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Sight

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Describes interesting things to be seen in the world and discusses the workings of the eyes

29 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 1985

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About the author

José María Parramón

591 books9 followers
José María Parramón Vilasaló (Barcelona, 1919 - íd., 2002) fue un escritor, pintor, dibujante, diseñador gráfico y editor español, famoso como autor y editor de obras de divulgación técnica sobre pintura y dibujo, de las que escribió más de ciento veinte y con las cuales llegó a ser el español más traducido después de Miguel de Cervantes (466 traducciones)

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Sonny.
3 reviews
December 8, 2020
I can't figure out what age this book was created for. The beginning is suitable for toddlers, with very simplistic sentences like, "Look, look! Look at all the things you can see." Then the back of the book is a scientific diagram of the eye and all its components (e.g. choroid layer, vitreous fluid, aqueous fluid) with several pages of paragraph after paragraph describing rods and cones and tears and eyeglasses. What an identity crisis. I'm thinking it's meant to age with the child, but it doesn't seem cohesive to me at all. More like a picture book and a pamphlet slapped together.

I do love the 1980's art though. As a picture book, ignoring the elementary school science primer in the back, this is a solid choice for discussing the senses with preschoolers.
Profile Image for Kit Feral.
328 reviews15 followers
February 17, 2017
There's something I like about these old fashioned books. I did appreciate that they included children with glasses and explained near sighted/far sighted in the back. I felt since they were making the point to be inclusive in that way it was amiss to not include blindness.
Profile Image for Tam.
909 reviews18 followers
July 26, 2014
My 4-year-old just learned about the 5 senses in preschool so this was a good book to remind him about "sight".

"Look, look! Look at all the things you can see". It shows fireworks, a turtle, chessboard, rainy day with a rainbow, puppy, tiny ant, elephant, picture book, moon, sun, clock on a bell tower, and TV.

"Everything that you see, you see with your EYES."

There's a labeled diagram of the eye at the end of the book along with an explanation about each part of the eye (The light goes in through an opening called the pupil). It also tells how your eye works and how some people have trouble seeing so they need to wear glasses.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews