Kids books roundup
Jun. 28th, 2020 09:14 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Welcome to what will probably be a new, recurring feature. Casterbrook decided he loved books around seven months and, at nine months, can knock over a stack of books, sort through them, retrieve the specific one he wants, and very pointedly bring it to the nearest mom. So we are getting a pretty good idea of his preferences.
ABC Disgusting by Greg Pak and Takeshi Miyazawa
A current Casterbrook favorite, we theorize because there are many many drawings of kids pulling faces, and he's currently way into that. An ABC book of gross things (year-old yogurt, anyone?), as siblings try to outgross each other, with a sweet twist of supportiveness at the end.
Octopus Escapes by Nathaniel Lachenmeyer and Frank Dormer
I'm pretty sure this was a gift from
gnomad. The story of an octopus who escapes his tank at night and rampages through the aquarium, generally making mischief. It's occurring to me that we might want to give this one a rest once Casterbrook is trying to climb out of his crib in earnest, LOL. But for now, he likes the art and the simple, one or two word sentences on each page. I regularly make up rhyming phrases to this one as Casterbrook turns pages, and its rhythms have infused our jokes – "guard closes gates, octopus waits" adapts itself well to a baby letting you know what he thinks of a babygate.
A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo
A gift from my sister. So, background – Marlon Bundo is the pet bunny of the vice presiden'ts family. He starred in an earlier kids book written by the Pences, and also this one – about his gay romance with another boy bunny – with proceeds going to the Trevor Project. That's kind of a lot going on for a kid's book. Casterbrook is not that into this one right now – no human faces and no rhymes – but we don't hate reading it. And points for Dill Prickle the Hedgehog. It is a bit . . . love is love, if you know what I mean.
McElligot's Pool by Dr. Seuss
A classic. Our copy is, in fact, my wife's from childhood. A consistent favorite of Casterbrook's, and there's no mystery about why. Because my god, the quality of verse in this thing is so far beyond any other baby book we have, it's not even funny. This verse rollicks. It breezes. It delights. And Casterbrook loves listening to it. And it is refreshingly hefty. I regularly tune in and out to the sound of it, and I swore for weeks on end that every time I tuned back in, my wife was reading a section I'd never heard before.
What's Wrong, Little Pookie? by Sandra Boynton
I have this with clear Braille labels over each page. Casterbrook enjoys that textural element, but otherwise it's a total non-starter right now, as any position I put this book in to let me physically read it means it's flat enough that he can't see enough of it to stay interested. It's a cute story, though, about a little kid who is super upset but who, it turns out after increasingly fantastical guesses as to why, can't actually remember. Probably valuable to read a thousand times to a more emotionally volatile toddler.
ABC Disgusting by Greg Pak and Takeshi Miyazawa
A current Casterbrook favorite, we theorize because there are many many drawings of kids pulling faces, and he's currently way into that. An ABC book of gross things (year-old yogurt, anyone?), as siblings try to outgross each other, with a sweet twist of supportiveness at the end.
Octopus Escapes by Nathaniel Lachenmeyer and Frank Dormer
I'm pretty sure this was a gift from
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo
A gift from my sister. So, background – Marlon Bundo is the pet bunny of the vice presiden'ts family. He starred in an earlier kids book written by the Pences, and also this one – about his gay romance with another boy bunny – with proceeds going to the Trevor Project. That's kind of a lot going on for a kid's book. Casterbrook is not that into this one right now – no human faces and no rhymes – but we don't hate reading it. And points for Dill Prickle the Hedgehog. It is a bit . . . love is love, if you know what I mean.
McElligot's Pool by Dr. Seuss
A classic. Our copy is, in fact, my wife's from childhood. A consistent favorite of Casterbrook's, and there's no mystery about why. Because my god, the quality of verse in this thing is so far beyond any other baby book we have, it's not even funny. This verse rollicks. It breezes. It delights. And Casterbrook loves listening to it. And it is refreshingly hefty. I regularly tune in and out to the sound of it, and I swore for weeks on end that every time I tuned back in, my wife was reading a section I'd never heard before.
What's Wrong, Little Pookie? by Sandra Boynton
I have this with clear Braille labels over each page. Casterbrook enjoys that textural element, but otherwise it's a total non-starter right now, as any position I put this book in to let me physically read it means it's flat enough that he can't see enough of it to stay interested. It's a cute story, though, about a little kid who is super upset but who, it turns out after increasingly fantastical guesses as to why, can't actually remember. Probably valuable to read a thousand times to a more emotionally volatile toddler.
no subject
Date: 2020-06-29 09:36 am (UTC)I am very fond of Sandra Boynton’s books. Happy Hippo, Angry Duck made me cry when I read it for the first time in a post natally depressed haze. We also spent some months with her music albums on repeat.
There is so much terrible verse in children’s books. My favourite for the sheer delight is Margaret Mahy’s Bubble Trouble (“Little Mabel blew a bubble/And it caused a lot of trouble”), which is just a pleasure to read.
no subject
Date: 2020-07-06 03:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-06-29 08:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-06-30 12:36 pm (UTC)Son heartily recommends Calvin & Hobbes, for when Casterbrook is a little older. I remember thinking "maybe teaching my kid words like 'pair of pathetic peripatetics' is gonna get him bullied at school", then realizing that no, the egghead-vocabulary ship had already sailed.
Husband recommends Tops and Bottoms, by Janet Stevens. It's a story about a tricksy rabbit who cheats his lazy creditor, Bear, out of the top half of the garden's corn crop and the bottom half of the carrot crop. Gorgeous illustrations, about two paragraphs per page.
no subject
Date: 2020-07-01 12:22 am (UTC)Calvin! Yes, I'd forgotten about Calvin. We actually have the Complete Calvin & Hobbes, in baby/toddler unfriendly giant hardcovers, lol.