The Small Mice of Homesville – a review

Small Mice of Homesville

Photo from Amazon.com

Over the past few evenings, Little O and I have been reading a book on the Kindle app called The Small Mice of Homesville by Linda May Kallestein and Elias Kallestein, who have set up Kallestein Publishing together.

This book – the third that they have published – is beautifully illustrated by Elias Kallestein with charming drawings of the mice and I loved the red thread illustration that runs along the bottom of every page, finishing in a ball of wool at the end of the book. Little O and I had fun tracing the pattern of it across the pages.

We split reading of the book over three evenings before bedtime because of Little O’s age; however, I think that if he was a year or so older, we could have read the story in one sitting (or maybe it is just his inability to sit still!). It is broken up into a number of short chapters, which does make it easier to stop reading at different points if you do need to read it bit by bit, as we did.

The story gives you many things to talk about, primarily taking care of younger siblings, so in that way, it suits us perfectly. I am looking forward to us reading it through again and seeing what Little O remembers from the first time. At almost three (this weekend, can you believe it?), I think Little O is at the young end of the scale to enjoy this book, and I think it is something that children would like for some years on because it could also be a book that children read themselves.

The book costs $6.24 on Amazon.com, which works out at around Skr 41, less than €5 or some £4. (I am not sure of the retail price on Amazon.co.uk as it does not allowed me to see the UK price of Kindle books.) Their first two books – Baby Animals and Animal Kingdom Alphabet – are also on Amazon and cost the same price.

Disclosure: I was given a free copy of this book by the author for review purposes. However, the review above is written solely by me, in my own words.

Baby and toddler book review

As Little O grows and is moving into a new phase of toddlerdom, I’ve been reading a lot more books to try and find ways to deal with the new challenges that we are facing; not that Little O is a difficult toddler, just that he has inherited a bit of a stubborn streak from both Husband and I.

I’ve been reading a range of different books, both English and Swedish, covering very different styles of parenting. So I thought I’d do a quick run-through and say which I found good and which I thought was less useful.

• • • •

An English Mamma in Stockholm: trotsboken malin alfven book review

Trotsboken – Malin Alfvén & Kristina Hofsten. Malin Alfvén is a well-known child psychologist here in Sweden and has written a number of books, but I think that this is one of the best known. It focuses on the “trotsåldern” (obstinate ages) throughout childhood: 9 months, 2-3 years, 4 years, 6 years, 9 years, 12 years and, of course, the teenage years.

I focused on reading the chapters on 9 months and 2-3 years as these are the most relevant to me. I’m not really so sure about needing to worry about obstinacy for a 9-month old – they are still babies. But the section on 2-3 year olds was interesting. One thing that stood out was that she says that children learn and develop better when they discover that they cannot always get their way – very interesting as this is something that I find hard to get the right balance with. She also says that this age is all about picking your battles, deciding what is worth putting your foot down about and what to let slide. She suggests using deflection at this age to avoid too much strife but to be consistent in whatever you decide.

I really liked this book. I like how it is written and I like what Malin Alfvén has to say.

• • • •

An English Mamma in Stockholm baby toddler book review Louise Hallin Linda Nyberg

Linda frågar Louise om Överlivnadstips för småbarnsmamman – Louise Hallin & Linda Nyberg. This book by psychotherapist Louise Hallin and journalist Linda Nyberg is aimed at “småbarnsmamma” – mothers to small children, but I wonder, just when you are expected to read this? I avoided books like this during pregnancy and before birth because I did not really want to read about that then; I wanted to experience it first and then consult books if I felt I needed to. I think if you read this while still pregnant it would terrify you! And after birth you don’t really have the time to read a book like this, which is done in the form of a “conversation” between the two of them, from start to finish to discover what they have to say. And if you read it when you have a little more time, say when your little one is at preschool, by then it is too late for most of the information in the book.

Perhaps if it had an index that related to the little bits of margin text, it might be more useful as you could dip in and out and find out the information that you want.

I also have to say that I objected to the term that she uses throughout for a mother: “stationary mothership”! She says that babies require a mother who sits still with them and concentrates on them. Yes, that I agree with wholeheartedly, for your first child. But this just isn’t an option for anyone with more than one. With a baby and a toddler, you just don’t have the same number of hours to dedicate to sitting still. It would be lovely if you did, but you just don’t.

