By Taro Gomi
I really like this author. These baby books are visually appealing and really simple.
This story in particular is so easy for a baby to understand. Look, there's Mama! Oh, no, where is she? There she is!
Over and over again.
My son goes around the house saying, "MAMA MAMA! NO! NO MAMA!"
He would make me read this book all day if I was willing.
Showing posts with label 2 and under. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2 and under. Show all posts
Monday, May 23, 2016
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Where is Baby's Belly Button
By Karen Katz
This one is also very popular. It's a lift-the-flap book. Plus it's all about body parts. This is one of the very few books that my youngest will ask to read.
There is one African-American baby and there is one East-Asian baby and the rest are white. Equal numbers of girls and boys.
So that's something.
This one is also very popular. It's a lift-the-flap book. Plus it's all about body parts. This is one of the very few books that my youngest will ask to read.
There is one African-American baby and there is one East-Asian baby and the rest are white. Equal numbers of girls and boys.
So that's something.
Friday, April 15, 2016
Friday Post - Bathtime
We've gotten a lot of bath toys, we've made a few purchases, and we've
tried a lot of different hand-me-downs. Here is a list of toys and
gadgets that worked for us.
My sister had a proper baby bath, like the one pictured here, and it worked really well for her. It would have worked with our first baby, but we had a little baby sling and a large oval shaped bin instead. It worked fine. We had to use that same big tub for baby number two, because when we borrowed my sister's special little bathtub he started trying to roll himself out of it the minute he had any muscle. This is the kid who at 8 or 9 months was crawling ON HIS BACK USING HIS HEAD FOR LEVERAGE.
Somehow we managed to get by bathing the first baby without ever needing a faucet cover. We got one immediately for baby number two, and good thing too, because he's managed to bash his head against it numerous times. He's also figured out how to take it apart, because it has a pretty simple design. That hasn't caused us problems, though. Yet.
The bathtub floor stickies were essential for baby number two as well, because he gets excited and decides to run or stomp in the bath. Even with the stickies he has fallen down at least four times. But I don't want a full mat because they're so much harder to clean. (He's pretty much learned his lesson at this point, anyway.) These can just be shoved to dry in the toy holder.
We got the kids a rubber duck, of course. We bought the big one, of course. I didn't really think about how big 32 centimeters was when we purchased it. It's huge. The kids like to pretend to ride this thing. They're both CRAZY about it and talk about it even when it isn't bathtime. He's their friend.
Now, the rubber duck holds air and has a hole in it, which is a big mistake for a bath toy. They fill with mildew and become dangerous and impossible to clean. My husband cut a slit in its mouth so that we can bleach the inside of it and water can pour out of it easily. It will be the only squeezy toy we get.
The kids like to pour water. These Ikea stacking cups are fantastic for that, because they have holes in them, and slits for pouring, and they stack.
The kids also like to drink bathwater, so sometimes I skip putting these in.
These cups are no longer available. :(
This Green Toys Tugboat is our favourite toy for pouring, by far, though. And we have TWO of them in different colours. Which means they each get to hold one. They can't figure out how to drink from it, either. Green Toys does a whole load of awesome bath toys that are designed to drain properly, pour and float.
We fill out the tub with a pack of foamy letters and numbers. We got them when my daughter went through her alphabet obsession. My son doesn't seem to be that interested, so I don't know that he'll catch on as fast as she did. Also, we're missing a load of them. But he likes to stick them to the tub, or the wall, or his sister...
That's pretty much it for toys. The kids are satisfied with that, and it's easy to keep track of. We do have a random bath book, but I use it for diaper changes so that I don't have to worry about their bathroom reader getting poopy. I'll have to get more for potty time.
We store everything in one of these sliding bath toy trays. Everything else we looked up was hung from a suction hook. We had suction hooks on a few things in our bathroom and they were constantly falling down in the middle of the night. Plus, the toy holders made with netting take forever to dry and are a pain to get into.
I have a drawer right next to the tub that this rack fits in perfectly, so when everything is dry, I just shove it in the drawer. We are completely satisfied with it.
My sister had a proper baby bath, like the one pictured here, and it worked really well for her. It would have worked with our first baby, but we had a little baby sling and a large oval shaped bin instead. It worked fine. We had to use that same big tub for baby number two, because when we borrowed my sister's special little bathtub he started trying to roll himself out of it the minute he had any muscle. This is the kid who at 8 or 9 months was crawling ON HIS BACK USING HIS HEAD FOR LEVERAGE.
Somehow we managed to get by bathing the first baby without ever needing a faucet cover. We got one immediately for baby number two, and good thing too, because he's managed to bash his head against it numerous times. He's also figured out how to take it apart, because it has a pretty simple design. That hasn't caused us problems, though. Yet.
The bathtub floor stickies were essential for baby number two as well, because he gets excited and decides to run or stomp in the bath. Even with the stickies he has fallen down at least four times. But I don't want a full mat because they're so much harder to clean. (He's pretty much learned his lesson at this point, anyway.) These can just be shoved to dry in the toy holder.
We got the kids a rubber duck, of course. We bought the big one, of course. I didn't really think about how big 32 centimeters was when we purchased it. It's huge. The kids like to pretend to ride this thing. They're both CRAZY about it and talk about it even when it isn't bathtime. He's their friend.
Now, the rubber duck holds air and has a hole in it, which is a big mistake for a bath toy. They fill with mildew and become dangerous and impossible to clean. My husband cut a slit in its mouth so that we can bleach the inside of it and water can pour out of it easily. It will be the only squeezy toy we get.
The kids like to pour water. These Ikea stacking cups are fantastic for that, because they have holes in them, and slits for pouring, and they stack.
The kids also like to drink bathwater, so sometimes I skip putting these in.
These cups are no longer available. :(
This Green Toys Tugboat is our favourite toy for pouring, by far, though. And we have TWO of them in different colours. Which means they each get to hold one. They can't figure out how to drink from it, either. Green Toys does a whole load of awesome bath toys that are designed to drain properly, pour and float.
We fill out the tub with a pack of foamy letters and numbers. We got them when my daughter went through her alphabet obsession. My son doesn't seem to be that interested, so I don't know that he'll catch on as fast as she did. Also, we're missing a load of them. But he likes to stick them to the tub, or the wall, or his sister...
That's pretty much it for toys. The kids are satisfied with that, and it's easy to keep track of. We do have a random bath book, but I use it for diaper changes so that I don't have to worry about their bathroom reader getting poopy. I'll have to get more for potty time.
We store everything in one of these sliding bath toy trays. Everything else we looked up was hung from a suction hook. We had suction hooks on a few things in our bathroom and they were constantly falling down in the middle of the night. Plus, the toy holders made with netting take forever to dry and are a pain to get into.
I have a drawer right next to the tub that this rack fits in perfectly, so when everything is dry, I just shove it in the drawer. We are completely satisfied with it.
Labels:
2 and under,
2 years,
3+ years,
4+ years,
5+ years,
alphabet,
baby,
Friday post,
Montessori,
toddler,
toy
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Five Little Monkeys Reading in Bed
Written by Eileen Christelow
This is part of a series about the 5 little monkeys that is obviously inspired by the "jumping on the bed" rhyme. (There is a book in the series based on the rhyme, too, though I haven't read it.)
I got this one out in desperation because my son hated every book in the house save one Sandra Boynton book that we were all tired of.
He really didn't like this book, either, but didn't mind flipping through it on a car trip.
It's not written particularly well; you have to bend the sentences a bit to make them match up rhythmically. The story is okay. The monkeys make so much noise reading books in bed that Mom takes the books away, and then gets caught reading them herself. My daughter thought it was funny.
I kind of really like that it's a single mom with five kids. And, like, quintuplets or something. That's brutal.
There are lots of books in this series. Pretty much any kid who has heard the original rhyme would go crazy for any of these books, like my daughter did. We ended up buying the one where they make the birthday cake, and I don't mind having it around the house, even though I have the same complaints about it.
This is part of a series about the 5 little monkeys that is obviously inspired by the "jumping on the bed" rhyme. (There is a book in the series based on the rhyme, too, though I haven't read it.)
I got this one out in desperation because my son hated every book in the house save one Sandra Boynton book that we were all tired of.
