REST and PLAY, by Elizabeth Verdick and Marjorie Lisovskis are two delightful books for newborns through two years old.
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Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 0-3, Photography, Bedtime, Board Books, Baby Books, Bedtime Books, Elizabeth Verdick, Marjorie Lisovskis, Add a tag
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Pirates, Ages 0-3, Ages 4-8, Friendship, Siblings, Imagination, Picture Books, Frogs, Baby Books, Author Showcase, Problem Solving, Baby Shower Gifts, Social Graces, Emotions & Behavior, Carole P. Roman, Captain No Beard, New Sibling Book, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Baby Shower Ideas, Add a tag
Fribbet the Frog and the Tadpoles: A Captain No Beard Story should be readily welcomed into the personal libraries of all expectant families with soon-to-be or new siblings.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Family, Ages 0-3, Siblings, Picture Books, Parenting, Baby Books, Author Showcase, New Baby, Breastfeeding, Parenting Books, Attachment Parenting, Social Graces, Dedicated Reviews, New Sibling Book, S. Marie Carlson, Toni Olson, Add a tag
Mama, Talk About Our New Baby is a great parental tool that supports breastfeeding, co-sleeping, baby wearing, and raising emotionally intelligent older siblings.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 0-3, Science, Chronicle Books, Board Books, Baby Books, Ocean Animals, Animal Books, Sea Life, Boards Books, Baby Animal Books, Lorena Simonovich, You Are My Baby Series, Add a tag
You Are My Baby: Ocean, by Lorena Simonovich, is a sturdy and colorful board book and another wonderful addition to the You Are My Baby series!
Add a CommentBlog: Kid Lit Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Children's Books, Poetry, Favorites, board book, children's book reviews, Board Books, baby books, Debut Author, Book Excerpt, baby shower gifts, 5stars, Library Donated Books, Debut Illustrator, in utero book, Jacqueline Boyle, read to baby in utero, Susan Lupone Stonis, Add a tag
Can’t Wait to Show You: A Celebration for Mothers-to-Be
by Jacqueline Boyle and Susan Lupone Stonis
Preliteracy Partners / Belly-Books 3/01/2014
978-0-9860511-0-4
14 page, 8 x 8 Board Book
Age: last trimester to 3+
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“Exciting results rom recent studies show the powerful effects of reading to babies in utero: a rhythmic, repetitive story read regularly during the last trimester will soothe your baby after he or she is born. It’s also been sown that sharing storied with pretern aies familiarizes them with the voices of their parents and other family members, and that babies can even absorb elements of language while in the womb. Such discoveries inspire the Belly Book Collection.”
Opening
“Hello in there, baby! I’m thinking of you
As you’re curled up inside me so small
Every joy we share
All my loving care
And I can’t wait to show you it all!”
Review
Can’t Wait to Show You consists of one poem of 10 5-line stanzas. The poem begins with one stanza on the first spread, two stanzas on the second spread, and alternates from there until the final one stanza spread. The rhyming scheme notation is a-b-c-c-b. If not for the first line standing alone, the 5-line stanzas are close to the limerick form.
The authors base their book on the idea that in the last trimester, the child can hear the voices outside of the womb and can remember those voices. This familiarity helps the child relax, find a happy mood, and may help the child at birth. Singing the poem will intensify this, as newborns can recognize repeated songs, which also has a calming effect. The process of reading to their yet-to-be-born child also helps the parents’ transition into parenthood and enjoy the nine-month gestation period.
The poem is event centered. Parents anxious to meet their child is the on-going theme consistently stated in the fifth line.
“Oh, I can’t wait to show you the . . . “
In the second stanza, they cannot wait to show their child the light of the sun through rainbows, suncatchers, and sunbeams. In the final stanza, the parents cannot wait to show the child their love. The poem is easy to find a nice consistent rhythm by which to sing the verses or simply read them aloud with ease. The meter is consistently perfect.
