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Leo, a hilarious baby chameleon, won't stop staring at the screen. But suddenly... What is that music? And that rhythm? Sounds like lots of fun... Can you play with Leo and get him to have a great time without screens? This fantastic interactive story is perfect for playing with your little ones and helping them understand how fun and creative screenless play can be. When the music plays, the fun begins. No more screens! Let's Play Without Screens is part of the Bit by Bit I Learn More and I Grow Big collection, which is a reference collection designed for children from 0 to 3 years old. In…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Leo, a hilarious baby chameleon, won't stop staring at the screen. But suddenly... What is that music? And that rhythm? Sounds like lots of fun... Can you play with Leo and get him to have a great time without screens? This fantastic interactive story is perfect for playing with your little ones and helping them understand how fun and creative screenless play can be. When the music plays, the fun begins. No more screens! Let's Play Without Screens is part of the Bit by Bit I Learn More and I Grow Big collection, which is a reference collection designed for children from 0 to 3 years old. In each of these cardboard books we will meet a different animal baby, who will show us one of the first great challenges in a child's life. Some features: - All titles have been supervised by early childhood educators. - They are interactive and fun: the children play and help the animals. - They are cardboard stories with a handle so that the little ones can carry them from one place to another. - With fun and very striking illustrations, which stand out against the background to capture the attention of babies. - With a flap on the last page that can be opened to see the before and after.
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Autorenporträt
As a child, her two favorite things were a pencil and a white sheet of paper. She had heard in some remote place that there were people whose profession was to draw. If it was true, she wanted to be one of them! When she grew up, her dream was still there, very strong, so she graduated in Fine Arts specializing in engraving and stamping. In 2009 she won the 6th Lola Anglada Illustration Award for "Els contes d' Ukanaburu". A few years later, she would illustrate "Mosgo", the winning novel of the XXI Edebé Prize for Children's Literature in 2013. Her passion has become her profession and a way of life that she adores, so she is one of those strange beings who love and enjoy their work.