Learn more
These promotions will be applied to this item:
Some promotions may be combined; others are not eligible to be combined with other offers. For details, please see the Terms & Conditions associated with these promotions.
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
OK
Planet Kindergarten Kindle Edition
--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
This clever picture book will prepare young explorers to boldly go where they have never gone before: Planet Kindergarten. Suit up for a daring adventure as our hero navigates the unknown reaches and alien inhabitants of this strange new world. Hilarious and confidence-boosting, this exciting story will have new kindergarteners ready for liftoff!
- LanguageEnglish
- Grade levelPreschool - Kindergarten
- Lexile measure520
- PublisherChronicle Books LLC
- Publication dateMay 20, 2014
- ISBN-13978-1452136165
Fire Tablets
Customers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
Review
"The inventive approach of both author and artist will give anxious children a creative way of looking at their new experiences, as explorers of a new frontier."--Shelf Awareness
"A genius way to ease kids into the new adventure that is kindergarten."--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Will help readers understand that kindergarten really is out of this world."--School Library Journal
"Both kids and parents will delight in the cheerful exuberance of Prigmore's style!" -Maureen Palacios, Once Upon a Time, Montrose, CA
"Planet Kindergarten is the most imaginative book I have seen about starting school."--Kid Lit Reviews
"Visual excitement and madcap humor."-The New York Times
"Gives anxious children a creative way of looking at their new experiences, as explorers of a new frontier."--Jenny Brown, Twenty by Jenny
"Sure to comfort and amuse many a new space traveler and the grateful teachers who will read this aloud over and over."--The Horn Book
"The first day of class takes on the dimensions of a cosmic mission in this imaginative tale."--BookPage
"Demystifes the brave new world of kindergarten, making this mission a stellar success."--School Library Journal Curriculum Connections
Review
For one brave boy, kindergarten isn’t just a grade—it’s a destination. He gets to school via rocket (one that looks suspiciously like his father’s hatchback), and considers his classmates to be aliens, including two that could be relatives of Cousin It. The boy adjusts to “zero gravity” (“We have to try hard to stay in our seats. And our hands go up a lot”), discovers that he likes space food, and freaks out during naptime: “Is the room running out of oxygen?” Prigmore’s manic digital art gives a nod to Jetsons-era cartoons, while Ganz-Schmitt’s metaphor will ring true with intrepid readers. Ages 3–5. Author’s agent: Jennifer Unter, the Unter Agency. (May)"
A genius way to ease kids into the new adventure that is kindergarten."
--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Kindergarten isn't just a grade-it's a destination."
--Publishers Weekly
"Both kids and parents will delight in the cheerful exuberance of Prigmore's style!"
--Maureen Palacios, Once Upon a Time, Montrose, CA
Kirkus Reviews ★ 2014-05-14
A genius way to ease kids into the new adventure that is kindergarten.In an imaginative ruse that's maintained through the whole book, a young astronaut prepares for his mission to Planet Kindergarten. On liftoff day (a space shuttle-themed calendar counts down the days; a stopwatch, the minutes), the small family boards their rocket ship (depicted in the illustrations as the family car), and "the boosters fire." They orbit base camp while looking for a docking place. "I am assigned to my commander, capsule, and crewmates." Though he's afraid, he stands tall and is brave (not just once, either—the escape hatch beckons, but NASA's saying gets him through: "FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION"). Parents will certainly chuckle along with this one, but kindergarten teachers' stomach muscles will ache: "[G]ravity works differently here. We have to try hard to stay in our seats. And our hands go up a lot." Prigmore's digital illustrations are the perfect complement to the tongue-in-cheek text. Bold colors, sharp lines and a retro-space style play up the theme. The intrepid explorer's crewmates are a motley assortment of "aliens"—among them are a kid in a hoodie with the laces pulled so tight that only a nose and mouth are visible; a plump kid with a bluish cast to his skin; and a pinkish girl with a toothpick-thin neck and huge bug eyes.Sure to assuage the fears of all astronauts bound for similar missions. (Picture book. 3-7)
School Library Journal--07/01/2014
PreS-K— A child bids farewell to his parents (who are sent back to their own planets) and begins his first mission on Planet Kindergarten. He is joined by intergalactic aliens, all reporting to a commander whose desk is littered with apples. The gravitational field is different: "We have to try hard to stay in our seats. And our hands go up a lot." Projects include exploration outside the capsule, keeping logs, and, most challenging of all, extended rest time. "Abort mission," the homesick space traveler thinks. Then he remembers what's said at NASA: "Failure is not an option." Before he knows it, he's in splashdown—back home— and training for his next mission. Ganz-Schmitt exhibits a fine mix of sensitivity and pizzazz in approaching the challenges that children face. With the help of Prigmore's superpowered animation-style illustrations, she offers a story that will help readers understand that kindergarten really is out of this world.
