This post may contain affiliate links.
By Melissa Taylor
Posted onUpdated on
Share
Pin
Post
Don’t forget about nonfiction books for 2nd graders around 7 and 8 years old! It’s also fun to read informational fiction with fictionalized elements to learn facts, too– which are gateway books to straight nonfiction.
When you read nonfiction with your growing readers in the primary grades, especially in second grade, teach them about text features that make nonfiction books different than fiction books.
Notice the text features of nonfiction together. Look for what makes nonfiction different than fiction. Things like:
- table of contents
- captions
- graphics
- titles and subtitles
- bolded words
- glossary
Here are my top recommendations to keep your 7-year-olds in 2nd-grade reading nonfiction at an appropriate reading level.
Let your kids pick books about things that interest them– it’s very motivating to have a choice of reading material!
NONFICTION BOOKS FOR ALL AGES
Nonfiction Reading Comprehension Strategies
BOOK LISTS BY AGES
All Picture Book Biographies
Activity Books
Nonfiction Books for 2nd Grade, 7-Year-Olds
We Dig Worms!by Kevin McCloskey
I love this Toon Early Readerwitheye-popping illustrations and one sentence of text per page that explainssomething about worms. The art is painted on recycled grocerybags which makes for a gorgeous, earthy feeling throughout.
Go Wild! Pandasby Margie Markiarian
This book is a beautiful way for younger readers ages 6 to 9 to learn about pandas with easier text and plenty of photo support and captions.
How Birds Sleep writtenby David Obuchowski, illustrated by Sarah Pedry
Read about 20 different birds and where they sleep. From the Black-legged Kittiwake who sleeps on the choppy waves of the ocean to the Sandhill crane who sleeps on one leg while others in the flock watch for predators, this is a fascinating book about interesting birds and their sleeping habits. Add to that beautiful blue-colored illustrations, and you’ll feel cozy and sleepy while reading about these sleeping birds.
Go Wild! Sea Turtlesby Jill Esbaum for National Geographic Kids
Use this new Go Wild! series with your early elementary readers to learn how to read nonfiction text for information.Full-color photographs, labels and captions, and colorful and readable text.
All About Plants: Ada Twist, Scientist The Why Fileswritten by Andrea Beaty and Dr. Theanne Griffith
Packed full of information, this informational book hits the right spot for primary ages.Full-color photographs, diagrams, labels, cartoons, and informational text answer big questions like “How do they eat?” and “Do plants need air like me?“I like this book — the writing and format are excellent. However, I wish this book include a table of contents and a glossary.
Mars: Earthlings Welcomewritten by Stacy McAnulty, illustrated by Stevie Lewis
Not nonfiction per se but informational fiction, this first-person narration fromMars‘s perspectiveshares all its many features of Mars.Like two moons and 37 more minutes in a day! It’s funny, entertaining, and very informative. I would love to use this in a writing class to teachvoice,point of view, and even organization.
Fox Explores the Nightwritten by Martin Jenkins, illustrated by Richard Smythe
Anocturnalfox searches for food in a busy city. She finds supper in someone’s backyard then returns home. It’s a purposefully simple book with guided questions in the back such as “Can you find examples of different light sources in the book?“
Not a Monsterwritten by Claudia Guadalupe Martinez, illustrated by Laura Gonzalez
As you learn about the not-a-monster axolotl, you’ll also learn the color words in Spanish.Watch the egg to growing fins, the color roja, then swim under a moon the color blanca. See the axolotl search for food among the roots of flowers rosados. Readers will read about these adorable salamander creatures, their behaviors, and how pollution is affecting their canal habitat in Mexico City. Bravo for this lovely picture book that does triple duty — entertains kids, educates us about the axolotl, and teaches us about los colores!
Stone Age Beastswritten by Ben Lerwill, illustrated by Grahame Baker-Smith
Kids will love this interesting oversized book about the cool creatures from the Stone Age.Each two-page spread is filled with a mesmerizing illustration and accompanied by fascinating descriptions of the creature along with a sidebar of facts, including a world map of its location. For Siberian Unicorn, the author writes, “Unicorns in fairy tales are normally dainty and elegant, but this spectacular real-life beast was a gigantic mass of fur and muscle.” Read about the Wolly Mammoth, Elephant Bird, Wonambi, Saber-Toothed Cat, Cave Lion, Dire Wolf, and more! A new favorite!!
