Babies and toddlers will love touching the textured patches as they meet lots of adorable sloths. The bright pictures and textures to touch are designed to help develop sensory and language awareness.
Fiona Watt is an Editorial Director and writer at Usborne Publishing. She started working at Usborne in 1989 and has written and edited hundreds of books including baby and novelty, sticker, art and craft, cookery, science and activity books. Fiona graduated from Exeter University with a B.Ed. (Hons.), specialising in Psychology and Art and Design. After university she worked as a researcher and writer for a company which published educational material for places where children went on school visits (zoos, museums, stately homes etc). She then taught seven, eight, and nine year olds for five years; three years at a state school in Sevenoaks in Kent, and two years at The British School in the Netherlands in The Hague.
Having joined Usborne in 1989, Fiona became an editorial director in 2003, largely responsible for writing baby and novelty books, as well as art and activity titles. She has written over 100 titles for Usborne Publishing, perhaps most notably the, ‘That’s not my ….‘ touchy-feely series.
First book I read to my baby girl! At 11 days old I read this book to her while feeding. Her hands were occupied and I decided to let her feel the sensory patches with her feet. By the end of the book, she was dragging her foot across the spots on her own to feel the soft textures 💚
This was one of the first books my son & I checked out for him at the library when we signed him up for the summer reading program. I was so excited to read new books in this series as we'd exhausted his 3 at home. I wonder if it's because this book was "well loved" but he didn't enjoy it as much. The rips and over touched textured areas made it hard for him to locate the touchable parts & enjoy the art because the book was definitely used. Even so, I don't know if there's much difference sloth to sloth so it's not as engaging as the other themes.
A short story about finding your sloth. Touch and feel on every page and learning about body parts and textures. The pages are full and colourful. Love the interactive content.
One mouse's quest to find her pet(?) sloth by scanning different sloths for their physical attributes. Are all sloths owned by the mouse overlords? Do the sloths count so little in this mouse-run society that they don't even get personal pronouns but are all "it"?
About half of the touchy-feely parts are good (scratchy velcro nose, furry legs, soft belly), the "smooth" parts don't differ much from the pages. The furry legs and soft belly should have been swapped, as the legs are much softer than the belly.
Using a less common animal, this board book explores the textures associated with many animals, particularly a sloth... smooth claws, silky tongue, furry tummy etc.