CCBC-Net Archives

[CCBC-Net] Baby books -- Todd Parr

From: Mayra <mayra>
Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2005 20:08:40 -0600

I can't believe no one has mentioned the Todd Parr books. They are not exactly baby books, but many two year olds love them as well as my first graders. The bright colors, patterned sentences, and good messages make them a hit with the kiddos. Some titles I remember right now:

Underwear Do's and Don'ts Things that Make you Feel Good This Is my Hair It's Okay to Be Different The Peace Book The Friends Book Zoo Do's and Don'ts The Mommy Book The Daddy Book

Plus a lot more that I can't remember right now.

And now he has one about reading! (The title is something like 'Reading Makes you Feel Good', can't remember right now)


mayra in milwaukee

-----Original Message----- From: ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
[mailto:ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu] On Behalf Of maggie_bo at comcast.net Sent: Monday, November 07, 2005 7:00 PM To: MShuttleworth at slv.vic.gov.au; ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] Baby books -- Peepo

Peek-a-Boo was, hands down, my favorite book to read to my own babies once they were just past the boardbook stage (although I guess it comes as a boardbook now). Another Ahlberg book was also a favorite: Each Peach Pear Plum. The mother-goose and fairy-tale inspired rhymes are just made to order, and the fun of searching for the characters never grows old for toddlers, even after they've done it 100 times. So fun for a toddler to share this book with a grown-up who hasn't seen it before (a visiting grandparent or aunt or uncle) and proudly point out all the interesting discoveries.

Maggie Bokelman

-------------- Original message --------------

>
>
>
>
> I wasn't aware that the Ahlbergs Peepo underwent translation for
American
> readers. I wonder how it would read as Peek-a-boo. As a parent we read
and
> read and read this and I still love it. This book is worth a thesis
alone.
> Why? I think it teaches children (and their parents) to look. It
guides the
> eye, teaches to make connections within scenes and across pages.
>
> There are so many dynamics at work: The immediate family ("she wants
him on
> her knee") the way dad's clothes are casually hooked upon the end of
the
> bed, the adventures in the park and the presence of both mother and
> grandma...the tassles blowing in the breeze. The historical setting
lends a
> quiet memoir-esque quality and an authenticity that you can't find in
their
> metafictional stories (Jolly Postman, etc) When I look at Bob Graham's

> books (Let's Get A Pup, Red Woollen Blanket, etc I see the same
rumpled
> charm that permeates Peepo. It wears its cleverness, its genius, on
the
> inside if you like.
>
> The text is easy and unforced. It has the same comfortable, rounded
> slightly worn feel that the pictures have.
>
>
> But what caps it for me is the final scene at the top of the stairs.
We are
> looking at the mirror, its rainbow rim, and the mirror (or the family
> including the baby) are looking back at the reader. It's the detail
that
> makes me love it. Peepo is seamless and brilliant. I don't think the
> Ahlbergs did a better book.
>
>
>
>
> Mike Shuttleworth
> Program Co-ordinator
> Centre for Youth Literature
> 328 Swanston Street
> Melbourne VIC 3000
> PH: 03 8664 7262
> FAX: 03 9639 4143
> http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/youthlit/
>
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Received on Mon 07 Nov 2005 08:08:40 PM CST