Also, being really picky… I don’t like the cover of the book. It irritates me. Perhaps the irritation came after I began to dislike the book though.

(Interestingly, I just read in a magazine that Louise Hallin and Malin Alfvén now have a slot together on Swedish radio discussing children and parenting.)

• • • •

An English Mamma in Stockholm: 501 tips underlättar föräldraskap book review

501 Tips som Underlättar Föräldraskapet – Katarina Markiewicz. This book of tips covers everything: sleep, feeding, preschool, tantrums, travel, parties. And the tips cover every type of parenting: babies sleeping in your bed, babies sleeping in their own rooms, babies in disposable nappies, babies in cloth nappies, babies being potty trained before one. Some of the tips are really good and the wide range means that you can pick and choose which you believe are interesting.

Definitely a book for first-time parents, as most of the tips are things that you have heard from others or discovered for yourself by the time you’ve had two or more children.

A bit of a theme developing here, but I don’t really like the cover of this book either, or the illustrations inside. I found them a bit silly really.

• • • •

An English Mamma in Stockholm: Nya Barnliv Katerina Janouch book review

Nya Barnliv – Katerina Janouch. This is a big bible of a book (more than 700 pages), starting with pregnancy and going through to the teenage years. I like her writing style: relaxed, slightly chatty, open without sounding too bossy. Katerina Janouch has five children and uses many examples from her own life to illustrate her points, which makes you feel like she knows what she is talking about and has been through it too. The index in book is good, which I believe is key with such a large book as this. I read long sections of the book and also dipped in and out of it.

Another great feature is that every few pages there is a box of useful or summarised information, such as 10 tips for sick children or 10 tips for parental leave.

I really liked this book and think that I might buy it now that I have had to take it back to the library.

• • • •

New Toddler Taming – Dr Christopher Green. I read this book first after it was recommended to me by a friend. The title suggests that it is the parents who need to reign in toddler behaviour but actually the book is about changing parents’ opinions to find a way for toddlers to grow and develop without picking up bad habits. Dr Green believes that toddler behaviour is no worse now than it was in the past, just that we are more aware of ways to deal with it now. He talks about discipline rather than punishment and pinpointing the five triggers that can set a toddler off before they have an impact.

I really enjoyed this book as it makes sense to me to try and work with a toddler rather than against them. He also compares a toddler to a busy international airport without any flight control. This really stuck in my mind and I come back to this phrase every time that Little O starts on a meltdown, and really try to help him through his tantrum.

I read this one as a Kindle book and it is useful to have it on there to refer to every so often. Again though, I did not like the silly little illustrations in the book, but it is easy to overlook them as there are only a couple in each chapter.

I have to say this one is highly recommended!

• • • •

So, three good and two bad, in my opinion.

What toddler books have you read and found helpful? And what ones should be avoided?

The Gallery – books

This week’s Gallery prompt is one close to my heart: books. I love books and reading and have done since I was small. I would love to post a photo of our bookshelves, stacked with all the books that Husband and I own, but unfortunately, we are still not finished with the apartment renovation, so all the lovely books remain in storage.

Happily though, while searching for the boys’ winter things yesterday, Husband did bring up a box with my “To read” pile from the bedside table. I liberated three books from it quickly, before he saw, and they will be added to my new pile of books beside the bed that I want to read.

books coco chanel coaching language bilingual

It feels so good to have found these. They’ve been hiding in their box since the spring, so I had forgotten about their existence, but now I am going to get reading!

° ° ° ° ° ° ° °

Why not head over to The Gallery and check out the other entries this week.

Photo 366 challenge – week 33

Well, these days I am really finding the Photo 366 challenge to be be just that: a challenge. But then I guess that is the point… We are moving a week on Wednesday and it just feels as if there are not enough days between no and then to pack up everything that we own into boxes. At least we have given ourselves a few days’ leeway and don’t actually have to be out of our current apartment until the following Monday. But still – urgh, packing…

This week then: on Monday it was all about these little books – the kind that if they were to get lost during the move, I would not mind. Little O spends every day pointing out the tractors, police cars, diggers etc in them over and over and over and over and over again. The next day, Baby E and I took a very vintage train out to a friend’s summer house – absolute bliss to be sitting out on the terrace listening to the water lapping the shore. And the next day there were Brazilian parties in town as the country was due to play Sweden that night as the closing match for the old football stadium in Stockholm.

