
Millie Fleur’s Poison Garden by Christy Mandin. Orchard Books, 2024. 9781339023274.
Millie Fleur Le Fae and her mom move to a spooky old house in Garden Glen. She plants a garden to make it feel like home. Her plants are weird, and the local garden club deems it unacceptable. She ignores their objections and invites her classmates to visit her garden. (Minor spoiler: this changes Garden Glen, where everything is the same, forever.)
Contains notes at the end about “Snapdragons & Spider Plants” plus a real poisonous garden in Alnwick, Northumberland, in England.

Vulture View by April Pulley Sayre, illustrated by Steve Jenkins. Beach Lane Books, 2007. 9781665952194.
I love turkey vultures, and I’m in favor of any picture books that show they love to eat stinky, rotting animals. In this one, Jenkins manages to make even rotting carcasses beautiful. The book is told in verse, and there’s a “Get To Know Vultures” section at the end that’s full of facts.

Every Monday Mabel by Jashar Awan. Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2025. 9781665938150.
Monday is Mabel’s favorite day of the week. Every day she grabs a chair and some cereal and goes to wait at the top of her driveway to see the best thing in the world. Minor spoiler: It’s the garbage truck! (There’s a garbage truck on the front and back of the book, so it’s not much of a spoiler; plus I need to tell you this so you can read it to the young garbage truck fan in your life.) Awan’s art has a classic feel, and the book’s pacing is epic — there’s a nice build-up to the garbage truck reveal that I’m sure will have a fun payoff, even with re-readings.