Feel Your Happy

Emily Coxhead has created another uplifting book overflowing with positivity. Its narrator is a small, very endearing sloth that offers lots of practical strategies to use when things get too much. ‘When I hear a noise that hurts my ears, I find somewhere quiet to be still and calm’, is one. ‘When the world seems too bright, ‘I ask someone to read me a story’ is another

and ‘when somewhere new smells different or strange, I take my softest teddy to snuggle so it smells of home.’ – all of these will appeal to young children and help them to ‘feel their happy’. I love the reassurance given at the end of the book: ‘Your feelings are part of what makes you, YOU! Just remember to be proud, be yourself …”

Using the five senses to manage feelings really helps to make things accessible to very young children, especially when the text is accompanied by warm bright, joyful illustrations with humorous details that are as positive as the words and enable little ones to feel involved.

All children find it difficult to manage their emotions at times, so this is a book to have in home and early years/foundation stage collections.

Happy Days: 365 Facts to Brighten Every Day of the Year

A few years ago, Emily Coxhead had a mission: to sprinkle a tiny bit of happiness all over the planet. To that end she launched a quarterly newspaper, The Happy News. Now comes this book aimed primarily at young children. Starting on 1st January, there are 366 fun facts, each one vibrantly illustrated by Rachel Suzanne. Some feature animals, others plants, and there are also facts relating to humans in various parts of the world.

You can either follow the pattern of the book, discovering a new fact each day, or perhaps start by looking at birthday dates of friends and relations. No matter how you read it, you’re certain to discover new facts. Did you know for instance that a group of pugs is called a grumble or that a 100-year old tortoise, Diego by name, saved his species from extinction by fathering 800 offspring. Wow!

I wonder how big a newly hatched tortoise is: a newborn koala, so we read, is the size of a 2 pence coin.

Prepare to be astonished, puzzled and amused as you turn the pages of this chunky book. I was puzzled to discover that elephants can hear better with one foot off the ground and surprised to read playing music to plants helps them grow faster and that lemons float but limes sink. I guess that’s to do with density. A fun, gently educative read that goes on giving.