Why Mommy Says No?


Book Description

Why Mommy says No is a book about the right & wrongs in the everyday life of a child. Its about having discipline and why there is disipline. Moms everywhere don't want to say no to their child, but do this as a right of passage so that their child will learn from their everyday experiences. Mommy says no for the sake of keeping their child safe & allow their child to perform in the everyday real world. Why Mommy Says No is basically because mom loves his or her child.




Why Does Mommy Say No?!


Book Description

Since the dawn of time, children have wrestled with one frustrating question: Why does Mommy say no?! Amanda Hebert Hughes paints this constant struggle of young minds from their perspective. Will her book reveal the answer to an age-old mystery and restore amiable relations between toddlers and parents everywhere? Open the pages to find out!




When Mommy and Daddy Say No, They Still Love You


Book Description

In a series of family scenerios, a mother and father transform "NO" into a word of love and protection, encouraging their children to become responsible, healthy, and curteous individuals.




Mommy Didn't Say That...


Book Description




Sometimes My Mommy Gets Angry


Book Description

A little girl copes with her mother's mental illness, with the help of her grandmother and friends.




Mommy, Please Don't Go to Work!


Book Description

Mommy, Please Don't Go to Work! is a story for young children feeling sad when mom leaves for work. Leo and his sister, Luci, want Mommy to stay home from work. When a mishap at school threatens to cancel a bake sale, Mommy jumps into action. Mommy is a TV reporter and rallies the community to help. Other working moms help save the bake sale. Even though moms work, they don't forget that family always comes first.




Betty Bunny Loves Chocolate Cake


Book Description

Meet Betty Bunny, a loveable handful nobunny can resist. From author Michael B. Kaplan, creator of Disney’s T.V. show Dog with a Blog, comes the debut picture book of the Betty Bunny series. It's a story about patience—seen through the eyes of a precocious preschooler. Betty Bunny is the youngest in her family of rabbits and she’s just discovering the important things in life, like chocolate cake. She declares, “I am going to marry chocolate cake” and takes a piece to school with her in her pocket. Mom values healthy eating and tells Betty Bunny she needs patience when it comes to dessert. But Betty Bunny doesn’t want patience, she wants chocolate cake! In this funny tribute to chocolate lovers (and picky eaters), Betty Bunny’s charming perspective on patience will be recognizable to anyone with a preschooler in their life.




Yes Mommy


Book Description

What kind of mother doesn’t say no to her kids? One who is clearly angling for the Mother of the Year trophy – or an extended stay in a mental institution. After deciding to eliminate the words no, don’t and stop from her parenting vocabulary for one month, Amy Sprenger documents what life is like with her three young children. Spoiler alert: she’s still alive, so it didn’t actually kill her.




Mothers


Book Description

A simple argument guides this book: motherhood is the place in our culture where we lodge, or rather bury, the reality of our own conflicts. By making mothers the objects of both licensed idealization and cruelty, we blind ourselves to the world’s iniquities and shut down the portals of the heart. Mothers are the ultimate scapegoat for our personal and political failings, for everything that is wrong with the world, which becomes their task (unrealizable, of course) to repair. Moving commandingly between pop cultural references such as Roald Dahl’s Matilda to insights on motherhood in the ancient world and the contemporary stigmatization of single mothers, Jacqueline Rose delivers a groundbreaking report into something so prevalent we hardly notice. Mothers is an incisive, rousing call to action from one of our most important contemporary thinkers.




Mad at Mommy


Book Description

Little Bunny is REALLY MAD at his mommy. She sleeps too late. She talks too much. She watches her silly grown-up shows instead of cartoons. And she gets mad for no reason-like just a few little soap bubbles on the floor. It's time for Little Bunny to SPEAK OUT. And time for a hug later on. With the charming illustrations and spot-on understanding of young children's thinking that distinguished The Snow Day, Komako Sakai brings us a REALLY ANGRY-and ultimately sweet-new story.