Join Books.org — it's free

Poetry - Rhymes, Nursery Rhymes & Fingerplays, Fiction - General & Miscellaneous, Fiction - Emotions & Behaviors, Fiction - Family Life
I Already Know I Love You by Billy Crystal — book cover

I Already Know I Love You

by Billy Crystal, Elizabeth Sayles
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Grandpa can hardly wait!

Starting with the anticipation of a new baby's arrival, this book from Emmy Award-winning comedian Billy Crystal celebrates all the moments, great and small, that a new grandpa is ready to share. Whether it's taking a nap together or attending baseball games, this grandpa just can't wait for his grandchild to be born.

A grandfather dreams of all the things he will do with his new grandchild.

Synopsis

Grandpa can hardly wait!

Starting with the anticipation of a new baby's arrival, this book from Emmy Award-winning comedian Billy Crystal celebrates all the moments, great and small, that a new grandpa is ready to share. Whether it's taking a nap together or attending baseball games, this grandpa just can't wait for his grandchild to be born.

Child Magazine

In this tender ode to his unborn grandchild, comic actor Crystal imagines all the moments they will share: "I want to feel your heart beat/as you lie upon my chest,/bait your hook, fly your kite,/help you study for a test." Sayles's dreamy pastel scenes bring these hopes to life, capturing the love and easy companionship of a grandfather and granddaughter who play, stargaze, and make a splendid mess of their spaghetti dinner. (Ages birth to 2)
Child magazine's Best Children's Book Awards 2004

About the Author, Billy Crystal

Tony Award-winning comedian, director, actor, and author Billy Crystal is just as importantly a grandfather. He charmed children and grown-ups alike as the voice of Mike Wazowski in Monsters, Inc. and starred in the hilarious movies Analyze This and City Slickers and He recently set box-office records with his smash Tony Award-winning one-man show on Broadway, 700 Sundays. The father of two grown daughters, Jennifer and Lindsay, Billy Crystal lives with his wife, Janice, in California.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

From Barnes & Noble

Comedian Billy Crystal serves up an ode to a grandparent's love in this gentle, poetic picture book illustrated by Elizabeth Sayles. Glowing with warmly colored scenes of a man imagining special moments with his unborn granddaughter, Crystal's tale begins with an exclamation of joy -- "I'm going to be your grandpa! I have the biggest smile. I've been waiting to meet you for such a long, long while" -- and continues with similarly enthusiastic musings until the very end. Along the way, Grandpa and his sweetie-pie have fun watching "butterflies and monkeys and clown who cross their eyes," and he dreams about introducing her to the stars, the moon, and other natural wonders he wants to share. For Grandpa, movies hold a special interest ("I took your mom to her first movie. I want to take you, too. That will be a special day devoted just to you"), along with baseball and family history, interests that evidently rank high on the author's own list of favorites. But whether or not everyone shares Crystal's love of wontons or ice-cream pie, no one can fail to pick up on his message of joyful expectation. The perfect gift for both seasoned grandparents and those who are new to the game, this book provides an interesting perspective on love between the generations.

Child magazine

“A tender ode…capturing the love and easy companionship of a grandfather and granddaughter.”

Child Magazine

"A tender ode…capturing the love and easy companionship of a grandfather and granddaughter."

From The Critics

In this tender ode to his unborn grandchild, comic actor Crystal imagines all the moments they will share: "I want to feel your heart beat/as you lie upon my chest,/bait your hook, fly your kite,/help you study for a test." Sayles's dreamy pastel scenes bring these hopes to life, capturing the love and easy companionship of a grandfather and granddaughter who play, stargaze, and make a splendid mess of their spaghetti dinner. (Ages birth to 2)
Child magazine's Best Children's Book Awards 2004

Publishers Weekly

Comedian Crystal's unabashedly sentimental poem to his first grandchild rather clumsily starts on the opening endpapers, where the verse begins, "I'm waiting to see you in ballet shoes or is it football pads?" and concludes, "I can't believe I'm writing this, 'cause I don't know who you are." The rhyming narrative that follows echoes this hypothetical tenor ("I'm waiting to show you everything,/ hear your giggles and your sighs,/ see butterflies and monkeys/ and clowns who cross their eyes"), as Sayles's (This Mess) softly focused, emotion-filled pastels reveal a devoted grandfather and a girl-as an infant, toddler and elementary schooler. They engage in such activities as playing in the waves, sharing a strand of spaghetti, watching a baseball game and (reinforcing the narrator's unremitting affection) enjoying a variety of hugs. The verse's rhythm and rhyme at times falter and several passages are awkward (a picture of the narrator gazing upon his newborn grandchild in a hospital nursery accompanies this text: "Your mom is my daughter,/ and your dad is his mom's son./ You lived within your mommy,/ but now the time has come./ Get ready, sweet little one-/ your life will be just great"). Yet Crystal's name and the inherent appeal of his theme should put this in the spotlight on the grandparent/baby gift bookshelf. All ages. (Apr.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Children's Literature - Marilyn Courtot

Celebrity books seems to be the rage at the moment; titles have been penned by Jay Leno, Sarah Ferguson (The Duchess of York), Julie Andrews, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jerry Seinfeld, and now Billy Crystal. While the message of this one is heartfelt, the rhyming verses sometimes seem a bit strained and don't always work. The shift here is an example: "I'm waiting to show you oceans / and explain why the sky is blue. / I want to show you that lying / is never as good as true." Not only is there no real connection between the concepts, but wouldn't the word "truth" have been more appropriate even though it does not rhyme with "blue"? The soft pastel illustration fit the sappy text. It is, of course, wonderful to become a grandparent and sharing that joy is also wonderful, but to do so in a book with a mediocre rhyming scheme is not wonderful. Given the author's fame, the book has been converted from a picture book to a board book, but I don't think it is a book that will stand the test of time. Reviewer: Marilyn Courtot

School Library Journal

PreS-K-As a grandfather-to-be anticipates the birth of his grandchild, he expresses excitement for all of the special moments and activities he can't wait to share: bear hugs, the ocean, a Yankees game, a movie. The rhyming text is basic and yet effective. Crystal manages to come across as sincere rather than sappy so that the special nature of this intergenerational relationship shines through. As the narrator imagines the future, the soft pastel art depicts the baby nestled snuggly in Grandpa's arms. Other pictures show the wide-eyed red-headed child getting older, her grandpa and a fuzzy stuffed monkey by her side. The longevity and importance of this family relationship is thus visually supported and celebrated. After readers see and hear about all of the enjoyable events that will occur, the book comes full circle and ends with the birth of the child, "Get ready, little sweet one-/your life will be just great./I'm going to be your grandpa, and-/I can hardly wait."-Martha Topol, Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City, MI Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Another celebrity author misses his audience. Undistinguished soft pastels help to tell the rhyming story that begins by depicting a graying man listening at the bulging womb of a young woman (his daughter) and stating, "I'm going to be your grandpa!" Picture-book readers will not identify with the adult perspective and the logic of activities, which has the child sliding into bases and later reverting to bouncing on Grandfather's knee. Young readers will also have difficulty relating to the idea that grandfather is waiting as the baby (sometimes a boy and sometimes a girl, sometimes big and sometimes little) is already in the pictures. And the rhymes are just atrocious. A much better choice would be Harriet Ziefert's Waiting for Baby (1998). (Picture book. 4-8)

Book Details

Published
March 1, 2008
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
32
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780061450570

More by Billy Crystal

Similar books