What do you give a newborn boy,
With eyes that twinkle full of joy?
A bundle of books just his size,
Full of wonder, love and surprise.
Click the links below for reviews of four board books "for now and to grow on." Or scroll down the page!
Paintings by Virginia Johnson
$8.95 (board book), 22 pages
A mother watches her newborn, and wonders about all that he sees and feels in this tender poem originally published in 1999 as a picture book.
"This new baby / sleeps in my arms / like a moon / sleeping on a cloud," the mother muses, as she holds him close, her face touching his.
Later, she says, as he drifts into a dreamworld in father's lap, he's "like a hawk drifting through the sky."
For a time the baby's still, then something stirs inside him, disquiets him, "the sound of hawks' wings lifting," and he lets out a cry, deep from inside.
His wail challenges his unrest, and "chases old ghosts / back into the shadows." Then his body relaxes once more, his eyes open "like two moons / shining on a lake," and he rests limply over his father's shoulder.
Later as the sun rises like a big orange balloon, mother takes him out in his stroller, aware that so much is new to him, and she wonders what he's thinking.
"This new baby stares at the sun, this new baby searches for his toes / what this new baby finds / what this new baby knows."
Johnson's delicate watercolors match the text's wondrous quality, a feeling of being blissfully lost in one's thoughts.
Written & illustrated by Joyce Wan
$6.99 (board book), 14 pages
Babies have us the moment we see them. One look at those cheeks and eyes, and we get all melty inside.
And when they're our babies? Well, we think we'll burst from happiness, or as the idiom curiously goes, we'll "just eat them up," every little toe.
In this adorable board book, Wan plays off that familiar expression and the intoxicating feeling we get from babies with words we reach for to show our affection.
Cupcake, gumdrop, sweet pea, cutie-pie, peanut and pumpkin -- phrases that convey how deliciously cute babies are and when read aloud, have our lips scrunching into a pucker.
Every endearment is used in a phrase, then paired with a rosy-cheeked picture of what it represents. Each has big dot eyes and tiny curved mouths that capture the sweetness of a baby.
The cutie pie is topped with a swirl of whipped cream to resemble a baby's first curl of hair, while the sweet pea peeks out of his pod as contentedly as a baby snuggled in Momma's sling.
One look at these adorable foods and you'll feel like you could just, well, eat this book up!
Don't miss Wan's other darling book in the series, We Belong Together, about the bonds of parent and child.