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  • Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes

Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes

Author
Illustrator
Helen Oxenbury
Publication Date
October 01, 2008
Genre / Grade Band
Fiction /  K − 1st
Language
English
Format
Picture Book
Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes

Description
In their first-ever collaboration, two of today's most gifted picture book creators deliver a gorgeously simple book that celebrates baby fingers, baby toes, and the joy they--and the babies they belong to--bring to everyone.
Publication date
October 01, 2008
Genre
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780152060572
Lexile Measure
550
Guided Reading Level
F
Publisher
Clarion Books
BISAC categories
JUV057000 - Juvenile Fiction | Stories in Verse (see also Poetry)
JUV013040 - Juvenile Fiction | Family | New Baby
JUV009120 - Juvenile Fiction | Concepts | Body
Library of Congress categories
Stories in rhyme
Babies
Toes
Fingers

ALA/Booklist

Starred Review
A standout for its beautiful simplicity, this picture-book collaboration between Fox and Oxenbury aims a message of diversity and tolerance at very young children. . . . Clusters of adorable mulitcultural babies from around the world toddle across the pages until just one child receives three kisses on the nose from her loving mom, a sweet gesture that parents will want to act out with their own children. A gentle, joyous offering.

None

Starred Review
Fox's lilting verse just has to be read aloud, and preschoolers will quickly pick up on and join in on the anticipated refrain. Oxenbury's spacious illustrations, featuring her irresistible round-headed tots (and, of course, plenty of chubby baby digits), emphasize the babies' differences and will engage even the youngest listeners in the on-page action.

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

Put two titans of kids' books together for the first time, and what do you get (besides the urge to shout, What took you so long?)? The answer: an instant classic. Fox's ("Time for Bed") text works off the simplest premise: babies around the world, even those who seem like polar opposites, have the same 20 digits in common. But there's real magic at work here. Given their perfect cadences, the rhymes feel as if they always existed in our collective consciousness and were simply waiting to be written down: There was one little baby who was born far away./ And another who was born on the very next day./ And both of these babies, as everyone knows/ had ten little fingers and ten little toes. Oxenbury ("We're Going on a Bear Hunt") once again makes multiculturalism feel utterly natural and chummy. As her global brood of toddlers growsshe introduces two cast members with every new stanzareaders can savor each addition both as beguiling individualist and giggly, bouncy co-conspirator. Ages 35. "(Oct.)"

Copyright 2008 Publishers Weekly Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Starred Review

PreS"There was one little baby/who was born far away./And another who was born/on the very next day./And both of these babies, /as everyone knows, /had ten little fingers/and ten little toes." So opens this nearly perfect picture book. Fox's simple text lists a variety of pairs of babies, all with the refrain listing the requisite number of digits, and finally ending with the narrator's baby, who is "truly divine" and has fingers, toes, "and three little kisses/on the tip of its nose." Oxenbury's signature multicultural babies people the pages, gathering together and increasing by twos as each pair is introduced. They are distinctive in dress and personality and appear on primarily white backgrounds. The single misstep appears in the picture of the baby who was "born on the ice." The child, who looks to be from Northern Asia or perhaps an Inuit, stands next to a penguin. However, this minor jarring placement does not detract enough from the otherwise ideal marriage of text and artwork to prevent the book from being a first purchase. Whether shared one-on-one or in storytimes, where the large trim size and big, clear images will carry perfectly, this selection is sure to be a hit."Amy Lilien-Harper, The Ferguson Library, Stamford, CT"

Copyright 2008 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Mem Fox
MEM FOX is the author of many acclaimed picture books, including Possum Magic, Koala Lou, and Time for Bed. She lives in Adelaide, South Australia.

TRICIA TUSA has illustrated several picture books, including her own Maebelle's Suitcase; Camilla's New Hairdo, a Parents Magazine Best Book; and Bunnies in My Head, which features drawings by the young patients at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. She lives in Houston, Texas.

Texas 2x2 Reading List
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Recommended 2009 - 2009
Indies Choice Book Awards
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Honor Book 2009 - 2009
Capitol Choices: Noteworthy Books for Children and Teens
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Recommended 2009 - 2009