Cute. Disjointed, but brings it back together with the Suessian bedtime prayer: Today is gone. Today was fun. Tomorrow will be another one.

Gripping. Suspenseful. Ultimately encouraging, with a cheeky twist. Unparalleled classic.

It's like a rip off of a bunch of things Jesus said and I love that about it

Illustrations as beautiful as always from Eric Carle, but I could've taken or left the story and its seemingly random repeated phrases

I only have most of this book memorized

Another one that evidently sounds good to active toddlers and inspires them to sit quietly and listen. I could take it or leave it - no tear jerker OR funny lines - but it seemed to work for the kids.

Charming little book ripe (lol) for discussing the benefits of eating a wide variety of fruits and vegetables instead of always the same. Fun anticipation with the color on one page and finding out the actually type of food on the next page.

There comes a point in every read-aloud, around the beetle bottle battles, where I have to detach from the text as an English sentence and simply plow through it as a collection of sounds. It's the only way I can get through it.

I love the interactive aspect of this book, spinning the wheels to match the colors. It's fun to revisit multiple times to see how toddlers get the hang of it.

As an adult human, I would expect offering an over-easy egg to a three-year-old to go about this well.

I lowkey love this book. Counting and nutrition right in the story and such fun colorful pictures to look at and talk about. I like flapping the last page like butterfly wings.

It's about good habits, which parents like, and dinosaurs, which kids like. Not my most favorite for reading aloud though.

Bizarre book that I thoroughly enjoyed. It makes sense that it was written partially out of spite.

Adorable story for discussing emotional awareness and acceptance of feelings.

(I have read so much preschool literature this year that I've decided I'm including it in my 2025 reading goal - full storybooks only and counting each book only once.)

I just have something in my eye