A board book for babies, full of wholesome, hearty goodness. Market-fresh fruit sumptuous to the eye, named in playful rhyme that's delightful to the ears. This rhythmic nourishment will set baby on the right path to eating healthy food for years to come. Beautiful, colorful, cut-paper style images of fruit from pineapple to mango are presented in a rhythmic Huckleberry-strawberry- watermelon-plum/ apricot-mango Let's have some! In this book, the juicy sensuousness of fruit comes alive and drips down your chin!
Absolutely love this book and its companion book, Vegetables.
There are so many kids' books that subtly or not-so-subtly promote junk food that to find one teaching about healthy food that is also actually a good book is awesome.
I love the art style--artsy enough to be art, but realistic enough to familiarize the kid with different fruits.
This was a great introduction to fruit. My mama loves fruit and ate lots of it while pregnant with me (especially mango, bananas, pineapple, apples, blueberries, strawberries, cherries, oranges, etc). My papa especially loves bananas. I can't wait to try them!
This very simplistic book with mediocre artwork features various pieces of fruit that children can identify. No story or anything. Just average pictures of fruit.
Along with the companion book, Vegetables, these are my twin toddlers favorite books right now and I don't mind reading them over and over. It's not often you find a board book that has been laid out so thoughtfully and artistically. I would happily frame the pictures and hang them on my walls if I could find the prints. The color schemes, texture, shading, and details of each illustration make them very artistic compositions. I think you can learn a lot about art by studying the illustrations.
The rolling verse is lovely too. Very well written. I think my family has the whole thing memorized now. This is the perfect kind of book for a baby/toddler that is just beginning to say a lot of words and looking for labels for everything. They can't handle lots of words on a page but one word that clearly labels the image above it is perfect.
I've also noticed these books inspire my kids to eat more produce. Yea!