Little Miss History Travels to Sequoia National Park by Barbara Ann Mojica

Books like Little Miss History Travels to Sequoia National Park

By Barbara Ann Mojica

For the kid who wants every road trip to national parks to come with a built-in tour guide, Little Miss HISTORY drops right into Sequoia's tallest trees and starts exploring. Curious, adventurous, and packed with real-world facts.

Señorita Mariposa by Ben Gundersheimer

Monarch butterflies leave Canada each fall and fly all the way to Mexico, crossing snow-capped mountains and deserts to reach the forests their ancestors once called home.

Hey, Water! by Antoinette Portis

A curious young girl goes looking for water all around her — finding it as a lake, steam, a tear, even a snowman — and discovers it's hiding in more places than she ever expected.

Seeds Move! by Robin Page

A tour through the natural world reveals how seeds travel to new ground — riding ocean waves, rolling in dung beetle balls, or drifting away on the wind.

Not a Box by Antoinette Portis

Not a Box

Antoinette Portis

Firefly Song by Colleen Paeff

A girl who grows up watching fireflies in the Great Smoky Mountains notices they blink in perfect unison — and sets out to convince skeptical scientists that the dazzling synchronized show is real.

Grand Canyon by Jason Chin

A father and daughter hike down into the Grand Canyon, layer by layer, uncovering fossils and creatures that reveal millions of years of history hidden in the rock.

Red Leaf, Yellow Leaf by Lois Ehlert

A young child follows a maple sapling from seed to full-grown tree, watching its leaves change color through the seasons as roots dig deep and branches reach for sky.

Humanimal by Christopher Lloyd

Humanimal

Christopher Lloyd

First the Egg by Laura Vaccaro Seeger

A concept book traces everyday transformations — seed to flower, tadpole to frog, caterpillar to butterfly — using die-cut pages that let one shape magically become the next.

The Curious Garden by Peter Brown

A boy named Liam finds a struggling garden hidden in his gray city and starts tending it, slowly coaxing green life to spread through the streets he calls home.

Actual Size by Steve Jenkins

A gallery of real animals shown at their true size — a two-foot tongue, an eye bigger than your head — turning astonishing facts into something you can see with your own eyes.

Is a Blue Whale the Biggest Thing There Is? by Robert E. Wells

A comparison of biggest things starts with the blue whale, then zooms outward — a hollow Mount Everest could hold billions of whales, and Mount Everest itself is tiny next to the Earth, stars, and the universe.