What’s Inside a Caterpillar Cocoon? and Other Questions About Moths & Butterfliesby Rachel Ignotofsky
Just wait until you see the gorgeous illustrations throughout this book. I could frame them all!Learn all about moths and butterflies, starting with their differences, their life stages, their metamorphosis, their anatomy, and more interesting information about their diet, mating, and spreading pollen.Kids will love reading about these important insects. Perfect for primary-grade classrooms and homes.
The Indestructible Tom Creanby Jennifer Thermes
Kudos to author/illustrator Jennifer Thermes!She’s made Tom Crean’s biography into a mesmerizing, heart-pounding adventure of a story — which it was.Tom’s a sailor who takes three trips to Antarctica, the most perilous being the famous Endurance voyage with Captain Shakelford. Their ship freezes and sinks. Survival seems unlikely. But somehow, the crew makes it to land, where they climb through a glacier range to get help. Incredible writing with stunning illustrations.
Honeybee: The Busy Life of Apis Melliferawritten by Candace Fleming, illustrated by Eric Rohmann
Amazing,gigantic illustrations give us a bees-eye view of a honeybee’s lifefrom her birth to the days of working in the hive, guarding the hive, and searching for nectar. Beautifully written and illustrated, this book accomplishes being an informative book about the life-cycle of bees that sensitively ends with a reflection of our honeybee’s accomplishments (“She has visited thirty thousand flowers…Her work is done.”), her final flight in the warm air, and the birth of a new honeybee.
The Toad: The Disgusting Critters Seriesby Elise Gravel
Visually captivating with interesting, easy-to-read text that is informative and sometimes hilarious. I’m a fan of this kid-friendly nonfiction book series! (also read:The Worm,The Fly,andThe Rat)
Fly Guy Presents Scary Creatures!by Tedd Arnold
Get 5 books in 1 in this large-sized book filled with these level 2 titles:Sharks, Dinosaurs, Insects, Bats, andSnakes.Fly Guy and Buzz visit places like the aquarium or the museum to learn about different creatures.Colorful drawings and photographs illustrate the topics about which they’re learning with an appealing layout. The text of facts and conversation bubbles are just right and comprehensible for growing readers.
Pizza: A Slice of Historyby Greg Pizzoli
Pizza fans, check out these tasty tidbits, history, and facts about your favorite food.Where did pizza originate? Greece or Persia? Or Naples, Italy when a man named Raffaele Esposito created a pizza with tomatoes. One or two sentences per page, this informative book hits the right spot for ages 4 to 8 year olds.
Over and Under the Canyonwritten by Kate Messner, illustrated by Christopher Silas Neal
A mother and son take a hike in a desert canyon where animals shelter from the hot sun.Overhead the kestrels glide and eagles dive, along the walls tarantulas creep and geckos scoot. The pair see a roadrunner devour rattlesnakes, a mule deer gallop away, and wildflowers blossom. When the sun fades for the day, mom, dad, and son eat supper and crawl into their tent while coyotes howl and the insects sing a desert-night lullaby. Informative while being interesting and magical.
The World’s Best Jokes for Kids Volume 1by Lisa Swerling & Ralph Lazar
Each of these jokes is illustrated with I really love because it gives struggling or new readers extra picture support for decoding and comprehension. This series (volume 2 is here) shares jokes that will make your kids laugh, groan, and share with all their friends.
My Little Book Manateeswritten by Hope Irvin Marston, illustrated by Stephanie Mirocha
Perfect for early elementary-age readers,read all about the life of a mother and babymanateeas he grows with his birth, behavior, food, and problems with pollution and speed boats.Vivid verbs and lots of sounds words throughout make this extra engaging. “Munch! Her huge teeth looked like crinkle-cut french fries. She chewed very fast. Every day she chomped down one hundred pounds of plants.” Very well-done!
Shall We Dance?by Robin Page
You’ll love these creatures who high-step and tap off the pages with vivid verbs, informational facts, and colorful illustrations. “Turtles tickle… Eagles cartwheel… Crabs wave.” Each page features a creature and its strut, spin, or shimmy, plus an informational paragraph. Fun, exciting, and fact-filled!
Plants Fight Backwritten by Lisa J. Amstutz, illustrated by Rebecca Evans
What a well-done, fascinating book!On each two-page spread, clever rhymes show how plants protect themselves and more non-rhyming text explains and elaborates on that information.For example, “Some plants deliver a peppery punch to mammals who might try to much them for lunch. // Rabbits like to eat most garden plants. But they don’t touch chili peppers! That’s because chili seeds taste very hot to mammals. The hot seeds don’t bother birds.“
What Do They Do With All That Poo? written by Jane Kurtz, illustrated by Allison Black
There’s potty humor, and then there are books literally about poop. Learn about the poop of different zoo animals — pandas, hippos, elephants, hyenas, bats, and more. You’ll read what’s in each animal’s poo, the shape and color, and other pertinent facts. “Each rhino’s poop has its own unique smell. Rhinos smell dung to gather information about one another.” Then, the book answers the title’s question –what does the zoo do with so much poop? Well, they put it in trucks and dump it into landfills, send some to scientists, or make compost.
