So the Gerber Baby Photo Contest is on again, and this time you don't have to vote through facebook or some other social media site but directly on the gerber website. Follow this link (https://gerber.promo.eprize.com/photosearch2014/) to vote or register your child for the contest.
My whole write up about the thing somehow got deleted by blogger, and it's really hard to rewrite something you already finished and published but then somehow disappeared.
You can find the winners of the contest by following this link (http://bit.ly/1qGTtWS) after January 30, 2015. So that means you have to wait. People always want to know how many votes their child has, but all you can do is wait until the winners are announced at the end of January. Our child participated in the contest in 2012, and if you want to read all about it then check out my 2012 post.
Friday, November 21, 2014
Mommy! Mommy! by Taro Gomi
It's been such a long time since I've written about my child that now I have to say children because we've had a second child. Over the months we've started going to the local library's story hour every week, and read quite a few new children's books. I thought it might be a good way for me to ease back into writing here if I shared some of my favorite books - books that we take out over and over again or have purchased because we liked them so much. I'll review one book per post to keep things manageable, and try to talk about a variety of topics. Maybe I'll develop some categories to use in considering each book, but now things are getting complicated and I want to let this evolve on its own.
The first book I have chosen is Mommy! Mommy! by Taro Gomi, a book we borrowed from the library. It's a board book, and 11 pages long. Taro Gomi is the author and artist, and when you open the book the left and right sides of the page form one image. The images are simple and very cute, and the story is almost like dialog to a game of hide-and-seek between some baby chickens and their mother. The chicks mistake a flower and some kind of warthog thing for their mother and say oops, and I don't want to spoil the ending but they do eventually find their mother. The book averages a little more than two words to a page, in part because of a five-word last page. It is the simplicity of this book that makes it so good, and there are a lot of cute little details in the art that seems familiar but different in a way.
This is a book that has all of its publishing information on the back cover, and I learned a lot from it before I googled the artist and learned even more. The back cover reads:
The book also has an original copyright of 2004 being published in Japan by Crayon House Co., Ltd. It was first published in the United States in 2013 by Chronicle Books LLC., and was translated by Chronicle Books. So I thought that was cool, and it may have explained some of the art.
When I googled Gomi I instantly recognized his book Everyone Poops, which I think is well known in the United States. I didn't have it as a child, but I'm sure over the years I've seen it in the houses of friends with younger siblings. He also has a storybook The Crocodile and the Dentist that looks familiar to me, and I think when we go to the library again I will look for more books by Taro Gomi.
My 2.5 year old likes the book, and my 9-month old loves the book as well. She sits and watches the book the entire time, unlike when we're reading some wordier books and she tries to squirm away.
Both of my children love Mommy! Mommy! by Taro Gomi, and the book provides a lot of opportunity for silliness with its adorable art. It can be an introduction to Gomi's work and to Japanese art and culture. There's a simple grammar lesson there too, as the hen says at first "here I am," then later switches to "there you are."
Mommy! Mommy! by Taro Gomi |
The first book I have chosen is Mommy! Mommy! by Taro Gomi, a book we borrowed from the library. It's a board book, and 11 pages long. Taro Gomi is the author and artist, and when you open the book the left and right sides of the page form one image. The images are simple and very cute, and the story is almost like dialog to a game of hide-and-seek between some baby chickens and their mother. The chicks mistake a flower and some kind of warthog thing for their mother and say oops, and I don't want to spoil the ending but they do eventually find their mother. The book averages a little more than two words to a page, in part because of a five-word last page. It is the simplicity of this book that makes it so good, and there are a lot of cute little details in the art that seems familiar but different in a way.
This is a book that has all of its publishing information on the back cover, and I learned a lot from it before I googled the artist and learned even more. The back cover reads:
"Babies know their mommies anywhere. See, there she is right- wait, that's not Mommy! Acclaimed author and illustrator Taro Gomi creates a playful world where readers follow two chicks on a search through the barnyard for their mother hen."
The book also has an original copyright of 2004 being published in Japan by Crayon House Co., Ltd. It was first published in the United States in 2013 by Chronicle Books LLC., and was translated by Chronicle Books. So I thought that was cool, and it may have explained some of the art.
When I googled Gomi I instantly recognized his book Everyone Poops, which I think is well known in the United States. I didn't have it as a child, but I'm sure over the years I've seen it in the houses of friends with younger siblings. He also has a storybook The Crocodile and the Dentist that looks familiar to me, and I think when we go to the library again I will look for more books by Taro Gomi.
My 2.5 year old likes the book, and my 9-month old loves the book as well. She sits and watches the book the entire time, unlike when we're reading some wordier books and she tries to squirm away.
Both of my children love Mommy! Mommy! by Taro Gomi, and the book provides a lot of opportunity for silliness with its adorable art. It can be an introduction to Gomi's work and to Japanese art and culture. There's a simple grammar lesson there too, as the hen says at first "here I am," then later switches to "there you are."
The bottom line: we like this book a lot.
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