--Susan Weitz, formerly at Spencer-Van Etten School District, Spencer, NY
Review
For one brave boy, kindergarten isn’t just a grade—it’s a destination. He gets to school via rocket (one that looks suspiciously like his father’s hatchback), and considers his classmates to be aliens, including two that could be relatives of Cousin It. The boy adjusts to “zero gravity” (“We have to try hard to stay in our seats. And our hands go up a lot”), discovers that he likes space food, and freaks out during naptime: “Is the room running out of oxygen?” Prigmore’s manic digital art gives a nod to Jetsons-era cartoons, while Ganz-Schmitt’s metaphor will ring true with intrepid readers. Ages 3–5. Author’s agent: Jennifer Unter, the Unter Agency. (May)"
A genius way to ease kids into the new adventure that is kindergarten."
--Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Kindergarten isn't just a grade-it's a destination."
--Publishers Weekly
"Both kids and parents will delight in the cheerful exuberance of Prigmore's style!"
--Maureen Palacios, Once Upon a Time, Montrose, CA
Kirkus Reviews ★ 2014-05-14
A genius way to ease kids into the new adventure that is kindergarten.In an imaginative ruse that's maintained through the whole book, a young astronaut prepares for his mission to Planet Kindergarten. On liftoff day (a space shuttle-themed calendar counts down the days; a stopwatch, the minutes), the small family boards their rocket ship (depicted in the illustrations as the family car), and "the boosters fire." They orbit base camp while looking for a docking place. "I am assigned to my commander, capsule, and crewmates." Though he's afraid, he stands tall and is brave (not just once, either—the escape hatch beckons, but NASA's saying gets him through: "FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION"). Parents will certainly chuckle along with this one, but kindergarten teachers' stomach muscles will ache: "[G]ravity works differently here. We have to try hard to stay in our seats. And our hands go up a lot." Prigmore's digital illustrations are the perfect complement to the tongue-in-cheek text. Bold colors, sharp lines and a retro-space style play up the theme. The intrepid explorer's crewmates are a motley assortment of "aliens"—among them are a kid in a hoodie with the laces pulled so tight that only a nose and mouth are visible; a plump kid with a bluish cast to his skin; and a pinkish girl with a toothpick-thin neck and huge bug eyes.Sure to assuage the fears of all astronauts bound for similar missions. (Picture book. 3-7)
School Library Journal--07/01/2014
PreS-K— A child bids farewell to his parents (who are sent back to their own planets) and begins his first mission on Planet Kindergarten. He is joined by intergalactic aliens, all reporting to a commander whose desk is littered with apples. The gravitational field is different: "We have to try hard to stay in our seats. And our hands go up a lot." Projects include exploration outside the capsule, keeping logs, and, most challenging of all, extended rest time. "Abort mission," the homesick space traveler thinks. Then he remembers what's said at NASA: "Failure is not an option." Before he knows it, he's in splashdown—back home— and training for his next mission. Ganz-Schmitt exhibits a fine mix of sensitivity and pizzazz in approaching the challenges that children face. With the help of Prigmore's superpowered animation-style illustrations, she offers a story that will help readers understand that kindergarten really is out of this world.
