How Did You Count? by Christopher Danielson

How Did You Count?

by Christopher Danielson

A Stenhouse Book (Routledge), 2025. 36 pages.
Teacher’s Guide, 2025. 135 pages.
Review written January 2, 2026, from my own copies, sent to me by the publisher.
Starred Review
2025 Sonderbooks Stand-out: #3 Children’s Nonfiction

First, my apologies to the author for not reviewing this book sooner. The publisher sent me copies of the book and teacher’s guide when they were first published, because I so loved the author’s previous books, Which One Doesn’t Belong? and How Many?.

I did order copies for my library system and talked my coworker, who selects adult nonfiction, into ordering copies of the Teacher’s Guide. I had to decide whether to write separate reviews for each book and where to put them, but I eventually decided to review the books together and post the review on my Children’s Nonfiction page.

But then I got bogged down and put off reading the Teacher’s Guide, even though I was intrigued by it. I ended up setting aside an hour to finish it off on the afternoon of New Year’s Eve, because I knew it was going to be one of my Sonderbooks Stand-outs. (And I only count books I *finish* in the previous year.) So, here, at last, is my review of this book I’m completely delighted with.

Like with his other books, as you might discern from the titles, Christopher Danielson is the master of asking kids questions that don’t have one right answer. And thus masterfully encourages children to explore and to engage in mathematical thinking.

The basic picture book here shows objects arranged in some way – rows, triangles, circles, clusters. Beside the photos, the reader is asked “How many…?” and “How did you count them?”

As usual, he starts with a simple example that helps kids understand what’s going on.

This is a book about counting, but not about right and wrong answers.
There are lots of interesting things to count. More important, there are lots of interesting ways to count them.
Once you know how many there are, count them in another way.
Turn the page to see what that means…

We see a photo of twelve tangerines arranged in a dish. The questions are asked. When you turn the page, across from the text are four smaller images of the same tangerines with lines drawn over them to show how they might have been counted.

Did you count the tangerines as four columns of three tangerines each?
Maybe you saw three zigzags of four tangerines.
Or two groups of six, or maybe you counted them one-by-one.
What other ways can you count the tangerines?

Various collections of objects follow. The most challenging to me was the tetrahedron made of basketballs. That page asked the usual questions, as well as, “Did you count any basketballs that you cannot see?”

At the back, the author says:

I made this book to spark conversation, thinking, and wonder.

It still makes my heart happy that a book about math can indeed spark those things.

Okay, all that’s in the picture book itself. I do recommend the Teacher’s Guide to elementary school teachers, to help you provoke those conversations and to start conversations with kids with genuine curiosity about their thought processes. I enjoyed the stories in the Teacher’s Guide about the conversations the author had with kids when he brought this book into classrooms.

I marked this paragraph in the Teacher’s Guide that shows the beauty of what’s going on here:

How Did You Count? is a book about structures. You can count everything in the book one-by-one. But you can also count by twos or fives, or by pairs, rows, columns, triangles, or squares. The fun is less in knowing how many there are, and much more in making and sharing new ways to know how many there are. How Did You Count? supports a virtuous cycle where the more ways you know how to count, the more new ways you can think of. All of this is in service of a rich understanding of number and operation relationships in arithmetic, which is not only a worthy goal on its own, but it also builds intuitions that support later math learning beyond arithmetic.

I love my job as Youth Materials Selector so much, it’s not often I miss working with the public. But reading the Teacher’s Guide, I got the idea for an awesome library program: Make it a Family Math program. Start by going over pictures from the book. But have a large collection of objects of various sizes and amounts. And ask the families to arrange objects to make their own “How Did You Count?” photos, and invite them to take pictures of the arrangements on their phones (or have the librarian do it for them) and submit them to the author’s website, talkingmathwithkids.com. (Since I can’t do it, maybe I can talk some of my colleagues into doing it.)

(And if that doesn’t sound like awesome, curious, exciting fun to you, I can’t help you.)

talkingmathwithkids.com
christopherdanielson.wordpress.com
routledge.com

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Review of Abundance, by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson

Abundance

by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson
read by the authors

Simon & Schuster Audio, 2025. 7 hours, 15 minutes.
Review written December 27, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review
2025 Sonderbooks Stand-out: #4 More Nonfiction

I read this book from the recommendation on President Obama’s list, and I love remembering that once we had a president who read such thoughtful works. Maybe some day we will again! (Confession: I’ve read two of the novels from the list, and they were too literary for me. So in a way, I was glad to appreciate this one – haven’t completely lost my ability to grasp difficult reading.)

