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Summary
Summary
With delightful verse and cuddly pictures, this book captures the joy and excitement of welcoming a new baby to the family from a toddler's point of view. Sweet and loving, it's the perfect introduction for older siblings as they wait to meet their new brother or sister.
Praise for I Love My Mommy
"Andreae and Dodd team up to create a winning read-aloud for the very young...The large format and warm tone make this truly perfect for little ones." -- Kirkus Reviews , starred review
"[W]ill be a hit at storytimes." -- School Library Journal
Praise for I Love My Daddy
"A pleasingly rhythmic text paired with oversized illustrations in black-outlined saturated brights ensures instant appeal for the youngest readers." -- Kirkus Reviews
"[T]he singsong rhythm and bold, colorful, expressive illustrations will have kid appeal. At the same time, the vocabulary and positive attributes (kind, clever, polite) will have adult appeal." -- Booklist
"Whether out on the town or cuddling on the couch, Dad, Daughter, and an ever-present stuffed rabbit radiate a comfortable warmth that will resonate with young listeners." -- School Library Journal
Author Notes
Giles Andreae is the award-winning, best-selling author of Rumble in the Jungle , Giraffes Can't Dance , and the companions to this book, I Love My Daddy and I Love My Mommy , which won the Booktrust Early Years Award. He lives in London.
Emma Dodd has written and illustrated several books, including No Matter What I Don't Want a Posh Dog! and the Booktrust Early Years Award-honored What Pet to Get? She also illustrated I Love My Daddy, I Love My Mommy , the popular Amazing Baby series, and the Dot and Dash series. Emma lives with her family in Surrey, England.
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Following I Love My Mommy and I Love My Daddy, Andreae and Dodd continue to share the love as a boy with a shock of blond hair sings the praises of the newborn baby in his life. In the process, readers get a crash course on some of the baby's adorable body parts: "Two chubby legs and two rolly thighs./ One little forehead, two round eyes." Dodd's loosely outlined, dot-eyed characters exude affection as the action moves from home to the pool and back. Don't look for displacement anxieties or tantrums-this is a baby lovefest from start to finish. Ages 3-5. (Dec.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
In rhyming text, a child describes everything he loves about his new sibling, starting with "one fat tummy, tight as a drum. / Two little cheeks on one little bum." While pointing out the baby's adorable body parts isn't a new concept, the welcoming illustrations--complete with floating hearts in the backgrounds--warmly convey the family's love for their new addition. (c) Copyright 2016. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Andreae and Dodd continue to explore family relationships (I Love My Mommy, 2011; I Love My Daddy, 2012) with this look at the towheaded toddler's love for his new sibling. The young boy's adoration for the new addition is obvious from the start. Readers follow the boy and his loving parents as they dress the baby, drive to a pool to swim, get dried off and eat, go for a walk, give the baby a bath, and tuck the wee one into bed. Along the way, the boy counts all the parts the baby has: "two little cheeks on one little bum," "eight squashy knuckles," and "one kissy mouth" being just a few. But although Dodd's signature illustrations are as adorable and child-friendly as ever, not all the body parts counted in the text can be found in the pictures, making this a frustrating read for those eager to point them out to their own loving adults or siblings. For instance, the baby's mouth is an upward, lipless swoosh, the baby's head is turned so only one ear shows, and all of the mentioned parts are under a blanket when the baby is ensconced in the carriage. Plus, younger readers may not know chest, ankles, and hips. Children familiar with the other two titles may fruitlessly look for the boy's purple stuffed duck in every illustrationit only appears in half of them. For new siblings who are pretty solid in knowing their body parts. (Picture book. 2-4) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.