Reviewed by: BigAl with input from The Princess
Genre: Children’s Picture Book
Approximate word count: Fourteen pages with both text and
illustrations (excluding cover, front matter, and back matter)
Availability
Click
on a YES above to go to appropriate page in Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or
Smashwords store
Author:
“Karin Cox
is an Australian editor, poet, and author and, like many women, is doing her
best to be a modern Wonder Woman. Trained as a professional editor, and with
more than fifteen years in the trade publishing industry under her belt, she
edits and writes in her ‘spare time’ while being a fulltime mum to her infant
daughter and to a black cat with the improbable name of ‘Ping Pong.’
Since her
first book was published in 2003, Karin has written more than 28 natural
history books, biographies, Australian social history books, children's picture
storybooks, and travel guides. In 2010, her books Amazing Facts about Australian Wildlife Conservation and Amazing Facts about Australia's Early
Settlers were listed as notable books on the Children's Book Council of
Australia 2010 Notable Books list. In 2010, Karin also won two Whitley Awards
for natural history writing in the Popular Zoology and Wildlife Conservation
categories.”
For more,
visit the author’s blog.
Description:
“Zac is
very excited to be getting a new little sister. But how will she arrive
exactly? And will he like her after all?
Designed
for parents to help initiate conversation about pregnancy, birth, and the
arrival of a new sibling, this engaging, beautifully illustrated picture book
by Australian author Karin Cox raises some likely questions from young children
while still allowing parents to decide how to explain a new arrival in their
own terms. Follow Zac and his family as they prepare for a little bundle of joy
to arrive.”
Appraisal:
When my
nine year-old granddaughter (“The Princess”) was visiting and wanted something
to read, I downloaded Hey Little Sister
to my Kindle Fire and suggested she read it to her four year-old sister. Then I
quizzed her on how it had gone.
Although a short book (in adult terms), I thought it was a good indication that her
younger sister actually sat still for the full book. When asked, The Princess
liked the story, liked all the illustrations with one exception (she wasn’t too
keen on one involving an accident the Mother in the story had), and was quick
to give it a letter grade of “B” on an A, B, C, D, F grading scale.
Although The
Princess has (obviously) already been through the experience, when I read the
book later, I agreed with her, that it was a good story, and well suited to its
purpose of initiating conversation with a younger child who has a new sibling
on the way.
Because the
illustrations are in color, this is ideal for a Kindle Fire or other tablet
computer with a Kindle app; however, when viewed on my Kindle keyboard, the
illustrations still looked good, even though in grayscale, and the text was easy
to read.
Format/Typo Issues:
No
significant issues.
Rating: **** Four stars
2 comments:
Thanks Al & Princess. I'm glad you enjoyed it. I am not sure why the cover is blurry. It may be I sent you the hi-res cover (not web res). Is it okay if I resend it to you?
Cheers
Karin Cox
Karin,
I don't think I received a cover with your submission. I don't ask for them and, as a rule, use the image from Amazon.
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