One of the most interesting features of Can’t Wait to Show You is the book’s shape. The edges and corners curve making the rounded book smooth and perfect for a baby-belly. The book is designed to comfortably sit atop the pregnant woman’s belly and, later, the child, as she or he sit in mom or dad’s lap listening to the now familiar poem.
The illustrations are beautiful. Each new spread advances the age of the child from third-trimester to toddler and then flows full-circle back to a newborn on the final spread. The babies and toddlers are happy bundles of baby fat and smiles; images that will be irresistible to most. The pages are thick, perfect for children’s grips. The weight of the book as a whole should help it stay in the given belly position.
I love the poem Can’t Wait to Show You. Here is my favorite spread; the fourth spread:
“If you try some bananas and peaches
Lick the spoon so they don’t go to waste
For your birthday I’ll make
Chocolate angelfood cake
Oh, I can’t wait to show you the taste!
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“Your blanky is warm, soft and snuggly
The splashy bath suds make you squeal
A kitten will purr
When you snuggle her fur
Oh, I can’t wait to show you the feel!”
The love of reading is acquired best when started early. Reading to your child in the womb is the best start, as long as reading to your child continues through the years. The beauty of the words and illustrations make Can’t Wait to Show You the perfect baby shower gift. It would also be a unique gift as unique as the poem inside the pages.
Can’t Wait to Show You is not a novelty book. Nor is it just for mothers. Fathers can and should read to their baby; getting to know the one person who will wrap him around their finger for a lifetime. Can’t Wait to Show You is destined to become a family favorite that lasts many years, and then becomes a cherished heirloom passed down to succeeding generations.
CAN’T WAIT TO SHOW YOU: A CELEBRATION FOR MOTHERS-TO-BE. Text and illustrations copyright © 2013 by Jacqueline Boyle and Susan Lupone Stonis. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, Preliteracy Partners / Belly-Books.
Purchase Can’t Wait to Show You: A Celebration for Mothers-to-Be at Amazon—Belly-Books—your favorite bookstore.
Learn more about Can’t Wait to Show You: A Celebration for Mothers-to-Be and Belly-Button Bookss HERE.
Meet author Jacquelilne Boyle at her website: http://jacquelineboyle.wordpress.com/
Meet author, Susan Lupone Stonis, at her website: https://thereadingwomb.wordpress.com/
Find Belly-Books at the website: http://belly-books.com/
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Also by Jacqueline Boyle

Dead Drop
Filed under: 5stars, Board Books, Book Excerpt, Children's Books, Debut Author, Debut Illustrator, Favorites, Library Donated Books, Poetry Tagged: baby books, baby shower gifts, board book, children's book reviews, in utero book, Jacqueline Boyle, poetry, read to baby in utero, Susan Lupone Stonis

Blog: Kid Lit Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: coffee table books, 5stars, Library Donated Books, Andrew Zuckerman, NonFiction, animals, photography, Chronicle Books, Series, Board Books, baby books, creatures, Add a tag
Creature Colors
& Creature Numbers
by Andrew Zuckerman
Chronicle Books 3/01/2014
978-1-4521-1668-6 / 987-1-4521-1667-9
Age 2 to 4 18 pages
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“Learn the rainbow with red snakes, orange fish, and yellow birds. Learn to count as two scorpions fight, four penguins waddle, and nine ants work. Andrew Zuckerman’s vivid pictures of fascinating animals from around the world will enthrall young readers and teach basic colors and numbers in a celebration of nature in two books that bring the wildly successful photographer’s work to a whole new audience. The up-close and personal photos of everyone’s favorite animals make these board books perfect educational tools for any child, and stunning works of art for animal lovers of all ages.”
Review
Creature Colors – The creatures represent ten different colors. Red snake), blue (parakeet), yellow (canary) are the primary colors and can make any other color. Green (frog), orange (bird), and purple make the secondary colors. Purple is not in the book. Black (bear), and white (snow owl), when blended in to any color will produce differing shades of that color. In addition to the primary, partial secondary, and the shading colors, the author adds the colors pink(flamingo), brown (seahorse), and gray (elephant).
