Rock-a-bye, Dino

Hannah Eliot

Book - 2019

The classic lullaby, "Rock-a-Bye, Baby" gets a prehistoric twist as different dinosaurs get ready for bedtime in this board book with soft touch-and-feels on the cover!

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jBOARD BOOK/Eliot
2 / 4 copies available
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Children's Room jBOARD BOOK/Eliot Checked In
Children's Room jBOARD BOOK/Eliot Due Apr 28, 2024
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Children's Room jBOARD BOOK/Eliot Due May 9, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Board books
Published
New York : Little Simon 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Hannah Eliot (author)
Other Authors
Chie Y. Boyd (illustrator)
Edition
First Little Simon edition
Item Description
On board pages.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781534456402
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Sweet lullabies meet prehistoric predators and plant eaters in a bedtime board book with loads of charm and color. From the eye-catching iridescence of the tactile plates on the mother stegasaurus on the cover to the gentle, nursery-rhyme lilt of each dinosaur vignette, this book is a pleasant surprise on many levels. Presented in double-page tableaux pairing a stanza of text with richly colorful and delightfully expressive images of adult-child dinosaur pairs, this book maintains a winning tone throughout. Less a book about dinosaurs than a restful celebration of familial bedtime bonding, it succeeds on sincerity and the natural fascination kids have for dinosaurs. "Rock-a-bye, T. rex, in the treetop, / when your feet stomp, the mountains do rock. / You give a big yawn that means it's nightfall, / so home you come, dino--claws, teeth and all." It's not Shakespeare, but it's nice. Seven different dinosaur species are represented, Brachiosaurus, Brontosaurus, Allosaurus, and more, as well as Pterodactylus, all in different stages of the bedtime routine. The stylized renderings are not at all scary, and they convey very clearly the love between caregiver and child. Whether it's hugs or snuggles, reading a bedtime book together, or encouraging young dinos to eat their greens, there's a disarming level of blissful domesticity that should resonate well with tired would-be dinosaurs. Unapologetically unscientific, but a lovely way to tuck in young dinosaur fanciers everywhere. (Board book. 1-4) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.