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Baby Book Club Parenting Product Reviews This N' That

Baby Book Club: A Chomping Good Baby Book! 🦈

We (Ellie and I!) are back with another baby book club post. Our book of choice today is a book about sharks called Sharks Teeth to Tail from Smithsonian kids. Sharks Teeth to Tail was written by Jaye Garnett with illustrations by Beatrice Tinarelli.

This book was another thrift store find, and it caught my eye because my husband loves sharks.

a baby book called Sharks Teeth to Tail with images of different sharks on the cover
Image by Nina Harper

It also looked like a good choice to me, because I am trying to ensure that I get her a variety of books to grow up with.

I have gotten her a few princess-y books (such as one cute search and find princess book with little flaps to open to search for the crown) but I want to make sure she is exposed to nature books, planet books, science books, books about good habits, books about arts and music, and more.

I also want to be intentional about getting her plenty of math books. One of the princess books I picked up is actually a math princess book, so I’m excited for that one as well!

Back to the shark book.

Sharks Teeth to Tail is a nice sturdy book. It is full of information; this is not one of those rhyming story books with a few lines. No, this book contains precise information on shark senses, parts of a shark (first dorsal fin, pectoral fin, etc), types of shark teeth, “notable” sharks, and suggestions for helping your kids follow the spark of curiosity (such as visiting an aquarium and drawing pictures of the sharks there).

My baby daughter was actually very interested in this book. I guess the combination of pictures and colors on each page was appealing. This book does also have that texture feature, where some of the images are raised, but my daughter isn’t quite there yet on exploring textures.

I do love that this book features real pictures of different kinds of sharks, and real terms. The information is not “dumbed down.”

I actually enjoyed learning about sharks from this book too. For instance, I learned that bull sharks have a special ability to swim in fresh water as well as salt water!

I also enjoyed the book for a silly reason. The images of the different shark teeth brought back a very specific childhood memory for me in which I worked overtime to convince my dad to let me buy a shark book from the Scholastic catalog. Even though I was a reader as a kid, I didn’t care about the book at all. I wanted the tiger shark tooth necklace that came with it!

I remember my dad being pretty good at seeing through that kind of thing, but I guess in this case I wore him down because I did get that shark book and necklace.

Sharks Teeth to Tail is joining No Matter What on the favorites shelf.

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Parenting Product Reviews This N' That

Baby Product Review: Let the Beet Drop DJ toy

“Gah!” – My daughter Ellie

Skip Hop Farmstand Let the Beet Drop DJ Activity Play Toy

I’m not being paid for this review either. I’m going to write it anyway. πŸ˜œ

This toy is available from Target, Amazon, Wal-Mart β€” all the usual suspects. 

baby playing with toy
Image by Nina Harper

I got it on Facebook Marketplace in a lot of three toys for $10.00.

Apparently I am not up to date on the trendy color schemes of the day, because the color scheme of this toy made me think it was from the 60s or 70s. But, lo and behold, it is a modern, currently available toy. 

toy image
For example, compare to this 1970’s era toy, which can be seen with better clarity and more detail at Rachel’s Vintage & Retro blog.

This toy is kind of random. It’s a bunny DJ in a vegetable field. But it’s adorable and we love it. 

Here’s why:

This is the first toy we got for our daughter that has buttons to push, lights, and music. Maybe the timing was just right and it was a coincidence, but it does seem that it has encouraged her to interact more with her toys.

That being said, some of the buttons are hard to push for a four month old. I don’t consider that a meh! feature though, because the little ball and record thing spins very easily and she can work her way up to the harder-to-push buttons (the bunny itself is the most difficult).

baby toy
Image by Nina Harper

The music is fun, and not grating. It doesn’t make me feel crazy to hear it over and over again. 

Relatedly, there are different music and sounds combinations, so it’s not just the same thing over and over. I think there are four different songs that can play when you push the bunny, and for each song, there are different sounds that the two carrots and the lettuce record spinner make. 

The four buttons in the left corner always make the same sounds.

The blue knob on the right doesn’t appear to have any electronic aspects, and it is hard to push around, but apparently it looks very grab-able because my daughter is interested in it, though she can’t do anything with it yet.

Two final yay! features are that it takes standard AA batteries, three of them, and it has two sound levels. 

It’s a win. 

baby playing with lots of toys
AI generated image