Creature Numbers - Here, different animals than in the Creature Color book represent the numbers one to ten. I really like and appreciate that in Creature Numbers each animal is identified on the page. There is 1 kangaroo, 2 tigers, and 3 chimpanzees. In addition, the kangaroo is jumping, the tigers are playing, and the chimpanzees are running. The child will not only learn to count from 1 to 10, but will learn a new animal, and an action word on each spread. There are macaws, penguins, sheep, fish, and two animals identified by a body part rather than a name. The shark is fins and a spider is legs. I do not know why that is, unless the idea of 5 sharks or 5 spiders was creepy (I agree with the spider, where even one is creepy to me. No sense scaring anyone.)
The photographs are magnificent portraits of these wild animals. Only thing close to these would be an actual trip to the wild. Kids will love these pictures and will quickly decide on a favorite. Each animal is photographed against a white background, eliminating anything that might draw the child’s eye and attention away from the animal. According to Chronicle Books: “. . . Zuckerman utilizes a multitude of platforms to produce work that is systematically executed, conceptually based, and democratically presented. Minimalist in nature, Zuckerman aims to create atmospheres of clarity and neutrality to facilitate the viewer’s access to the material.”
The Creature board book series also includes Creature Sounds and Creature Baby Animals
(all $7.99). The Creature ABC
is a larger book with 120 pages of animals from alligator to zebra. This larger book is suitable for any age, and would be a magnificent way for anyone to learn the ABC’s.
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Adult books include Creature, a 300-page book with 175 animal portraits (ISBN 9780811861533, $60), Bird
, another 300 pages with 200 photographs of 75 different species of birds (ISBN 9780811870986, $60), and Flower
with 150 close-up photographs of exotic to everyday flowers species (9781452112169, $75).
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Kids will enjoy these animals, all expertly photographed by Andrew Zuckerman, a critically acclaimed filmmaker and photographer. Each book is an interesting way for children to learn numbers, colors, sounds, and baby animals, in addition to ABC’s with the larger edition of the Creature series. The pages are thick, making them easier for little fingers to turn without tearing. The glossy coating will easily let you wipe off a spot of jelly—ask me, I “tested” this feature. The smaller size is perfect for little laps.
If your child is fascinated with animals, there is no better way to introduce him or her to both the skills needed for kindergarten and a variety of animals. The children’s Creature series is a great introduction to the grand animal photography of Andrew Zuckerman at a fraction of the cost of his larger books.
CREATURE COLORS & CREATURE NUMBERS. Photography copyright © 2014 by Andrew Zuckerman. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, Chronicle Books, San Francisco, CA.
Learn more about Creatures HERE.
Purchase any of the Creature series at Amazon—B&N—BookDepository—Chronicle Books—your local bookstore.
Also available on iTunes.
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Meet photographer Andrew Zuckerman at his website: http://www.andrewzuckerman.com/
Find amazing kids books at the Chronicle Books website: http://www.chroniclebooks.com/titles/kids-teens
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Filed under: 5stars, Board Books, Library Donated Books, NonFiction, Series Tagged: Andrew Zuckerman, animals, baby books, Chronicle Books, coffee table books, creatures, photography


Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, children's illustration, baby, digital art, roberta baird, babies, artwork, baby books, houston, a mouse in the house, children's book art, www.robertabaird.com, Add a tag
Where did you come from, baby dear?
Out of the Everywhere and into here.
~George MacDonald, At the Back of the North Wind
I’ve been working a lot on middle grade art lately. I really like the preteen quirkiness, but baby books are fun to draw too.
So I’ve decided to also build up my younger portfolio as well.
Basically… I like to work in all areas.
Stay tuned!

