Infants Books
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great book, my 3 year old favoriteReview Date: 2008-07-14
Nice book for four to eight year oldsReview Date: 2007-10-10
Great book for sibsReview Date: 2007-10-10
My toddler loves it!Review Date: 2007-06-27
A must-have for a breastfeeding family with an older siblingReview Date: 2008-06-24
This book makes me tear up every single time I have read it, to myself or my daughter. It's just superbly done. The text just assumes that baby will be breastfed, or acknowledges the possibility of pumped milk in a bottle ("when baby is older"). Baby is pictured fitting into the family's activities with the older child in a ring sling and sleeping next to Mommy in a sidecar co-sleeper. It was such a beautiful thing to show my daughter a book that reflected pictures of what her family looked like!
There are fantastic little insets that speak directly to the older sibling outside of the story, many called "What about me?" that address how the older sibling may be feeling and acknowledging those feelings are ok. For example, that it's ok for the older sibling to be still wanting and expecting time and attention from parents, and that it's ok to feel angry towards the baby sometimes (but not to *hurt* the baby). It reminds children that the sort of needs the baby has are the same needs they had.
The book offers advice to children on how to make friends with the baby, and gives realistic expectations of what a baby will and will not do. My favorite illustration in this area is the one of the baby squeezing the older sister's finger - this is the one "game" we had prepared our daughter that the baby *would* be able to play with her right away, so it was fun to see it in there!
There are also incredibly helpful passages about what the older sibling can do to be helpful and feel included. I especially like where it tells children they can help by getting into the car seat quickly when going out and staying close by at all times!
There is also some really helpful information and advice for parents and caregivers about helping siblings prepare for baby written for adults, as well as information about attachment parenting and more resources at the end of the book.
All and all, I give this book my highest recommendation for children and adults in families who plan to breastfeed a new baby.

Used price: $7.27

Fantastic reference for MothersReview Date: 2008-11-02
It's a great reference for all Mums with babies. The follow up is The Mighty Toddler which is also a great book to have.
A Great Handbook for ParentsReview Date: 2008-10-04
It is an absolute gold mine of sensible information that provides a framework for decision making in the absense of hands on experience. My second child also benefited from brush ups on stage related information. And during those long sleep deprived days, my sanity benefited from being able to read ahead and see that stages pass.
All the basics are covered - how to know how much a baby should eat at various stages, diet ideas, sleep patterns, building blocks of routines. The lay out of the information makes it user friendly. An excellent index turns it into an essential handbook.
Finally a book that doesn't make me feel guilty!Review Date: 2008-09-08
I bought this book from Australia and I think that there must be a US and an Australian version which I didn't realise at the time, would have preferred a local version if I'd known.
can't be beat!Review Date: 2008-03-08
by far the best book for new mothers, and if you received it as a new mother, you know it's essential for the next time, and the next time... I doubt there is a question a mother couldn't find an answer to here. Perfect gift for a baby shower. Should be compulsory for new mums.
Great for first time parentsReview Date: 2007-06-21
The book gives lots of information on different age groups, like newborn, 3-6months, 6-9months and 9-12months. It addresses changes that happen during that time in behavior, motor skills, feeding and sleeping. It reassures you with smaller medical problems and tells you when it's better to call the ped.
Over all I love this book and I will buy the toddler-version too.