I like the approach this book takes, starting in the introduction by giving us a vision of what abundance might look like thirty years from now. What would we hope the lives of our children and grandchildren would look like if they have abundance?

Then the bulk of the book talks about how we might get there – some things we’ve done well in the past, and some course corrections we should make.

And very much of the book is about government and public policy. Because it’s about building and innovation – and government already has its hands in those things. They show that in some areas, government regulations have proliferated in a way that makes us unable to respond to immediate needs. But they also give examples where governments helped things come together to achieve greatness – two examples are the Moonshot and Operation Warp Speed – the Covid vaccine.

This book isn’t about one party or the other – it shows blind spots on both sides – but has many suggestions for how our country can foster innovation and do great things – and work toward a future of abundance for our entire population.

This is one that I could probably give a better review if I hadn’t listened to the audiobook and had the book in front of me – I could quote the excellent points made. (However, if I’d tried to get the print book read, it wouldn’t have happened any time soon, so it’s just as well.) So let me tell you that the book gives an in-depth look on the attitudes and values (rather than necessarily the policies) that we need to foster to build an abundant future.

I very much hope there are still politicians who read books – from local to state to federal – and that many of those will consider the ideas found in this book, and whether the laws and regulations they are responsible for help or hinder that abundant future.

derekthompson.org

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2025 Sonderbooks Stand-outs

Happy New Year! My 2025 Sonderbooks Stand-outs are up!

I can hardly believe it myself, but this is my 25th year of posting my favorite books read in the previous year! That’s a long run, and I’m not planning to stop any time soon.

Because of celebrating #Sonderbooks25, I did much more rereading than usual this past year, but I decided to limit the 2025 Sonderbooks Stand-outs to books I’d read for the first time. (Since most of the rereads were already Sonderbooks Stand-outs from a previous year.)

Here are my stats: I read a total of 527 books this year. But before you get too impressed, a large percentage of those were picture books. Here’s the breakdown:

Fiction for adults: 38
Nonfiction for adults: 34
Fiction for teens: 66
Nonfiction for teens: 9
Fiction for children: 45
Nonfiction for children: 87
Fiction Picture Books: 248

Total: 527

In the totals above, I reread 29 picture books from previous Stand-outs and reread 23 other books.

A lot of the children’s nonfiction are picture books, so you see that’s not as dramatic as if I were reading 500 adult books.

Some comments about my reading year:

I’ve really transitioned to audiobooks as my main way of consuming books. It’s a big switch for me, but now I have a habit of writing reviews ahead of time, and then every evening I do the mechanical task of posting a review while listening to an audiobook, getting a nightly story fix. I also listen while driving and while doing housework.

I’m not sure if I remembered to note them all, but my spreadsheet says that 92 of the above books were audiobooks.

I do still read as part of my daily devotional time – so you’ll see an abundance of Christian nonfiction among my Stand-outs. And this year I did some rereading of Sonderbooks Stand-outs from years 2001 to 2004, as part of #Sonderbooks25. That was a delight! The original plan was to reread one book from each year’s stand-outs, but I got pulled in way too quickly to too many others. I’m still hoping to go through all the old reviews before 2026 is done – and the official 25th anniversary in August. So I expect to get pulled into rereading far more favorites.

Alas! 2025 brought the end(?), at least for now, of the CYBILS Awards, at least in their prior form, so I was not a judge for Teen Speculative Fiction – and read fewer teen books because of that.

I am still a member of Capitol Choices, a DC-area group of librarians who make a list of our picks of the 100 best children’s and young adult books of the year. That membership has helped alert me to many wonderful books. I’m also co-chair of the Mathical Book Prize committee, which does influence some of my reading. (This year’s picks announced in February!)

And this is the time to state that my Stand-outs and their rankings do NOT attempt to reflect literary merit or quality in any way! Do NOT try to figure out how I will vote for the book on any committee from my reviews or rankings! What I try to do with Sonderbooks is go with my gut: Which books did I personally most enjoy reading in 2025?

I will say that I read and even reviewed some wonderful books in 2025 that did not make this list – after all, I only review books I like. Many of them were of exceptional literary quality. But this list is about books that make me smile, and books that stand out in my mind after a year of reading. I confess that some powerful books were well-written and wonderfully crafted – but on such an uncomfortable topic, they just weren’t among my personal favorites.

