I have read in several "writing for children" books that one of the best things you can do in order to improve your craft is by reading.
Of course! That’s not brain surgery!
So, one of the things I enjoy doing is heading over to my local bookstore, usually B & N, and surrounding myself with books, books, and more books. When I go to the bookstore, I walk around and grab picture books that I want to read, stack them in my arms (usually 6-15 books per visit), then find a comfy spot and begin my research.
During my bookstore reading sessions, there are four things that I look for when I am deciding which picture books to pull out and scour.
4 Things I Look For When Selecting Picture Books To Study
- Caldecott Medal or Honor Winners
- Titles or covers that catch my eye
- Favorite authors or illustrators
- Current popular books
Caldecott Winners

If you’d like more information about Caldecott Medals, or an entire list of Winners and Honorees dating back all the way to 1938, check out the website:
http://www.ala.org/alsc/awardsgrants/bookmedia/caldecottmedal/caldecottmedal.
http://www.ala.org/alsc/awardsgrants/bookmedia/caldecottmedal/caldecottmedal.
Eye-Catching Titles and Covers
I like to run my eyes over the shelves to see if anything seems interesting. Pictures and titles that intrigue me usually make it into my stack of books to read. This gives me a chance to go off of my own instinct, and read things that sound interesting to me. Within this group may be books that I realize, upon reading, that I don’t like at all, or books that become one of my new favorites (read my posting on Interrupting Chicken by David Ezra Stein on my “Books I love” page for an example of this. It’s also a Caldecott Honor Book.) However, even if I don’t like a book that I select, I read it and analyze why it didn’t work for me. I like using “unlikeable books” as learning tools for improving my own storytelling and writing skills.
Favorite Authors and Illustrators

Popular Books
Last but not least, I like to look at popular books because of course, every author thinks about how to find characters and stories that are marketable and interesting to young readers and their families. Usually, bookstores have many of their “bestsellers” in one easily accessible section. Right now, you’d probably see Splat the Cat, Llama Llama, Bad Kitty, No David, Jane Yolen and Mark Teague’s “How Do Dinosaurs...”, and the loveable Charlie & Lola, to list a few. I think it’s good to see what children are interested in today as a gage for where my own work may fit in.

So, if you are having a hard time thinking of what to write, try visiting your local bookstore. It works for me.