Karen Katz has written and illustrated many books for children, including The Colors of Us, Can You Say Peace, My First Ramadan, Counting Kisses and Where is Baby's Belly Button. Long inspired by folk art from around the world, she was inspired to write her first book, Over the Moon, when she and her husband adopted their daughter from Guatemala, and she wanted to tell the story of welcoming Lena into their lives. Katz loves to paint and experiment with texture, color, collage and pattern. Besides an author and illustrator, she has been a costume designer, quilt maker, fabric artist and graphic designer. Katz and her family divide their time between New York City and Saugerties, New York.
This book is a great way to introduce numerical value numbers as well as number words. This book allows you to participate in reading with your child. You can act out the action on the pages and count while you are doing it. It is a great interactive book. I chose this book because I feel like when people don't know how to read to their child this book is an icebreaker to that. This book shows you what to do and how to do it all the while making reading fun.
Sweet and cozy little story about all the kisses it takes before baby falls asleep--from ten little kisses on ten little toes to two kisses on each eye. It's nice as we see Mom, Dad, Grandma and Big Sis/Bro all showering the baby with love.
Any excuse to give kisses to my little girl is welcomed. Plus it is a really good counting book. Some of the descriptive adjectives of the places to kiss your child were a bit much for me.
Not my favorite, but better than others. There's the counting aspect and the body parts, too. It has a bedtime air in it, but I think it could work in baby storytime.
This is a sweet book to read with students at the facility students can think about the wonderful exeperiences they have at home with their love ones kissing them goodnight and showing them that they love them and will see them in the morning. It is also a good book to read with students learning numbers from 10to1.
I have read this book a million times. The littles can't get enough of the silly and sweet words and ridiculously adorable illustrations. Great way to learn numbers and share big smiles with the family.
There's a type of meditation practice that teaches you to methodically relax your entire body (and mind) by tightening, and then relaxing, one muscle group at a time. You can start with your forehead and work your way down to your toes, or vice versa. This book reminds me of that: baby gets ten kisses on her toes and then we count down to that last, single kiss "on your sleepy, dreamy head." A lovely progression that starts with tickly, silly fun (because how could ten toe kisses not be tickly, silly fun?!), and ends with peaceful sleepy relaxation. Good for babies' and toddlers' bedtime routines.
Since I'm currently looking for bedtime stories for a friend's little boy, I'm a little disappointed that this sweet book is so obviously geared towards girls. Of course girls have had to read guys' books since the dawn of time, so I personally wouldn't mind this at all. It's not like little boys will be hurt by seeing some pink every now and then. But I can't honestly envision the little guy's dad reading him this concoction of pink hearts and hair ribbons. Which reminds me of how far we still have to go in how we treat little girls and boys.
"Counting Kisses" by Karen Katz is a sweet picture book that helps young kids learn to count. The story shows a mom putting her baby to bed, counting down from 10 to 1 as she gives kisses. This book is great for teaching early math because it shows numbers in different ways - as digits, words, and pictures. It also uses a familiar bedtime routine that kids can relate to, and children can join in by counting along and pointing to their own body parts. Teachers can use this book in many fun ways, such as reading it out loud and having kids count along, playing counting games with body parts, or having kids make up their own counting stories. "Counting Kisses" is a good start for teaching numbers to young children, making learning math fun and connecting it to everyday life.
This board book presents learning numbers in a very colorful and sweet way. The main character in the story is a baby girl with brown pigtails and a pink onesie on. Throughout the book it presents each letter in order and every time the baby receives a kiss from her loved ones. This story teaches about family relationships, colors, objects, and numbers for infants and toddlers. One reason I did not like this book because it seemed very repetitive and lacked having a plot or a creative story.
Text to Teaching: This book can be used to teach math and literature. It can teach children how to count. It counts backwards from 10-1. This book also uses a lot of adjectives such as: tired, little, tiny, squishy, chubby, loud, and pretty. It can also be used to teach verbs and nouns. This book spells out the number and shows the actual number so the child can learn how to spell numbers.
The artwork was so simple and cute! I love how interactive this book is! This would be a perfect interactive read aloud with your own child... that you can kiss. Love that the book uses kisses and numbers to count down from ten until the fussy baby falls asleep! Would recommend to children under 5 who love to cuddle up to their mommies!
Great for a babytime, with very little ones. Have parents give little kisses to their infant/young one as you read the descriptions in the book. Probably won't translate over to toddler or preschool storytimes very well, though.
Counting Kisses by Karen Katz is an adorable book that was given to my baby girl before she was born. It is a great counting book for babies, and the illustrations are bright and colorful. We read to our children before bed, and Counting Kisses is a wonderful way to calm down the baby before bed.
This one is super cute, but my little guy wasn't into it. I think it would work better for kiddos who are not yet mobile--I had a hard time wrestling him around to kiss the designated spots in the book. :)
We're kind of obsessed with randomly yelling out body parts at the moment. Neck in particular is a favourite, so this was fun to read and point to our different body parts while mama counted and gave us kisses. Still not really on board with numbers so not sure what the fuss is all about.
I love how much shade the author throws the grandma. Her kisses are loud and warm - typical. Karen really understands knees - they are both chubby and yummy. I'm going to have to suggest some different adjectives for these animal kisses though. A cat's kiss has never and will never be fuzzy.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book is very sweet and would be a good book to read when kids are missing parents at school. This book also has lots of numbers and I like that it would make it easy to practice counting while reading it.
I love the concept of this book. I also really enjoy the hearts that correspond with the number of kisses; that is a nice visual aid. I only wish this book had more diversity.
I love the sweet nature behind this book. It is perfect for an interactive read with your child. You are able to count aloud and kiss the child following the book.