Showing posts with label toys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toys. Show all posts

01 June 2011

Spot's Toys


Spot's Toys
by
Eric Hill
board book
ages 0-4

Spot is a loveable, adorable, and playful puppy. He plays with his alligator and monkey friends until Mama dog tells him it is time for bed. These are books to cuddle up with and fall asleep on.

Spot books are good for vocabulary building.

These sturdy cardboard books would be a good set to give at a baby shower:
Spot's Snowy Day
Spot Loves His Friends
Spot Loves His Mommy
Spot's Toys

Libraries should also consider purchasing Spot DVD's for young viewers.

21 July 2010

Lego Star Wars the Visual Dictionary


Lego Star Wars the Visual Dictionary
nonfiction for children or adults

Let the salivating begin. This is a natural fit for just about every library in America. Legos have a huge fan base. Star Wars has a huge fan base. The Lego Star Wars video games have a huge fan base. There will be quite a few people who will check this one out. Others will browse through it in the library.

I am torn between wanting everything in the book and protesting - "but you are supposed to use your imagination and make up your own stuff with lego". Either way, I probably couldn't assemble a number of items pictured in this colorful book

http://starwars.lego.com/en-US/default.aspx

17 December 2009

Not a Stick


Not a Stick
by
Antoinette Portis
Ages 2-5.

This is a simple yet delightful book that shows the stick figure main character pig pretending that a stick is all kinds of things - a sword, a hobby horse, and more. Kids don't need all kinds of toys - just give them sticks!
In case you hadn't heard, the stick made it into the Toy Hall of Fame as a classic toy. I don't know if the author wrote this book inspired by the press surrounding this event or if it happened to come out at about the same time. All hail the STICK!
This book was on a reading list that the park system handed out.
The cover says that this is a Theodor Seuss Geisel Award, but maybe they meant that the author won for a different book.
http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/alsc/awardsgrants/bookmedia/geiselaward/index.cfm
I see that the author also has a book called "Not a Box". I am assuming that the plot is similar.

Here is what the Museum of Play has to say about sticks:

http://www.museumofplay.org/nthof/toys/index.php?toy=stick

Stick

The stick may be the world’s oldest toy. Animals play with sticks, and we use them to play fetch with our dogs. Children find sticks an endless source of make-believe fun. Sticks can turn into swords, magic wands, majorette batons, fishing poles, and light sabers. When children pretend with sticks, they cultivate their creativity and develop their imagination. They explore as they search outdoors for just the right one. Children build with sticks, bat balls with them, and walk with them. They are the original building blocks for creative play. Sticks also promote free play—the freedom to invent and discover. They encourage playing outside instead of inside. Sticks are all around us; they are natural and free. And playing with sticks isn’t just for children and animals. Adult artists, crafters, decorators, and architects all make use of sticks in sculptures, wreaths, furniture, and building design. Few adults or children can resist simple play with sticks—from drawing in the sand on the beach, to building a campfire and then toasting marshmallows. Sticks are not only possibly the oldest toy, they’re possibly the best!