My days are spent packing and my evenings are spent polishing up the brass door handles for the new apartment. I really am living the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle at present… But Little O has been having fun nonetheless, swinging in his little brother’s car seat, running in the Mini Mil race and standing around in large puddles, getting soaked through [sigh].

So that was our week that was. What have you been up to?

• • • • • • • • •

Why not head over to the Boy & Me and see what others have been up to and then check out Country Kids over at Coombe Mill.

TheBoyandMe's 366 Linky

Country Kids from Coombe Mill Family Farm Holidays Cornwall

Photo 366 challenge – week 9

Week 9 already? The time is just flying by. And Baby E turned six weeks old yesterday – incredible. He really feels like he has been a part of our little family for longer than that, but on the other hand, I cannot believe that the time has gone so quickly. In fact, despite us having Little O, I didn’t call us “a family” before; Baby E’s arrival seems to have cemented that.

Day 58:

Photo © English Mamma

Husband makes a rare appearance on my blog! (Maybe even his first ever?) We returned from a long weekend spent down in the south of Sweden with his family and he took the rest of Monday off work to hang out and play with us. This is the play fort in our favourite playground. Husband enjoys it almost as much as Little O…

Day 59:

Photo © English Mamma

After collecting Little O from preschool on Tuesday, he, Baby E and I went for a long walk around the city in the winter sunshine (bliss!). Down by Gamla Stan (the Old Town) at the time time of year, you can see the large sheets of broken up ice float past as they head downstream from Lake Mälaren towards the harbour and then on to the sea. Surely a sign that spring is on its way!

Day 60:

Photo © English Mamma

These boys and their crazy sleeping positions! Baby E stayed sleeping like this for about an hour. How can that be comfortable?

Day 61:

Photo © English Mamma

In celebration of World Book Day – this is the pile of Little O’s books that lives in this sitting room. He has another large pile in his bedroom, mainly of bedtime reading stories and some special keepsake books up on one of the shelves. I’m hoping that he proves to be a book worm like me!

Day 62:

Photo © English Mamma

Friday was a beautifully sunny day, cold but clear blue skies. Husband took the afternoon off and he, Baby E and I went for a walk around Gamla Stan, the old town, and then went for cheeseburgers at Hotel Lydmar.

Day 63:

Photo © English Mamma

Yesterday we went back to what is becoming our new favourite local cafe for brunch (and car magazines for Little O).

Day 64:

Photo © English Mamma

Vasaloppet, an annual cross-country skiing competition here in Sweden, started at 8am this morning. As Husband has participated in the past, he is always keen to watch it. This year, however, he had not counted on a lively toddler for company for the 8am start. Unfortunately, Little O cannot stay still for more than five seconds at a time and five minutes into the race he had decided that there were far too many skiers and far too few cars involved and that clambering all over Pappa was far more fun.

So that is a snapshot of our week. Now head over to The Boy and Me and check out what others have been up to this week!

TheBoyandMe's 366 Linky

Siblings

I’ve actually had this post saved as a draft for a couple of months now – just a few little comments to remind myself what I was thinking about and to act as a prompt to write it up. And then today I saw this week’s Parentonomy prompt.

So, siblings…

In the last few months of pregnancy I become increasingly worried about the effect that the arrival of Baby E would have on Little O. It is also something that I had no experience to draw on, being any only child, and looking at Husband’s family did not help matters as there does seem to be some favouritism by his parents. I kept on going round and round the worst case scenario in my head: Little O feeling that he was being overlooked with the arrival of Baby E. I could imagine the tears, the sadness and then the resignation. It was something that I was determined that he would not feel.

To combat this, I did what I always do in these cases: I read, I researched, I read some more. One great book that I downloaded on Kindle was The Second Baby Survival Guide by Naia Edwards, which covered topics like sibling rivalry, attention-seeking behaviour by toddlers and gave tips on how to juggle life with a toddler and a newborn. And a quick google search reveals many helpful websites, including this page on Gurgle and this one on kellymom. We also bought a few books about babies to read with Little O (two by Rachel Fuller (Waiting For Baby and My New Baby) and There’s a House Inside My Mummy by Giles Andreae), which we read with him in the last weeks before Baby E’s birth.