He really didn't like this book, either, but didn't mind flipping through it on a car trip.
It's not written particularly well; you have to bend the sentences a bit to make them match up rhythmically. The story is okay. The monkeys make so much noise reading books in bed that Mom takes the books away, and then gets caught reading them herself. My daughter thought it was funny.
I kind of really like that it's a single mom with five kids. And, like, quintuplets or something. That's brutal.
There are lots of books in this series. Pretty much any kid who has heard the original rhyme would go crazy for any of these books, like my daughter did. We ended up buying the one where they make the birthday cake, and I don't mind having it around the house, even though I have the same complaints about it.
Labels:
2 and under,
2 years,
3+ years,
animals,
baby,
board book,
book,
repetition,
toddler
Thursday, April 7, 2016
Moo, Baa, La La La!
By Sandra Boynton
My kids both love this book. My youngest makes me read it repeatedly.
Mostly because it has animal noises that he likes to copy.
My daughter likes this page, because she's starting to understand jokes.
The ending only made sense to my daughter after she was three. She now makes funny noises and laughs when it's finished. It's nice to have a book that I can read to both of them at the same time.
My kids both love this book. My youngest makes me read it repeatedly.
Mostly because it has animal noises that he likes to copy.
My daughter likes this page, because she's starting to understand jokes.
The ending only made sense to my daughter after she was three. She now makes funny noises and laughs when it's finished. It's nice to have a book that I can read to both of them at the same time.
Labels:
2 and under,
2 years,
3+ years,
animals,
baby,
board book,
book,
picture book,
toddler
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Dive In!
By April Jones Prince
Illustrated by Michelle Berg
This is a favourite in the house. There are fights.
The writing is really bad. Nothing makes any sense to babies, or even toddlers. They should have not tried to rhyme any of it.
But the concept is cute. Working mice coming out with all of their machines and equipment to fill the bathtub with water and toys.
All of the movable pieces are super sturdy. Nothing has been broken on this book yet! My toddler is mesmerized every time he sits down with it.
Illustrated by Michelle Berg
This is a favourite in the house. There are fights.
The writing is really bad. Nothing makes any sense to babies, or even toddlers. They should have not tried to rhyme any of it.
But the concept is cute. Working mice coming out with all of their machines and equipment to fill the bathtub with water and toys.
All of the movable pieces are super sturdy. Nothing has been broken on this book yet! My toddler is mesmerized every time he sits down with it.
Labels:
2 and under,
animals,
baby,
board book,
book,
dexterity,
rhymes,
toddler
Monday, March 28, 2016
We're Going to the Farmers' Market
By Stephan Page
You know me. I'm a pretty big hippie. And I'm all about fruits and veg and farmers' markets. But I picked this book up primarily because the art was appealing. It was the nicest looking book at the library that week and, believe me, I looked through each one. I thought maybe my son would recognize the food and be mildly interested. Plus it's in verse, and he will currently only sit still for board books with verse.
Well, the verse is not metered. They tried and failed. Badly. So my son hated it because he's so damn picky.
But the pictures are still nice. Lots of geometric shapes and symmetry and simple colours and patterns. It's very pretty.
I wish there was no text. They tried to do a version of "To Market, To Market to Buy a Fat Pig" and got lost in this sustainability message. It's so heavy handed that it felt like they were trying to make my children feel bad for straying from the 100 mile diet.
Plus, this meal. Like, I would eat that, sure. And I always serve good food for my kids. We eat food from just about any culture and keep a variety of spices in the house. But my one year old is not eating fish and olives. In fact, he's teething and refuses anything that isn't blended into mush and snuck into his mouth in between bites of cracker. And furthermore, with a baby in the house, is it possible to make labour intensive meals? No, really, I'm curious. When do I get to stop making casseroles? Also, I don't take kids to market under the age of 3 if I can help it because grabbing groceries and paying for them with an angry toddler in your arms is the worst experience.
Is this a board book that teaches toddlers about everything they're missing out on because they can't get it together and eat real food and behave at the store? Or is this is a board book for 6 year olds? I can't decide.
