Oh, baby! Leslie Patricelli's one-haired wonder returns to share the love.
When you're an adorable bald baby, your family finds lots of ways to show you how much they love you: Mommy lifts you uppy, Daddy kisses you on the tummy, and everyone wants to snuggle. What's not to love? With comedy and warmth, Leslie Patricelli offers a universal tribute to love and affection in a book full of instant appeal for little valentines everywhere.
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Creators
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Series
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Publisher
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Release date
October 22, 2014 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780763665876
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
December 10, 2012
A toddler with a single, springy curl (who appears in several other board books by Patricelli) welcomes affection from his parents and family members—and they joyfully accommodate: “Mommy kisses all my toesies./ Daddy kisses on my tummy./ They both want to eat me up./ I’m so yummy, yummy!” Working in acrylic, Patricelli offers friendly, cartoonlike characters that show their love in individual ways, set against welcoming backgrounds in rosy pinks, reds, and blues. Readers ought to find all this kissing and hugging contagious. Ages 1–3. -
Kirkus
December 15, 2012
Patricelli's huggable, cartoon baby is back in an exploration of hugs and kisses. "A kissy when I cry, a hug to say bye-bye, / I don't want this hug to end. Now I hug my friend!" So goes the rhyming verse narrated by the iconic, diaper-clad tot, who explains physical affection among babies, families, friends and pets. Each spread features one, two or multiple scenes of Patricelli's acrylic cartoon characters with thick, black outlines against bold backgrounds in red, dark pink or purple jewel tones. She does a lovely job of capturing toddler-and-parent interactions; especially ebullient: the depiction of a family pileup hug on the floor. As in Patricelli's other books in the series, the final spread provides several smaller captioned cartoons on the theme. While this list of the variety of kisses and hugs people share and their idiomatic names is fun, it is troubling that Patricelli chose to include "Eskimo Kiss," a pejorative and outdated term, showing a dark-skinned young child dressed in a stereotypically oversized jacket rubbing noses with the Caucasian baby protagonist. An unfortunate choice in an otherwise charming package. (Board book. 6 mos.-3)COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Languages
- English
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