--Susan Weitz, formerly at Spencer-Van Etten School District, Spencer, NY
About the Author
Sue Ganz-Schmitt, childrens book author, mother, and philanthropist, is passionate about helping children and families globally. She is the cofounder of an AIDS orphanage in Haiti, has traveled to China to help medically challenged orphans, and set up a birthing clinic in rural India. She now lives in Los Angeles with her two daughters and husband. She produces childrens musical theater, has sung on Broadway in Rent, and contributes to local paper.
Product details
- ASIN : B00GOJT7XM
- Publisher : Chronicle Books LLC; Reprint edition (May 20, 2014)
- Publication date : May 20, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 7.9 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Not enabled
- Enhanced typesetting : Not Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Print length : 36 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,021,087 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,633 in Children's New Family Experiences Books
- #2,836 in Children's Issues in School Books
- #7,110 in Children's New Experiences Books
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

SUE is an award-winning children’s book author, musical theater producer, SCBWI member, and philanthropist. She holds an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts in writing for children and young adults. Sue has performed in RENT on Broadway, run a marathon, and pursues other improbable and exciting challenges—as often as she can.
Her books include THAT MONSTER ON THE BLOCK, NOW, I'M A BIRD, PLANET KINDERGARTEN, PLANET KINDERGARTEN:100 DAYS IN ORBIT, THE PRINCESS AND THE PEANUT: A ROYALLY ALLERGIC FAIRYTALE, and EVEN SUPERHEROES GET DIABETES.
Sue has served as a NASA Social Media correspondent, a volunteer for The Planetary Society, and a space advocate representing the Space Exploration Alliance to Congress. She has also written and produced a STEAM video featured by The Planetary Society (The Galaxy Girls Save Pluto).
You can often find Sue at her home in the Los Angeles mountains with her eyes to the stars.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 2, 2016My grandson loved this book! He's really into space, planets, rockets, and everything associated. I got this for him about a week before he started kindergarten and he loved it! My suggestion is that you read it by yourself first and think about ways you can apply the concepts and images to your child before you read it to him/her. It will become a favorite and you can really create a bond through this book with your child's anxiety about beginning kindergarten. It's as much fun for you as it is for your child.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2018Read this to my class of 4 & 5 year olds (many students are going into kindergarten in the fall) and they all loved it. I also gave it to my nephew for a Pre-K graduation gift and he loved it so much he wanted to read it again. The pictures are very cool and the story is very sweet. I would definitely buy this again :)
- Reviewed in the United States on October 25, 2021My son loves it. We read it nearly every night for over a month once Kindergarten started. Fun little play on what happens during their day.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2015The illustrations in this book are fantastic. My 5.5 and 3.5 year old didn't really understand the parallel between the mission to space & mission to Kindergarten, but nevertheless its a cute book.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2021This book is precious and tells a wonderful story about starting kindergarten. My son loves all the colors and graphics! Well done.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 20, 2014I got this from my husband who knows the illustrator, I read it to my kinder class at the end of school, loved it. The other kinder teacher read it, her class loved it. It is definitely about starting kinder, but a good literature type discussion can happen at any time of the year. I would highly recommend this, it's cool, but gets the message across.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2016This is just the cutest story! I teach Kindergarten and can't wait to share it with my students the first week of school. It is told as if the boy is an astronaut but instead of launching into space, he's going to Kindergarten. My students who are obsessed with all things space will just adore this story!
- Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2020Very clever and entertaining. My grandson loved it except for the fact that he had to do school at home over the computer!
Top reviews from other countries
- TeaLoverReviewed in Canada on July 1, 2015
3.0 out of 5 stars Meh
Not my fav children's book. Found it very "busy". My son did not like it at all.