You know me. I'm a pretty big hippie. And I'm all about fruits and veg and farmers' markets. But I picked this book up primarily because the art was appealing. It was the nicest looking book at the library that week and, believe me, I looked through each one. I thought maybe my son would recognize the food and be mildly interested. Plus it's in verse, and he will currently only sit still for board books with verse.
Well, the verse is not metered. They tried and failed. Badly. So my son hated it because he's so damn picky.
But the pictures are still nice. Lots of geometric shapes and symmetry and simple colours and patterns. It's very pretty.
I wish there was no text. They tried to do a version of "To Market, To Market to Buy a Fat Pig" and got lost in this sustainability message. It's so heavy handed that it felt like they were trying to make my children feel bad for straying from the 100 mile diet.
Plus, this meal. Like, I would eat that, sure. And I always serve good food for my kids. We eat food from just about any culture and keep a variety of spices in the house. But my one year old is not eating fish and olives. In fact, he's teething and refuses anything that isn't blended into mush and snuck into his mouth in between bites of cracker. And furthermore, with a baby in the house, is it possible to make labour intensive meals? No, really, I'm curious. When do I get to stop making casseroles? Also, I don't take kids to market under the age of 3 if I can help it because grabbing groceries and paying for them with an angry toddler in your arms is the worst experience.
Is this a board book that teaches toddlers about everything they're missing out on because they can't get it together and eat real food and behave at the store? Or is this is a board book for 6 year olds? I can't decide.
Thursday, March 17, 2016
What Do You Want?
By Lars Klinting
This book was great! We found it at the library. I had to dig through stacks of baby books to find it. It was the only one that looked half decent.
Digging through board books at the library is the worst ever. Especially if you have a wild walking baby with you who is inexplicably attracted to CD racks. But who also loves picking books up at random off of shelves and running to the front with them in an attempt to shove them all into the return slot. HE HAS TO PUT EVERYTHING AWAY.
But obviously we've stopped taking him to the library for now, so we don't have this problem anymore.
Every page has an object, and when you turn the page you find out what belongs to that object.
The only part I'm not so keen on is the little old man wanting his hat and the little old woman wanting her man, but it's not the worst thing. It really isn't. Maybe it's really commentary on how the man losing his hair is having an identity crisis, and the woman basically wants for nothing but her husband because she's got herself all sorted. Or maybe it's just a really lazily written baby book.
The best parts are the stroller and the baby, or the foot wanting a shoe, or the chair wanting the table. Basically everything else in the book. These are things that babies understand.
For me, when I see this page, I can't help but think of my Grandma who is single and has the craziest happiest social life. Rolling her eyes at little old men trying to hit on her.
My kids loved this book so much that it ended up covered in crayon before we returned it (luckily it comes out easily with eraser.)
This book was great! We found it at the library. I had to dig through stacks of baby books to find it. It was the only one that looked half decent.
Digging through board books at the library is the worst ever. Especially if you have a wild walking baby with you who is inexplicably attracted to CD racks. But who also loves picking books up at random off of shelves and running to the front with them in an attempt to shove them all into the return slot. HE HAS TO PUT EVERYTHING AWAY.
But obviously we've stopped taking him to the library for now, so we don't have this problem anymore.
Every page has an object, and when you turn the page you find out what belongs to that object.
The only part I'm not so keen on is the little old man wanting his hat and the little old woman wanting her man, but it's not the worst thing. It really isn't. Maybe it's really commentary on how the man losing his hair is having an identity crisis, and the woman basically wants for nothing but her husband because she's got herself all sorted. Or maybe it's just a really lazily written baby book.
The best parts are the stroller and the baby, or the foot wanting a shoe, or the chair wanting the table. Basically everything else in the book. These are things that babies understand.
For me, when I see this page, I can't help but think of my Grandma who is single and has the craziest happiest social life. Rolling her eyes at little old men trying to hit on her.
My kids loved this book so much that it ended up covered in crayon before we returned it (luckily it comes out easily with eraser.)
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
Sharing Our World - Animals of the Native Northwest Coast - Board Book
By Garfinkel Publications
I really liked the art and layout of this board book. It was nice to look through with the kids.
However, it is really not appropriate for babies. There is way too much text.
Plus, on the first page it starts with an ancestor. I can't even describe what an ancestor is to my 3 year old. What in the world does the baby even think this is?
