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Hardcover Don't Forget to Come Back! Book

ISBN: 0763617822

ISBN13: 9780763617820

Don't Forget to Come Back!

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$5.79
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Book Overview

This all-too-familiar tale about a child whose parents hire a babysitter for the night is wittily penned by a child development expert and illustrated by a noted "New Yorker" cartoonist. Full color. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Don't Forget to Get Your Kid This Book.

This is such a sweet, funny way for kids to wrestle with the horror of their parents GOING OUT. BY THEMSELVES. ("Wait, I'm NOT the center of the universe?") My boys love it, and regularly shout at me when I'm going out, "Don't forget to come back!"

Don't Forget to Come Back

This was a witty book describing the fears of children when the babysitter is coming. I found it a pleasure to read. The book uses a language the children are comfortable and familar with. It describes how date night for the parents can be just a fun for the kids. This is a must read in the classroom or at home.

If ever I would leave you...

What makes a good picture book? Well, in my humble opinion, a good picture book is the kind where you read through it, enjoy it, then glance at the copyright page and shriek with befuddlement when you realize that the original text was written waaaay way back in 1978. The year of this reviewer's humble birth. This fact is so amazingly shocking because "Don't Forget to Come Back" is a book that feels ultra-hip on top of being ultra-modern. Chalk that feeling up to the amazing illustrations by preeminent illustrator Harry Bliss. Choosing to help kids cut through the fears that overtake them when their parents go out for a night, this book is an excellent resource for any parent with a particularly clingy young `un on a Saturday night. Our young protagonist informs us right off the bat that she is aware that her father and mother are going out for the night. Her reaction? "I didn't like that one bit!". As a result she tries every trick in her bag to keep her parents in the home. She points out that since she is not a baby she does not need a "baby" sitter. When that doesn't work she tries a different tactic. If the parents leave a thunderstorm will blow the house down, she'll throw up, and she'll be eaten by a moose (not necessarily in that order). She then attempts to come along, persuade just one parent to stay, threaten unending not-niceness, run away from home via the closet, etc. Of course, she likes her babysitter (which helps) and so she admonishes her parents with the title phrase, "Don't forget to come back!". In the morning, when she wakes, there they are in bed safe and sound. And not a single moose ate her either. When I first read this book glancingly (is that a word?) I wasn't particularly impressed. Something about the parents' hoity-toity digs kinda threw me for a mild loop. On a closer rereading, however, I was charmed. Throughout the heroine's various cajoleries and dire warnings the parents have the distinct look of people who've heard it all before. They're not disinterested, necessarily. Just well-aware of the battle that takes place every time they want to go out for a night. Illustrator Harry Bliss gives them patient albeit dressing-for-the-night attitudes towards their only child. And I loved the babysitter. She's a great companion to the kid, acting as silly or semi-serious as called for. The best image in the whole book is that of the girl asleep in her bed wearing a clown face while the sitter, in a matching clown face, reads to her from a monster book sporting Lon Chaney's "Phantom" mug. You have to see it yourself to get the full flavor. Writer Robie H. Harris is one of those speakers who presents on topics like, "Writing About the Powerful Feelings and Real Concerns of Young Children". I don't know if she was aware of the form her book would take when she originally wrote it in 1978. In a novel twist, the book is rife with speech bubbles. This gives it a particularly contemporary air an

A terrific book for kids and adults

Being a parent, an elementary school teacher(and a former child) this book is a terrific exploration of childhood angst. It opens up a dialogue between kids and parents over the issue of separation. I found it funny, well paced and timeless. It's no surprise School Library Journal gave it a starred review.

Became my daughter's favorite in a matter of days!

This book is perfect for anyone who has a strong-willed, feisty youngster in their house. I bought this book for my daughter thinking it would help her with the idea of babysitters. It has been a dream! My daughter can easily relate to the spunky little girl in the book and the sweet, reassuring parents. The illustrations are charming, the language is realistic and the little girl is a typical creative toddler who will do anything to keep mommy and daddy from leaving the house. Both my husband and I have read the book to my daughter frequently, and she has now taken to "reading" the book to us, her stuffed animals and our family dog! We are searching for a babysitter in the new town we must moved to, and our little one is hoping we will find her a "silly Sarah" to care for her when we must go out too. This is the best book I have bought her in the past 6 months at least.
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