Time to end a useless practiceReview Date: 2008-08-15
Six years ago I presented this to my son and his wife. They were being badgered into circumcising by the doctors and hosptal. I credit this information for savng my grandson from being damaged for life.
****Review Date: 2003-05-05
Bridging the gap between medicine, psychology and cultureReview Date: 2004-04-21
Gore Vidal
MYRA BRECKINRIDGE
If there was ever an issue that metaphorically encapsulates the Achilles heel of Western society, it turns out that this may be it, above all others. The title of this incredible, clearly thought out, brilliantly edited and masterfully written book may lead you to believe that it is all about a seemingly benign issue. Make no mistake: what this book is actually about are
1) the actual definition of the surgical practice and
2) the social, economic, sociological, psychological and anthropological forces that go into us seeing it as other than what it is.
Dr. Goldman effectively teaches in this book, from the anthropological perspectives of such luminaries as Ashley Montagu and Margaret Mead, that circumcision is a practice that is older than all recorded history and religions. (The practice was actually regimented and ritualized by the Egyptian priests and pharohs, millenia before the advent of Judaism.) Yet the practice, in and out of a religious context, continues. Dr. Goldman shows us from the purely medical/health/surgical perspective (with an avalanche of evidence and corroborative opinions in the medical profession) that circumcision is a practice that has little to no medical health value, and was once actually called a cure for masturbation and cancer by last century's medical community. Yet the implausible and unscientific theories justifying its existence keep coming up, and the practice continues. Dr. Goldman shows us, amazingly, from an internationally sociological and cultural perspective, that the United States is the only industrialized nation in the modern world that has the overwhelming majority of its infant boys be subjected to the practice. Yet the practice continues. Dr. Goldman shows us, from an ethics in medicine perspective, that circumcision is a practice that, by virtue of the harm done to infant children physically and psychologically--with little to no up side beyond the money going to obstetricians and pediatricians for the procedure--completely rips to shreds any conception of the Hippocratic oath and turns the entire life of any doctor who performs them routinely into a profoundly dangerous lie.
Yet, the practice continues.
It is an old anthropologist's dictum that the most important thing to know about a culture is what it takes for granted. Dr. Ronald Goldman, with CIRCUMCISION, THE HIDDEN TRAUMA gives us not only the hidden, true anatomy of the surgical process, along with the actual complete and (heretofore to my knowledge in everyday America) unknown anatomy of the human male, but also the secret architecture of the social forces and weaknesses that make up the ritualised American denial of the inherently violent nature of its existence. Dr. Goldman shows in this both innovatively and exhaustively researched book that the entire surgical procedure of circumcision depends on the total invalidation of the soul of the infant male child and their personhood for its existence in medicine. Only paleolithic theories of the child feeling no pain and suffering no lasting or remembered traumatic side effects from the procedure--WHICH ROUTINELY INVOLVES THE USE OF NO ANESTHESIA--justify its medical practice; and fly in the face of all kinds of logic while doing so.
I along with most of the country have never seen actual pictures of or witnessed a circumcision; part of the reason I saw no problem with it when I picked this book up. The *pictures* in this book alone of children in the process of being circumcised, however, will change your way of looking at the practice forever--as it has changed me and mine forever. Picture an adult male going through the process of circumcision, complete with his hands, arms and legs forceably bound in industrial strength velcro to keep him from being able to interrupt a surgical process performed on his perfectly healthy sex organ against his will--again, *without anesthesia*--and the first thought that will probably come to your mind is one of two things: the electric chair, or Nazi Germany.
Which by definition takes away the mystery of how BOTH in the 20th century could have come into existence.
I discovered Dr. Goldman's work in the bibliography of one of the seminal books by the psychologist champion of the human child Alice Miller (author of, among other classics in the field, FOR YOUR OWN GOOD, BANISHED KNOWLEDGE and PRISONERS OF CHILDHOOD--THE DRAMA OF THE GIFTED CHILD). Between this, Alice Miller's work, and William Dufty's SUGAR BLUES, I feel as if I have the answer to why our culture can move so far forward and fall so far backward on the evolutionary ladder at the same time. The door separating Western culture from the embrace of higher consciousness, as told to us by poets, mystics,yogis, leaders of ancient religions, transpersonal psychologists and theoretical physicist/philosophers, is our view of the spiritual and physical completeness of the human child--and the actions we take upholding that view.
That door is locked with a dead bolt called CIRCUMCISION. And even unlocking the door, as Europe has already shown us, does not by definition mean opening it. But without unlocking it opening it isn't posible.
Read this if you have to in small doses, but read it; it will change the way you view our world.
A Unique Contribution to the FieldReview Date: 2006-10-04
I just want a fair argumentReview Date: 2003-08-30

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Great CookbookReview Date: 2008-10-25
Good Book, but not all it's cracked up to beReview Date: 2008-08-21
Yummy in my TummyReview Date: 2008-05-15
plain carrots vs. chickpea cakesReview Date: 2008-06-02
Your child enjoy healthy meals without being duped!Review Date: 2008-05-15
By preparing a limited menu and keeping them out of the process, parents unwittingly create picky eaters who'll explode at anything but chicken fingers, cereal, and peanut butter sandwiches. If you cook yummy healthy meals, they will eat them! Of course, some foods might take a few tries and incarnations, but isn't that how you learned to love avocados, brussel sprouts, fish, and other formerly yucky stuff?
I love that Jennifer Carden has such respect for the littlest budding gourmets. I really enjoyed flipping through the inventive and inspired recipes in this book. Can't wait to try them out with my favorite tiny chefs!