I always wait to post my Stand-outs until at least New Year’s Day – and indeed, yesterday I spent a good hour finishing a book because I knew it was going to make this list. This means that I haven’t posted all the reviews just yet – but the next books I’ll post this week will be those Stand-outs that still need to be posted, and while I’m doing that, I’ll update the webpages for the reviews of the other Stand-outs. Eventually, each book gets the Sonderbooks Stand-outs seal on its review page.

Bottom line, it’s all about the books! I hope you will enjoy some of the books I loved reading this year!

Review of The Forbidden Book, by Sacha Lamb

The Forbidden Book

by Sacha Lamb

Levine Querido, 2024. 251 pages.
Review written February 18, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review
2025 Sidney Taylor Young Adult Silver Medal

The Forbidden Book is another brilliant paranormal story playing off Jewish folklore, as with When the Angels Left the Old Country that I enjoyed so much. This one is set in medieval Eastern Europe.

As the book opens, a lumber merchant’s daughter named Sorel is about to be married to the rebbe’s son from the nearby city. She knows she feels like the girl dressed up in the wedding clothes is a stranger, and she wants to leave. But it’s when she hears a voice in her head saying that they’ll go with her that she leaps out the window and flees.

She steals the stable-boy’s clothes where he stashed them in the stable, along with a knife. She cuts her hair short and sets out, feeling oddly free.

I thought it was a story about a young transgender man, but it turns out there’s more to the voice she heard than her own wishful thinking. When asked her name, Sorel comes up with Isser Jacobs, and before long, she gets attacked in an alley by thugs looking for Isser Jacobs and something he stole. But a giant black dog interrupts the attack and Sorel escapes.

But she’s worried about the girl, a friend of the real Isser, that the thugs mentioned. One thing leads to another, and Sorel and a small group of others are trying to find out what happened to Isser and looking for a magic book that he stole, which was written by the Angel of Death.

The book is full of that touch of magic and reads like a mystical folktale. Sorel has some encounters with spirits before she’s through and needs to think about what she actually wants for her life.

sachalamb.wordpress.com

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Review of Toes, Teeth, and Tentacles, by Steve Jenkins & Robin Page

Toes, Teeth, and Tentacles

A Curious Counting Book

by Steve Jenkins & Robin Page

Little, Brown and Company, 2025. 36 pages.
Review written November 18, 2025, from my own copy, sent to me by the publisher.
Starred Review

I’ve long been a big fan of the work of Steve Jenkins and his wife Robin Page, so I was saddened by his death in 2021. I’m glad that Robin Page is keeping his memory alive by creating new books with his art (and it’s not clear how much she’s contributed to the art side).

Steve Jenkins is the one who makes incredibly realistic images of animals using cut paper techniques. Then his books are the ever-popular books full of facts about animals. Yes, I’d already noticed that some of the images have already appeared in other books. In this case, I don’t know how many of the images are new and how many are reused, but whatever the source, the result is delightful.

I tend to think that most animals have similar features to humans – two eyes, two ears, a nose, and a mouth. Two arms, two legs, five fingers and toes on each limb. Sure, I know about octopuses and spiders and insects, but there’s a basic pattern, right?

Well, this book disrupts those ideas of mine. It’s a counting book – of animal features.

We start with the one glowing spine on the angler fish, one sac in the nose of the hooded seal, one ear of the praying mantis. Then we look at the moray eel with two sets of jaws and the slow loris with two tongues. Then the squid with three hearts, the tuatara with three eyes, and the Jackson’s chameleon with three horns.

And so it goes. For each number up to ten (which includes the rattlesnake’s rattles and the sea pig’s legs), we’re given four or five examples. Then we’re told about several animals with bigger numbers of things, like the twenty-two tentacles that ring the nose of the star-nosed mole and the 18,000 teeth of the giant African land snail. A chart at the back gives more details and facts about each animal featured.

Books of strange animal facts are always a hit with many kids, and this is a fun and surprising way to organize those facts.

stevejenkinsbooks.com
robinpagebooks.com
lbyr.com

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The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan

The Joy Luck Club

by Amy Tan
read by Gwendoline Yeo

Phoenix Books, 2008. 9 hours, 5 minutes. Original book published in 1989.
Review written December 1, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

I’m going to go ahead and call this an Old Favorite, though I only read it once before – sometime before I started writing Sonderbooks in 2001. I remember that we watched the movie based on the book when my second was a baby – and felt like it should have a warning label because a baby dies in the movie. I revisited the book because my friend Suzanne mentioned it when she signed up for Book Talking with Sondy. I then discovered that my library has an eaudiobook version available and put a hold on it.

