Whose wet nose is this? A dog's wet nose, of course! Little ones will love to see the close-up photography and try to guess which animal the long, twitchy, or colorful nose belongs to. Animals featured About the Whose Is It These photo-based, early learning nonfiction books use a simple question-and-answer format to provide a fun and interactive learning experience for very young readers. Readers will learn about the characteristics of several body parts of a wide variety of animals as they observe the bold text and stunning photographs.
While some animals have distinctively colored noses, others have very long ones. In this board book for beginning readers, youngsters have the chance to use visual and textual clues to figure out which animal goes with which nose. There are five different animals, an elephant, a pig, a toucan, a horse, and a dog. While color seems to matter most in two of these appendages, it is great that the book presents at least one fairly unusual animal and one with which most youngsters will be familiar. The photographs are large, spreading across two pages. Parents and caregivers can use this book, along with others in this series, to encourage little ones to make guesses and even to talk about the animals and what they know about them or even learn more.
This is a short, simple board book featuring five animals. It's an interactive guessing game book to read to your little one. My daughter is 18 months and enjoyed it, guessing the animals and flipping back and forth between the pages. I liked that the pages weren't too busy so it kept her attention.
A bizzarely abrupt ending; also no educational resources included. But for a board book, the high-resolution photographs are high-quality. For that reason, I'd include it in a resource bag or classroom set.
My one year old loved this book and I love reading it to him because of how much he enjoyed. Just goes to show, for the right audience even a basic, basic book can be great!
This is an excellent opportunity to guess animals by seeing just one part of their body as a clue. The toucan and horse were stumpers. Love the real photos.