Christmas, Holidays, homeschooling, parenting

Our Favorite Christmas Books for Elementary Readers: Building Joyful Holiday Traditions

There’s something magical about curling up with a good Christmas book during the holiday season. In our homeschool, we’ve built a tradition around reading quality Christmas literature together – books that capture the wonder of the season while offering rich language and beautiful illustrations.

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Here is a picture of our Christmas books! These are the books that have earned a permanent spot on our bookshelf (pictured above!) and come out year after year. When the kids were small, I would always put them out in a basket underneath the tree to encourage magical Christmas reading time. Rereading some of these can take me back to my own childhood Christmases!

Early Elementary (K-2nd Grade)

Stranger in the Woods by Carl R. Sams II and Jean Stoick

Stranger in the Woods by Carl R. Sams II & Jean Stoick is a gorgeous “photographic fantasy” follows woodland animals as they discover a mysterious snowman in their forest. The stunning nature photography makes it feel like a nature study and a Christmas story rolled into one. Perfect for children who love animals and the beauty of winter.


Merry Christmas, Squirrel! by Nancy Rose

Speaking of woodland creatures – this delightful book features real photographs of a mischievous squirrel preparing for Christmas.

It’s adorable, funny, and amazingly well-crafted. Kids love the real animal photography combined with tiny props and sets. I love all of Nancy Rose’s books!


The Mitten adapted by Jan Brett


While not strictly a Christmas story, Jan Brett’s The Mitten is a Ukrainian folktale has become a winter/Christmas classic in many homes.

Jan Brett’s intricate illustrations are worth poring over again and again – you will find a new detail with every reading – and the cumulative tale structure makes it perfect for young readers to “read” along.


The Biggest, Most Beautiful Christmas Tree by Amye Rosenberg

This is a classic story about forest animals who work together to find the perfect Christmas tree.

The vintage illustrations and simple story make this a perfect first read-aloud for the youngest readers.

This is the perfect gift for littles from someone who wants to be the Fun Aunt, since the main character is their aunt who comes and brings Christmas to them!


Middle Elementary (3rd-4th Grade)

The Jolly Christmas Postman by Allan Ahlberg and Janet Ahlberg

This gorgeously illustrated, full-color classic celebrates a time before email with an interactive picture book full of real letters to read aloud. The Jolly Postman brings a batch of wonderful letters for Christmas, including notes from fairy tale characters. Open this book, take out the letters, and discover what favorite characters would write to each other–and reimagine best-loved tales together.”


A Little House Christmas Treasury by Laura Ingalls Wilder

This collection pulls together all the Christmas chapters from the Little House books into one beautiful volume. If you’re already reading the Little House series, this makes a wonderful companion. The stories capture simple, pioneer Christmas celebrations that help children appreciate the true meaning of the season and understand how people celebrated with joy even with very few material possessions. Complete with Garth Williams’s beloved illustrations!


Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin

This Caldecott Medal winner tells the true story of Wilson Bentley, the man who first photographed snowflakes and proved that no two are alike. It’s a beautiful blend of science, biography, and winter wonder. Perfect for nature study during the Christmas season.


More Christmas Book Recommendations

The Nutcracker by E.T.A. Hoffmann (various editions)

The original story that inspired the ballet! We have many different editions but I really want this copy. It has audio and tells the story of the orchestra! You can push the button on each beautiful scene to hear the vivid sound of an orchestra playing from Tchaikovsky’s score.


The Berenstain Bears and the Joy of Giving: The True Meaning of Christmas by by Jan Berenstain and Mike Berenstain

Join Brother and Sister Bear at the Christmas Eve pageant as they witness the very first Christmas, and make an important discovery about giving and receiving, a valuable lesson during the holiday season and year around. Young readers will learn the true meaning of Christmas in this addition to The Berenstain Bears Living Lights™ series.”


Christmas Activity Books

My kids (and myself, really!) have always adored the Usborne Dolly Sticker books as well as Magic Painting books! These activity books will give you valuable minutes to get things done, like wrapping gifts, and give your kids something magical to do that is edifying and not just busywork!


Sticker Dolly Dressing The Nutcracker: A Magical Interactive Sticker Adaptation of the Classic Wintertime Ballet

Use the stickers to dress the doll characters in this exciting version of the The Nutcracker ballet. Clara’s uncle gives her a wooden nutcracker doll for Christmas, which, after a battle with the evil Mouse King, transforms into a real-life prince. Clara and the prince travel through a forest, filled with twirling snowflakes, before arriving the kingdom of the Sugar Plum Fairy, where trees are made of candy floss, cupcakes and candy canes. Clara eventually returns home. Has her experience been real or is it all an amazing dream?”


