The first language every child learns to speak and read is body language. In this wonderfully playful picture book, one of the most recognized faces in America (along with her young son, Presley) shows us how to use our faces to say just about anything to our young loved ones! Filled with silly sounding onomatopoeic words, this delightful read-aloud will have adults smiling, frowning, wrinkling their noses, and making other funny faces with every line. Infants and toddlers find out how expressive they can be while adults learn that they are most beautiful in their children's eyes when they simply play, listen and laugh together!
ELLEN SCHECTER has been published widely in print and on the web. Many of her books are for children, and her first novel, The Big Idea [Hyperion] won the Américas Award for Children’s and Young Adult Literature. She’s written and collaborated on multiple-award-winning TV for PBS, Disney, CBS, and the Discovery Channel. Not bad for someone who never grew up.
Excepts from her new memoir, Fierce Joy, have been published online on ducts.org, Lilith magazine, and the University of Virginia Medical Arts Journal.
Check out the great reviews of her latest book, FIERCE JOY, at faboverfify: best memoirs of the year so far [faboverfifty.com/bookblog/2012/04]; New York Review of Books: Laura Schultz, in the New York Journal of Books: “Ellen Schecter creates a visual symphony with her extraordinary command of the unique language of the soul.” In “Diagnosis Is Not Death,” a review in Tablet by Sarah Ivry: “Illness does not always rob us of our spirit …and Schecter…finds in Judaism a sense of nurturing that… she didn’t realize she craved….I not only want to make peace with my illness, I want to sanctify it."
I have negative feeling sand positive feelings in the anti-bias aspect of this book. I believe it did a fantastic job showing different races of the children, although the main character was her son who was Caucasian. The negative of it for me was the fact that it didn’t have any fathers in the book and only mentioned something about a dad once and the rest of the time it was just mommies. It made me frustrated because 1. The book would have been fine without the mention of mommies or daddies and 2. What about the families that don’t have mommies or even daddies in them? I also felt the book was a bit too long, while reading it I often thought “okay, is this the last page yet?” I did appreciate the fact that the illustrations in the book were actual photographs and not drawings. I am not sure if I would have this in my future classroom or not. I am a bit torn about it.