, and I expect you’ll find that the imaginations of you and your young readers/listeners will grow accordingly. This sort of thing, more or less, is needed depending on your co-reader’s reading comprehension level.

I’ve found that I can effectively assist my child’s understanding of the stories by asking questions ( How do you think Zita’s feeling now? or What happened when Zita helped that little alien? ) and providing a little extra explanatory narrative ( Now Zita’s rocket is blasting off… ). The series appeals to both girls and boys and a wide range of ages: my nine-year-old, seven-year-old, and four-year-old all enjoy these tales…and I do too. Hatke’s frame-by-frame illustrations present fun and varied alien life, and that along with the characters’ dialogue presents an honorable, likeable heroine who continually gets into tight scrapes but displays courage while consistently acting rightly toward her friends and compatriots. This graphic novel trilogy follows the adventures of a young girl named Zita as she accidentally leaves Earth and enjoys some galactic adventures. It’s here that author/illustrator/graphic novelist Ben Hatke’s Zita the Spacegirl series shines. In the best of these, the stories are bigger and more complex, the characters are more developed and more interesting, and the book’s text and illustrations play together differently and encourage the imagination to grow. There’s a bit of a gap between these two genres, however, and we’ve found that graphic novels can provide a bridge. Eventually, though, one’s imagination can fill in the gaps more effectively than the best illustrator, and “chapter books” ( the Chronicles of Narnia, say) are feasible and fun for your young readers. Picture books are great, of course, and we’ve shared some ideas about what you can read to your kids in this space.