While looking up info on this book, I discovered that it was originally a 28 page picture book for older kids. That makes so much more sense and would have been so much better. I'll have to look into it for later.
I really liked the art and layout of this board book. It was nice to look through with the kids.
However, it is really not appropriate for babies. There is way too much text.
Plus, on the first page it starts with an ancestor. I can't even describe what an ancestor is to my 3 year old. What in the world does the baby even think this is?
While looking up info on this book, I discovered that it was originally a 28 page picture book for older kids. That makes so much more sense and would have been so much better. I'll have to look into it for later.
Labels:
2 and under,
animals,
art,
baby,
board book,
book,
First Nations
Wednesday, March 2, 2016
Snuggle Puppy
By Sandra Boynton
Boynton does some nice baby books, some of which my kids are crazy about, some of which are funnier to read as an older kid or adult, but there are some real duds, too. Like this one.
It comes with a CD with music that you listen to while you read the lyrics.
I can't really be bothered to say a lot about this. The drawing is pretty lazy. Most of the book is just colourful text. The text itself is really, really lazy rhyming.
But, I guess if you like this sort of thing, then whatever. It's not the worst book I've ever read.
Boynton does some nice baby books, some of which my kids are crazy about, some of which are funnier to read as an older kid or adult, but there are some real duds, too. Like this one.
It comes with a CD with music that you listen to while you read the lyrics.
I can't really be bothered to say a lot about this. The drawing is pretty lazy. Most of the book is just colourful text. The text itself is really, really lazy rhyming.
But, I guess if you like this sort of thing, then whatever. It's not the worst book I've ever read.
Labels:
2 and under,
2 years,
3+ years,
baby,
board book,
book,
dog,
emotions,
music,
picture book,
rhymes,
songs,
toddler
Monday, February 22, 2016
Blue Hat, Green Hat
By Sandra Boynton
Everyone gets this one, right? I think.
My daughter didn't mind this book. My son was OBSESSED with it. As soon as he learned to walk (just before his first bithday), he would find this book, rush over to me, place it in my lap and sit patiently while I read it. When I finished, he would grab it, flip it, and throw it back in my hands for another read-through.
It was pretty impressive because otherwise he hated storytime and wouldn't sit still for anything.
He obviously didn't understand the content. He liked it, and still does, because it's really simplistic and very rhythmic. He still mimics the rhythm of the text with melodic nonsense words every time he picks it up.
Everyone gets this one, right? I think.
My daughter didn't mind this book. My son was OBSESSED with it. As soon as he learned to walk (just before his first bithday), he would find this book, rush over to me, place it in my lap and sit patiently while I read it. When I finished, he would grab it, flip it, and throw it back in my hands for another read-through.
It was pretty impressive because otherwise he hated storytime and wouldn't sit still for anything.
He obviously didn't understand the content. He liked it, and still does, because it's really simplistic and very rhythmic. He still mimics the rhythm of the text with melodic nonsense words every time he picks it up.
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Funny Face
By Anna Walker
This is a great book about facial expressions. I really could have used this with my daughter when she was a baby.
My son actually likes this book a lot. I say actually, because he isn't that keen on books. He's only just a year old and kind of a clumsy maniac. He has no interest in sitting still and reading.
But this book is simple and easy to follow.
I change the text a bit so that I'm only saying the few words that he seems to know. There's one character who has a "bunny face". I feel like it's an inside joke or something. It doesn't make sense, and even my daughter doesn't get the joke. She's all, "That's not a face" and then the whole thing gets derailed into an argument.
There are a few too many pages of them dancing that are very similar. We skip those sometimes, too.
But, overall, it's a very cute book. I even like the pictures.
This is a great book about facial expressions. I really could have used this with my daughter when she was a baby.
My son actually likes this book a lot. I say actually, because he isn't that keen on books. He's only just a year old and kind of a clumsy maniac. He has no interest in sitting still and reading.
But this book is simple and easy to follow.
I change the text a bit so that I'm only saying the few words that he seems to know. There's one character who has a "bunny face". I feel like it's an inside joke or something. It doesn't make sense, and even my daughter doesn't get the joke. She's all, "That's not a face" and then the whole thing gets derailed into an argument.
