Toys
About this book
Tea for four
– My doll invites her friends for tea.
Plastic soldier
– My soldier’s face and hands are not really green.
Bunny
– Bunny, you make the perfect friend.
Teddy bear
– Teddy’s a different kind of bear.
Rubber ducky
– Ducky’s an “any weather” bird.
Doll eyes
– No human child could be as docile.
Raggedy Ann
– To be loved, you don’t need to be beautiful.
Finger puppets
– Any finger could play its own character.
Frog
– My little frog climbs walls.
Sock monkey
– Nothing quite as silly could love me quite as much.
Paper boats
– My paper boats endure violent seas.
Mouse
– This mouse was made to scurry.
Wooden train
– My wooden train retains a life of its own.
Wooden blocks
– I have a box of wooden blocks.
Spinning top
– Its spinning seems to keep it upright.
Bamboo dragonfly
– It’s like a little flying fairy.
Tin airplane
– My tin airplane doesn’t fly.
Red tractor
– My tractor rolls over anything.
Farm animals
– Horse and collie appeal to the farmer.
Car race
– Roadster and jet car are evenly matched.
Dinosaurs
– My triceratops survived the great extinction.
Hobby horse
– A horse head on a stick is fun for a younger child.
Kite
– A kite isn’t really a toy.
Ball
– The ball itself doesn’t make all the fun.
Tools
– My father gave me a hammer.