36 Popular Monster Books That Kids Love (Ages 2 to 16) – Imagination Soup

Monsters can be sweet, giggly, smelly, scary, or creepy. what kind of monsters do your kids like? And which of these popular monster books will your kids love and want to read again and again?

Below, you’ll find picture books and chapter books filled with monsters that dance, won’t sleep, need haircuts, want to make friends, attack towns, and more.

You are reading: Children’s books with monsters

get ready for your next favorite story…

monsters in picture books

36 Popular Monster Books That Kids Love (Ages 2 to 16) Fingers For Lunch by Brandt Lewis, illustrated by Cori Dornfeld Little hands wiggle through the die-cut holes while the grown-up “monsters” read and “eat” yummy fingers. How fun!

monster books Muddle and Match Monsters: A mix-and-match book! by Stephanie Hinson Mix up the monster heads, bodies, and feet to create ogres, beasts, giants, and yetis.

The Monster at the End of This Book by Jon Stone, illustrated by Michael Smollin This is SUCH a funny book that you’ll read multiple times through and laugh every time. Grover tries EVERYTHING to stop you from turning the page — because of the monster at the end of the book. Are you getting nervous? You’ll be surprised when you meet the “monster.” (Don’t worry, parents, there is nothing scary at the end — it was Grover all along.)

nibbles the monster hunt by emma yarlett nibbles is a book monster who makes a monstrous mess in the boy’s books. first the boy chases nibbles but then joins him. she reads the minibooks about colors and numbers and looks through the holes.

Creature vs. Teacher A Book of Rhyme by T. Nat Fuller, illustrated by Alex Eben Meyer Exuberant illustrations show a monster creature and a teacher. The creature tries to get the teacher’s attention. When he does, it’s fun and giggles!

Ten Creepy Monsters by Carey F. Armstrong-Ellis Count down from 10 creepy monsters to 0 in this creepy rhyming book with ghoulish illustrations. Clever and entertaining with scary-ish Halloween illustrations.

36 Popular Monster Books That Kids Love (Ages 2 to 16) Have You Seen My Monster? by Steve Light Help this little girl search for her monster at the fair. Her monster loves the funhouse, the slide, and bumper cars. The illustrations are black and white except for the geometric shape featured on each page — octagon, rectangle, decagon, etc. This is a delightful search-and-find book.

Looking for a Jumbie by Tracey Baptiste, illustrated by Amber Ren Naya is a brave girl who goes out into the dark to search for a jumbie…even though her Mama says that jumbies are only in stories. “I’m looking for a jumbie. I’m going to find a scary one.” The refrain repeats as Naya searches in the dark in a beautiful turquoise woods where she meets other mythological monstrous creatures. She compares each creature to a jumbie (thick fur and big mouths) then invites them to join her search. At the end of the night, Naya and her new friends arrive back at her little house. Are jumbies real? Because now we know that Mama D’Leau, Papa Bois, Soucouyants, Lagahoo, and Douen are real and sleeping on Naya’s lawn. You will LOVE this picture book about mythology, monsters, and bravery!

How to Talk Monster by Lynn Plourde, illustrated by Mike Lowery A Little Monster startles Little Boy as he’s sleeping but what is he saying? And why does he keep trying to talk to Little Boy? At first, Little Boy is scared but then he helps Little Monster when he gets hurt and they become friends, playing together all night long.

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36 Popular Monster Books That Kids Love (Ages 2 to 16) Monster Trouble! by Lane Fredrickson, illustrated by Michael Robertson Winifred isn’t scared of the monsters who visit her bedroom. She loves them and thinks they’re cute. But they are annoying — they interrupt her sleeping and are smelly. She tries everything to get rid of them until she stumbles on the perfect solution — kisses! Monsters hate kisses. Funny!!

Boo Stew by Donna L. Washington, illustrated by Jeffrey Ebbeler A clever and brave heroine named Curly Locks saves the town with her unusual cooking! When Mr. Mayor’s house is overrun with Scares from the Toadsuck Swamp, the townspeople try to help. But every attempt just makes more Scares appear. Until Curly Locks wonders if violence isn’t the answer — but making them food might be the trick. And sure enough, Curly Locks give them a taste of her famous Boo Stew, makes them clean up, and gets them to agree to a trade: they’ll stay in the swamp if she cooks for them.

El Chupacabras by Adam Rubin, illustrated by Chas McCreery Wacky and fun, written in sentences that mix English and Spanish and Spanish and English, this modern folk story explores the chupacabra in a way that isn’t scary but more light-hearted. A farmer and daughter discover the goatsucker (chupacabra) has sucked one of their precious goats. So, the father asks the flower seller for help. She gives him magic powder which, when overused, makes a herd of gigantic goats! Now, they need the chupacabra’s help to suck out some of the air! Beautiful, earthy illustrations. “Hector had to fix everything, pero la dama de las floras lo ayudo.”

Tickle Monster by Josie Bissett, illustrated by Kevan Atteberry This picture book and tickle mitts arrive in a beautiful box. A monster arrives from Planet Tickle to bring joy and happiness to Earth. How? By tickling kids readers of this book! Cute, huh?

The Color Monster: A Pop-Up Book of Feelings by Anna Llenas Monster’s colors are all scribbly and mixed-up which means his emotions are, too. The little girl helps Monster separate his feelings on each page with fantastic pop-ups. I love the green calm page showing Monster in a hammock. The next-to-last page has fun pull-up tabs so kids can see inside each of the feelings jars. And the last page is the best surprise…

spike, the confused monster by susan hood, illustrated by melissa sweetkids will love the surprises in this book about a monster (an axolotl) named spike that is no bigger than a lily pad. But, when a very scary gila monster arrives, the monster, all the other animals in the pond run away. but not peak. watch what happens when spike meets the monster.

go to sleep, monster by kevin cornell george can’t sleep because he’s afraid of the monster under his bed. Her sister of hers anna gives the monster a stern talk and learns that gasp! the monster under the bed is afraid of the monster that lives under the floor who, in turn, is afraid of the monster under the room that she is afraid of. . . well, you get the idea. the monsters and the human children learn that everyone can be friends, which helps everyone sleep.

