I love the inventive concept of this little counting story! Much more engaging than the typical bland 123s books that lack a storyline, this is a creative journey through the numbers with an artistic rabbit sculptor. 🐰
The last of our 4 rabbit books from our permanent children's collection. A counting book is tough to make great. This one makes clever use of art and is not horribly repetitive. And it ends well. This rabbit book probably has the least amount of character, but it still has some.
The goodreads description of this book is all mixed-up with the other books. Just saying...
In the 1,2,3 book, Rabbit plays with clay (we call it by a popular brand name, which I won't mention here. The grandsons do NOT want to call it clay.)Anyhow, Rabbit slowly makes one worm, then two toucans, and so on and so on, making a different number of animals, until finally all pooped out, he makes a chair and falls asleep in it.
With each grandson - the six-year old, followed by the two-year old - I had to count each animal on each page. And yes I did this faithfully over and over and over...
We love all the 'Rabbit' books at our house and they are always the first books pulled off the shelf when they want me to read to them. (Which is literally, on every visit.)
I finished story time with this story because the craft activity involved play-dough.
"One day Gray Rabbit found some clay. He made one wiggly, squiggly..." (Invite the children to roll imaginary clay between their hands and ask them what they think Gray Rabbit made. Turn the page.) "worm".
Pretend to roll balls, smash and shape, coil, and squish imaginary clay.
Cleverly designed to seem like so much more than a counting book. Each double-page spread is a new mystery, and you have to turn the page to find the answer...and the number.