(Part 2) Best children duck books according to redditors

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We found 89 Reddit comments discussing the best children duck books. We ranked the 36 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top Reddit comments about Children's Duck Books:

u/Sadimal · 14 pointsr/WTF

This looks like something out of a Beatrix Potter book.

u/mootiechazam · 11 pointsr/reddit.com

I work with children with CP (well, really a variety of children but some with CP). It is amazing what can be accomplished with early intervention. It is an incredibly hard road, but nothing is more amazing than seeing them take those first steps or speak those first words. Congrats on this first milestone and all that will come in the future. Although I can't predict what those milestones will be, I can predict that she will continue to amaze you every single day.

Suggested reading.

u/11-22-1963 · 5 pointsr/communism101

Farmer Duck is a children's book about sharing responsibility. and I guess there's an anti-capitalist theme implied (lazy farmer, hard-working farm animal).

u/theram4 · 3 pointsr/AskReddit

Actually, was it this one? The Story about Ping.

u/wajiii · 2 pointsr/books

What do you have against geese? It wasn't a goose that gave you rabies! May I suggest you please check out "Duck & Goose": www.amazon.com/dp/037583611X

P.S. My deepest sympathy regarding your patio furniture.

u/PaytheDevil · 2 pointsr/funny
u/LongUsername · 2 pointsr/Parenting

My son (2yo) isn't to the age of reading by himself, but he is starting to memorize parts of books, and if we pause he'll sometimes say the next word.

He loves the "Gossie and Friends" series. They take the form of Introduce a character-> introduce a problem -> resolve problem though action.

u/TakverToo · 2 pointsr/Parenting

Little Blue Truck has been a favorite in our house for years - enough so that it's my go-to baby shower and toddler birthday present. Excellent rhythm, animal noises, and a sweet message about friendship.

One Duck Stuck - Really great noises and again a nice message about helping.

(We do read books that aren't about being stuck in the mud...)

I Love You, Stinky Face - great title of course, and an awesome imaginative, loving conversation between mom and child. I often suggest reading this if we've had a hard day.

And a sweeping endorsement for Dahlov Ipcar - though her board books tend to be collections of "greatest hits" of illustrations from her many (somewhat lengthy) story books. Still good!

u/sdchargersfan55 · 1 pointr/childrensbooks

Good Little Wolf by Nadia Shireen. This is a typical children's book and as I read it I thought i knew where the story would go, and boy was I surprised when I got to the end!

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11407965-good-little-wolf

If you like Mo Willems then "That if Not a Good Idea" will also fit the bill.

https://www.amazon.com/That-Not-Good-Idea-Willems/dp/0062203096


Princess Pink and the Land of Fake Believe is a beginning chapter book series that will work. It's part of the Branches Scholastic series; it has lots of pictures and each book is a quick read. It is a series of fractured fairy tales where all the characters aren't what you expect them to be.

http://www.scholastic.ca/branches/princesspink.htm

The Paper bag Princess by Robert Munsch is another one. If you go to his web site you can listen to him read it.

http://robertmunsch.com/book/the-paper-bag-princess


u/Fang_14 · 1 pointr/firstimpression

I'm going to guess from your username that your real name is Suzy. Nah, but let's see. You seem like you're in your late teens, early twenties. I'd caution an even 20 years old. You're artistic and enjoy drawing, which you are quite good at though you are humble in regards to your skill. Also, you're quite friendly and try to be talkative when you can since you consider yourself to be a quiet person.

u/not_a_duck_I_promise · 1 pointr/CircleofTrust
u/melonlollicholypop · 1 pointr/childrensbooks
u/LeiterQuarrel · 1 pointr/Spanish

Do you mean a beginners children’s book like this

Bilingual Tales: El patito feo / The Ugly Duckling (Spanish Edition) https://www.amazon.com/dp/0439773768/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_z.fMAbC2DPQFJ

Or something more difficult?

u/ThunderCuuuunt · 1 pointr/dataisbeautiful

No, sometimes make way, but not give way. For example, in the title of this classic children's book. I think using give way in the sense that we use yield would sound peculiar. When it's not used to mean collapse, it always has some of that sense of failure or defeat.