Children raised in Christian settings usually hear the Lord’s Prayer from an early age, internalizing its language and cadence without necessarily understanding its meaning.
If James and the Giant Peach or Charlie and the Chocolate Factory were ever your favorite stories, Oxford University Press has a gift for you.
How does a quiet young German theologian, a pacifist who came of age between the world wars, find himself involved in a plan to assassinate Hitler?
Keith and Kristyn Getty have been producing thoughtful, well-written and -recorded worship music for over 15 years.
Using both Arabic and English text, a fictional Syrian girl named Rama tells the story of how her family became refugees.
From her nest in a rock crevice overlooking a majestic canyon, a baby wren sees that “the world was filled with such wonderfulness”—monarch butterflies, soft breezes, and a shimmering river.
Yes, another Bible storybook, and one worth considering.
A young boy whose parents have died must go on a quest to find the armor that will protect him from his evil aunts and grandfather.
Fifteen-year-old Mercy Wong understands poverty and discrimination, having experienced both while growing up in San Francisco’s Chinatown in the early 1900s.
Disney continues to bring new life to their old catalog, this time giving us a live-action version of their 1977 animated film, Pete’s Dragon.
A bear cub discovers a piano in the forest, but he has no idea what it is. Touching the keys, he’s appalled by the sound it makes.
As the oldest daughter at home, she is expected to help run the house—cooking and cleaning as well as helping her younger siblings with their homeschooling.
Young William lives in an orphanage along dismal Grimloch Lane.
Dory, the lovable amnesiac blue tang from Finding Nemo, gets her own origin story in Finding Dory.
In a time where children spend too little time outside and have too many adult-driven commitments, Bringing the Outside In is a reminder of the exuberance of playing outdoors