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Children s and YA Books for Valentine s Day 2021 Compiled by Emma Kantor | Jan 25, 2021
The pandemic continues to put a wedge between family and friends through the necessity of social distancing, while bringing us closer together through shared hopes and fears. In honor of Valentine’s Day, we’ve gathered a list of new and forthcoming books for young readers that affirm the value of love in its many forms.
Picture Books & Board Books
Jane Porter, illus. by Maisie Paradise Shearring. Candlewick, $16.99 (32p) ISBN 978-1-5362-1123-8. Ages 3–7.
Dimitri, who has dark hair and light tan skin, spends his first day at a new preschool telling everyone and everything “I love you.” But when no one returns his declarations, he feels dejected until his mother imparts a lesson: “When you tell people you love them,” she says, “even if they don’t say it back or show it, they feel it. That’s just the way love is.” A gentle, resonant narrative for ch
Go Nakamura/Getty Images
The virus has become the country s leading cause of death.
It s just the beginning of the effects of Thanksgiving travel and gatherings, one epidemiologist said. The rate of death probably won t slow anytime soon.
At some hospitals, staff can t keep up, and they say patients are falling through the cracks.
In August, Stacey Singer DeLoye was finally allowed to visit her mother, Marilyn, at her Minnesota nursing home as long as they were outdoors, masked, and distant. She was totally cheerful, Stacey told Business Insider. I was astonished at how happy she was in that place, and I was impressed with how well they did at keeping the pandemic out.
The Thanksgiving surge in coronavirus deaths is here. It s horrifically awful, a hospital chaplain said.
The Thanksgiving surge in coronavirus deaths is here. It s horrifically awful, a hospital chaplain said.
Morgan McFall-JohnsenDec 19, 2020, 17:50 IST
Dr. Joseph Varon hugs and comforts a patient in the COVID-19 ICU during Thanksgiving at the United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas.Go Nakamura/Getty Images
More than 47,000 people in the US have died from
COVID-19 since Thanksgiving.
The virus has become the country s leading cause of death.
It s just the beginning of the effects of Thanksgiving travel and gatherings, one epidemiologist said. The rate of death probably won t slow anytime soon.