• All
  • #LGBTQFamiliesDay
  • Adoption
  • Advocating
  • Allies
  • Assisted Reproduction
  • Blog Admin
  • Blogging Events
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2006
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2007
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2008
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2009
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2010
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2011
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2012
  • Blogging for LGBT Families Day 2013
  • Blogging for LGBTQ Families Day 2014
  • Blogging for LGBTQ Families Day 2015
  • Blogging for LGBTQ Families Day 2016
  • Blogging for LGBTQ Families Day 2017
  • Books for Kids
  • Books for Parents
  • Business
  • Calls for Participation
  • Child Outcomes/Experiences
  • Connecting
  • Demographics
  • Entertainment
  • Events in the News
  • Explaining Our Families to Our Kids
  • Extended Families
  • Family Profiles
  • Family Voices
  • Fighting Daily Bias & Misunderstanding
  • Foster Parenting
  • Fun/Ephemera
  • Health and Safety
  • Holidays
  • Interviews
  • Kids' Activities
  • Kitchen and Food
  • LGBTQ Parenting Roundup
  • Media Coverage
  • Misc Parenting Tips
  • Money and Finance
  • Music
  • Naming
  • Other Research
  • Parental Outcomes/Experiences
  • Politics and Law
  • Post of the Week
  • Pregnancy
  • Protecting
  • Queer Parenting in a Cishet World
  • Raising
  • Reflections on Parenthood
  • Religion
  • Remembering (LGBTQ History)
  • Representing
  • Researching
  • Schools/Education
  • Selves and Identities
  • Social Justice
  • Sports
  • Starting
  • Supporting LGBTQ Children
  • Surrogacy
  • Tools and Hobbies
  • Travel
  • Video Blog
  • Violence and Tragedy
  • Weekly Political Roundup
  • Working

Books for Kids

The MFI Loves Me – and I Love Them Back

Yesterday, I posted a recent column in which I reviewed several new books and films for and about LGBT families. It turns out the conservative Massachusetts Family Institute, which took the lead fighting against marriage equality here in the Bay State, didn’t like it so much—or maybe they did. In their latest e-newsletter, they included […]

New Resources for LGBT Families

(Originally published in Bay Windows, July 29, 2009. Stay tuned for another post on what an ultra-conservative group had to say about this article.) The number of resources for LGBT families is, like my own son, small but growing. Here are some recent highlights for a variety of children’s ages: Mommy, Mama, and Me and

Parent Hex: Harry Potter Redux

[I published a version of this two years ago when Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows first came out. I thought it was worth revisiting now that Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is in theaters. (No, I haven’t seen it yet. Hope to soon.) Warning: Serious geekiness ahead.] The below list of charms and

Heather’s Mommy Has Two New Books

“Writing has always been my political activism,” said Lesléa Newman, author of Heather Has Two Mommies, the classic 1989 children’s book that was one of the first to feature a child with two moms. Her two new books, however, are sweet, simple tales of family life, without any overt politics or agenda. Mommy, Mama, and

“She Got Me Pregnant”: Episode 73

Helen and I discuss two new children’s books (one about moms and one about dads) by Lesléa Newman, author of Heather Has Two Mommies. We then reveal yet another hidden lesbian on children’s television, Lily Tomlin (bonus points if you can guess which show without looking it up), and ask whether we’ll see any actual

Book Recommendation: There Is a Bird on Your Head!

My son is starting to read more on his own now, so I was delighted to find the lighthearted early reader There Is a Bird On Your Head! by Mo Willems, of Knuffle Bunny and Pigeon fame. The simple plot is that elephant Gerald has a bird on his head, and must rely on his

From Penguins to Chicken Butts: Diversity and Subversion in Children’s Books

“Guess what?” “Chicken Butt!” The classic schoolyard gag has found new life in Chicken Butt!, a picture book by critically acclaimed children’s author Erica Perl. There is nothing LGBT-specific about the story, but Perl’s illustrator is Henry Cole, the prolific artist who also did the drawings for Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson’s And Tango Makes

Penguin Three-peat!

For the third year in a row, Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell’s And Tango Makes Three, about two male penguins who care for an orphaned egg and raise a chick, tops the American Library Association’s (ALA) Top Ten list of the Most Frequently Challenged Books. This despite the fact that the book is based on

“She Got Me Pregnant”: Episode 64

This week, Helen and I are celebrating 16 years together! We also discuss the joys of classic Disney films (with or without a young Angela Lansbury), and how children’s movies have changed over the years, not necessarily for the better. For bonus points, we demonstrate the fun fold-out action of the Panorama book I blogged

A Book Recommendation for National Poetry Month

It’s National Poetry Month, and while I dislike the idea of constraining poetry to one month (same for women’s history, black history, etc.), I see no reason not to use it as an occasion to celebrate. I’ll be doing a variety of poetry-related pieces throughout the month. Stay tuned. I’ll start with a book recommendation:

Scroll to Top