Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Children's books

Join in for children's book recommendations.

Recommendations for 2-3 year old

31 replies

thereareworsethingsicoulddo · 19/11/2017 17:46

Sorry, am sure this has done before but I searched and couldn’t quite find a thread that nailed it.
2 year old DS, really into his books. Loves The Tiger Came to Tea, The Gruffalo, William & The Night Train...recommendations of similar titles? Amazon seems lift the flap & potty training focussed. I have to read them over & over again Hmm quite often 3 times in one sitting so a nice story rather than just illustrations please for my sanity! Thanks

OP posts:
New posts on this thread. Refresh page
QueenBee2 · 04/01/2018 07:27

The Honey Bees Reward by Paul Vagg, my favourite after Room On The Broom.

Freezingwinter · 29/12/2017 21:04

Monkey puzzle, the smartest giant in town and a squash and a squeeze by Julia Donaldson.
Hairy Maclary is always a huge hit.

FuzzyPenguin · 29/12/2017 21:02

Supertato, my 3 year old is obsessed by the books there are 4 different ones.

NapQueen · 29/12/2017 21:01

The Great Dog Bottom Swap
The Crocodile Who didnt Like the Water
No Bot
Stuck

emsmum79 · 29/12/2017 20:59

Dr Seuss!

brilliotic · 27/11/2017 14:16

The day I discovered books in charity shops, and then the day I discovered the Book People, have saved me hundreds of pounds.

Agree with many of the suggestions and would add non-fiction books on topics your child enjoys, particularly the Usborne lift-the-flap books. E.g. on trains, or dinosaurs, or whatever it is your child is into!

ProseccoPoppy · 25/11/2017 22:48

The Book People have a set of 10 Julia Donaldson books in a nice little bag for about a tenner (they are much more limited in choice but much cheaper than amazon). We love The Snail and The Whale.

Other books that my little one lives include “I love you Stinky Face” and “Oi Frog!”. Not sure of the authors on either but pretty sure we got both from Amazon so should be easy to find.

bumpertobumper · 25/11/2017 22:43

Bear in the cave, by Michael rosen is very popular with mine. Also bear hunt of course

PandaPieForTea · 25/11/2017 21:54

My DD likes:

Who’s Hiding
Press Here
Don’t put your finger in the jelly, nelly
The Fox in the Dark
Dogs don’t do ballet
Who’s in the loo
Are the dinosaurs dead, Dad?
Tuck me in!
Any Wibbly Pig book
Giraffes can’t dance
Supermarket Zoopermarket
Little rabbit foo foo

WeirdnessOfDoom · 25/11/2017 21:38

Look up Helen Docherty and Rachel Bright. Nice books with good rhyme, a story and a message.

Schmoochypoos · 23/11/2017 21:14

We are currently into

Bumblebear
Not now Bernard
Gruffalo
There’s a bear on my chair
You can’t fit an elephant on the bus

thereareworsethingsicoulddo · 23/11/2017 21:11

Thanks again everyone, I now have a plethora of literary possibilities (and a full basket on Amazon)!

OP posts:
TeaBelle · 22/11/2017 12:47

Avoid 'you choose like the plague!! Have read it nightly for the last year dd loves it so much

SnugglySnerd · 22/11/2017 12:41

I've just discovered the Book Trust have a book finder website. It's brilliant. You can search by age and theme and it appears to be updated with new books.

sunshine7981 · 22/11/2017 11:47

Once there were giants Martin Waddell - the most lovely book

BeeMumma · 22/11/2017 11:44

Would definitely recommend:
The Emperor's New Clothes (Susanna Davidson)
Emily Brown and the Thing (Cressida Cowell)
The Firebird (Mairi Mackinnon)

My daughter couldn't put them down! Would never have thought of them, but discovered them through a company called Bookabees, which sends unique books right to our door

villainousbroodmare · 20/11/2017 13:29

Others listed above plus Cave Baby (Julia Donaldson) and Farmer Duck (Martin Waddell) and Each Peach Pear Plum by Janet and Allan Ahlberg.

thereareworsethingsicoulddo · 20/11/2017 13:25

Wow- loads of ideas! Thanks everyone Smile

OP posts:
Nan0second · 20/11/2017 13:25

Oh yes, forgot
Elmer books
Each peach pear plum and peepo
Hungry caterpiller

Also consider joining your local library, means you can try some new stuff and if they don't like something, it's free so it doesn't matter!

PeekabooPoo · 20/11/2017 09:51

Moo cow kung fu cow, elephant weliphant, octopus soctopus

PeekabooPoo · 20/11/2017 09:50

Julia Donaldson - as mentioned by everyone else (have read them so often that ds now 'reads' them to himself)

The little princess books

ojell · 20/11/2017 09:49

Don’t forget about poems, both rhyming and non-rhyming - good rhythm and metre are as fun to read and support language development just as well as rhyme.

‘When We Were Very Young’, ‘Stars In Jars’, ‘I Am A Poetato’ and ‘Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats’ (the version with the Axel Scheffler illustrations) have all gone down well in our house.

SnugglySnerd · 20/11/2017 09:45

Aliens Love Underpants
Peace at Last
Elmer books

DD recently got given a book by Jarvis about Alan the alligator. It's brilliant but I can't remember the exact title.

GinnyBaker · 20/11/2017 09:42

So agree about the paw patrol books just awful bilge.I am slowly removing them one at a time for my own sanity.

Agree hairy mclary series brilliant. And percy the park keeper series as others have said.

Jez alborough books esp ' duck in a truck' and 'some dogs do' are wonderful.

Loads of julia donaldson ones but a squash and a squeeze and charlie cooks favourite books are real favourites here.

Ds's favourite books are currently 'meet the parents' by peter bently and 'the tree elves picnic' by alice jane roberts. Both of which are wonderful.

Firstaidnovice · 20/11/2017 09:19

I find anything with a rhyme generally much easier to read multiple times. I love Hairy Mclairy for this reason. And the Slinky Malinki spin-off might actually be my all time favourite.

Any TV tie-ins go straight to the back of the wardrobe, because they are such hard work. You might assume that writing books for three year olds would be easy, but a quick read of a Paw Patrol book will set you straight.

Current favourite of both DC in our house is You Choose. Not a story book, but a lovely conversation starter.

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.

This thread is closed and is no longer accepting replies. Click here to start a new thread.