There are a few too many pages of them dancing that are very similar. We skip those sometimes, too.
But, overall, it's a very cute book. I even like the pictures.
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Tap Tap Bang Bang
This book is pretty lazy. Lots of tools with googly eyes.
What the eff.
My daughter picked it out, probably for the googly eyes.
Is this seriously meant for babies? Does this even register with them? The pictures bear so little semblance to the real tools.
I thought this one was a turkey baster at first.
And this is a vise. Sure. And it makes a clamp, clamp sound? When it clamps? Is 'clamp' a word that babies are familiar with? Is it one that you can explain to a child under the age of 2?
And then after a bunch of other tools, there's a random final page with a go-kart on it. At which point I have to explain to my child what a go-kart is and how the tools made it and where the materials came from.
But I decided to send it back to the library instead.
Labels:
2 and under,
baby,
board book,
book,
toddler,
tools,
vocabulary
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
One, Two, Where's My Shoe?
By Tomi Ungerer
Ungerer is a French author whose books sometimes contain a bit of dark humour, and are generally pretty absurd.
This one has almost no text and is just pictures of shoes and boots where you would least expect them. It's fan-freaking-tastic.
This page is my favourite. Find the boots!
Sometimes they're a bit harder to find, but really, this book is less about how tricky the author is and hiding the shoes and more about the joke of swapping out shapes for boots and shoes.
This book is incredibly popular at our house.
Ungerer is a French author whose books sometimes contain a bit of dark humour, and are generally pretty absurd.
This one has almost no text and is just pictures of shoes and boots where you would least expect them. It's fan-freaking-tastic.
This page is my favourite. Find the boots!
Sometimes they're a bit harder to find, but really, this book is less about how tricky the author is and hiding the shoes and more about the joke of swapping out shapes for boots and shoes.
This book is incredibly popular at our house.
Thursday, January 7, 2016
Young Canada's Nursery Rhymes
Illustrated by Constance Haselwood
Originally printed as a British collection of nursery rhymes in England, it was re-titled and shipped to Canada back when it was first settled. A copy was found more recently and it was reprinted.
These original illustrations are fantastic. The rhymes chosen are not all the most popular ones, which makes it a fun little book. I'm happy that it exists and that I've found it, but it isn't nearly as appealing to my kids as other collections that I've found.
Originally printed as a British collection of nursery rhymes in England, it was re-titled and shipped to Canada back when it was first settled. A copy was found more recently and it was reprinted.
These original illustrations are fantastic. The rhymes chosen are not all the most popular ones, which makes it a fun little book. I'm happy that it exists and that I've found it, but it isn't nearly as appealing to my kids as other collections that I've found.
Labels:
2 and under,
2 years,
3+ years,
baby,
book,
Canadiana,
compilation,
poetry,
rhymes,
toddler,
traditional
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Read With Chirp
By Bob Kain
We love the Chirp magazines and are constantly getting them out of the library. I got this out of the library to encourage my daughter to work on learning to read. It isn't real reading; it's rebus reading. But it is totally helpful to use when teaching kids to read.
First of all, if nothing else, it teaches kids to read from left to right. It encourages my daughter to help me read (She loves deciphering the pictures). Sometimes, if we've gotten far enough into the story, she'll have the courage to attempt a two or three letter word as well. If there's repetition, which there often is, she can figure out a whole sentence by herself.
I really believe that teaching kids to read has more to do with establishing self confidence than anything else.
We love the Chirp magazines and are constantly getting them out of the library. I got this out of the library to encourage my daughter to work on learning to read. It isn't real reading; it's rebus reading. But it is totally helpful to use when teaching kids to read.
First of all, if nothing else, it teaches kids to read from left to right. It encourages my daughter to help me read (She loves deciphering the pictures). Sometimes, if we've gotten far enough into the story, she'll have the courage to attempt a two or three letter word as well. If there's repetition, which there often is, she can figure out a whole sentence by herself.
I really believe that teaching kids to read has more to do with establishing self confidence than anything else.
Labels:
2 and under,
2 years,
3+ years,
animals,
book,
educational,
reader,
rebus,
story book,
toddler
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