Brittany Pomales Kidlit Haha Week,Publishing Kidlit Haha Week 2026 Day #5 – IF IT PLAYED IN PARIS, WILL IT PLAY IN PEORIA with Besty Bird

Kidlit Haha Week 2026 Day #5 – IF IT PLAYED IN PARIS, WILL IT PLAY IN PEORIA with Besty Bird

Kidlit Haha Week 2026 Day #5 – IF IT PLAYED IN PARIS, WILL IT PLAY IN PEORIA with Besty Bird post thumbnail image

Top 10 Funny International Children’s Books From the Last 5 Years


31 thoughts on “Kidlit Haha Week 2026 Day #5 – IF IT PLAYED IN PARIS, WILL IT PLAY IN PEORIA with Besty Bird”

  1. I am hoping the top 10 international funny books are available in the US because I need to read a few of them!

  2. Fascinating post, thank you yet again. I want to get my hands on all of these, but when Betsy said at the end of the description of Freya and the Snake—“Doesn’t sound funny. Is hilarious.” — hooked me.

  3. I agree with Stacey R. Freya and the Snake caught my attention and I’d love to see how they make the situation humorous! Thanks for sharing the list, Betsy!

  4. Thank you for sharing all this; lots to think about! It makes me wonder, are more kids reading internationally where broader concepts make it though the publishing industry because there is more of an opportunity for kids to find their unique favorite book that gets them into reading? 1st choice from the International Book List that I would like to check out is Best Thing Ever! by Beatrice Alemagna; sound like a great story concept that both kids and the parents reading the story to the kids will be able to relate to!

  5. Thank you for introducing me to funny international children’s books. I am sincerely excited to read them. The one jumps out at me is Champ by Payam Ebrahimi, ill. Reza Dalvand, translated by Caroline Croskery…. maybe because I was tangled in the web of family expectations as a kid and can’t wait to see how it plays out in this story. Thanks again!

  6. Aiko and the Planet of Dogs sounds like my kind of book combining three of my favorite things dancing, dogs, and space! Why didn’t I think of that?
    I also am fascinated by the popularity of Butt Detective even though I’d never heard of it! I live in a small town with a large Korean population and I just checked the library website. Sure enough, there’s a large collection of them but I think they’re all in Korean.

  7. Oh my gosh, this post is brilliant. And kids here would LOVE Butt Detective! I am going to put these books on hold through my library — I especially am interested in the 90s one. Thanks for this great post!

  8. Fabulous post. Best Thing Ever! sounds like a must read. As a mother who watched her typically well-behaved son have a total meltdown at Toys R Us over a toy, I need to read this book.

  9. This is a great list, Betsy. I’m looking forward to checking out all these titles. Two books stand out as must reads: Freya and the Snake and My Presentation Today is About the Anaconda. They will be at the top of my list. Thanks for posting!

  10. Thanks for expanding our reading list — I’d especially like to read MINE! A STORY OF NOT SHARING.
    Your article also makes me wonder how this situation works in reverse. Which American picture books make international audiences laugh? What sort of humor tickles U.S. or North American kids, but doesn’t land well elsewhere? Such an interesting topic!

  11. Thanks for this list, Betsy! I’ve read some of the Aiko books, so I’d love to get my hands on Aiko and the Planet of the Dogs. I also need to read My Presentation Today Is About the Anaconda.

  12. What an eye-opening post! Freya and the Snake has me intrigued! I’d love to read that one. As a mom with the excavator song stuck in her head, I wouldn’t mind giving Diggers, Dozers & Dumpers: Small Stories About Big Machines a try too!

  13. A dog conga line- yes, please! These sound fantastic and are now must reads! I used your book, POP! Goes the Nursery Rhyme, as a comp for my latest subbed book. Thank you!

  14. Interesting post. The book I’d read is True Colors: Growing Up weird . In the 90’s
    I’d read it but first I’d have to correct the spelling of the Elise’s name! Never thought I’d see ‘our’ name in print. LOL

  15. So many good choices on the list, but I think you sold Freya and the Snake best – I really need to know how that topic was made funny.

  16. I love the sound of My Presentation Today Is about an Anaconda. The title alone makes me want to dive right in!

  17. Tough choice, but I’d check out Freya and the Snake first! Thanks for sharing this awesome list. I hope to see that little butt on US shelves soon. 😆 My kids would love it.

  18. BETSY: THANK YOU for INSPIRING us to look outside our own culture-box so we can discover a WHOLE WORLD of other stories. I took an international children’s literature class in college, and it was TRULY EYE-OPENING! We have SO MUCH to learn from other cultures! At the same time, we come to understand how we share SO MUCH in common. I’m EXCITED to read the books you’ve introduced us to. I’m ESPECIALLY interested in HOW WE SHARE CAKE, as that’s something I’ve NEVER been good at and NEED A LOT of HELP with! However, I do believe I’m a HOPELESS CASE in this department (NO PROMISES!!!)!

  19. Freya and the Snake has me so intrigued! My daughter would not quickly forgive anyone to hurt a living thing. As a toddler, she stopped her tricycle on the sidewalk so ANTS could cross.

  20. Looking to see which ones my library has now. It’s a bit of a tie for me, but since I have to pick one, I’m going with My Presentation Today is About the Anaconda. I’m a sucker for funny animals.

  21. I just put *all* these books on hold at my library. But as a 90s kid myself, I’m most intrigued by True Colors. Also, what is WRONG with us Americans?! It makes me so sad that we miss out on so many funny books.

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