The book is wonderful. It features four Chinese women who immigrated to America and their four American daughters. The women met monthly for a Joy Luck Club where they played Mahjongg, but now one of them has recently passed away, and her daughter has been invited to join the game. And the women in the club have a surprise for the daughter – they have found her long lost twin sisters, and have gotten her tickets to China to meet them, fulfilling her mother’s dearest wish.

The rest of the book gives us stories – stories of the mothers, and stories of the daughters. We eventually learn how the twin babies were lost so long ago during war time. We see how the mothers and daughters lived very different lives and don’t fully understand each other. We see that the daughters have more in common with each other than they ever realize.

The reader did a fine job of consistently giving the characters in this book their own unique voices – but I had trouble in the audio version keeping track of whose story I was hearing and which daughter went with which mother. Unfortunately, the part of the chapter heading that showed in Libby did not include the character’s name, and I listened to this while driving to a new place, and missed some crucial details. I did remember how it worked from having read it before, so I feel like I still appreciated the book.

And this remains a classic novel about mothers and daughters and the experience of being an immigrant. With each character having different experiences in their journeys, literal and figurative, it shows how every immigrant’s experience is unique – yet gives us a window on what the challenges they face, which even their own children may not fully understand.

amytan.net

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Review of True True, by Don P. Hooper

True True

by Don P. Hooper

Nancy Paulsen Books (Penguin Random House), 2023. 368 pages.
Review written October 20, 2023, from my own copy, sent by the publisher.
Starred Review

True True is the story of Gil, a Black teenager from Brooklyn with Jamaican roots, who transfers for his senior year to a prep school in Manhattan to be on the robotics team. But once there, he gets confronted by racism – a football player and two teammates start a fight with him, and Gil is the only one who gets suspended and put on probation.

On probation, he’s not supposed to work with the robotics team for a month. But he knows he can help – is it worth doing if he can’t take any credit?

The racism is quite blatant, but still unacknowledged. Gil fumes and figures out how to get those opportunities his grandma and mother sacrificed for, while still showing his friends in Brooklyn that he cares about them. The sensei at his dojo has a copy of The Art of War, and Gil tries to use the principles found there to battle the racism so strong at school.

It’s all portrayed in such a way that it feels real, and we are with Gil as he tries to juggle friends, family, classes, martial arts, robotics, all while trying to battle racism in the most savvy way. He makes many mistakes along the way, which gets us all the more firmly on his side.

This book has so much heart, it doesn’t feel like an issue book. It’s a book about a teen trying to deal with what life throws at him.

DonHooper.com
PenguinTeen.com

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Review of Coach, by Jason Reynolds

Coach

Track, Book Five

by Jason Reynolds
read by Guy Lockard

Simon & Schuster Audio, 2025. 5 hours, 14 minutes.
Review written December 18, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

Coach is the fifth book in Jason Reynolds’ Track series for middle grade readers, each one featuring a different member of the Defenders track team – talking about all the good things about competing on a team while also giving us a window into life situations that weren’t always easy. It looks like I only reviewed the first two books, Ghost and Patina. Though this is book five, it’s effectively a prequel – since this book covers when Coach was a kid, discovering track himself in the 1980s.

This book is narrated with great enthusiasm by Guy Lockard. The reading was basically the same character as in Jason Reynolds’ Stuntboy books, a boy with ADHD. And that didn’t feel wrong for this book, though Coach – then known as Otie Brody – wasn’t formally diagnosed with ADHD and was a bit older than Stuntboy. But he was enthusiastic about things and did sometimes get distracted.

Otie’s enthusiasms make for great reading. His dream is to run in the Olympics and win a gold medal like his hero, Carl Lewis. And also to build a time machine like Marty McFly from Back to the Future. But after he gets mocked for letting his hair get out of shape – his dad being out of town – Otie tries to fix it himself – and accidentally shaves his eyebrow off. His mother helps him concoct a plausible story that it reduces drag and makes him faster – and shaves his whole head to sell the story.

That’s the beginning of Otie’s antics and obstacles as we see him trying to do his best, dreaming of winning glory, and dealing with some family issues – that all go into making him the empathetic coach he’ll need to be later.

