The writer, Julia Inserro, uses language any child will understand. I love the scenarios at the end of the book that kids and parents can do
This is a great children’s book that teaches children how to handle a bad day. A very perceptive grandma notices her granddaughter, Layla, is deep in thought. Grandma is a very attentive, empathic listener while Layla explains why her day was so bad.
The writer, Julia Inserro in The Do-Over Day, uses language any child will understand. The artwork defines precisely how a child would feel in a similar situation.
Layla, like many children, remembers her bad day in relation to how she felt about each situation. In the end Layla looks at things differently.
I love the scenarios at the end of the book that kids and parents can do.
I am an author, an advocate, and former foster parent. I adopted my granddaughter, and we wrote a book together called Carly Shares Her Story. We used the pen names Eve Collins and Morgan Carew. The book is about her experience as a foster child. I worked with inmates for 20+ yrs and now I'm retired
Comments