Interactive Picture Books
Reviews by
Melissa Oxborrow
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[June 16, 2016]
Trying to monitor the time
your little one spends on your phone or tablet? Try these interactive picture
books that encourage a special way of engaging with the written word. Toddler,
preschoolers and even early school-age children will love these fabulous titles.
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Don’t Push the Button!
by Bill Cotter,
c2013
You’ll laugh out loud at Cotter’s interactive picture book Don’t Push the
Button! Meet Larry the monster who announces at the very beginning that
there is only one rule in his book: don’t push the button! Before long,
however, the temptation of that big red button is just too much to resist.
Larry tells the kids to go ahead and push it--- again and again. Before
their eyes, Larry will turn colors, gain polka dots and then multiply into
lots of monsters! Silly fun (with a bow to the natural consequences of our
action) will keep little listeners hanging on every word. Like this title?
Be sure to check out Don’t Touch This Book!
Mix It Up!
by Herve Tullet,
c2014
Herve Tullet does it again! This follow-up title to Press Here features
simple, brightly colored artwork with basic instructive language that
engages children and encourages them to interact with the book. The book
begins with a simple introduction to the primary colors and an invitation to
mix them up, creating new colors. Then the guessing game begins…If you rub
blue and red together really hard, what do you get? Add the concept of
adding white to make colors lighter and black to make them darker and you
have a perfectly wonderful interactive picture book---and introductory art
lesson. Ta da! If your child loves Mix It Up! be sure to try some more of
Tullet’s titles. Hint: The Game of Light is super fun for bedtime!
[to top of second column] |
Touch the Brightest Star
by Christie Matheson,
c2015
The sun is going down and night is approaching. Discover the magic of a
changing world…
Christie Matheson’s second title is another interactive hit! A soft palette
of gentle blues paired with simple evocative language is the perfect formula
for a unique bedtime story. Children are invited to press a firefly to make
it light up, to swipe the night sky to bring out a shooting star, to trace
stars to create the Big and Little Dippers---and lots more! If your child
enjoys this title, try Matheson’s Tap the Magic Tree, an interactive
exploration of the seasons.
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To check out these books or to get recommendations
for other great reads, please come see us at the Lincoln Public
Library, 725 Pekin Street.
[By
MELISSA OXBORROW,
Lincoln Public Library District] |