Skip to main content

You are here: Home » Going To The Dentist

Going To The Dentist

  • Going To The Dentist
    Going To The Dentist
    Dorling Kindersley
    Dorling Kindersley
    Review this store
    Product ID: 673590445
    Category: Books
    Description: Turn a new experience into a fun activity for you and your toddler with this step-by-step guide Are you off to see the dentist? Have you got first time nerves? Read the book together and find out what to expect. Watch toddler Dora as she goes to the dentist with her toy alligator.
    ISBN: 9781405335874
    Price: £3.49

    Visit store »

Add a Review/Comment

 

Similar Products

Magnify A Trip To The Dentist
A Trip To The Dentist

A Trip To The Dentist


Category: Books
Description: A trip to the dentist needn't be so scary when you can read all about it. Lots of photographs, simple vocabulary and illustrations make a great book to read together with your child and ideal for guided reading in the Literacy hour.
ISBN: 9781405333900
Review this product
 
Dorling Kindersley
Review this store
Dorling Kindersley
Product ID: 626926249
 
Price: £1.99
 
Visit Store »
Magnify Harry And The Dinosaurs Say raahh! - Ian Whybrow - Picture Books
Harry And The Dinosaurs Say raahh! - Ian Whybrow - Picture Books

Harry And The Dinosaurs Say raahh! - Ian Whybrow - Picture Books


Category: Books
Description: Harry's dinosaurs are acting strangely. They're hiding all over the house and refusing to come out. Could it be because today's the day of Harry's dentist appointment? Eventually Harry persuades them to jump in their bucket, but will the dinosaurs behave once they get to the dentist?
Delivery time: 1 to 3 days
Delivery cost: 1.95
Author: 0
Review this product
 
The Book People
Review this store
The Book People
Product ID: ADBWS
 
Price: £4.79
 
Visit Store »
Magnify The Way Things Work
The Way Things Work

The Way Things Work


Category: Books
Description: What really makes the things around us tick? Did you know that the principle behind the zip fastener also governed the building of the pyramids? Or that the dentist's drill is a direct descendant of the first windmill? The inner workings of hundreds of machines and devices are explained in this fun, colourful and unique look at technology through time.
ISBN: 9781405302388
Review this product
 
Dorling Kindersley
Review this store
Dorling Kindersley
Product ID: 61098629
 
Price: £18.99
 
Visit Store »
Magnify The Way Things Work - David Macaulay - Reference and Home Learning
The Way Things Work - David Macaulay - Reference and Home Learning

The Way Things Work - David Macaulay - Reference and Home Learning


Category: Books
Description: What really makes the things around us tick? Did you know that the principle behind the zip fastener also governed the building of the pyramids? Or that the dentist's drill is a direct descendant of the first windmill? The inner workings of hundreds of machines and devices are explained in this fun, colourful and unique look at technology through time.
Delivery time: 1 to 3 days
Delivery cost: 1.95
Author: 0
Review this product
 
The Book People
Review this store
The Book People
Product ID: AEBAB
 
Price: £15.19
 
Visit Store »

Amazon.co.uk reviews:

16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Going to the Dentist, 10 July 2003
By A Customer
This book is a good idea if you want to prepare your child for their first trip to the dentist.It is the story of a brother and sister who go to the dentist,one of which needs treatment.The book describes most things which could happen at the dental surgery,including the waiting room,the dentist`s chair,an injection,a filling,the importance of brushing teeth,etc.,in an easy to understand and direct manner.
This book is a favourite of my 3 year old son!.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Really good intro to the dentist, 28 Oct 2009
By 
Karina Everett "filmaholic" (East Susex, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
i thought this book was fab and my 3 year old loves it. it comes with stickers to stick in relevant places on each page and you also have to try to find the yellow duck on each page.

its a really good book to help explain to your child what happens when you do go to the dentist and that its not scary, and also why its important to brush your teeth and keep them nice and clean.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Going to the Dentist (Usborne First Experiences), 10 Aug 2010
This review is from: Going to the Dentist (Usborne First Experiences) (Paperback)
Highly recomended, we bought the series (going to the doctor etc) it worked a treat for our little girl
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


Articles

  • 25/05/2012 12:00 AM
    The 10 Best summer cookbooks

    1. The Food of Spain by Claudia Roden




    25/05/2012 12:00 AM
    The 10 best summer cookbooks

    1. The Food of Spain by Claudia Roden




    24/05/2012 12:00 AM
    Will Dean's Ideas Factory: Billr app means an end to asking 'Why am I paying for your steak?'