Blog: newkidsbooksinoz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Board Books, Baby books, Add a tag
I Love My ABC and I Love My 123 Anna Walker (Scholastic)
Starring the gorgeous Ollie from Anna Walker’s I Love Ollie series of books come these brand new board books I Love My ABC and I Love My 1,2,3.
In ABC the letters are clearly formed in both upper and lower case and the characters easily identifiable with the other Ollie titles. Also great for encouraging talk between parent and child identifying the letters and the objects or animal with which they are associated.
In 123 again Ollie stars along with butterflies, beetles and host of other animals as well as a pair of gum boots and a few plants. A lovely addition to the usual counting book appears on the final spread where all the characters or objects counted previously return in their appropriate numbers to be identified in the garden by the reader.
Snugglepot and Cuddlepie Present First Words May Gibbs (Scholastic)
Generations of children have grown up with the May Gibbs classic Australian bush characters from the Gumnut Babies and with these new board books a new generation can join in.
In First Words each page features a Gumnut Babies character or plant and introduces appropriate words like hello, smile, food, walk, cuddle and goodnight. Each page features classic Gumnut Babies characters and plants with large sized lower case words and ample white space.
Royalties from the titles go to the Cerebral Palsy Alliance and the Northcott Society.
Also available Colours, 1, 2, 3, and First Words
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Blog: Picture Book Junkies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: baby books, alicia padron, just released, ladybird happy babies, Add a tag
Two new titles from the Ladybird Happy Babies Series are out today! Bathtime and Teatime. :o)
While I was working on them I learned "teatime" in the UK also refers to mealtime. I always thought it was the actual teatime at 5pm, you know, the one with delicious cookies and biscuits, hee! Anyway, this goes to show you that we learn something new everyday.
Teatime Baby and Bathtime Baby are cute little peep-through board books that show babies in their daily routines, bedtime, playtime, teatime and bathtime. The rhyming text describes what is happening in each picture, and baby looks through the hole in the page to find out what the baby in the book is doing next.
All the books in the series feature a cute teddy that gives clues to the baby reading the book. They also have a ladybird hidden somewhere on each page so baby has to play and find it.
The books are available in the UK but I recently found this site that ships around the world and the shipping is free. How great is that?
I love working on these little books. Pure joy! :o)
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Blog: Picture Book Junkies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: baby books, alicia padron, what i am working on week, Add a tag



Blog: Tara Lazar (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Children's Books, Picture Books, Children's Writing, Writing for Children, Board Books, Baby Books, Novelty Books, Salina Yoon, Opposnakes, PiBoIdMo 2010, Add a tag
by Salina Yoon
Toys, toys, toys! I love toys! They are often the inspiration to my novelty books—board books with interactive features. They are designed to be touched, pulled, squeezed and played with, so my books and toys are like cousins.
Colored stacking rings, the Connect Four game, wooden puzzles, rubber duckies, and even a football has inspired a book idea! And sometimes, it’s not even a toy at all. Random objects will inspire me. My husband’s toolbox, kitchen utensils, scrap fabric, a greeting card, and even a funny jack-o-lantern on Halloween! I can’t get away from ideas creeping into my head because I’m surrounded by objects. Needless to say, I develop a ton of ideas every year. About a dozen are usually good enough to publish. And the others crawl back into my deep, dark dummy closet of doom. (See photo!)
My books are concept- and format-driven, so I’m not looking for story ideas. I look for fun concepts that allow a child to interact in a meaningful way from the physical design of the book. Rock & Roll COLORS is an excellent example. The book has a hidden track within each narrow page that allow a shiny disk to roll back and forth when the book is tilted. It makes a nice, satisfying clunking sound when the disk hits the edge. Each side of the page has an image with die-cuts, so the foil comes shining through. Each spread focuses on one color, and both images on the page are that same color. It’s so simple, but effective!
So how does this help you if you’re not developing novelty books? I say keep an open mind! Even simple objects can inspire, if you let them. For the PiBoIdMo challenge, all you need are concepts.
