Fisher-Price: I Love My Family!


Book Description

Babies will enjoy cozying up with their rainforest friends. Parents will love pointing out all the fun and loving ways to interact with family.




Fisher-Price: Our First Book of Rhymes


Book Description

Give little ones a head start with this collection of rhymes, designed to foster cognitive development and deepen parent-child bonds. Featuring Fisher-Price’s viral “Purple Monkey” song and complete with expert tips for reading time, this board book offers warmth, fun, and learning for babies and grownups alike. Developed by Fisher-Price, the most successful childhood brand in the world. Inspired by Fisher-Price's viral "Purple Monkey" song, this collection of twelve sweet and silly rhymes was crafted with early childhood milestones in mind. Calming, rhythmic sounds keep babies engaged while images of playful animals spark their curiosity. Caregivers will delight in sharing these messages of big dreams, quiet moments, and unconditional love, creating lasting memories them and their little ones. Whether it's bedtime, downtime, or just “us” time, flip through the pages to find the perfect rhyme or enjoy reading the whole book in one go! Get the most out of reading time with practical tips from the experts at Fisher-Price. From advice on reading aloud to strategies for keeping little ones engaged, these insights help parents and caregivers encourage early childhood literacy and pave the way for a life-long love of reading. From little moments to big milestones, Fisher-Price is dedicated to helping families throughout every age and stage.




One Ripple at a Time


Book Description

Written especially for women who have struggled with the death of a child under age thirteen, One Ripple at a Time describes one mother’s guidance of her family and herself through grief, with practical advice for embracing new horizons of growth and self-confidence, as well as surprising connections. A parent should never outlive their own child, yet this is the position Janice Jensen found herself in after the drowning of her nine-year-old son. In the aftermath of this tragedy, Janice dedicated herself to her roles as mother to her surviving daughter and wife to her devastated husband even as she grappled with her grief. As a non-swimmer, Janice experienced water’s unforgiving power through the loss of her son, but as time went on, she also learned to appreciate its redemptive and healing properties. She sculled symbolic and real rivers, taking the necessary side channels to find waves that soaked peace and happiness into her body, mind, and heart. She learned to sail. And she fell in love with ballroom dancing, a passion that eventually led her back to the very place where she lost her son. A poignant, heartfelt story that takes readers through the everyday ups and downs of life after a tragedy and highlights the need to view each person’s grief journey and timeline as unique. One Ripple at a Time comforts readers and, through decades of the author’s personal quest, imparts a crucial message: The best of you is just around the bend.




Radical Play


Book Description

In Radical Play Rob Goldberg recovers a little-known history of American children’s culture in the 1960s and 1970s by showing how dolls, guns, action figures, and other toys galvanized and symbolized new visions of social, racial, and gender justice. From a nationwide movement to oppose the sale of war toys during the Vietnam War to the founding of the company Shindana Toys by Black Power movement activists and the efforts of feminist groups to promote and produce nonsexist and racially diverse toys, Goldberg returns readers to a defining moment in the history of childhood when politics, parenting, and purchasing converged. Goldberg traces not only how movement activists brought their progressive politics to the playroom by enlisting toys in the era’s culture wars but also how the children’s culture industry navigated the explosive politics and turmoil of the time in creative and socially conscious ways. Outlining how toys shaped and were shaped by radical visions, Goldberg locates the moment Americans first came to understand the world of toys—from Barbie to G.I. Joe—as much more than child’s play.




Parents


Book Description




Time


Book Description




Buy, Buy Baby


Book Description

An investigative journalist examines how marketers exploit infants and toddlers and the broad, often shocking impact of that exploitation on our society It's no secret that toy and media corporations manipulate the insecurities of parents to move their products, but Buy, Buy Baby unveils the chilling fact that these corporations are using -- and often funding -- the latest research in child development to sell directly to babies and toddlers. Susan Gregory Thomas offers even more unnerving epiphanies: the lack of evidence that "educational" shows and toys provide any educational benefit at all for young children and the growing evidence that some of these products actually impair early development and could harm our kids socially and cognitively for life. Underlying these revelations is a dangerous economic and cultural shift: our kids are becoming consumers at alarmingly young ages and suffering all the ills that rampant materialism used to visit only on adults -- from anxiety to hypercompetitiveness to depression. Thomas blends prodigious reportage with an empathetic voice. Her two daughters were toddlers while she wrote this book, and she never loses sight of the temporal and emotional challenges that parents face. She shows how we can help our kids live at their natural pace, not the frenetic clip that serves only the toddler-industrial complex. Buy, Buy Baby helps us fight the power marketers wield by exposing the false fears they spread.




Opera Magazine


Book Description




Little Horror


Book Description

Rita may be a baby, but she has the mind (and attitude) of a teenager. She knows she is not a normal toddler but when her parents disappear and a sinister clown and an ice-cream van seem to be hunting her down, even a soft-play centre might not be safe...