Picture Books

When Grandparents Raise the Kids: A Roundup of Books

Not long after I became a single mom, my father came to visit me in New York City and he must’ve noticed how much I was struggling because he offered to let me come and live with him in California.

I was grateful, but also apprehensive. We had a challenging relationship. But I was hopeful we could find a way to heal, and that he could become the man in my daughter’s life, even if our relationship wasn’t easy. Authors who manage to capture this bond inspire me.

Here are five books, for kids in preschool through middle school, that illustrate both the highlights and the hardships of what it’s like to be raised by a grandparent.

The Grandma Book

The Grandma Book

Paperback $8.99

The Grandma Book

By Todd Parr

In Stock Online

Paperback $8.99

The Grandma Book, by Todd Parr
We’re BIG Todd Parr fans here, and we have most of his picture books on our shelves. This story introduces young readers to the many kinds of grandmas in the world and eloquently dismisses stereotypes. “Some grandmas have a lot of cats, some grandmas have a lot of purses. Some grandmas give advice…others help their neighbors.” In his bright neon, supersaturated colors, Parr illustrates what how unique every grandma is, but also how similar: “All grandmas like to hear from you,” and “All grandmas like to give you lots of kisses.” The books end with a short message about grandparents and a reminder to tell them that you love them, and his message is such a positive one: no matter what your family looks like, your love for each other is what really matters.

The Grandma Book, by Todd Parr
We’re BIG Todd Parr fans here, and we have most of his picture books on our shelves. This story introduces young readers to the many kinds of grandmas in the world and eloquently dismisses stereotypes. “Some grandmas have a lot of cats, some grandmas have a lot of purses. Some grandmas give advice…others help their neighbors.” In his bright neon, supersaturated colors, Parr illustrates what how unique every grandma is, but also how similar: “All grandmas like to hear from you,” and “All grandmas like to give you lots of kisses.” The books end with a short message about grandparents and a reminder to tell them that you love them, and his message is such a positive one: no matter what your family looks like, your love for each other is what really matters.

Who's in My Family?: All About Our Families

Who's in My Family?: All About Our Families

Hardcover $18.99

Who's in My Family?: All About Our Families

By Robie H. Harris
Illustrator Nadine Bernard Westcott

In Stock Online

Hardcover $18.99

Who’s in My Family?: All About Our Familiesby Robie H. Harris and Nadine Bernard Westcott
“Wherever you live, wherever you go, there are all kinds of families.” Another optimistic, comforting picture book about diverse families, this one starts with a visit to the zoo where we learn about different kinds of families. Some kids eat different foods, and some kids look different from their parents (“In some families, people’s eyes are different colors or different shapes”). Some kids live with their grandparents. Some kids have two moms or two dads. Some kids are adopted. Some kids have two homes. In the end, this is what matters: families “love to be together” and care for one another, even in “mad times” and “sad times.”

Who’s in My Family?: All About Our Familiesby Robie H. Harris and Nadine Bernard Westcott
“Wherever you live, wherever you go, there are all kinds of families.” Another optimistic, comforting picture book about diverse families, this one starts with a visit to the zoo where we learn about different kinds of families. Some kids eat different foods, and some kids look different from their parents (“In some families, people’s eyes are different colors or different shapes”). Some kids live with their grandparents. Some kids have two moms or two dads. Some kids are adopted. Some kids have two homes. In the end, this is what matters: families “love to be together” and care for one another, even in “mad times” and “sad times.”

The Secret Hum of a Daisy

The Secret Hum of a Daisy

Paperback $7.99

The Secret Hum of a Daisy

By Tracy Holczer

Paperback $7.99

The Secret Hum of a Daisyby Tracy Holczer
Twelve-year-old Grace and her mom have always been a family, the two of them going from place to place like gypsies, but now Grace wants to have a home all her own. Until her mother says it’s time to move again. Then her mother tragically drowns in an accident, so Grace has to go and live with a grandmother she has never met. In a town that holds the secrets of her family’s past, Grace grieves. (“I shivered in my sleeping bag, feeling the chill of the river, and wondered if my dreams were bringing me one piece of Mama’s death at a time”). Along the way, she struggles to face her sadness, forgive, and learn what being family really means.

The Secret Hum of a Daisyby Tracy Holczer
Twelve-year-old Grace and her mom have always been a family, the two of them going from place to place like gypsies, but now Grace wants to have a home all her own. Until her mother says it’s time to move again. Then her mother tragically drowns in an accident, so Grace has to go and live with a grandmother she has never met. In a town that holds the secrets of her family’s past, Grace grieves. (“I shivered in my sleeping bag, feeling the chill of the river, and wondered if my dreams were bringing me one piece of Mama’s death at a time”). Along the way, she struggles to face her sadness, forgive, and learn what being family really means.

Love, Aubrey

Love, Aubrey

Paperback $9.99

Love, Aubrey

By Suzanne LaFleur

In Stock Online

Paperback $9.99

Love, Aubrey, by Suzanne LaFleur
Here’s another poignant middle grade novel about being forced to live with a grandmother you’ve never met. After her father and younger sister die in a car accident and her mother abandons her, 11-year-old Aubrey decides she can take care of herself. First, she buys canned food (and a pet fish) with her birthday money, then she sets out to watch a lot of TV. Aubrey isn’t answering the phone, so finally her concerned grandmother shows up. Aubrey has to leave her Virginia home to live with her grandma in Vermont, where she grapples with abandonment and begins to grieve. This is a moving middle grade novel about a girl learning how to cope, heal, and move on after such a devastating tragedy. There’s a comforting, compassionate message here to remind kids that you’re never alone as long as you have a grandma.

Love, Aubrey, by Suzanne LaFleur
Here’s another poignant middle grade novel about being forced to live with a grandmother you’ve never met. After her father and younger sister die in a car accident and her mother abandons her, 11-year-old Aubrey decides she can take care of herself. First, she buys canned food (and a pet fish) with her birthday money, then she sets out to watch a lot of TV. Aubrey isn’t answering the phone, so finally her concerned grandmother shows up. Aubrey has to leave her Virginia home to live with her grandma in Vermont, where she grapples with abandonment and begins to grieve. This is a moving middle grade novel about a girl learning how to cope, heal, and move on after such a devastating tragedy. There’s a comforting, compassionate message here to remind kids that you’re never alone as long as you have a grandma.

Some Kind of Happiness

Some Kind of Happiness

Paperback $8.99

Some Kind of Happiness

By Claire Legrand

In Stock Online

Paperback $8.99

Some Kind of Happinessby Claire Legrand
Finley’s parents are going through a rough patch so they need some space to work things out (or not), so they send 11-year-old Finley to her estranged grandparents’ country estate for the summer with some cousins she has never met. In this dark multi-layered fantasy, Finley allows her cousins into her imaginary world at the Everwood, a forest kingdom that exists in the pages of her notebook. Writing is what helps her face her deep anxiety in this coming-of-age tale, as she learns to trust her family and feel brave in the world.

Some Kind of Happinessby Claire Legrand
Finley’s parents are going through a rough patch so they need some space to work things out (or not), so they send 11-year-old Finley to her estranged grandparents’ country estate for the summer with some cousins she has never met. In this dark multi-layered fantasy, Finley allows her cousins into her imaginary world at the Everwood, a forest kingdom that exists in the pages of her notebook. Writing is what helps her face her deep anxiety in this coming-of-age tale, as she learns to trust her family and feel brave in the world.

 What books about grandparents raising children have you loved?