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English
Farrar Straus Giroux
11 October 2022
"Just how many things can ""one"" be?
One box of crayons.

One batch of cookies.

One world.

One family.

In this unabridged board book edition of the beloved picture book, One Family, author George Shannon and artist Blanca Gomez craft a playful, interactive story that shows how a family can be big or small and comprised of people of a range of genders and races."

By:  
Illustrated by:   Blanca Gomez
Imprint:   Farrar Straus Giroux
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 164mm,  Width: 166mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   203g
ISBN:   9780374389536
ISBN 10:   0374389535
Pages:   24
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 4 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  English as a second language
Format:   Board book
Publisher's Status:   Active

George Shannon is a children's librarian whose many notable picture books include Turkey Tot, Tomorrow's Alphabet, and Lizard's Guest. He lives on Bainbridge Island, Washington. Blanca Gomez started creating illustrations for her mother when she was a kid. Now, she illustrates for clients around the world. Blanca lives and works in Madrid, Spain. cosasminimas.com

Reviews for One Family

Amazon's Best Books of May 2022 - Amazon's Best Children's Books of 2022 So Far - Amazon's Best Children's Books of 2022 The breadth of diversity on display is refreshing: families include multigenerational homes, interracial marriage, neighboring households, children who identically resemble their parents and those who don't. --Booklist Round-faced, rosy-cheeked characters representing a broad array of races, cultures, and familial make-up populate this loving concept book about the multitudes contained in the number one: One is five. One bunch of bananas. One hand of cards. One family. In Shannon's simple, lyrical text, well-chosen, child-accessible details suggest larger concepts of unity and collectivity, differences and commonalities, while still bolstering the fundamentals of enumeration. --Horn Book The text is focused and precise, and the examples are often friendly (One pile of pups) and sometimes rhyming (One house of bears. One bowl of pears), making for a cozy read-aloud that trips agreeably off the tongue. There's an entertaining seek-and-find element to the cited objects, perfect for sharp young eyes, and a closing spread identifies all the countable objects spread by spread. Complicate your counting curricula in the nicest possible way with this. --BCCB


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