On the day that we came home from the hospital with Baby E, we found that Little O was almost beside himself with excitement about meeting his little brother. Over the next couple of days, this turned into a little bit of resentment about how much attention this little interloper was receiving. I think part of this was because our initial approach was to have Baby E shut in our room when he slept, which meant Little O only really saw him when Baby E was feeding and that created some bad feeling – to him it must have seemed that Baby E was getting lots of cuddles. I consulted the book again and changed strategy and had Baby E sleeping in his carrycot out in the main part of the apartment. Little O was then very keen to stroke him, but often a little too heavy-handedly. Through trial and error, we found that if we encouraged him in his stroking and removed him from the situation and distracted him with toys when he became too aggressive, we could create some harmony. I say through trial and error – we had a few incidences when Little O realised that if he hit Baby E or poked him hard, he got a reaction, albeit a negative one, from us, and so he would do it over and over. Simply distracting him with a new game or a new way to play with his toys stopped this negative behaviour though.

In one way though, the opposite of what I had feared has happened and sometimes poor Baby E has to take a backseat. If both of them are crying and it is just me with them, then Little O is the one who I attend to first, in most cases, simply because he is the one who would understand and be hurt by me focusing on his little brother over him. From what I read this is the best way to handle this situation and can actually help the newborn be less fussy and grow more independent.

Now, three and a half weeks in, Little O already seems to adore his baby brother, always comes in to our bedroom in the morning to say hello to him, wants to cuddle him and to help with changing his nappy. Of course, there are still, and will continue to be, moments of discord and rivalry, but I feel much happier than I did in late pregnancy. I just hope that their closeness in age will translate into closeness later in life. Excluding, of course, the many battles that we’ll see between them – they are little boys, after all!

What’s your style?

Last week, some of my mamma friends were at our place for the day. I’d invited all those I knew with little ones of a similar-ish age. In fact, they ranged from one year and a week old and to just seven weeks old (teeny – awh!). The conversation turned to the different books espousing varied parenting techniques. Between us, we seemed to cover the range from Dr Sears to Gina Ford, with one friend admitting that she had read not one of these books but just gathered tips from those of us who had read them.

I started thinking about exactly what our parenting style was. While I was still pregnant, I bought a number of different baby books and read the majority of them. I had heard good things about Gina Ford’s Contented Baby book (if your baby was one that fitted into her strict schedule) and even better things about Tracy Hogg’s Baby Whisperer. At that point, I liked the style of Contented Baby more – it seemed to suit how my life was at that point more (structured thanks to many years with a time-critical job). I even went as far as creating Excel spreadsheets with her timetables for the different age groups. Conversely, I found the Baby Whisperer a little more airy-fairy and was put off by aspects such as asking the baby for permission before changing his nappy.

Photo © English Mamma

When we returned home from the hospital with this tiny little creature, however, I just could not see how the Contented Baby style of parenting would fit in our new lifestyle as a family. One of my main stumbling blocks was that it left no time to go out and this just wasn’t going to work for me. I am a very social person and need interaction with others. I get cabin fever easily when I am alone for more than three hours at a time long periods of time (I’m also an only child, which explains a lot). In fact, I was out with Baby O for the first time on my own before the BVC nurse even came to visit for the first time. The other areas I found challenging were the darkness (with a blackout blind) in the room and the total silence, mostly because I wanted to be able to go out and about and I wanted him to be able to sleep while we were out. Some might not agree with this approach, but I knew that I would be climbing the walls if I had to stay in each day with just Baby O for company. And an unhappy mamma does not a happy baby make…

While in the UK over the summer, I bought Penelope Leach’s Essential First Year, but the book terrified me by saying that leaving a baby crying could lead to a loss of brain cells, but did not specify exactly what she meant by “leaving a baby crying”. Looking back, I am sure she meant crying to sleep for hours but at the time, I convinced myself that she meant longer than 20 seconds and so I would run in and scoop up Baby O at the slightest sound. She is also a hardcore breastfeeding fan and, as I was struggling with breastfeeding at that time and her advice seemed to amount to “anyone can breastfeed, don’t be a quitter, just persist”, I found it hard to see past that.

Once Baby O was a couple of months old, I returned to the Baby Whisperer and found that if I overlooked the permission to change a nappy aspects, then her three-hour EASY schedule of eat, activity, sleep and you time suited both Baby O and I down to the ground. We rolled with the EASY schedule for the next three or four months and everything was dandy.

