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Dinosaur countdown  Cover Image Book Book

Dinosaur countdown / Nicholas Oldland.

Oldland, Nicholas. (Author).

Summary:

A counting book featuring a variety of different dinosaurs.

Record details

  • ISBN: 1525304763
  • ISBN: 9781525304767
  • Physical Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations
  • Edition: Board book edition.
  • Publisher: Toronto : Kids Can Press, 2021.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Cover title.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 10.99
Subject: Dinosaurs > Juvenile fiction.
Counting books.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Cookstown Branch BB Oldla 31681020158531 BOARDBOOK Available -

  • Baker & Taylor
    This fun-filled, interactive book takes readers on a prehistoric counting adventure that introduces them to different dinosaurs. Illustrations.
  • Baker & Taylor
    Young readers are introduced to different types of dinosaurs, counting down from ten to one.
  • Grand Central Pub
    Count down from ten striding velociraptors to a ferociously funny end in this counting book for dinosaur lovers of all ages!
  • Grand Central Pub

    In this simple and clever picture book from Nicholas Oldland, small children will have fun counting backward, as they’re introduced to different dinosaurs grouped from ten to two, and a final, single dinosaur. Then, in a unique twist, the book goes on to “zero” dinosaurs as well (because “they’re extinct, silly!”). Each number gets its own two-page spread, where it is both written as a numeral and spelled out as a word within the illustration’s description (for example, “ten striding velociraptors”). The dinosaur names are appropriately long and tongue-twisting, one of the things young children love about dinosaurs --- but not to worry, there’s a pronunciation guide at the end of the book! And the dinosaurs are all actively engaged, “sauntering” and “soaring,” “rearing” and “roaring.” A couple of spreads offer clues to something extra on the page to search for (a “looming predator” on one, “and what’s that flying overhead?” on another), to keep the counting activity fun and not too repetitive.

    Oldland’s fresh, playful and lively artwork will keep young eyes engaged, an important task as they begin to learn to count. This book is an excellent choice for an interactive preschool or kindergarten early numeracy or counting lesson. It also works for first lessons on prehistoric animals or on animal biology in general (herbivores and carnivores are both mentioned, for example). And it makes a terrific vocabulary stretcher, as children use visual cues to figure out what it means that a tyrannosaurus is “towering” or a stegosaurus is “lumbering.”


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