(Not that I know how much she can really read, but I'm going off what she admits to.)
This means I want suggestions for books in two different categories:
1. Books without words, where the kid works out the story alone
2. Beginner books that are intended for early reading - I've heard of, say, Bob books, or republished Dick and Jane books, that's the sort of thing I mean. They don't have to be inspiring, they just have to be simple.
Any suggestions?
Oh, and I've added a lot of books to my various online catalogs, if you're interested in what the nieces already read.
I have more books in Amazon than the others because I also include books there that I don't actually own - ones we took out from the library or read at the bookstore, especially if we happened to decide *not* to get it and I know why. After all that effort I'm now slightly irked that so few people call my reviews helpful there. (Well. Not that much effort. I get lazy after the first two words!)
This means I want suggestions for books in two different categories:
1. Books without words, where the kid works out the story alone
2. Beginner books that are intended for early reading - I've heard of, say, Bob books, or republished Dick and Jane books, that's the sort of thing I mean. They don't have to be inspiring, they just have to be simple.
Any suggestions?
Oh, and I've added a lot of books to my various online catalogs, if you're interested in what the nieces already read.
I have more books in Amazon than the others because I also include books there that I don't actually own - ones we took out from the library or read at the bookstore, especially if we happened to decide *not* to get it and I know why. After all that effort I'm now slightly irked that so few people call my reviews helpful there. (Well. Not that much effort. I get lazy after the first two words!)