Surrender to your imagination! I don’t actively try to create ideas as much as allowing ideas to come into my head. Allow your mind to be free! Relax. Smile. Enjoy the process. Like the Chinese finger trap, the harder you pull, the stronger it resists. Don’t stress too much about trying to think up great ideas. When they come a-knockin’, just invite them in!
Salina Yoon is the creator of over 150 innovative books for young children. She has been named a finalist for the CBC’s Children’s Choice Book Awards for K-2nd Best Book of the Year, for Opposnakes (S&S/Little Simon), received the Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Gold Seal awards for Little Scholastic TOYS (Scholastic/Cartwheel) and Rock & Roll COLORS (Scholastic/Cartwheel), and the Nick Jr. Fam
Blog: Imagination-Cafe Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: literature, baby books, tips for summer reading, get kids reading again, Add a tag

With the absence of a routine that the school year provides, summer can seem chaotic. It can also be a prime time for important reading skills to slip.

Read Together
Reading is a great way to connect with kids. Take around 15 minutes each day to sit down and spend some time in a story or book with a young reader. Use this time to monitor what your kids are reading, asking questions about what’s happening in a particular story and if they agree with choices the main characters are making. This is a simple way to encourage kids to take a deeper interest in a story and relate with it personally. Your kids will soon look forward to this time each day, developing their connections both with you and the reading process.
Celebrate!
There are several Summer Reading Rewards Programs to help support your kids, through your local library, book stores or restaurants. These can be found through an Internet search. Have your children choose their favorite programs and talk about the reading requirements and the rewards offered. Download and print the appropriate forms, and hang them within easy reach. Each day, your kids can mark what they read, getting closer to their Reading Rewards.
If you want to make your own system of challenge and rewards, use this reproducible Bookmark and Reading Log and this Summer Reading Calendar. Make a goal for each day, week and/or month to meet - such as reading minutes or total number of books to read - and decide what the rewards will be when your kids meet the goal. If you want kids to put in a little more effort into Summer Reading, here is a great Book Box activity, along with a printable Book Report form for kids to use.
Bingo is a great game regardless of the subject. To make your summer activities a little more book-oriented, print out this Reading Bingo Board. Each square on the Bingo Board has a genre or activity suggestion related to reading. Print one out for each of your kids and make summer reading a fun adventure!
Kelly Wilson writes for Teaching Resource Center in a regular column called “Kelly’s Corner.” Teaching Resource Center offers classroom teaching tools and resources designed to help K-3 students who are learning to read.
Oh they are absolutely gorgeous, Alicia!!!! Congrats on the new books! I really like the boy in his frog coat, so cute!
Thanks so much Maria!! Hee, hee.. my oldest (now 14) used to have a frog towel when he was a baby. Those are the mommy things that get imprinted on us forever I guess. :o)
Oh, I want, I want!!! :) Love this series! Your babies are the best!
Hee hee.. awww thanks Macdebbie!! xo
You know we are big fans of your books! Oooh, I want to smush those cheeks! Congrats, Alicia!
Wonderful news, Alicia! Your babies are super cute!
Congratulations, Ali. Another two beauties to add to the shelves.
This is so thrilling, Alicia!
I'm going to get Claudia to bring some of the baby series for our baby Gretchen when she comes from the UK
at the beginning of May!
Lovely! Congrats--looks so sweet!
Hee hee.. aww thanks Diandra!! :o)
Thanks so much Marcha!
Thanks Ggina! I'm sending P copies! xo
Hi Elizabeth, thank you so much! I hope baby Gretchen will enjoy them! *hugs* :o)
Thank you Michaele! :o)
These look precious, Alicat!! Your babies are so adorable.
Congrats Alicia! They are so cute!
Thank you Rozzita!! zo
Love your avatar JS! Thanks for the sweet words :o)
Love those babies! We've never encountered a less than stellar Ladybird book.
Thank you Perogyo! Yes, these Ladybird books are really wonderful for babies and toddlers. :o)