This elegant alphabet board book will teach little ones all about nature.
This elegant alphabet board book will teach little ones all about nature. The talented Rosalind Beardshaw’s beautiful illustrations and visual storytelling follow two children on a day in the countryside, bringing a narrative feel to this simple book for very young readers. The first in a series of seasonal concept books, this is a board book to visit again and again.
Rosalind Beardshaw is the illustrator of many books for children, including The Fairiest Fairy, Box, and Just Right for Christmas. She loves creating new characters, especially if they can be based on her dog, Basil. She lives with her partner and her children in York, England.
Beardshaw’s friendly mixed-media images are awash with details and textures for readers to “eXamine” themselves, and the children’s discoveries—which include a grasshopper and hedgehog amid tall grasses, squirrels leaping among branches, tadpoles in a pond—should leave them ready to do some exploring of their own. —Publishers Weekly
This elegant alphabet board book will teach little ones all about nature.
This elegant alphabet board book will teach little ones all about nature. The talented Rosalind Beardshaw’s beautiful illustrations and visual storytelling follow two children on a day in the countryside, bringing a narrative feel to this simple book for very young readers. The first in a series of seasonal concept books, this is a board book to visit again and again.
Creators
Rosalind Beardshaw is the illustrator of many books for children, including The Fairiest Fairy, Box, and Just Right for Christmas. She loves creating new characters, especially if they can be based on her dog, Basil. She lives with her partner and her children in York, England.
Beardshaw’s friendly mixed-media images are awash with details and textures for readers to “eXamine” themselves, and the children’s discoveries—which include a grasshopper and hedgehog amid tall grasses, squirrels leaping among branches, tadpoles in a pond—should leave them ready to do some exploring of their own. —Publishers Weekly