Believe me. I tried. I really, really tried. I love books. Before 18 months you'll be hard pressed to get any sort of attention for any extended period of time. The book is more something to chew on at that early age (and the contrast toys are really, in all fairness, also a waste of time and money since they grow out of that so, so fast).
The first books that got a reaction were books in the Eric Carle series - the Very Hungry Caterpillar, the "bear" series (Brown Bear, Polar Bear, Panda Bear, Baby Bear - but be sure to cut out the adjectives: instead of "whooping crane" you should start with just "crane" and then add in the adjectives well after age 2), etc.
Simple Dr. Seuss books work as well - at 2 our daughter loved The Cat in the Hat, the Cat in the Hat Comes Back and One Fish, Two Fish. Anything beyond that is a waste - it is still hard to get her to sit through Horton Hatches the Egg but she's getting better.
Before 18 months you're best off with the simple books that just have a picture and a word - we had one called "Baby Animals" where it said "The Cat" and you open the flap and it says "The Cat Drinks Milk". All we got from our daughter was "Kisa moloko" (which is "cat milk" in Russian), and the "l" was tending towards "w" (one more reason why Polish people sound like they have speech defects - they do that into adulthood).
Elmo counting books worked well, too, starting at about 2-2.5 years.
I'll skip the Russian books but they were generally the same sorts of books as the US ones (barnyard animals, simple stories with lots of repetition, etc.).
It really is a geometric progression - you should have extremely low expectations early on and watch everything explode after two, and REALLY explode after 3. Our daughter now even makes fun of the way my mom tries to speak Russian (without malice, and spot-on no less) and has a rich vocabulary in both languages, and also knows simple phrases in French (though if we ask her to demonstrate her French by asking something in French in front of other people, she just says "I can't hear you" and smiles).
The first books that got a reaction were books in the Eric Carle series - the Very Hungry Caterpillar, the "bear" series (Brown Bear, Polar Bear, Panda Bear, Baby Bear - but be sure to cut out the adjectives: instead of "whooping crane" you should start with just "crane" and then add in the adjectives well after age 2), etc.
Simple Dr. Seuss books work as well - at 2 our daughter loved The Cat in the Hat, the Cat in the Hat Comes Back and One Fish, Two Fish. Anything beyond that is a waste - it is still hard to get her to sit through Horton Hatches the Egg but she's getting better.
Before 18 months you're best off with the simple books that just have a picture and a word - we had one called "Baby Animals" where it said "The Cat" and you open the flap and it says "The Cat Drinks Milk". All we got from our daughter was "Kisa moloko" (which is "cat milk" in Russian), and the "l" was tending towards "w" (one more reason why Polish people sound like they have speech defects - they do that into adulthood).
Elmo counting books worked well, too, starting at about 2-2.5 years.
I'll skip the Russian books but they were generally the same sorts of books as the US ones (barnyard animals, simple stories with lots of repetition, etc.).
It really is a geometric progression - you should have extremely low expectations early on and watch everything explode after two, and REALLY explode after 3. Our daughter now even makes fun of the way my mom tries to speak Russian (without malice, and spot-on no less) and has a rich vocabulary in both languages, and also knows simple phrases in French (though if we ask her to demonstrate her French by asking something in French in front of other people, she just says "I can't hear you" and smiles).
Political correctness is the pettiest form of casuistry.
ἡ δὲ κἀκ τριῶν τρυπημάτων ἐργαζομένη ἐνεκάλει τῇ φύσει, δυσφορουμένη, ὅτι δὴ μὴ καὶ τοὺς τιτθοὺς αὐτῇ εὐρύτερον ἢ νῦν εἰσι τρυπώη, ὅπως καὶ ἄλλην ἐνταῦθα μίξιν ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι δυνατὴ εἴη. – Procopius
Ummaka qinnassa nīk!
*MySmiley*
ἡ δὲ κἀκ τριῶν τρυπημάτων ἐργαζομένη ἐνεκάλει τῇ φύσει, δυσφορουμένη, ὅτι δὴ μὴ καὶ τοὺς τιτθοὺς αὐτῇ εὐρύτερον ἢ νῦν εἰσι τρυπώη, ὅπως καὶ ἄλλην ἐνταῦθα μίξιν ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι δυνατὴ εἴη. – Procopius
Ummaka qinnassa nīk!
*MySmiley*
Books for very small children: suggestions?
20/04/2012 12:19:39 AM
- 1572 Views
Really, before 18 months you're wasting your time
20/04/2012 01:26:05 AM
- 1218 Views
I dunno. I really enjoyed books when I was that young
20/04/2012 03:12:29 AM
- 1307 Views
At a year and a half?
20/04/2012 06:18:01 PM
- 1060 Views
I don't remember reading quite that young, but I do remember not long after that.
20/04/2012 09:35:11 PM
- 1276 Views
Color me slightly skeptical.
21/04/2012 01:17:51 PM
- 1109 Views
I double checked. I was confusing it with another event. I was about 2.5 *NM*
22/04/2012 12:19:09 AM
- 702 Views
Similar experience here...
20/04/2012 07:04:51 PM
- 1372 Views
Yah, I was a bit like your niece
20/04/2012 09:30:02 PM
- 1428 Views
Re: Yah, I was a bit like your niece
20/04/2012 11:48:12 PM
- 1294 Views
Doesn't need to be an extended period of time, though. A few minutes is enough at the beginning.
23/04/2012 12:42:23 PM
- 1346 Views
No problem, if you just want to flush money down a toilet.
23/04/2012 02:29:57 PM
- 1072 Views
Re: No problem, if you just want to flush money down a toilet.
23/04/2012 03:32:22 PM
- 1220 Views
Look, it's useless to discuss at this point but let's have the discussion again in 2 years.
23/04/2012 04:39:47 PM
- 1442 Views
I'm really interested in the evidence for the crawling thing.
25/04/2012 08:11:31 PM
- 1309 Views
I can't find actual scientific studies on the web
25/04/2012 09:56:14 PM
- 1092 Views
Re: I can't find actual scientific studies on the web
26/04/2012 03:45:40 AM
- 1498 Views
anyone who thinks an infant sleeping on its stomach is dangerous is behind the times.
26/04/2012 01:51:59 PM
- 1349 Views
If there was a big ad campaign in the UK about this then no-one told my medical team.
26/04/2012 07:40:48 PM
- 1181 Views
Hmmm. *shrug* I don't know. I trust this professor to have his facts straight.
26/04/2012 08:01:53 PM
- 1229 Views
Possible answer is difference between Scottish and English health systems.
26/04/2012 08:28:38 PM
- 1122 Views
weird. maybe trends have swung back the other way.
26/04/2012 10:01:01 PM
- 1188 Views
I hope you don't have it mixed up...
26/04/2012 10:18:00 PM
- 1222 Views
blagh. maybe I do...I hope not. I hate it when that happens. let me pull out that notebook...
27/04/2012 12:01:47 AM
- 1182 Views
Re: Look, it's useless to discuss at this point but let's have the discussion again in 2 years.
26/04/2012 01:39:25 PM
- 1071 Views
OH! Another suggestion!
20/04/2012 03:36:45 AM
- 1467 Views
I LOVE that book.
23/04/2012 12:44:08 PM
- 1149 Views
I...actually had a really long post at one point. I don't know where it went
23/04/2012 02:43:25 PM
- 1436 Views

Books by Ruth Brown
20/04/2012 04:26:18 PM
- 1060 Views
I loved books like that too. That had little "Easter Eggs" hidden in the pictures ^_^ *NM*
20/04/2012 05:29:50 PM
- 638 Views