Gen zhe dian xin shu shu Counting with dim sum

跟著點心數數 = Counting with dim sum / by: Lacey Benard & Lulu Cheng.

Lacey Benard

Book - 2022

Counting in two languages is so much fun with our dim sum friends! Dim sum is everyone's favorite late-morning-to-lunchtime meal shared between family and friends. Our counting book utilizes dim sum's little dishes, accompanied by a pot of tea, as the subject for children to practice their counting. Children and adults alike will be delighted to find their favorite snacks included in the book as they turn each page. Our counting book squeezes in lots of extra learning opportunities and skills, such as encouraging one-to-one correspondence while practicing counting on a number line, extra fun facts about Chinese language, and a non-fiction page with real-life pictures of dim sum items in the picture glossary.

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0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room j495.1/Benard Due Jul 2, 2024
Subjects
Genres
board books
Board books
Fiction
Juvenile works
Picture books
Textbooks for Chinese speakers
Published
[Los Angeles, CA] : Bitty Bao, LLC 2022.
Language
Chinese
English
Main Author
Lacey Benard (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Cover title.
On board pages.
"Bilingual book Chinese-English"--Cover.
"Bitty bao"--Cover.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations ; 17 cm
ISBN
9781958833094
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

One pot of tea, 2 lotus-wrapped rice, 3 beef rice rolls, and 4 BBQ pork buns kick off this delectable introduction to counting and Chinese cuisine--and the snacks keep coming until readers reach 10 sesame balls. Extremely adorable cut-paper collage illustrations plate up the food, each piece with a cute face and unique expression, which rests against a solid-color background. Each double-page spread contains a surprising amount of information for its simple, uncluttered layout. The featured number is printed in a large, white font--both as a numeral and written out--beneath which the food name is written in a slightly smaller, yellow font. For the Chinese portion of the bilingual text, Mandarin is used with traditional characters, Zhuyin (phonetic notation), and Pinyin (Romanized spellings), and Cantonese and simplified Chinese editions will be released in February 2024. Along the bottom of each spread is a counting line that highlights the numbers already learned, reinforcing the sequence and vocabulary, and a dim sum picture glossary concludes with labeled food photos. This sturdily constructed, irresistible board book is a must-purchase for any library serving a Chinese community.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.