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THE TEDDY POTTY BOOK

From the Bright Start Right Start series

With all the potty titles out there—many with clearer presentations of the concepts or stronger storylines and...

This tall, sturdy volume of potty basics is another entry in the British Bright Start, Right Start series (First Numbers, 2014, etc.).

The text here reads like a beginner’s nonfiction title, introducing items such as diapers, underwear, toilets and training pants without much of a storyline to anchor the concepts. To begin, readers are introduced to Baby Bear: “This is Baby Bear wearing a diaper. / Baby Bear pees and poops in the diaper.” A note in small print suggests that parents replace the words “pee” and “poop” with whatever terms their family prefers. Readers then see Baby Bear wear training pants and underwear, use the potty successfully and unsuccessfully, and wash up afterward. Mommy Bear is there to help wipe Baby Bear’s bottom and flush the toilet. Unfortunately, the text doesn’t always flow smoothly at the sentence level, perhaps a result of the assiduous avoidance of gendered pronouns, and the connections between events are sometimes unclear. Further contributing to this disjointed effect are the mixed-media illustrations, which feature photographs of dressed-up teddy bears set against cartoon backgrounds, making for a busy, sometimes-dizzying blend of reality and fiction.

With all the potty titles out there—many with clearer presentations of the concepts or stronger storylines and characters—this is one to skip. (Board book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Aug. 5, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-910184-14-1

Page Count: 16

Publisher: Scribblers/Sterling

Review Posted Online: Oct. 21, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2015

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CAPTAIN OF THE TOILET

Not a standout, but it’s potentially useful for allaying the anxieties of wee ones ready to make what can be a scary leap...

A primer for little boys transitioning from their own potties to the toilet.

Jack is a cute, bespectacled tot wearing a large pirate hat featuring a skull and crossbones. He is busy playing with his teddy bear (which sports a bandanna and eye patch) when Daddy announces that it’s time to potty. But Jack has decided that he’s ready to give up the little potty and use the toilet like his father. Capt. Jack climbs aboard “his ship,” pees into the bowl, sits down and “does a poo,” flushes the toilet and then washes his hands. Proud Jack “takes a bow” while “Daddy claps and cheers,” proclaiming Jack “Captain of the Toilet!” Jack makes it look really easy, which may intimidate little ones, but they will probably be too busy repeatedly generating flushing sounds by pushing the book’s big blue button to notice. A companion title, Queen of the Toilet (978-0-7641-6659-4), stars a little girl. It follows the pattern of Jack’s story, except no child’s potty is pictured or mentioned. Bella seems to go directly from diapers to toilet, though the back cover indicates that this title, too, is intended for those transitioning from a child’s potty.

Not a standout, but it’s potentially useful for allaying the anxieties of wee ones ready to make what can be a scary leap from child’s potty to toilet. (Board book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Sept. 1, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-7641-6658-7

Page Count: 10

Publisher: Barron's

Review Posted Online: Nov. 1, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2014

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NOSES ARE NOT FOR PICKING

From the Best Behavior series

A positive approach to a difficult subject.

The latest addition to the Best Behaviors series encourages little ones to “Pick a tissue, not your nose.”

The opening spreads inform readers that noses are for breathing and sniffing but not for picking. The rhyming text, with a couple of clever lines, describes using a tissue, throwing the tissue away and washing hands to “Tell those germs good-bye.” Heinlen’s art, which is a step above other titles of this instructive, didactic ilk, uses a diverse cast of cartoon kids and grown-ups to model appropriate behaviors, rendering them with a bold black line and warm colors. The last two pages offer extensive tips for parents and caregivers on ways to gently discourage nose-picking through modeling, respect, redirection and persistence.

A positive approach to a difficult subject. (Board book. 2-4)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-57542-471-2

Page Count: 24

Publisher: Free Spirit Publishing

Review Posted Online: Oct. 5, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2015

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