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Reading With Your Kids Podcast

Reading With Your Kids Podcast

Written by: Jedlie Circus Productions Inc
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Reading With Your Kids is all about encouraging parents to read with their kids, and cook with their kids, and do activities with their kids, and experience tv, movies and music together. In other words, our podcast is all about helping parents build stronger relationships with their kids.Jedlie Circus Productions, Inc
Episodes
  • Love Over Blood
    Feb 22 2026

    In this heartwarming episode of Reading With Your Kids, Jed Doherty welcomes Brooklyn teacher and award-winning author Torrey Maldonado to celebrate his debut picture book "Just Right."

    Torrey shares the deeply personal story behind the book: his relationship with his niece, whom he helped raise and who later asked him to walk her down the aisle because he had been "the only dad" she'd ever known. That love and chosen-family bond lives at the center of Just Right. Torrey and Jed talk about how love doesn't have to be biological to be real or powerful, and how kids can find their "just right people" in uncles, aunts, teachers, and neighbors, not just parents.

    Torrey explains that Just Right shows how small, everyday moments can lift a child from "down to up," and how cherishing people matters more than any gift. He also describes his writing style as "roller coaster fiction"—short, tight, joyful stories kids want to ride again and again. Balancing nearly 30 years of teaching in New York City with writing, he says he writes "spoonful by spoonful," like slowly tunneling out of Shawshank.

    Later in the episode, Jed chats with Danna Smith, author of "Zenguin." Danna introduces listeners to a sweet, anxious little penguin who learns calming techniques like breathing, yoga, and simple mindfulness. Drawing on her own childhood anxiety, Dana talks about giving kids (and parents) a gentle, playful toolbox to recognize big feelings and find their calm—one breath, and one page, at a time.

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    58 mins
  • Chained, Bruised, and Reading: The Real Magic Behind Houdini
    Feb 20 2026

    In this episode of Reading With Your Kids, Jed welcomes picture book author Barb Rosenstock to talk about her captivating new title, Houdini's Library. Drawing on her deep love of history and storytelling, Barb shares how a tiny sign at the Library of Congress—"Houdini Collection" —sparked years of research and ultimately this book.

    Barb and Jed dive into the real Harry Houdini: not just the "handcuff king" and daring escape artist, but a relentless learner who built a massive working library of magic books. Barb explains that Houdini, who likely had only a second‑ or third‑grade education, used books to teach himself everything—from escapes to showmanship to public relations. They talk about how he studied older tricks, respected the magicians who came before him, and combined ideas to create something new—powerful lessons for kids about persistence, creativity, and hard work.

    Barb also highlights the team effort behind both Houdini's performances and her own books, reminding listeners that big achievements are almost never solo acts. She connects Houdini's discipline to athletes like Kobe Bryant: the first in the gym, the last to leave, still practicing even at the top.

    Later in the episode, Jed chats with 12‑year‑old author Shravya Khandelwal, whose middle grade novel The Curse of Judice blends suspense, demons, and a brave heroine named Sarah. Shravya talks about her love of spooky, supernatural stories, how curiosity pulls kids into mysteries, and what it feels like to be a young, published author balancing school, big dreams, and book promotion.

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    55 mins
  • Coming Of Age In The Limelight
    Feb 19 2026

    In this episode of Reading With Your Kids, we first head to 1990s New York City with Broadway actor and author Andrew Keenan-Bolger, here to celebrate his YA novel Limelight. Set in 1996, the story follows Danny, a shy Staten Island teen who lands a spot at LaGuardia High School, the famed performing arts school. Andrew explains that Danny is not a version of his younger, confident, Broadway‑kid self; instead, he wanted to write about someone with their "nose pressed to the glass," feeling like an outsider looking in—just like so many real teens do.

    Andrew talks about moving to New York as a child actor, the sensory overload of Times Square in the 90s, and how that era's gritty, transforming city—along with the evolving realities of queer life post–AIDS crisis—shaped this queer coming‑of‑age story. He leans into the darkness of the period: toxic masculinity, homophobia, racism, and misogyny, while still keeping the book tender and often funny. Theater deeply informs his writing—his sense of rhythm, character, and ensemble—and writing Limelight alone gave him a new sense of confidence and purpose. He also dreams of adapting the book for TV or film someday.

    Later in the episode, we travel to Hartford, Connecticut, to meet Devon Torres, author‑illustrator of the rhyming picture book Freddy the Frog. Devon shares how Freddy's playful, confident energy is meant to remind families of unstructured playground fun in a screen‑saturated world. Drawing on his love of art, support from his wife, and inspiration from teachers, Devon hopes the Friendables series will blend vibrant illustrations, joyful play, and gentle learning for young readers.

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    55 mins
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