Waterstones Opposites with Frank Lloyd Wright
511 ratings
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Price: £9.99
Brand: Waterstones
Description: The follow-up to the Mudpuppy board book bestseller My First Shapes With Frank Lloyd Wright, Mudpuppy's Opposites With Frank Lloyd Wright Board Book entertains and introduces children the concept of opposites. Using Wright's famous works, colorful spreads illustrate hard and soft round and pointy, city and nature, and more.- Size: 6.25 x 6.25 x 0.75. Waterstones Opposites with Frank Lloyd Wright - shop the best deal online on thebookbug.co.uk
Category: Books
Merchant: Waterstones
Product ID: 9780735354081
Delivery cost: 2.99
ISBN: 9780735354081
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Author: TMP
Rating: 5
Review: I purchased this book for my one year old Grandson as a Christmas gift. The book is very sturdy and the pages are colorful and thick. He loves it!
Author: majikthise
Rating: 2
Review: We’re first time parents, but we’ve learned pretty quickly that, because babies and toddlers don’t decide what you buy for them, there’s a whole category of toys and baby items that are really marketed for their parents, but in which the kids themselves have absolutely no interest. I’m talking about stuff like those beautiful, expensive, high quality montessori-style wooden toys that look so great in that ideal baby’s room in catalogs, and then you imagine your baby being so enriched and educated and perfect, but then in reality your baby would rather play with the loose fibers on your carpet than engage with that toy. This book is just like that—a book that adults might love (if you love Frank Lloyd Wright). But if you actually want to teach your toddler about opposites, it’s terrible. Some of the illustrations are okay, but some of them are downright confusing. See my attached photos for examples. We returned our copy without even showing it to our kid once—I didn’t want to risk confusing him and undoing all the work we’ve already been doing in teaching him opposites. I mean, if you can get your kid to learn the difference between hot and cold with this book, more power to you. I would have loved to have that kid too. But our kid learned hot and cold by sticking his face on top of the AC / heating vents (which are on the floor in our house for some reason) in March, where sometimes the heat was on, sometimes AC. And we’d just tell him “hot!” or “cold!”, depending on which one it was. Our baby-raising reality is really different from the aspirational ideal that books like this exploit.