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Mind Your Monsters by Catherine Balley, illustrated by Oriol Vidal Monsters invaded Wally’s small town, scaring kids, smelling like rotten eggs, and causing big messes. Wally tries everything to get the monsters to stop. Finally, he says the right word: PLEASE. And that works! (Of course.)

My Teacher is a Monster! (No, I Am Not) by Peter Brown Bobby’s teacher (Ms. Kirby) is a scary monster who yells and keeps kids in at recess. You know the type. But one day Bobby sees his monstrous teacher at the park and Bobby helps her rescue her runaway hat. Together they feed the ducks and fly paper airplanes. And something really strange happens to Ms. Kirby. She doesn’t seem like a monster anymore. At least not until Bobby gets back to school…

I will fight monsters for youPicture Books to Teach Perspective (How You See the World) I Will Fight Monsters for You by Santi Balmes, illustrates by Lyona This is a parallel story picture book of a young girl and a young monster who are both frightened about sleeping because of fears about each other. Can the little girl and monster come together and see each other as something not scary?

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What Makes a Monster? Discovering the World’s Scariest Creatures by Jess Keating, illustrations by David DeGrand Monsters — real animal monsters — is a topic that kids will love reading about. Keating writes in a way that gives kids lots of information in a readable, engaging way. I love the design, too -it’s a mix of photographs, illustrations, cool fonts, and bright colors. What Makes a Monster is a must-read picture book filled with unexpected information about fascinating, dangerous animals. Are they real monsters?

Hattie & Hudson by Chris Van Dusen Hattie’s sweet singing draws a large green “monster” reminiscent of the Loch Ness Monster out of the lake’s depths. The two become good friends. Unfortunately, the lake’s other residents are terrified of the supposedly dangerous monster who Hattie has named Hudson. Hudson comes up with a brilliant idea to show the townspeople what they can’t yet see — his kind heart.

36 Popular Monster Books That Kids Love (Ages 2 to 16) Dining with Monsters! A Disgusting Way to Count to 10! by Agnese Baruzzi Turn this picture book sideways to read and lift-the-flaps to see what these horrible monsters eat — 1 spider, 2 frogs, 3 whales. Awesome bold graphic illustrations!

Monster School First Day Frights by Dave Keane Norm’s new school is full of hairy, scary, Larry monsters. But, Norm feels different because he’s not a monster. But, he can turn green like Hilda when she takes him for a wild broom ride. Kids love this hilarious, not-at-all-scary I Can Read easy reader book about monsters.

Ava the Monster Slayer by Lisa Maggiore, illustrated by Ross Felten We think Ava rocks – she’s the fierce monster slayer (and quite cute) who braves monsters in her basement to rescue stuffed Piggy. She is awesome, don’t you think?

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36 Popular Monster Books That Kids Love (Ages 2 to 16) Even Monsters Say Good Night by Doreen Mulryan Marts Avery doesn’t want to go to bed. She’s worried about the monsters under her bed and in the closet, too. Until her mom explains that monsters sleep in their own beds in their own houses. And Avery isn’t scared anymore. What a great way to help calm children’s nighttime fears, don’t you think?

monsters in chapter books

Notebook of Doom by Troy Cummings (Ages 6-10) Alexander discovers his new town is full of monsters! and he’s right in the middle of it all, especially after finding an old sketchbook and facts about monsters. fun with a touch of fear. these simple chapter books are hard to put down.

ghoulia: making new friends can be scary by barbara cantini (ages 6-9) ghoulia wants to make friends. but she is a zombie, so she is forbidden to make friends with the village children or else her family will be expelled from the village. When she hears the kids talk about Halloween, Ella Ghoulia realizes that she too can join in the celebrations. the kids are impressed with her costume until the ghoulia rips her head off. surprised, all they can do is watch. she and she watch until they are shot with joy, they love it and promise to keep the family secret from her. Charming full-color illustrations give this story lots of character.

Carlton Crumple Creature Catcher by David Fremont ages 8 – 12 Super fun and funny, this is a story about a naive kid named Carlton who decides to fight monsters who are actually his older brother. Nevertheless, Carlton learns how to fight monsters — and this knowledge comes in handy when he needs to save humanity from the monsters who will do anything for fast food burgers.

the curse of the hyena-man (a monstertown mystery) by bruce hale (ages 8 to 12) your children will love this new series of adventures full of of action and fantasy of the talented bruce hale. In this first book, Carlos and Benny notice strange behavior from his favorite teacher. they are convinced that he is becoming a man-something-or-other. Using his friend, comic book store owner, brains and courage to save their teacher, they must stop the original were-hyena from doing more, before it’s too late. Absolutely fantastic and fun, this is a must read new book.

36 Popular Monster Books That Kids Love My Monster Bubble Writer by Linda Scott (ages 8 – 12) Get your writers psyched about writing in cool letter styles with this fun new book of monster handwriting fun!

The Last Kids on Earth by Max Brallier, illustrated by Douglas Colgate (ages 8 – 12) Based on this book, you’d think the zombie apocalypse was totally fun. At least that’s how Jack approaches life and zombie fights. He and his best friend, Quint, live in an upgraded, well-defended treehouse where they plan for rescuing his crush June (she doesn’t need rescuing being quite capable) and fighting zombies and monsters. Illustrations throughout make this even more appealing to read and imagine. Delightful. Who would have thought?!

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