This week we take a look at more new apps from publishers. There's a varied range, from originals to spin-offs of classic children's books, and subjects cover science, vocabulary, and more.
Title: The Little Engine That Could
Publisher: Penguin Young Readers Group/Smashing Ideas
Available: December 22
Price: $6.99
Background: Penguin’s classic version of The Little Engine That Could by Watty Piper, published since 1930, has sold more than 10 million copies in the English language.
Interactive features: Sound effects; moveable objects; can be set to either “follow along” or “read-aloud” mode.
Title: The Monster at the End of This Book
Publisher: Callaway Digital Arts/Sesame Street
Available: December 22
Price: $0.99
Background: First published in 1971 and celebrating its 40th anniversary in print in 2011, The Monster at the End of This Book, written by Jon Stone and illustrated by Mike Smollin, has sold more than three million copies, making it the bestselling trade book in Sesame Street’s history.
Interactive features: Animation responds to a child’s touch; narration by Grover; word highlighting.
Title: The Real Life Adventures of Mabel & Lulu
Publisher: Apphaus Design Inc.
Available: December 22
Price: iPad: $2.99; iPhone: $0.99
Background: The app is an original children’s interactive digital picture book series featuring dogs Mabel and Lulu.
Interactive features: Touch-based animations; “Read to Me” or “Read to Myself” options; original music.
Title: Ultimate Dinopedia: The Most Complete Dinosaur Reference Ever
Publisher: National Geographic Kids/ScrollMotion
Available: December 22
Price: $5.99
Background: Based on National Geographic's award-winning children's book of the same name, which came out in October and was named an Outstanding Science Trade Book for Students K-12 by the National Science Teachers Association and the Children's Book Council.
Interactive features: Pronunciations for more than 700 dinosaurs; videos; interactive family tree lets users jump to their favorite family of dinosaurs.
Title: Peter Rabbit: Buddy Edition
Publisher: Sideways
Available: December 21
Price: $1.99
Background: Beatrix Potter’s The Tales of Peter Rabbit was first released in a trade edition in 1902. It has been translated into 36 languages and has sold 45 million copies.
Interactive features: Sideways’ patent-pending Buddy Reading technology lets two people to remotely read aloud together; some pictures initiate sounds when touched and others can be moved (e.g., kids can help bunnies fill their baskets with berries); and an interactive coloring book includes line drawings from Potter’s first version of the book.
Title: Ready, Set, Spot!
Publisher: Carus Publishing
Available: December 17
Price: $2.99
Background: Carus, owner of the Cricket Magazine Group and Cobblestone Publishing, did not base the app on a specific book.
Interactive features: Kids ages 3 and up learn to recognize the pattern in a group of pictures and build a three-card set before time runs out. There is an animated, step-by-step tutorial and three difficulty levels.
Title: Vocabulary Central
Publisher: Pearson
Available: December 9
Price: $2.99 in individualized editions for grades 6-12
Background: Pearson publishes education materials for preK through college. It is in the process of rolling out apps for the K-12 age range on grammar, literacy, science, and humanities.
Interactive features: Each flashcard gives the word’s explanation, a model sentence, synonyms and antonyms, word families, and background information, all with accompanying audio. Students can earn points through the quiz mode. Videos with scrolling lyrics provide musical and contextual clues to help students learn vocabulary words.
Title: PopOut! The Night Before Christmas
Publisher: Loud Crow Interactive Inc.
Available: December 2
Price: $4.99 (introductory price: $1.99)
Background: Clement C. Moore’s Christmas classic has been published countless times; among the versions available are a picture book illustrated by Mary Engelbreit (HarperCollins), a Golden Book, and a paper-cut edition from Candlewick.
Interactive features: Touch and drag objects to make them “spring” to life or tilt to make them slide; “Read to Me” feature highlights words; hear individual words spoken with the tap of a finger; 50 pages of text and illustrations with page turning interactions; a piano version of “O Christmas Tree” plays in the background.
Titles: A Christmas Carol and ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas
Publisher: Helium Creative
Available: Christmas Carol: November; Night Before Christmas: December 11
Price: Christmas Carol: $4.99 now; $8.99 after January 2; Night Before Christmas: $3.99
Background: Little, Brown just released author and artist Chuck Fischer’s pop-up version of A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens.
Interactive features: Full-page animations, interactive illustrations, some pages with sound effects, and professional voice-over. Actor Victor Garber narrates ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas.
Title: Spaghetti Day
Publisher: Picpocketbooks.com
Available: iPad: November 11; iPod: November 6
Price: iPad: $3.99; iPod: $1.99
Background: Scholastic published Wednesday Is Spaghetti Day by Maryann Cocca-Leffler in 1990 and it sold more than 250,000 copies. It is now out of print but Cocca-Leffler, who regained the rights in 2009, hired a developer to create the app.
Interactive features: “Read to Me” audio with music; when a child touches the cat it meows; words light up as they are being read.
Title: Teddy’s Day
Publisher: Minedition/Auryn
Available: November
Price: Free now; $3.99 starting January 3
Background: What Does My Teddy Bear Do All Day?, written by Bruno Hachler and illustrated by Birte Muller, came out in 2004 from Minedition.
Interactive features: A color drawing tablet, a mini puzzle, and a splatter paint page where children can uncover secret images.
To be included in this weekly listing, please send us the app title, the book or other source for the app (if there is one -- original apps are fine, too), when it was released, price, background of the book (including such info as copies in print, when it was released, awards, and brief plot summary), and the interactive elements of the app. We also need the promo codes, and an image from the app if possible. Send all apps to Jim Milliot, and send news of children’s apps to Diane Roback as well.