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Chargement... Fuzzy Fuzzy Fuzzy! a touch, skritch, & tickle book (2003)par Sandra Boynton
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. This is a good first touchy-feely book. It's a little large, so it's great for lapsitters; there isn't too much in the way of vocabulary to muck things up; and the textures are varied. But it's the sort of book that babies and toddlers will tire of quickly, and yes, the two flaps on the back *will* get torn off, so it has to be a supervised book. For more long-term use, I'd suggest the "That's Not My..." series. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Prix et récompenses
Introduces different textures, including a cow's fuzzy nose, a puppy's rough paws, and a duck's soft tummy. On board pages. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)612.88Technology Medicine and health Human physiology Nervous system Touch; Tactil Sense; EquilibriumClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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But the more I look at it, the more it bugs me.
On the first page, Sandra Boynton would have us believe a cow's nose is fuzzy. I grew up on a dairy farm and know for a fact that cow snouts are smooth and slimy, with any hair around them being more prickly than fuzzy. They literally stick their tongues up their nostrils all day long, slurping up the mucus constantly oozing out of them. Calling that "fuzzy" is blatant misinformation. She's lying to kids, people!
On the next page, we have a dog's paw to touch with the caption, "Rough rough rough." That's clever because it picks up on the animal sound, right? We are then shown a pig's nose on the next page with a caption of "Smoooooooth." Yes, a pig's snout is probably about as smooth as a cow's. But if we moved the "Smoooooooth" to the cow, we'd have a more accurate description of it's nose and could emphasize the "mooooooo" in the middle and suddenly have a secondary animal noises theme the whole book could have been built around. Now we're moving into the realm of actually having to think about the book being made, Boynton, instead of farming it out to an intern to slap together from random images in your sketchbook and materials in your sewing basket.
Turning to the last page, the text asks "Do you want to start over with the fuzzy fuzzy guy?" Imagine being the parent stuck in a loop where the kid lifts the flap "Yes!" over and over again. It's just setting up a fight. Or if the kid picks "No." the first time through, then the parent will probably have regrets about wasting money on a book the kid doesn't want to read again. Lose, lose scenario.
Also, by referring to the "fuzzy, fuzzy guy," Boynton draws attention to the fact that the first page actually has "fuzzy" three times when indeed, there are only two instances of fuzzy -- and one of those is on the cover. WHERE'S OUR THIRD FUZZY!
Finally, looking at the back cover, we find that some copywriter has spoiled every single page. Every. Single. One. Look at it in a bookstore and you might as well put the book back on the shelf because there are no surprises or reveals left to be had. Boo!
I'm obviously overreacting for fun, but this really isn't anywhere close to the level I expect when I open a Sandra Boynton board book. ( )