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Book cover of Where's Your Nose? (Begin Smart Series)
Sense & Sensation, Fiction - Health & Medicine, Fiction - Basic Concepts

Where's Your Nose? (Begin Smart Series)

by Begin Smart Books
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Overview

“This teddy bear touches his toes.

Can you touch bear’s toes?

Where are your toes?”

Clear, colorful photos show teddy bears reaching and stretching and touching their knees, toes, and noses. This touch-and-feel board book helps baby identify the parts of the body.

Synopsis

“This teddy bear touches his toes.

Can you touch bear’s toes?

Where are your toes?”

Clear, colorful photos show teddy bears reaching and stretching and touching their knees, toes, and noses. This touch-and-feel board book helps baby identify the parts of the body.

School Library Journal

PreS—Each title includes a letter to parents extolling the benefits of reading to children. Neither Lily's nor Pete's potty can be found. Readers and listeners must lift the flaps as they search under the bed and in the kitchen, and eventually discover the missing item in the bathroom. After using their respective potties, the children wash their hands. Youngsters always enjoy books they can manipulate, and these titles will have fans, but Barbro Lindgren's Sam's Potty (Methuen, 1986) is still the best of the toilet-training genre. In What Shapes Do You See? large, sturdy, die-cut foldouts reveal bright glossy photographs of squares, circles, triangles and rectangles. In Where's Your Nose? the text accompanying the full-color photographs of teddy bears touching various parts of the body invites small listeners to find their toes, nose, etc. Some pages include texture inserts, in the tradition of Dorothy Kunhardt's Pat the Bunny. These titles are adequate choices for refreshing board-book collections.—Amelia Jenkins, Juneau Public Library, AK

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Editorials

School Library Journal

PreS—Each title includes a letter to parents extolling the benefits of reading to children. Neither Lily's nor Pete's potty can be found. Readers and listeners must lift the flaps as they search under the bed and in the kitchen, and eventually discover the missing item in the bathroom. After using their respective potties, the children wash their hands. Youngsters always enjoy books they can manipulate, and these titles will have fans, but Barbro Lindgren's Sam's Potty (Methuen, 1986) is still the best of the toilet-training genre. In What Shapes Do You See? large, sturdy, die-cut foldouts reveal bright glossy photographs of squares, circles, triangles and rectangles. In Where's Your Nose? the text accompanying the full-color photographs of teddy bears touching various parts of the body invites small listeners to find their toes, nose, etc. Some pages include texture inserts, in the tradition of Dorothy Kunhardt's Pat the Bunny. These titles are adequate choices for refreshing board-book collections.—Amelia Jenkins, Juneau Public Library, AK

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2010
Publisher
Begin Smart Books
Pages
16
Format
Board Book
ISBN
9781934618936

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