How small animals go to sleep

How small  Today there is a book review about “How How small  Little Animals Go to Sleep” by Anne-Kristin zur Brügge (author) and Marina Rachner (illustrator).

Find out here whether it is a nice bedtime story for 1- to 3-year-olds.

How small animals go to sleep
“How little animals go to sleep” * was one of the first bedtime books we had. I thought the cuddly owls on the front cover were really cute and thought to myself: “Well, then you should get this.”

It took me some time to finally decide FOR the book and not AGAINST it. You can read why below.

What is it about?

You can probably guess: “How Little Animals Go to Sleep” is about how animals put their children to sleep. A total of six animals are introduced: the lion, the mouse, the monkey, the owl, the cat and the hedgehog. Finally, a mother puts her little boy to bed. How is that done?

The story is accompanied by beautiful, loving rhymes.

On the whole, the illustrations are very nicely done. I like some more, others less. It’s always a question of taste. Or of your own point of view. I think the picture with the monkeys cuddling arm in arm in the trees is nicer than the one with the mouse scratching its baby’s ear.

opinion of an adult
Children’s books don’t have to be realistic, not at all. But imagine how the animals stroke their children to sleep. Scratch their ears. Cover them with leaves and poke their noses… And these are mainly animals that don’t go peru mobile database to sleep at night because they are actually nocturnal… And personally I find books more beautiful that are either very abstract so that you can let your imagination run wild. Or that depict animals as they really are. True to reality.

In my imagination, the animals just cuddle together and sleep. They are not alone. That’s why it bothers me when the boy ends up sleeping alone in bed with a bunch of stuffed animals. And the mother just sits at the edge of the bed and accompanies him to sleep. These are things that annoy me personally because I think differently about this topic. I don’t think a child has to sleep alone in bed. But if I start philosophizing about it now, I’ll go off on a tangent.

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Opinion of a nearly 2-year-old

To put it bluntly, my son doesn’t care at all about what has been described above. As long as he doesn’t have to sleep alone, I think he won’t care. He loves it when we imitate animals and stroke each other, hug each other, poke each other on the nose, pick “fleas” off our bottoms, etc.

The book was also the trigger for his love of parrots. I thought that was really sweet.

Conclusion
How do I rate a book that I personally don’t like that much, but the little man does?

In itself, “How Little Animals Go to Sleep” is a really nice bedtime book. Beautiful rhymes (that you can quickly learn by heart), nice illustrations, not too long and not too short.

And especially in times when the topic of “letting the baby cry” is becoming relevant again, it is nice to read a story that deals with the topic of sleep in a very warm-hearted way. It is about love, protection, security, feeling safe. google trends: instructions for use If you are lovingly accompanied to sleep, you can sleep alone in bed. And you don’t have to sleep in the family bed, as I would always like to see in children’s books.

In the end, I saw that the little man liked it. So I can live with agb directory having bought this book. In “How Little Animals Go to Sleep” * you will find a loving bedtime story. And if you are bothered by the fact that the child has to sleep alone at the end, you can tell the story differently (like I do).

 

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