Cover Image: Sumo Counting

Sumo Counting

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Member Reviews

A truly adorable way to do your counting and learn a bit about sumo wrestling in the process. We like this series!

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This is a children's book that I read to my twin boys. I loved that there is Japanese and English numbers on each page, and there is also one Japanese word on each page. This book teaches you a little bit about sumo culture. I found this book cute and fun to read. My boys really loved this book. This book is different book then other children's book I have read to my twin boys. The pictures are simple but super cute. I was kindly provided an e-copy of this book by the publisher (Little Bigfoot) or author (Sanae Ishida) via NetGalley, so I can give honest review about how I feel about this book. I want to send a big Thank you to them for that.

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The little Sumo wrestlers in this cute picture book are very (!) busy. Get to know them and something about Japanese words and culture as you and a child count to ten, fifty and one hundred. There is an illustrated vocabulary section at the end of the book. This will help adults to explain the pictures to children.

Sumo Counting is an appealing book. Toddlers should enjoy it.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher. All opinions are my own.

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I really enjoyed this cute picture book with all the little sumos. I even learned some Japanese in the process.

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Sumo Counting by Sanae Ishida is an adorable picture book for early childhood learners. The illustrations are so cute and I adored seeing the tiny sumo wrestlers. Of course this is at its heart a book on counting and it certainly delivers on presenting the numbers with visuals so that children can physically point to and count. This is obviously a good start to introducing number sense to early learners. This book also introduces Japanese vocabulary along with the counting. This is excellent to help expose children to other cultures. I’ve seen bilingual books in other languages, but this is the first one that I have seen in Japanese. Overall, I liked it and feel that it would be a good addition to my classroom math library.

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This was cute and a quick book about counting. It would be a good way to expose younger children to cultures they’re not familiar with.

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Review to come to blog August 25th and goodreads September.

I received this book from Netgalley in exchange of an honest review.

The second book in the Sumo series and I definitely hope that the author makes more of these! Because these are just so much fun!

The previous book was all about opposites, in this one it is all about numbers! From one sumo wrestler having a big dream to eight wrestlers in a big bath. I had so much fun seeing what the little wrestlers were up to and was constantly curious what would be next. I loved seeing the many things that they were doing.

In this one we don't just learn numbers. Oh no! We also learn some Japanese words that are interspersed in the little sentences that each page has. The numbers are all already explained in both romaji and written language. The words, well of these are often easily deduced from the pictures, but at the end of the book we get some more explanation on what the word means. I was quite happy that we learn so much in a fun packed book. Not just normal numbers (one two three), but also Japanese numbers (ichi, ni, san) and words.

The art? The style is just as good as the first book and I really love seeing what those sumo wrestlers are up to!

All in all, give us more sumo wrestlers books! There are still topics that can be done, so I would love to see them! I would highly recommend this book to everyone.

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Sumo Counting introduces children to Japanese words and culture with super adorable illustrations. Kids count sumo wrestlers in English and Japanese. For a fun activity, count the figures in the illustrations with kids and look at what the wrestlers are doing on each page.

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Sumo Counting is an adorable bilingual Japanese/English illustrated book for babies and children by Sanae Ishida. Due out 7th Sept 2021 from Sasquatch imprint Little Bigfoot, it's 22 pages and will be available in boardbook format.

This is such a fun book with engaging colourful and fun illustrations full of movement and learning opportunities. Each of the illustrations covers a full page with simple inset text describing the pictures simply with numbers shown in both Arabic numerals, Japanese hiragana / IPA, and a short 2 line text in English. It's written as a counting book: "One little sumo full of yokozuna dreams", "Two little sumo wrestlers bouting in a dohyo ring", etc and each subsequent picture is full of more and more little sumo wrestlers doing sumo things (including cleaning up their sumo heya - training and living area). The illustrations are full of subtle little extras which will provide lots of opportunity for hunt and find during reading time.

I really liked that this little book (and the other one in the series) is full of Japanese vocabulary which is easy to understand. All the Japanese words included in the text are also defined with their IPA/hiragana in the back of the book. This would make a wonderful all-ages book for babies up to adults who want to learn a few rudimentary words and numbers as well as simple cultural things from Japan.

Additionally, and it has no real bearing on the book review, but the author/artist, Sanae Ishida's own website and blog are wonderfully creative and full of beautifully designed and constructed sewn clothing, watercolors, printables, papercrafts, and insight. She's a multi-talented creative soul and I am in awe of her sheer productivity.

Five stars.

Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.

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This was a clever way to count. And adding the Sumo and Japanese traditions was a great way to introduce children to other cultures.

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Great little counting book with a difference - it's all based around sumo wrestlers and Japanese traditions.
Only downside is my daughter kept asking me what a certain word meant and I had no idea - luckily the words were at the end of the book but I obviously had to keep scrolling every time!
Cute little pics too - it's good to learn about other countries traditions and culture

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