Room on the Broom
A witch and her cat are flying through the sky when the wind blows away some of her belongings. A dog, a bird, and a frog help her retrieve her items, and ask for a ride on her broomstick in return. But the broom can barely fit everyone! When a fire-breathing dragon appears, the animals join together to save her.
This story would be great for practicing retelling and sequencing.
Find it here on Amazon.
Bone Soup
This is a Halloween version of the classic book, Stone Soup.
Known across the land for his infamous appetite, Finnigin is never seen without his eating stool, his eating spoon, and his gigantic eating mouth. When Finnigin finds himself in a new town on Halloween, he hopes to join a great feast with the creatures who live there. But no one will share any of their food with Finnigin. So what's a hungry skeleton to do? Armed with only his wits and a special ingredient, will Finnigin be able to stir up a cauldron's worth of Halloween magic?
-Summary by Cambria Evans on Good Reads
You can use Stone Soup and Bone Soup to make text-to-text connections and compare/contrast different versions of the same story.
Find it here on Amazon.
Stellaluna
Stellaluna is a baby bat that is separated from her mother when they are attacked by an owl. She finds herself in a bird's nest, and her adventure of believing she is a bird, learning she is a bat, and being reunited with her mother follows. Stellaluna attempts to reunite her adopted bird family with her rediscovered bat community. The differences between them prove too difficult to surpass, yet she and her bird "siblings" vow to stay friends. Also has notes at the end of the story with factual information about bats.
-Summary by Alyssa Prater on Good Reads
This story has a few different problems and many characters, so you can use it to discuss the main problem and main character. It also can be used to help compare and contrast bats and birds.
Find it here on Amazon.
There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Bat
This spooky twist on the wildly popular There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly is perfect for fun Halloween reading!
What won't this old lady swallow? This time around, a bat, an owl, a cat, a ghost, a goblin, some bones, and a wizard are all on the menu! This Halloween-themed twist on the classic will delight and entertain all brave readers who dare to read it!
This story is full of rhymes for your students to practice rhyming words. It would also be great for retelling and sequencing events.
Find it here on Amazon.
Click, Clack, Boo!
Farmer Brown does not like Halloween, so he draws the shades, puts on his footy pajamas, and climbs into bed. But for the barnyard animals, the Halloween party has just begun. What will they do to poor Farmer Brown this time?
You can use this story for predicting (before reading you can predict what might happen, and throughout the stories there are various places for children to predict. Also, listing character traits for Farmer Brown would be a wonderful learning activity for your class.
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The Hallo-Wiener
Oscar is short, like all dachshunds, and all the other dogs make fun of him. On Halloween he takes more ridicule than ever in his hot-dog costume, but one brave act makes him a Grade-A hero.
Throughout the story, the other dogs make fun of Oscar. This would be a great story for character education to teach your class about bullying.
Find it here on Amazon.
Creepy Carrots
Jasper Rabbit loves carrots--especially Crackenhopper Field carrots. he eats them on the way to school. He eats them going to Little League. He eats them walking home. Until the day the carrots start following him...or are they?
Use this story for predicting and for teaching about the central message/author's purpose.
Find it here on Amazon.
Even Monsters Need Haircuts
Just before midnight, on the night of a full moon, a young barber stays out past his bedtime to go to work. Although his customers are mostly regulars, they are anything but normal-after all, even monsters need haircuts. Business is steady all night, and this barber is prepared for anything with his scissors, rotting tonic, horn polish, and stink wax. It's a tough job, but someone's got to help these creatures maintain their ghoulish good looks.
As you read, you can have the children predict what is going to happen next. This is also set up perfectly for kids to retell using beginning, middle, and end.
Find it here on Amazon.
The Pumpkin Book
When you are reading aloud to your class, don't forget to include nonfiction books! This is a great book with information about pumpkins: how they grow, their traditional uses and cultural significance.
Use this book for making text-to-self or text-to-world connections, and nonfiction text features.
Find it here on Amazon
The Biggest Pumpkin Ever
Desmond the field mouse wants to carve the biggest jack-o'-lantern in the neighborhood with his pumpkin. Clayton the house mouse wants to win the Biggest Pumpkin contest with his. But when they discover that their choice pumpkins are actually the same one, Desmond and Clayton decide to work together to grow the biggest pumpkin ever!
I grew up reading this book, and it is still one of my favorites! Some activities that would be good to do with this book are measuring/weighing pumpkins, growing pumpkins, and making connections.
Find it here on Amazon.
What Halloween books do you love to read to your children or students? Leave a comment below!