Evidence! How Dr. John Snow Solved the Mystery of Cholera written by Deborah Hopkinson, illustrated by Nik Henderson
It’s London, 1854, and people in a neighborhood are dying of a disease called cholera, for which there was no cure. Dr. John Snow thought he figured out why the disease was spreading so he gathered evidence by interviewing the affected people. Even though there wasn’t a cure, when the water access was stopped, the cholera stopped spreading. This historical picture book shows a real life medical detective solving problems using deductive reasoning and evidence. It’s a great book to read to understand the scientific method, how discoveries are made, and history. The writing is excellent (of course) and the art gives the book a vintage feel.
Whale Fall Exploring an Ocean-Floor Ecosystemby Melissa Stewart, illustrated by Rob Dunlavey
Do you know about a whale fall and the creatures who feed on a whale’s carcass?Stewart shares the process as a sequential, lyrical story starting when the whale dies and continuing with scavengers arriving to eat different parts. “Sleeper sharks smell the whale, too, but they swim slowly through the frigid water. When they arrive, they feast on skin and blubber.” The whale, in its death becomes food for other creatures—even its bones—for about 50 years, until every trace of the whale is gone. It’s pretty amazing!
Sun and Moon Togetherby Ethan Long
Long’s created a community (Happy County) withsilly cartoons and stories that explain factual information while engaging the reader’s attention.Learn about the Sun and the Moon, the water cycle,the solar system, and delight in stories about characters like Wilbur and Orzo Bright whose hot air balloon pops and sinks to the bottom of the ocean. There’s so much to learn, see, and do in this entertaining book.
Volcanoes written by Nell Cross Beckerman, illustrated by Kalen Chock
The writing in this spectacularly illustrated book SINGS and INFORMS and DELIGHTS. Vivid verbs, figurative language, poetry, and exposition, this nonfiction gem is a must-own because it’s a masterpiece of writing. Use it to teach earth science as well as writing craft. In fact, you’ll be able to model for growing writers the crafts of word choice, figurative language, voice, fluency, research to exposition, and more. This book is an essential, wonderful addition to all classrooms, libraries, and homes.
Thomas Jefferson’s Battle for Science: Bias, Truth, and a Mighty Moose! written by Beth Anderson, illustrated by Jeremy Holmes
Thomas Jefferson was a founding father of the United States but in this story, you’ll learn that he was a passionate naturalist who loved science most of all. When a European writer published misinformation about the nature of the Colonies, it infuriated Jefferson. So, Jefferson set out to prove the misinformation wrong and set the record straight with accuracy. He researched, questioned, and analyzed so he could write his own accurate book about the nature found in the Colonies. I love the illustration’s mixed-media style and earthy color palette.
Beginners United States Atlas National Geographic Kids (2020)
A MUST-OWN BOOK! Updated for 2020, this is a gorgeous, easy-to-use oversized atlas perfect for ages 4 to 12. Each state gets a two-page spread with a large map, a small map showing full-color photographs, the state’s location in the U.S., important facts, land and water features, history about the state. Organized by region, it’s easy to find what you’re looking for. The text is simple and readable, perfect for primary grades like 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grades.
All the Birds in the Worldby David Opie
As the narrator talks about what makes birds birds, the kiwi bird asks “What about me?” on every page. Eventually, we’ll learn the answer to the little bird’s question…even though she doesn’t fly, has no tail, and has a beak with nostrils, sheispart of the bird family. It’s awonderful, inclusive book with gorgeous illustrations of birds of all kinds.Valuable back matter gives readers a key to the names of the birds on each page.
The Blobfish Bookby Jessica Olien
I LOVE how creative this book is with a cartoon-like blobfish with a big personality who interjects said personality during the book’s photograph and textual information about life in the deepest parts of the ocean. Perfect text-to-picture ratio (aka. not too much!) makes this a nonfiction home run!
Darwin’s Super-Pooping Worm Spectacularby Polly Owen, illustrated by Gwen Millward
Charles Darwin knew that earthworms were special–he just had to prove it. So he used thescientific methodto hypothesize, test, and observe the worms. He realized that the worms were special because of their poop. Worm poop helps plants grow and that is poop-tastic! Who knew!? This book is sure to be popular with kids and adults — it’s fun and informative.
