Today my living room looks like the children's section of the library has exploded inside of it.
We are having our upstairs carpets cleaned on Wednesday and are taking this opportunity to purge all Happy Meal toys, broken toys and toys that haven't been touched since Christmas 2002.
And we're weeding through books. Emptying out five bookcases, we see what a collection we've amassed over the years since our first daughter was born. So now all of these books are piled high downstairs while my husband moves the bookshelves out of the girls' rooms -- hopefully enabling the carpet guys to nail any lurking dust mites.
AND while hubby's doing the heavy lifting, I've got the task of deciding which books need to go bye-bye. This has proved harder than I thought.
It's an inherited problem -- I grew up in a house where, even during lean years -- there were always books. These books were proudly displayed in over-stuffed bookcases -- reading material that ranged from the Warren Commission Report on the assassination of JFK to my great-grandmother's time-worn cookbooks. As a result, I think it's in my blood to feel funny about actually getting rid of books.
But still -- there are quite a few that my girls no longer read -- and many which they were never crazy about to begin with. I start with those -- make a pile to donate -- and then I stumble on some baby board books.
I find Do You Know New?, by Jean Marzollo, a book that I read over and over again to both of my girls, even as infants. The cute rhyme scheme and the mirrored page at the end were irresistible to both of them.
I can still feel their wiggling little selves in my lap. I'd read: "Do you know blue?" Then I'd ask them the color of the sky and they'd point to the page with chubby toddler fingers and say "Boo!"
Another great book series that my girls enjoyed was the "My First" series by DK Publishing. These are a type of first dictionary -- introducing the concept that every object has a word to go along with it -- an early reading lesson. Plus the pictures are stimulating and colorful and my girls loved pointing to them as I'd call out the corresponding word.
And they liked to chew on them too. Answer me this -- how's a mom supposed to get rid of a book that has her baby's teeth marks etched in the corners? -- even if that baby is now 9 years old?
Nope, sorry, can't do it -- maybe next time we have the carpets cleaned. But not today.
Sunday, September 9, 2007
Books, Books, Everywhere! Part I: The Board Book Years
Posted by
Christina
at
12:49 PM
Labels: baby books, board books, early readers, gift book, picture books, read aloud books
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