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Helping Your Toddler to Sleep

an easy-to-follow guide

Siobhan Mulholland

$39.99

Paperback

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English
Vermilion
01 April 2009
Essential advice on helping your toddler to sleep from Britain's number one parenting publisher

A new title in the series of beautifully illustrated and easy-to-follow practical guides covering all the essential phases of childcare.

Getting your toddler to sleep, and to sleep well, can become a battle that can be tiring and upsetting for both parent and child. And the less sleep they get, the more tiring it can be. This comprehensive guide - the first to be aimed purely at toddlers - offers practical guidance and clear guidelines on how to achieve the best result. From sleep cycles and nap times to food and mental attitude, Helping Your Toddler to Sleep is the only book parents need to ensure that their toddler - and they - get as much sleep as they need.
By:  
Imprint:   Vermilion
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 183mm,  Spine: 6mm
Weight:   213g
ISBN:   9780091929091
ISBN 10:   0091929091
Pages:   64
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Siobhan Mulhulland is an occasional contributor on health and parenting to the Times, Telegraph and the Financial Times. She writes regularly on travel for the Independent newspaper. She has done stints as Deputy Editor, Features Editor and as a columnist for the parenting magazine Junior. She is also a TV producer and channel commissioning editor. She lives in West London with her husband and three young children.

Reviews for Helping Your Toddler to Sleep: an easy-to-follow guide

Just follow my girlfriend and find out what she's up to, Johnny Rousseau tells his partner, ex-jockey Coley Killebrew (Stalking Horse, 1994); and in no time at all, Coley's up to his neck in murder, fraud, and (of course) horseflesh. Coley's not anxious to mess with the bratty daughter of popular conservative talk-show pundit Wilton Dresner, but Johnny makes him an offer he can't refuse: full title to the Horse's Neck, the restaurant they own together. So Coley settles into watching Paula Dresner from the rear of the pack, and she wastes no time in leading him to dead photographer Jerry Woo, a soon-to-be-dead jockey, two pairs of murderous thugs, and a far-flung plot to inflate the value of racehorses and then kill them (by fire, electrocution, lethal injection) for the insurance. By the time Coley can report all this back to Johnny, though, his partner's been arrested for killing Wilton Dresner hours after the obligatory high-profile quarrel. Their deal's done, Johnny insists chivalrously, but it isn't, partly because Coley's not ready to walk away from a murder plot just because the victims are equine, partly because the killers aren't about to let him walk away either. So a tale that started like Vertigo and segued into Ross Macdonald - say, The Barbarous Coast - comes down the stretch looking like The Big Sleep. Shoemaker continues to show a broader streak of fun than Dick Francis, and a more pronounced taste for intrigue - Coley spends more time bound and gagged than the Hardy Boys, and his story is plotted within an inch of its life (and we haven't even mentioned the bunco artists yet, or the philosophical bodyguard, or the dysfunctional family romance that sets the story in motion). Shoemaker's still tossing off plot twists like thrown horseshoes when the printers take the type away on the last page. (Kirkus Reviews)


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