Sticker Dolly Dressing Christmas: A Festive Christmas Dress-Up Adventure with Glamorous Balls, Ice Skating, Ballet, Carriage Rides and More

“Dress up the dolls for the festive season with a range of colorful outfits!

Scenes include a glamorous masked ball, an ice skating adventure, a trip to the ballet, a magical carriage ride and lots more Christmassy activities.

With hundreds of stickers of dresses, cosy coats, beautifully-wrapped gifts, ice skates and tutus to get the dolls ready for the festive season.”


Enchanted Christmas Magic Painting Book

Magic painting books are no normal paint with water books, with lackluster illustrations and weak colors. These are absolutely beautiful with artful settings like sunsets, beautiful forests, and more. I absolutely love all of these books and can never get enough of them! Plus, the paint doesn’t get messy because you are *only* using water, not the palette style of books. It is easier and more fun at the same time.

Bring the magic of Christmas to life in this adorable interactive activity book!


Winter Wonderland Magic Painting Book: A Winter and Holiday Book for Kids – A Mess-Free Festive Activity with Water-Activated Unicorns and Northern Lights for Children 

“Filled with wintry whimsy, from ice-skating unicorns to snow castles, northern lights and other fantastical delights. Use the brush provided to sweep water over the designs and festive colors magically appear!

A mess-free way to keep children busy for long winter nights and for the holidays. Simply tuck the waterproof back flap under each page as it’s painted, to stop water from seeping through to the rest of the book.”


Notebook Doodles Christmas: Coloring & Activity Book (Design Originals) 32 Festive Designs of Reindeer, Penguins, Gifts, Snowflakes, Stockings, Trees, Treats, and More, on Perforated Paper

This fun and engaging coloring book for ‘tweens is filled with 32 festive designs of charming Christmas scenes, reindeer, penguins, presents, snowflakes, stockings, trees, animals, and so much more, from talented artist Jess Volinski.

Along with uplifting creative art activities for young girls and fill-in prompts with inspirational hand-lettered sentiments, Jess also includes instructions on basic coloring techniques, fully colored examples, and motivational quotes to go with every design.”


Building Your Own Christmas Reading Tradition

In our home, we keep all our Christmas books together on a special shelf. On December 1st, we bring them out and they become part of our daily rhythm throughout the Advent season. Some families like to wrap Christmas books and unwrap one each night. Others create a Christmas book advent calendar.

However you choose to incorporate these books, the key is consistency. When children know that certain books appear every December, they begin to associate those stories with the warmth and joy of the season. These books become part of your family’s story.

Looking for more book recommendations? Subscribe to my email list for monthly resources, suggestions, homeschool encouragement, and free printables like our recent Themed Stocking Stuffer Guide to help make every Christmas stand out in memory! The first one in the series focuses on Jane Austen ideas!

Christmas, Holidays, homeschooling, joy, printables

Creating a Joyful Christmas (When You’re Already Overwhelmed)

It’s December 9th, and if you’re feeling behind, you’re not alone.

The irony of Christmas is that a season meant to bring joy often brings stress instead. We’re supposed to be celebrating connection and wonder, but instead we’re frantically trying to remember if we bought something for Aunt Sarah or panicking about co-op or music teacher gifts at 10 pm.

Somewhere between the shopping lists and the wrapping paper, the actual joy can get lost.

What If Christmas Could Feel Different?

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about what makes a joyful home during the holidays – not a perfect one, but one where people actually feel peaceful and present instead of stressed and scattered.

And here’s what I keep coming back to: joy doesn’t come from doing everything. It comes from being intentional about what actually matters.

For some families, that’s elaborate baking traditions. For others, it’s simple candlelight and carols. There’s no single right answer – it has to do with what creates a seal of Real Christmas Joy in your family. The traditions and rhythms that make your people feel loved and connected.

The problem is, it’s hard to focus on those meaningful moments when your brain is constantly running background calculations: “Did I get something for the mail carrier? Where did I put that thing I ordered? Is there even time to wrap everything? Do I still have something coming in from Amazon? Is that Etsy package lost in the mail?”

My Secret Weapon This Year

This year, I decided to transform our homeschool room into Elf Gift Wrapping Central.

I know – it sounds fancy. But here’s what it actually looked like: I asked my husband to install an indoor lock with a key instead of the little turn tab on the school room door. I got a secret key (with a baby Yoda keychain that’s actually a leftover party favor – one of those rainbow bubble fidgets).

