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Crib Notes Random Reference for the Modern Parent by Elizabeth Weil and Amy NEW

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所在地:Westfield, Massachusetts, 美國
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Subject
Literature
ISBN
9780811844055
Book Title
Crib Notes : a Random Référence for the Modern Parent
Item Length
7.2 in
Publisher
Chronicle Books
Publication Year
2004
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Illustrator
Yes
Item Height
0.8 in
Author
Elizabeth Weil, Amy Maniatis
Genre
Family & Relationships, Non-Classifiable
Topic
Parenting / General, Baby Names
Item Width
5 in
Item Weight
8.5 Oz
Number of Pages
144 Pages

關於產品

Product Information

Will the baby grow up to be the Dalai Lama? How do you twist balloons into dogs? Which countries offer the best maternity benefits? What are the most common baby names? What does a human face look like to a newborn? Crib Notes is the delightful, illustrated compendium of factsuseful and useless, and always fascinatingabout pregnancy and early childhood. This enchanting volume offers page after page of compelling trivia and practical information, made all the more playful by the juxtaposition of subjects. Growth charts, nanny salaries by region, ancient and modern gender predictors, bedtime story generators, and information and advice on scores of other topics make this whimsical book completely necessarya shower gift that will bring endless pleasure and the perfect cribside companion.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Chronicle Books
ISBN-10
0811844056
ISBN-13
9780811844055
eBay Product ID (ePID)
30766981

Product Key Features

Book Title
Crib Notes : a Random Référence for the Modern Parent
Author
Elizabeth Weil, Amy Maniatis
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Topic
Parenting / General, Baby Names
Publication Year
2004
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Family & Relationships, Non-Classifiable
Number of Pages
144 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
7.2 in
Item Height
0.8 in
Item Width
5 in
Item Weight
8.5 Oz

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
Grade from
Eighth Grade
Grade to
College Graduate Student
Reviews
You're holding your baby son in your arms. And like any new parent, you have a question. Could he be the next Dalai Lama? "Crib Notes: A Random Reference for the Modern Parent" has the answer (he might be, if he has large ears, long eyes or the mark of a conch shell on one palm) and other facts in an enjoyably quirky new book. How do the gestational periods of women compare to other mammals'? We beat rabbits by a wide margin, 226 days to 31, but the Indian elephant trumps every other creature on the list, with 624 days of pregnancy. There are stage directions for "Itsy-Bitsy Spider," a list of Dr. Seuss characters, tips for making a dog-shape balloon and a list of morals taught in Aesop's Fables. ("The Fox and the Goat" teaches kids to "look before they leap.") "There was no book out there that spoke to the sort of urban and hopefully hip people we were before we got pregnant," says Elizabeth Weil, who compiled the book with Amy Maniatis. "We wanted to put together a list of everything you wanted to know but probably wouldn't look up yourself, from economics and things that were useful to things esoteric and whimsical." The whimsical includes old wives' tales to predict a baby's sex (if a pregnant woman picks up a key by the round end, she'll have a boy; pick up the long end and it's a girl). The esoteric is for the mom who'd like to make her baby multilingual, giving the word for "mother" in 82 languages. And dads-to-be aren't forgotten: they can find out if a girl or a boy is more expensive to raise. - Newsweek, You're holding your baby son in your arms. And like any new parent, you have a question. Could he be the next Dalai Lama? "Crib Notes: A Random Reference for the Modern Parent" has the answer (he might be, if he has large ears, long eyes or the mark of a conch shell on one palm) and other facts in an enjoyably quirky new book. How do the gestational periods of women compare to other mammals'? We beat rabbits by a wide margin, 226 days to 31, but the Indian elephant trumps every other creature on the list, with 624 days of pregnancy. There are stage directions for "Itsy-Bitsy Spider," a list of Dr. Seuss characters, tips for making a dog-shape balloon and a list of morals taught in Aesop's Fables. ("The Fox and the Goat" teaches kids to "look before they leap.") "There was no book out there that spoke to the sort of urban and hopefully hip people we were before we got pregnant," says Elizabeth Weil, who compiled the book with Amy Maniatis. "We wanted to put together a list of everything you wanted to know but probably wouldn't look up yourself, from economics and things that were useful to things esoteric and whimsical." The whimsical includes old wives' tales to predict a baby's sex (if a pregnant woman picks up a key by the round end, she'll have a boy; pick up the long end and it's a girl). The esoteric is for the mom who'd like to make her baby multilingual, giving the word for "mother" in 82 languages. And dads-to-be aren't forgotten: they can find out if a girl or a boy is more expensive to raise. - Newsweek -- -
Copyright Date
2004

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