<< 1 >>
Rating:  Summary: Teddy in the House Review: My newborn son absolutely loves all the Lucy Cousins cloth books! He has certain pictures in each book that make his eyes widen and his arms and legs flail with glee! These are very wonderful books that can engage even the youngest baby.
Rating:  Summary: Teddy In the House Review: My son just adores this book especially the ending. It is a cloth picture book with drawings of things found in the home. The lack of text enables us to use our imaginations to the fullest allowing a different story each time. The pictures, although simple seem to mesmerize my son as he cannot get enough of them. I highly recommend this book for every infant.
Rating:  Summary: Teddy - Bear's Voyage Through A Human World Review: This is an outstanding example of an author's ability to take a seemingly innocuous character, a teddy bear, and with minimal words transport the reader into a complex world fraught with challenging and perplexing puzzles. Parents as well as the very young will both find inspiration and a "call to deeper thinking" when sharing this book. The brilliant juxaposition of a normally forest-dwelling ursus IN a house bears special notice. As I viewed Teddy in the various rooms, I couldn't help but ponder man's place in the universe. We as humans often feel we are entrapped in a "room", but in reality there are MANY rooms, and even, as this author points out in a subliminal technique using background details, DOORS and WINDOWS to the outside (universe). I highly recommend this book to all ages, for all time.
Rating:  Summary: Unconnected items Review: While the illustrations are bold and attractive, the book "Teddy in the House" consists of seven unrelated items (a block, a banana, a telephone, a cat, a clock and a bottle, plus teddy on the cover), one per page. It's not clear why it is titled "Teddy in the House". My six-month old prefers the more complex textures of cloth books such as "Zoo Faces" and "Farm Faces". Cartuni's review below is, of course, tongue in cheek.
Rating:  Summary: Unconnected items Review: While the illustrations are bold and attractive, the book "Teddy in the House" consists of seven unrelated items (a block, a banana, a telephone, a cat, a clock and a bottle, plus teddy on the cover), one per page. It's not clear why it is titled "Teddy in the House". My six-month old prefers the more complex textures of cloth books such as "Zoo Faces" and "Farm Faces". Cartuni's review below is, of course, tongue in cheek.
<< 1 >>
|