Just a little rant here--Martha Parravano and I are preparing a talk for next week's Fostering Lifelong Learners conference in Ohio, and the other day we visited the Children's Book Shop for some titles we wanted to share but couldn't find in the office. I was struck by the number of picture book titles for four-to-six-year-olds reissued in board book format. Right now I'm looking at a new board book edition of Samantha Berger and Dan Santat's Crankenstein. For Pete's sake, WHY? It's a terrific book, but it's not for kids who are still drooling and dripping and clueless about sharp corners. Or Liz Garton Scanlon and Marla Frazee's All the World--a beautiful book but so not for babies. Terri Schmitz pointed out to me a concurrent trend: baby-appropriate picture books that were smartly resized and formatted for baby hands that have subsequently been blown up--the "oversized board book edition" of Goodnight, Gorilla is bigger than the original picture book and weighs two pounds. It's been positively weaponized.We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing.
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Sam Juliano
CRANKENSTEIN has been a monster hit with the first and second graders in my school. I completely agree that the big format for this book is unnecessary much as I feel the same way about Ms. Frazee's beautiful Caldecott Honor winner.Posted : Sep 11, 2014 10:31
Sam Bloom
Nothing much to add to this conversation, other than this photo TERRIFIES me. Something about grown-up people sucking on binkies... so thanks, Roger, I'm going to have nightmares now!Posted : Sep 11, 2014 08:39
Shoshana
I suspect that gift buyers' nostalgia is a factor, too. An adult might remember that a particular title was a childhood favorite and be fuzzy enough on *when* in childhood to want to bring it to a baby shower. And look, there it is in the baby section, at less than half the price of the hardcover!Posted : Sep 11, 2014 12:03
Jess
I completely agree that Crankenstein (and similar) as a board book is ridiculous. However, I do think there's room for some wordier books repackaged as board books. I recently fielded a question from a mom whose 10 month old enjoyed sitting still for longer stories, but also wanted to handle them - books like Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel worked well for her child. I also know of plenty of toddlers that love All the World and would enjoy a board book version. Of course, though, the best ones are still short and sweet (my pet peeve are the classics as board books - seriously still a thing?!)Posted : Sep 10, 2014 11:01
Margaret Robson Kett
Right on, Roger! Just saw Madeline in board book format in my local bookshop. I think it's a combination of being easy to produce for the publisher and appealing to the parent nostalgia market. There are so few books in this format which actually appeal to children from birth to 2. It's a shame.Posted : Sep 10, 2014 09:41