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Potty Training Books for Toddlers: Aaron Butts
(Cataloger - Custom Cataloging)

Aaron Butts

Juvenile & YA Special Topics—07/23/10
Watching my toddler respond to books has been very exciting. When she first began to walk she did not have the attention span to listen to me read. In her infancy I enjoyed the warmth of reading aloud classic picture books while she drank her bottle. As a young walker her books became objects to open, close and toss, but I didn’t have to wait long until she shouted the words “doggies,” “hat” and “shooss” as she turned pages. She has imitated characters by banging on a drum and wearing a swim diaper on her head.

Her enthusiasm has led to me to make selections for the challenge of toilet training. Maybe she will sit and sit and sit like Prudence in Alona Frankel’s Once Upon a Potty. Many toilet training books follow the story of a child going through the process. Karen Katz’s A Potty for Me! emphasizes patience and positivity. Some include elements which could stand alone from the toilet training process like the humor of The Princess and the Potty by Wendy Cheyette Lewison. Toilet trainers may enjoy titles featuring well-known characters like Grover in Parker Sawyer’s Potty Time. Heidi Murkoff’s What to Expect When You Use the Potty provides captivating illustrations and answers to questions curious kids might ask. These titles may help my toddler get out of diapers and on to new challenges and new books as quickly as she moved from throwing books to looking at them.

Welcome the Jewish New Year by:
Kathryn Lynip

Kathryn Lynip

Adult Special Topics—07/23/10
The Jewish high holidays are in the beginning of September this year so I have been keeping an eye out for titles that might be of special interest to Jewish readers. Several years ago I worked in a book store in an area that had a large Jewish population, and we always had to order in extra Joan Nathan cookbooks before Passover and have gift books on hand for Bar and Bat Mitzvahs. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are not gift giving holidays, but are instead a time of reflection and repentance. I think it is a great time to think on how the Jewish diaspora has enriched my community for people of all religions and ethnicities. I recently picked up a book due to be released this fall called The Heavens Are Empty by Avron Bendavid-Val. He tells of the shtetl of Trochenbrod which was a vibrant farming community that was unique because it was inhabited and governed entirely by Jews. It stood as a remarkable self-sufficient town in Ukraine for a hundred years before being utterly wiped out by the Nazis in 1942. For a much lighter and humorous fare there is Baxter, The Pig Who Wanted To Be Kosher, a new picture book to be published this fall about a pig who desperately wants to go to Shabbat dinner because he hears someone at the bus stop describing the candlelight and singing. He is told he cannot go because he is not kosher so he does everything he can think of to try to become kosher so he can attend. And of course, I have to mention the newest cookbook by Joan Nathan. Quiches, Kugels, And Couscous will be out this November. L’Shanah Tovah!


This month, we sit down with Ken Burns

Ken Burns has been making films for more than 30 years. Since the Academy Award-nominated Brooklyn Bridge in 1982, Ken has gone on to direct and produce some of the most acclaimed historical documentaries ever made. The late historian Stephen Ambrose said of his films, “More Americans get their history from Ken Burns than any other source.” Burns’ documentaries have been nominated for two Academy Awards (Brooklyn Bridge in 1982 and The Statue of Liberty in 1986) and have won seven Emmy Awards, mostly from The Civil War and Baseball.

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