These are my rocks A story about collecting

Bethan Woollvin

Book - 2025

"Join the narrator, as they proudly introduce the reader to their prized collection, featuring BIG things to small things ... and spiky things to wobbly things! Each page is bursting with humor, and they are interactive too, with children encouraged to interact with the book, with invitations to point, make noises, clap their hands and think about what they could collect.. Interactive books engage young children and capture their natural curiosity and These Are My Rocks encourages the development of important early-learning skills such as listening, choosing, matching, counting, and moving by playing on the theme of interaction. These Are My Rocks is stylish, humorous, inclusive and utterly engaging ... and a celebration of children�...39;s love of collecting." --

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A tour of collections great and small. Readers are instructed to flick a switch on the opening page, literally shedding light on an unseen narrator's collection of neatly displayed "small things," including a puzzle piece, a snail, a paper clip, and a button. Woollvin's fetchingly stencil-like, glowing graphics imbue most objects, even inanimate ones, with lively eyes, as in herLittle Red (2016). Next up is a collection of "BIG things"--an elephant, a whale, and a car--spilling off the page. Quick, help the narrator "squash them back in!" Whew! The narrator shows off a collection of "pointy things" and then one of "prickly things" ("Expert collectors know the difference"), followed by a "most exciting" collection of rocks. Every page invites reader participation: Kids are asked to blow away cobwebs, grab an errant spider, sniff the pungent offerings in the "stinky collection," and sort a variety of especially delicate objects ("Gently does it!"). Uh-oh: You dropped the narrator's teapot! But don't worry; it soon finds a new home in the collection of broken things. And hey, there's that spider! Readers successfully corral it, and the narrator adds it to a "many-legs" collection labeled "DO NOT LET US OUT." The last page encourages youngsters to become collectors themselves, but they won't need much convincing; Woollvin's quirky, conversational text and artwork will have already persuaded them to follow suit. The joys of collecting, artfully conveyed.(Picture book. 3-7) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.