Wallace, Sandra Neil and Turk, Evan (illus.)
Marie's Magic Eggs: How Marie Procai Kept the Ukrainian Art of Pysanky Alive
February 10, 2026 by Calkins Creek
Copy provided by the Publisher
Ukrainian history is unfortunately filled with many tragic events, and young readers will be aware of the problems there currently with Russian. They may not know that the Ukranian people have a long history of trying to maintain their country, culture, and identity. Born in a small village in 1987, Marie and her family lived under various occupations, and eventually fled to Croatia. After her brothers left for North America, she made the trip herself at the age of thirteen, and ended up living with a cousin in Minneapolis. She worked in the vibrant Ukrainian community there, and started to try to replicate the Pysanky eggs that she made at Easter with her grandmother. She didn't have the dyes or equipment she needed, so improvised with using colors from paper and makeshift tools. She helped build a Ukranian church, and kept up her family traditions. After her son was killed in 1945, she helped welcome war refugees to further help her community. When her daughter took an interest in her art, Procai set up a Ukranian Gift Shop as a way to preserve the art of her culture. By 1972, there was such interest in Pysanka artists that Nationagl Geographic featured the family in an article. Procai went on to write books about decorating, and her business became the largest supplier of pysanka products in the world.
Wallace, whose family emigrated from Ukraine, is a vocal advocate for Ukranian identity. Her grandmother had a tool from Procai's gift shop, but she didn't find out about Procai until Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. It couldn't have been easy to gather information about Procai; the history of businesses is often lost to time, and folk artists often don't get the attention that they deserve. Luckily, her grandchildren agreed to speak to the author, and there are a good number of family photos from the mid twentieth century included in the back matter.
I might have to look up Procai's book; my cousin's father's parents were from Czechoslovakia, and she has made Pysanka eggs for fifty years. This is an art prevalent in several Slavic cultures, and doesn't get the widespread recognition that other arts and crafts do. Turk's art captures the color and style of the traditional egg designs.
This is a great book to celebrate Easter, and will perhaps encourage young readers to investigate other forms of egg decorating beyond the standard US dye tablets. Include this in displays or Ukranian culture or in ones celebrating artists along with Rogers and Innerst’s Joan Mitchell Paints a Symphony, Harvey and Wise’s Ablaze with Color: A Story of Painter Alma Thomas, Scott, Stinson and Soloy's A Tulip in Winter: A Story about Folk Artist Maud Lewis, Spangler and Sweet's Unbound: The Life and Art of Judith Scott, and Temple and White’s Wilhelmina Barnes-Graham: An Introduction to Her Life with Activities.
Zax, Helen Kemp and Eagan, Kiersten Eve (illustrator)
Little Bunny's To-Do List
January 6, 2026 by Harry N. Abrams
Copy provided by Young Adult Books Central
A small, white rabbit living in a hutch has a busy morning as he magically transform into a bow-tie wearing Easter bunny and makes all of his preparations for delivering eggs. He consults his lengthy to-do list as he gathers and Dye's eggs, harvests jelly beans from a tree, and knits a number of lambswool sweaters. After enchanting his giant egg basket, he takes off in the evening to deliver eggs. It's not all work, though; he has plenty of time to bunny hop with the garden gnomes. With all of the Easter baskets filled and eggs hidden everywhere, he hops home in time to drink some magic parsley tea and return to being a regular, and very tired, bunny. He snuggles with the other bunnies to dream.
Told in rhyming verse, this book shows Little Bunny being very productive, and even includes a fold out list at the end, complete with glittery check marks indicating that he got all of his work done. From a time management perspective, I was a little surprised that he left all of the work for the day before Easter; I rather wished this would also have showed some long range planning. The readers for this, however, are young enough that they probably have never even created a to-do list, so this is a great place to start. Zax and Evans have also written Little Witch's To-Do List and Little Elf's To-Do List (for Christmas).
The illustrations are befittingly pastel , with a good dose of sparkles. Little Bunny and his friends are all shown be upbeat, cooperative, and helpful. Little Bunny does take some breaks to have lemonade with his friends, who help him organize things, unwind wool, and have quite the party while dyeing the eggs. The end papers are delightful, with eggs, teacups, carrots, and flowers.
While there may never be another Easter picture book as completely perfect as Heyward's 1939 The Country Bunny and the Little Gold Shoes, there are a number of fun ones available. Take a look at Toht's Pick a Perfect Egg, Heim and Blanco's Stop That Bunny, Baker's Hap-Pea Easter, and Trukhan's The Great Big Egg Hunt for a veritable Easter basket of great titles.