Another solid feel-good choice for middle school and upper elementary readers, you don’t have to read the first books to enjoy this one. So glad that there’s one more!

jasonwritesbooks.com

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Review of God Didn’t Make Us to Hate Us, by Rev. Lizzie McManus-Dail

God Didn’t Make Us to Hate Us

40 Devotions to Liberate Your Faith from Fear and Reconnect with Joy

by Rev. Lizzie McManus-Dail

Tarcherperigee, 2025. 222 pages.
Review written December 17, 2025, from my own copy, purchased via Amazon.com
Starred Review

I don’t remember which book I was looking at on Amazon when this book came up as a suggestion – but the title delighted me, and I ordered it on the spot. I liked it even more than I expected to.

This is a book of 40 devotionals, with the final one about Easter – so it would be a good choice for Lent. But I enjoyed it at a totally different time of year, reading a devotional every few days. And I’ve recommended it to my church small group to read when we start up after the holidays. We’ll stretch it out through Spring, taking a break to do a churchwide study for Lent.

The message is, as you’ll guess from the title, affirming and uplifting. The devotionals are based on Bible stories, with a large number of them being stories about women. They end with a prayer. They aren’t about striving and gritting your teeth and trying not to disappoint God – they remind you how much God loves you already.

The Introduction talks about deconstruction and disillusionment with traditional theology, so yes, that’s partly why I liked it. Here’s a section from that Introduction:

So how do we melt away the fear?

I believe it begins here: by looking at the heavens, and looking at the dandelions in the cracks, and looking at scripture, and looking at God, and trying an older and wilder way of trust. It begins by saying: God did not make me to hate me; God made me to love me. God made me out of desire. God made me out of joy.

God is not so small-minded or vindictive as to make people in order to just . . . hate them. I mean, look at the sheer multitude of galaxies in the universe. The membranes of butterfly wings. The way a toddler’s teeth make the most crooked and sublime smile when they laugh. The dreamer-upper of these things isn’t an asshole. I just don’t buy it. The Bible doesn’t sell it, either; while full of challenging and complex stories that do dip into the lament and wrath of God, scripture on the whole has an undercurrent and over-arc of God’s delight in God’s people.

Something else I liked about this book was the author’s ability to help me see old stories in new ways. One example, talking about the story where Jesus told his disciples he was giving them his blood to drink, she reminded anyone who’s given birth that our babies feasted on our blood when they were in the womb, and blood converted to milk after their birth. We know about sustaining others with our very being. And that’s an image of how Jesus sustains his followers.

And, yes, this is another book I’ve marked up to make posts on my Sonderquotes blog. It will probably take me a long time to get all of them up, but it will give me more opportunities to mull on the wisdom found here. I do highly recommend this as a devotional book that will uplift and encourage you – and help you believe that God delights in you.

revlizzie.com
penguinrandomhouse.com

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Review of Legendary Frybread Drive-In, edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith

Legendary Frybread Drive-In

Intertribal Stories

edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith

Heartdrum, 2025. 7 hours, 46 minutes.
Review written December 20, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

Seventeen authors and seven narrators have created this delightful work of art. Here’s how editor Cynthia Leitich Smith describes the magical place at the center of these stories:

Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In is a liminal (or in-between) space that feels like home, welcoming Indigenous young heroes and their chosen kin. It’s a refuge, a place of reconciliation, of romance, a warm meal, an Elder’s hug, and artistic inspiration. The grandparents who run it offer happiness, hope, and healing with frybread on the side.

The list of seventeen authors who collaborated on this book is impressive. The four I’d already read award-winning young adult novels from – Darcie Little Badger, Jen Ferguson, Byron Graves, and Angeline Boulley – did not disappoint, but neither did any of the other authors.

The idea behind the book is that Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In is a place outside regular time and space. And indigenous people – teens in these stories – can find their way to Sandy June’s from wherever they are in Turtle Island. The path will open up for them when it’s needed. And the food is the best anyone’s ever tasted.

The stories bring together people across generations, show us teens finding true love, grappling with loss, and finding self-confidence and direction.

I probably should have read the book instead of listening (and I still may some day) – but it was easier for the book to get to the top of my audiobook queue than my visual reading queue. But I may have to visually read it again to catch more of the characters who show up in more than one story – and to appreciate it from the beginning as I understand better how the paranormal drive-in works. Or just for the fun of reading it again! This is a set of feel-good stories from a bunch of stellar indigenous authors.

cynthialeitichsmith.com

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