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The Kids’ Book of Brave: A Gentle Guide to Finding Your Yet
Posted by Literary Titan

The Kids’ Book of Brave, by Catherine Stephenson, is a gentle picture book about confidence, nervousness, and the small, ordinary moments when children learn to keep going. Through classroom worries, playground rejection, spilled cupcake batter, jealousy, shyness, and trying something new, the book shows bravery as something quiet and practical rather than loud or showy. Its central idea is simple but lovely: children don’t have to feel fearless to be brave; they just need one small step.
I really appreciated how tenderly the writing handles big feelings. As a parent, I’m always drawn to books that don’t rush children out of discomfort, and this one sits beside them for a moment instead. The repeated ideas, such as adding “yet” to “I can’t do this,” taking a slow breath, and noticing the thump-thump in your body, feel reassuring without becoming preachy. The phrasing is especially warm, and Stephenson gives children language for feelings that can otherwise seem huge and shapeless.
The artwork has a soft, handmade sweetness that fits the subject beautifully. The pencil and watercolor illustrations feel light and convey emotions well, with children who look uncertain, proud, jealous, shy, or relieved in ways that are easy to recognize. I especially liked that bravery is shown in such modest scenes: raising a hand, tapping a soccer ball, asking for help, and walking into a classroom. The ideas are familiar, but they’re handled with care, and the book’s rhythm gives those little moments real weight.
The Kids’ Book of Brave is a thoughtful and comforting children’s book with a clear sense of purpose. It doesn’t make confidence seem magical or instant, which I value; it presents it as something children can build, breath by breath and choice by choice. I’d recommend it for preschool and early elementary kids, especially those who are anxious, perfectionistic, shy, or easily discouraged, and for parents who want a calm way to talk about courage without making feelings sound like a problem to fix.
Pages: 42 | ISBN : 978-1917442091
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, The Kids' Books of Social Emotional Learning, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, Catherine Stephenson, Children's Books on Peer Pressure, Children's Self-Esteem Books, childrens book, confidence, ebook, feelings, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, life lessons, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, picture books, read, reader, reading, social emotional, story, The Kids' Book of Brave: A Gentle Guide to Finding Your Yet, trailer, writer, writing




