Book Review: Catch Picasso's Rooster by Julie Appel and Amy Guglielmo

Author: FitzPublished: Nov 05, 2009 at 2:05 pm 0 comments

When you have young children, you are often fighting a battle between entertaining them and educating them. The younger they are, the less attention span they typically have, which means that entertainment often occupies the lion's share of the job. As they get older, they are more able to entertain themselves. So what, you may ask, does this have to do with a book about Picasso's art?

Touch and feel books have been around since the 1940s. Pat the Bunny by Dorothy Kunhardt has been a perennial favorite for parents since first being published in 1940. It includes actual materials for readers to experience themselves, such as a bit of fake rabbit fur and a piece of sandpaper. Since then, I know we've seen many different variations on this theme, including Tails by Matthew Van Fleet, which includes not only physical "tails" of various furry or bumpy types, but also a "scratch-n-sniff" stinky skunk tail, which has been a favorite for both of my girls.

Catch Picasso's Rooster and the rest of the Touch the Art series merges the tactile appeal of other "touch and feel" books, but also introduces works of art — in this case those of Picasso, Rousseau, van Gogh, and others — to a young audience. This combination of entertainment and education works on a couple of different levels.

First, by integrating colorful works of art and a simple, rhyming story, youngsters who are having the book read to them are engaged by visual and auditory cues as well as tactile ones as they touch the various materials on a given page. For example, on the page featuring Albrecht Durer's Hare, painted in 1502, the authors reinforce that it's a bunny in the picture through the text ("Rooster, rooster! Stop running away! I hid near a bunny sleeping in hay."), the picture, and a scrap of fake rabbit fur integrated into the picture. We enjoyed working through the book with my youngest who's not reading yet, but loves interactive books such as this one.

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Article Author: Fitz

Brian Fitzpatrick (aka "Fitz") is a software engineer and writer living in Colorado Springs, Colorado, with his wife, two daughters, two dogs, and two cats -- trying desperately to survive the chaos!

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