Celebrate Winter with Language: Great Books to Boost Speech & Communication Skills
Winter brings cozy, indoor moments with loved ones, snowy days, and some of our favorite family reading time! Books are not only wonderful for bonding, but they also provide rich opportunities to build vocabulary, grammar, storytelling, and social communication skills, especially when you read with intention.
Below are some of our favorite winter-themed children’s books and tips for using them to strengthen speech and language skills.
1. The Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats
Why it’s great:
A classic winter story with simple, descriptive language that’s perfect for toddlers and preschoolers.
Speech + language targets:
Vocabulary: snowy, cold, footprints, sled
Describing scenes and actions
Sequencing: “first, next, last”
Try this activity:
After reading, ask your child to describe their favorite part of the story or sequence the events using “first… then… finally.”
2. Owl Moon by Jane Yolen
Why it’s great:
A gentle, descriptive story about a child and parent searching for an owl on a winter night. This book is perfect for imagination and rich language.
Speech + language targets:
Descriptive language (quiet, soft, shadows)
Verb vocabulary (crunching, walking, listening)
Inferencing (“Why do you think they were quiet?”)
Try this activity:
Pause before key pages and ask:
What do you think will happen next?”
“How do you think the character feels?”
3. The Mitten by Jan Brett
Why it’s great:
The Mitten is a predictable, repetitive tale about animals squeezing into a lost mitten, which is super fun and engaging for young listeners.
Speech + language targets:
Prediction/inferencing (“Who will fit in the mitten next?”)
Animal vocabulary
Repetition & prosody (expression while reading)
Try this activity:
After reading, let your child predict the next animal and explain why it could or couldn’t fit!
4. Snowmen at Night by Caralyn Buehner
Why it’s great:
Snowmen at Night is imaginative and playful and really has little ones thinking - what do snowmen do after dark?
Speech + language targets:
Imagination & storytelling
WH-questions: Who? What? When? Where? Why?
Describing actions
Try this activity:
Ask your child to create their own snowman night adventure in a few sentences or draw it and describe it.
5. Bear Snores On by Karma Wilson
Why it’s great:
This book is rhythmic and repetitive, which is great for expressive language practice.
Speech + language targets:
Rhyming and rhythm
Repetitive phrases (also great for articulation practice)
Character actions and emotions
Try this activity:
Talk about how each animal feels when it enters the cave (e.g., “happy? cozy? surprised?”)
Tips for Making Reading Richer for Language Development
Here are some simple ways to turn reading time into powerful language learning moments:
Pause and Prompt
Ask simple questions as you read:
💬 “What do you think will happen next?”
💬 “Why do you think the character feels that way?”
Talk About Words
Pick 2–3 new or interesting words and talk about them:
What do they mean?
Can you use it in a sentence?
What’s a similar word?
Encourage Retell
After the story, invite your child to tell it back in their own words.
Make It Interactive
Act out parts of the story, draw favorite scenes, or create a sensory bin related to the story (e.g., cotton “snow” and toy animals from The Mitten).
Some Final Thoughts
Reading together is one of the most powerful ways to support speech and language development, and winter’s cozy vibes make it even more enjoyable. Whether your child is just starting to say words or ready for longer stories, these books offer great opportunities to build communication skills in natural, meaningful ways.
If you’d like book recommendations tailored to your child’s goals (like articulation, word order, social communication, etc.), reach out to us at info@littletalkerspeech.com!