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The Little Farm by Lois Lenski
The Little Farm by Lois Lenski









Young children learn to talk by hearing you name things, and repeating the names and simple phrases.

The Little Farm by Lois Lenski

Voila! There you have a child-sized history and science lesson. If your child has ever seen a gas station attendant (say, if you live in Oregon), it’s unlikely he’s seen a gravity-fed gas pump. Small buys five gallons of gas.” As he gains more experience and makes observations about life around him, you can have conversations about what that man in the green pants is doing. Children will be drawn into the delight of words as they associate them with everyday activities.Īt first your child will look at the picture as you say, “The little Auto stops at a Filling Station. These simple little books are for your youngest listeners. She realized he wasn’t imagining the vehicles as characters, but rather, that he was seeing himself as the driver or pilot. Lenski said she got the idea for the “Small” books by watching her young son play with his toy trucks and airplanes. They were like peering into an old-fashioned dollhouse. I think that was part of the fascination. Published in 1932, the illustrations were already quaint when I was a child in the early 1960s.

The Little Farm by Lois Lenski

I’m almost positive The Little Family is one of the first books I ever checked out from our county library.











The Little Farm by Lois Lenski