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Bright Eyes, Brown Skin (A Feeling Good Book) (A Feeling Good Book) (A Feeling Good Book)
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Our Price $6.95
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INGRAM BOOK & DISTRIBUTOR |
African American Child's book
This was a wonderful book. I presented it as a Christmas gift to my GodDaughter. She enjoys the book. I would purchase it again for another child. The service from Amazon was excellent and ontime.
Great book!
An easy to read book with nice pictures. My kids love it.
Absolutely Wonderful
My 2-yr-old is so in love with this book. She is fascinated by the simple story and also by the great illustrations. It is one of her must-read bedtime books. It is indeed a "feeling good book", however I think it is only appropriate for children under 4-yrs.
An Okay Book for Babies and Toddlers - a review of "Bright Eyes, Brown Skin"
This would be a nice book for small children about to head off to preschool for the first time. It shows four darling children as they play and eventually nap at their school.
The artwork is reminiscent of Dick and Jane and is very appealing. As other reviewers have noted, there is very little text. In fact, here is the text from the first 4 pages (see below).
Bright eyes,
Brown skin...
A heart-shaped face,
A dimpled chin.
Now, Amazon has the ages for this book listed as 4 to 8. I would think Baby to beginning preschool would be more appropriate as there is no real story here. In regards to using this book as a beginning reader, I think it would be a miserable choice. Certainly there are not a lot of words, but the one's that *are* here are not suitable for beginners. Words like `heart-shaped' and `dimpled', `ticklish' and `special' are simply too hard.
Three Stars. Wonderful `Dick and Jane' pictures with brown-skinned children. I borrowed this book from the library for my entering-preschooler: 1) because he will be entering soon, and 2) because I am tired of looking at white-only faces in books (even though we are not brown skinned).
Not a great read-aloud, the conversations that can come from discussing the pictures make up for this flaw.
Charming
The title of this book might lead you to believe race is a major theme. In fact, it isn't addressed except to note that the characters have brown skin. There is very little text, and what there is describes, in rhyme, physical attributes of the four children as they go about a normal school day.
This book is one of the "Feeling Good" series, written for beginning readers. At least one of the children, Olivia, has appeared in another book. Olivia is actually the daughter of author Bernette Ford. The other characters are Ethan, Alexa, and Jordan.
Illustrations by George Ford (husband of Bernette?) of watercolor or pastel pencil show incredibly cute African American kids with dimples in their cheeks and chins, heart-shaped faces, etc. The book falls into that category of story that could be about anybody, appropriate for all; the characters just happen to be African American.
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