Used price: $16.39

Great help for parents traveling with childrenReview Date: 2008-06-28
Definitely worth the money!Review Date: 2008-06-14
A better guide for baby than toddlersReview Date: 2008-06-14
This book ROCKS!!!Review Date: 2008-08-25
Great advice!Review Date: 2008-06-01

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Some fresh ideasReview Date: 2006-02-08
Great!Review Date: 2008-01-16
I loved this book.Review Date: 2001-03-07
I'm trying to find it for every pregnant friend!
Keep it simple, sweetieReview Date: 2000-01-14
Practical suggestions for simplfying the chaosReview Date: 2000-01-18

Used price: $10.00

Baby patterns you actually want to use!Review Date: 2008-08-28
What you need to know:
- patterns may include crochet and embroidery.
- range from beginner to high intermediate.
- there is quite a bit of how-to for beginners.
- the book is from US with US needle sizes, gauge and measurements (no metrics given).
- some patterns are quite fiddly - meaning there is a lot of sewing of little things in some patterns.
- needle sizes range from US size 3 to US size 8. (So there are some fine knits and some chunky knits).
Would I buy this book again? Absolutely.
The knitter will enjoy the toys as much as the kidsReview Date: 2008-08-22
Basic and adorableReview Date: 2008-08-18
Adorable and EasyReview Date: 2008-05-07
OMG!Review Date: 2008-05-01

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Just what I needed to readReview Date: 2006-06-22
I finally found this book and immediately found what I needed at the time, to know that other babies had went through this and survived. This book gave me comfort while my two boys were still in the NICU, I cannot recommend it enough.
very heart touchingReview Date: 2004-06-01
VERY engrossing, even for the non-NICU parentsReview Date: 2002-11-27
all of the babies do survive in this book, but not all come out unscathed. all the parents mention how the child is affected now by their problems. some stories are short, some are long, but they are all so heartfelt,and true! you can't help but be engaged by these stories, that are not at all what you expect. you cry with the parents, and get excited when they do well. you are amazed what these kids go through. since the stories are written by the parents, it is firsthand knowledge, and no two stories are told in the same manner,and each one is so important to the writer, which is conveyed in the story.
i really recommend this book!!
I've been down this road . . .Review Date: 2003-07-12
Thank you for sharing!
The First of its KindReview Date: 2002-01-12
The book is laid out by gestation from 23 weeks to 36 weeks, with 22 stories in all. They have various outcomes, just as in real life. Each story is written from the parent's point of view, which makes it that much more gripping. There are stories where the children come out virtually unscathed from their experience with prematurity, and also stories where children have severe complications due to their prematurity. There are also stories about children who have problems completely unrelated to their prematurity. However the stories end up, they are all very touching and inspiring.
This is a book not only for parents of premature babies, but for everyone. You can't help but feel inspired after reading the stories of these heroic children born with the deck stacked against them. It is good for new parents of premature babies to give them hope for the future and make them realize they are not alone in what they are feeling the hours, weeks and months after their babies are born; For families of people with babies born premature to help them understand some of what the new parents are going through and feeling; For the average person who doesn't even know that there are over 400,000 babies born prematurely every year. It is important for people to be more aware of the many babies who are born early, and also that there are a number of reasons babies are born premature. Hopefully this book will find it's way to those people who don't have a clue that the preemie world even exists-just as I didn't just a short 3 years and some change ago! But most importantly, it is a great book for new parents of preemie babies because there is so much uncertainty after their birth.

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EXCELLENT Review Date: 2008-07-25
Good ChoiceReview Date: 2008-04-29
Journal fanaticReview Date: 2008-04-14
toddler journalReview Date: 2008-01-15
A wonderful way to document your little one's early yearsReview Date: 2007-11-30
I was sad when my girls recently turned 3 and I could not find another journal like this one to continue charting their journey.

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Baby E.R,: The Heroic Doctors and Nurses Who Perform Medicine's Tiniest MiraclesReview Date: 2007-01-17
Simply ExcellentReview Date: 2004-02-05
wonderful book, even for those without the nicu experienceReview Date: 2002-11-03
I agree with Oprah -- a great readReview Date: 2002-07-08
Inspiration!Review Date: 2003-11-11
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