And suddenly, I had a dedicated space where gifts could live without playing Twister to reach my sari skirts and having to continue climbing over mystery boxes throughout the month of December.

It’s been luxurious.

I’m never going back to hiding things in the closet! Doing school in the kitchen for the month is just fine.

Not because it’s elaborate or Pinterest-worthy, but because it gave me one clear spot to manage the practical side of Christmas. Gifts go in there. Wrapping supplies live there. The door locks, the kids can’t accidentally discover surprises, and I don’t have to keep mental track of which closet corner holds what.

It’s also been nice to not have to get out all the gift wrap, tags, bows, etc. all over our bedroom floor for a gift wrapping session and then put them all up again in order to walk through the room! The school room Elf Gift Wrapping Central stays an explosion of Christmassy joy and I like it that way and I’m not bothering anyone doing it!

That simple shift – giving the logistics a home – has freed up so much mental space for the things that actually matter.

Getting the Practical Stuff Out of Your Head

This is where I’ve learned something important: I can’t create a peaceful, joyful atmosphere when I’m carrying mental chaos.

The gift-giving part of Christmas doesn’t have to be complicated, but it does need to be managed. Not because perfectionism matters, but because mental clutter steals your presence.

When I finally started writing down who I was shopping for, what I’d bought, and what still needed doing, something shifted. The background anxiety quieted. I could actually be present during evening cocoa instead of mentally running through my shopping list.

That’s why I created this gift list tracker.

Not because organization is the point of Christmas – but because getting organized creates space for what actually is the point: connection, wonder, rest, celebration.

You don’t need an entire room with a secret baby Yoda key (though I highly recommend it). You just need a system that works for you – maybe it’s a corner of your bedroom, a drawer in your office, or a simple printable that keeps your brain from running constant gift-list calculations.

How a Simple Tracker Changes Things

This printable has space for everyone you’re shopping for, gift ideas, budget tracking if you need it, and checkboxes for “bought” and “wrapped.”

Four different watercolor designs (cozy fireplace, glowing tree, cheerful snowman, soft winter scene) because even practical tools can be beautiful.

But here’s what it really does: it takes all those scattered thoughts and gives them a home outside your brain.

You can see at a glance what’s done, what’s not, and what you’re forgetting. No more mental gymnastics in Target. No more midnight panics. Just clarity.

And clarity creates margin. Margin for the things that actually make Christmas feel special in your home.

Your Practical Game Plan

If you’re feeling overwhelmed right now, here’s what I’d suggest:

Print the tracker. Get everything out of your head and onto paper. Every person, every gift idea, everything you’ve already bought.

Look at what’s actually left. You might be further along than you think. Or you might realize a few strategic gift cards and one good baking day will cover what remains. Either way, you’ll know.

Find your “wrapping central.” It doesn’t have to be a whole room with a keep-out-the-kids lock. A closet shelf, a storage bin under the bed, a designated corner – just somewhere that isn’t “scattered across three locations you’ll forget about.”

Decide what matters most. Once the practical stuff is managed, what do you actually want this season to feel like? An evening of Muppet Christmas movies? A neighborhood light walk? Reading Christmas stories by the tree?

Those moments don’t require perfection. They just require showing up – which is a lot easier when you’re not mentally managing gift lists.

Those are the things that make memories and provide a joyful aura around your home.

The Real Goal

Christmas in a joyful home doesn’t mean everything goes smoothly or looks Pinterest-perfect.

It means the people in your home feel loved. It means you’re present enough to notice the small magical moments – the way the lights look at dusk, the sound of laughter over hot chocolate, the quiet of Christmas morning.

It means you’ve created space for wonder instead of drowning in logistics.

The gift tracker? It’s just a tool. But it’s a tool that helps you get the practical stuff handled so you can focus on what you’ll actually remember years from now.

My locked closet with the baby Yoda key? Also just a tool. But it’s made this December feel different – calmer, more intentional, more joyful.

Get Your Free Gift List Printable

Download the Christmas gift list tracker by subscribing here – four beautiful designs, instant download, use it however works for your family.

🔓📚Current subscribers can find the printables in the Resource Library!

And then go create some joy. Light a pine-scented candle. Put on festive music. Make cocoa with extra marshmallows. Do something small that makes your home feel like the peaceful, warm place you want it to be.

You don’t need everything figured out. You just need to start somewhere. Starting is the hardest – and the most important – part.