"I would like to see something kawaii, smell the sakura, meet your tomodachi (friends), have a bento, look at koi, gaze at the hoshi (stars)"
And those were exactly the things that Aoki did when she visited her friend Yoko in Tokyo. This book is super kawaiiii. It highlights all things Japanese, from shinkansen, sakura, bento, to cosplay culture (anime costume dress-up). Through the illustration, it also shows the colourful kimonos, Japanese traditional houses, and other little cultural details. So it's good (and cute) early book to expose young readers to Japanese culture.
Most importantly, the book is very interactive with super fun prompts and lift-the-flaps, making this one of the looongest bedtime book despite the short text. My daughter would take her time to help Aoki choose the things to pack, match the patterns of Shinkansen passengers' outfits with the patterns of the luggage, open every 'cupboard' to find missing Popo the panda, 'eat' the bento, 'shop' and trinket store, and help Popo take pictures for Aoki and Yoko 😶😶😶 On top of that, there are these little black birds that appear on every page that K just had to count at every flip of a page.
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It is certainly a delightful and engaging book. Maybe just try not to choose this book for bedtime story when you are exhausted and desperately need a quick 5-minute read. You have been warned.
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The lift-the-flaps are made of normal semi-glossy paper, the same type as the book pages, not thick board page type. So it's safer (for the book 🤭) to be handled by kids who can already be rather gentle with books. It's safe in the hands of my then 2-year-ish old daughter, with lots of reminders and guidance.