Thursday, May 28, 2009

Busy Penguins

Book: Busy Penguins
Photographs by: Jonathan Chester
Text by: John Schindel
Publisher: Tricycle Press



By popular demand, I am featuring the 94% adorable Busy Penguins (more on the 6% later). I defy anyone not to go "awww" at some point during this book, but the interesting thing is that it isn't a "cutesy" book, either.

We commemorated Baby H's first trip to the Monterey Bay Aquarium with this book as a souvenier (OK, and a few other things, too). It was also his first trip with his other baby friends, Baby Z and Baby G, two way-cute little girl babies. I was reading the book in detail while we were waiting for the three babies' restroom / eating cycles to get in sync, when I saw...

My least-favorite spread: "Penguins pooping" / "penguins drooping." I showed BlueDog this page, and she immediately said something like, "I could have never seen that in my whole life and been happy!" I agreed completely, which is why I also had to show her. Being grossed out loves company, I guess. Also, "penguins drooping" made me sad. Guess it's not a party all the time when you're a penguin. (Global warming commentary? Just tired penguins?) Anyway, maybe the pooping is one of the reasons the books isn't overly cutesy, which is a good thing.

Baby H's current favorite spread: He likes many of them, but the "penguins sliding / penguins diving" is his favorite. I think he likes the contrast of the penguins sliding on the ice.

My favorite spread: I love "penguins sharing / penguin caring." It's so sweet. Although again, the "sharing" image reminds me of global warming. Maybe I'm paranoid.



Deep thoughts: It's a crisp, modern photo book, making it a refreshing alternative to most of Baby H's collection of illustrated books. The words are fun--the rhyming is bouncy but not obnoxious--and the way the words look is fun, too. Many spreads have the text's appearance reflect the action--so "penguins sliding" the text is sliding down, too. Very fun.

The "penguin pooping" page is inexplicably yucky to me, since all baby caretakers witness way worse than that every day. I'm sure babies wouldn't even think twice about it, since it's a normal part of a day for penguins, babies, and anyone else! Maybe I just have enough poop in my day to deal with.

Then again, when we're trying to teach Baby H to use a toilet, perhaps it could be helpful in some way. "You don't want to poop on the ground like a penguin, do you?" Actually, that kind of makes it sound like fun. In any event, the book's a charmer, and Baby H isn't old enough to know when I skip a page yet.

4 comments:

  1. Yay! I'm so glad you posted the penguin book! And so thankful you didn't post the Penguins Pooping page. That Penguins Sharing page is sooo cute. I also think it's awesome that Baby H likes books. Zoe likes them, too — to eat.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I happened past a KVIE show the other day where a group of adults were sitting around what looked like a combination of a classroom and a talk-show set. I lasted all of ten seconds on the channel, because this was the line delivered by one individual (paraphrased):

    "It is good for children to see what comes out. Sometimes they need to see it before they realize what is happening. Once they make the connection between what they feel and seeing the result, it's much easier to potty train."

    That was SO not what I expected on KVIE. I expected a show about the horse whisperer. Sigh. I probably would be as grossed out as you and bluedog by the Penguin's Pooping spread. Eww.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for posting it. Its too good and people will enjoy it a lot.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The article is nice and
    It is good for children to see what comes out. Sometimes they need to see it before they realize what is happening. Once they make the connection between what they feel and seeing the result, it's much easier to potty train.

    ReplyDelete