BUGS! Animal Planet Amazing Animal Facts Chapter Booksby James Buckley, Jr.
The Animal Planet chapter books are in full color with photographs, illustrations, and kid-friendly design. The text size itself is perfect for elementary readers, it’s slightly bigger than typical nonfiction books of this length with decent white space in between the lines and around it. Finally, I’m impressed with the way this book series delivers factual information without dumbing it down or making it too difficult to read. Amazing Animal Facts Chapter Books is a stellar, highly recommended science chapter book series just perfect for elementary classrooms and libraries.
Creep, Leap, Crunch! A Food Chain Storywritten by Jody Jensen Shaffer, illustrated by Christopher Silas Neal
The first half of this book is a cumulative food chain story that starts with the sun and the plants, then continues to the smallest prey, a cricket that eats grass.Each page adds on a predator who eats the prey— the mouse eats the cricket, the snake eats the mouse, all the way up to a brown bear eating the fox. Back matter explains more about the forest and the animals.This is a perfectSTEM read aloudintroduction to food chains andforest biomes.
Pink is for Blobfish: Discovering the World’s Perfectly Pink Animalsby Jess Keating
These aren’t your princess pink variety of pink animals. No! In fact, these are gelatinous blobfish, hairy tarantulas, naked mole rats, and more — that just happen to be pink. Greatwriting pairs perfectly with photographs and cartoons. I love this book!
The Brain Is Kind of a Big Dealby Nick Seluk
Kids will learn so much about the brain in thiswell-done, humor-filled bookwith pacing and flow that will hold readers’ attention. Plus, they’ll love the cartoon panel illustrations and the text-to-picture ratio.
The Wing Wing Brothers’ Math Spectacular!by Ethan Long
I’m a big Ethan Long fan, and this book blew me away, it was so funny and educational. (Hard to do.) Plus, it’s a bedtime favorite, which I found, well, surprising. Math for bedtime? In this book,we meet the performing Wing Wing brothers: Willy, Woody, Walter, Wendell, and Wilmer. Cartoon illustrations depict their antics in three acts.
Caterpillar to Butterflyby Laura Marsh
Simple text matches each beautiful photograph. These books arebright, colorful, and informative — just perfectfor anybeginning reader.
Courageous Creatures and the Humans Who Help Them I Survived True Storiesby Lauren Tarshis
Four compelling stories of animals and humans will keep readers engaged.From carrier pigeon hero of WW I to cheetah cubs adopted by a human, these will share true stories for any animal lover. Filled with lots of black-and-white photographs and factual information that supports each story. For example, read about echolocation related to the dolphin story and general information about marine animals. Highly recommended.
Dogsledding and Extreme Sports: A nonfiction companion to Magic Tree House #54written by Mary Pope Osborne and Natalie Pope Boyce, illustrated by Carlo Molinari
I learned a lot from this little nonfiction book; it’s packed full of interesting information about many extreme sports, such as open water swimming, the Iditarod, and the X Games.SEE ALL of the Magic Tree House Fact Tracker Books.
You Can Be a Paleontologist! National Geographic Kidsby Scott D. Sampson, Ph.D.
Each section of information begins with a question like “How do you find fossils” then answers the question using text, photographs, and informational insets. Dinosaur fans will be excited to learn just how scientists find, store, study, and figure out more about the dinosaurs they study — all from the bones. Clear information with enticing photographs make this an excellent choice for 7 year old dinosaur and science enthusiasts.
Hockey Then to Wow! Sports Illustrated Kids
Whenever I volunteer in the school library, I see groups of kids huddled up reading sports facts books just like this one. From the beginnings of hockey to the present day, readers will learn about old style skates to current skates, gear including the outfits, famous players, coaches, and teams. For hockey players and fans, this is a nonfiction must read series.
More Book Lists:
Books for 5- and 6- year olds
Books for 2nd Graders, 7-year olds
Books for 3rd Graders, 8-year olds
Books for 4th Graders, 9-year olds
Books for 5th Graders, 10-year olds
Books for 6th Graders 11-year olds
Books for 7th Graders, 12-year olds
YA Books
Nonfiction Book Lists by Age
Picture Book Biographies
Melissa Taylor
Melissa Taylor, MA, is the creator of Imagination Soup. She's a mother, former teacher & literacy trainer, and freelance education writer. She writes Imagination Soup and freelances for publications online and in print, including Penguin Random House's Brightly website, USA Today Health, Adobe Education, Colorado Parent, and Parenting. She is passionate about matching kids with books that they'll love.