    Somehow, it's never easy. Even if there's an even number of you. Even if everyone has the same meal. And the same drinks. Even the tip can make things complicated.




    22/05/2012 12:00 AM
    Trending: Hardbacks vs e-books: the sequel

    In the world of journalism it's called a "reverse ferret" - a story breathlessly announcing that Black is White, just 24 hours after confidently asserting that Black is Black. In the genteel environs of publishing, it's a volte-face. Whatever it is, James Daunt, owner of Daunt Books and managing director of the Waterstones chain, executed a classic twirl at the weekend.




    20/05/2012 12:00 AM
    Between the Covers 20/05/2012

    We love flavorwire.com's new collection of "extremely silly photos of extremely serious writers", which shows that even Nobel Prize-winners kick back and let their hair down from time to time.




    20/05/2012 12:00 AM
    The Blagger's Guide To: Michael Frayn

    Michael Frayn's latest novel, Skios, will be launched on Thursday. It will be his eleventh novel. He has also written or translated 31 plays, and published 12 works of non-fiction, including a collection of his journalism, Travels With a Typewriter (2009) and a biography of his father, My Father's Fortune: A Life in 2010.




    20/05/2012 12:00 AM
    Invisible Ink: No 124 - Hans Fallada

    His pen-name was created from two characters in Grimm's fairy tales, but his novels had little in common with the moralistic fantasies of mittel-Europe. Rudolf Ditzen was a magistrate's son, raised in Berlin and immersed in Dickens, Flaubert and Dostoevsky. He became one of the greatest German authors of the 20th century, but was not translated into English until 2009.




    20/05/2012 12:00 AM
    The curious world of Norton Juster

    Some people are very easy to interview. Norton Juster is not one of them. He's delightful and articulate, but listening to the recording of our time together, it's striking how much more interesting his answers are than my questions. So our conversation entirely failed to resolve classics such as "Where did the idea for your book come from?" and ended up instead about vocational education, bipolar disorder, obscure Edwardian ghost-story writers, C P Snow, synaesthesia and the walks Juster used to take with his older brother. In some respects, it's hardly surprising; Juster has been giving interviews about his children's classic The Phantom Tollbooth for half a century, so might be forgiven for wanting his conversations to roam elsewhere.




    19/05/2012 09:00 AM
    How Aharon Appelfeld chronicled the Holocaust

    Blooms of Darkness, in Green's graceful, grave and irresistibly readable English version, tells the story of Hugo, a young Jewish boy in an occupied town in eastern Europe who loses his parents to the camps but stays alive thanks to the shelter and salvation offered him by a local prostitute, Mariana. It extends and deepens one of the most remarkable journeys in all modern literature. In a prolific career whose highlights include novels such as Badenheim 1939, Tzili, The Immortal Bartfuss and The Iron Tracks, as well as the memoir The Story of a Life, Appelfeld has interrogated the meaning of what happened to him, to his community, and to humanity itself, during Europe's era of genocide.




    19/05/2012 09:00 AM
    Gwendoline Riley: A portrait of the artist as a brooding young woman...

    Gwendoline Riley was finishing her first novel at the age that most of us were sleeping in, bunking off, or congregating around a pint at the student union bar. Turning her university dissertation into her debut, Cold Water (2002) she signed a two-book deal at the age of 22. Since then, she has accumulated a hipster-ish following and several literary awards (Somerset Maugham Award, the Betty Trask Award, a John Llewellyn-Rhys Memorial prize shortlisted nomination).