However, once we added food into the equation, it started to get a little more tricky. He was on three naps a day (around 8.30am, around midday and then mid-afternoon) and these turned into power struggles between us. The first nap of the day went smoothly, the midday nap became problematic and the afternoon one was an all-out battle. I had been offered a copy of Happiest Baby on the Block but had also been told that it was unlikely to make a difference to Baby O’s sleep now as the book was aimed at mothers of newborns.

We carried on like this for about a month before I suddenly had an epiphany: maybe a Contented Baby schedule could help us. And low and behold, after a couple of days it began to work like a dream. So now Baby O is down to two naps a day and is so much happier (thank you, Ms Ford!). We still don’t follow the book to the letter (sorry, Ms Ford!) as we still don’t use a blackout blind or have complete silence and I am more flexible with how long Baby O sleeps for his first nap (I don’t limit it to 45 mins if we are going out in the middle of day and he will have to sleep while away from home); however, we’ve found a method that works for us: part Baby Whisperer, part Contented Baby, part English Mamma.

I think it is a shame that this has become such an issue (on one forum where someone was selling one of these book, another mamma offered to buy it from her so she could burn it!) because the books do offer good advice; I think you just need to find the parts that suit you and tweak them a little as you go along and your baby grows. But I know a number of people who have been put off reading one or other of the books because of others’ opinions of them. The problem is the vast number of books available out there (Ferber, Dr SearsWeissbluth, No Cry Sleep Solution, Baby Wise, the Baby Whisperer, Penelope Leach and Contented Baby to name just a handful), and who has the time to read all these with a newborn?

* I have included links to these books for reference. I really don’t care who reads which books. If you find a book that works for you, then well done you, whichever book it may be.

Day Zero

Photo by Beth77 (on flickr)

No, not a post about reaching my estimated due date without the arrival of gyermek… Instead, this is about the Day Zero Project, where you set yourself 101 tasks to complete in 1001 days.

Unfortunately, pregnancy brain really seems to have taken hold and I wrote this post with the intention that I could complete another task, that of writing a blog post every day for a week. However, when I returned to the list I found that that wasn’t actually one of the tasks that I had set myself. It does mean that I am 25% of the way towards task no. 13 (to blog every day for a month), although I would be incredibly ambitious to believe that I could complete this run, given that today is the due date and if gyermek doesn’t make an appearance in the next 14 days, I will be induced. Oh well, I’ve still got more than 950 days to go… 

Day Zero tasks

  1. Eat at 10 new restaurants – already three new restaurants down (mainly because we’re getting out and about as much as we can in these last few days before gyermek arrives).
  2. Read 10 non-fiction books – two down, eight more to go!
  3. Finish off the nursery (part 1) – this will be complete once the cot arrives (any day now.
  4. Learn some new knitting stitches – learned how to do extended moss stitch this week; not quite sure when I’ll allow myself to call this task completed – how many is “some” after all?!
  5. Write a letter to myself to open in 10 years
  6. Ice skate on a lake
  7. Buy something from Etsy
  8. Attend a film festival
  9. See the Northern Lights
  10. See 10 classic movies I’ve never seen
  11. Go ice skating
  12. Host a tea party
  13. Participate in NaBloPoMo
  14. Learn how to play poker
  15. Make snow angels
  16. Don’t complain about anything for a week
  17. Take a photography class
  18. Make my own bread
  19. Photograph a landscape from the same location, capturing all four seasons
  20. Bury a time capsule
  21. Visit 5 parks or public gardens
  22. Take more photos
  23. Host a board game night
  24. Visit Japan
  25. Visit Australia
  26. Learn Swedish
  27. Make a font out of my handwriting
  28. Learn CPR
  29. Bake bread
  30. Improve my posture
  31. Visit 5 new museums
  32. Read War & Peace
  33. Learn how to play chess
  34. Blog at least once a week
  35. Learn more about wine
  36. Wear false eyelashes
  37. Floss at least once a week
  38. Inspire someone else to make their own 101 in 1001 list
  39. Visit the Ice Hotel in Jukkasjärvi
  40. Wear nothing black for a whole week
  41. Visit the Eden Project
  42. Start a new family tradition
  43. Get rid of 101 things I don´t need or want
  44. Take a photo of 26 things, one for each letter of the alphabet and post on my blog
  45. Drink more water
  46. Tie notes to five balloons and let them free
  47. Go to the library, close my eyes and pick a random book that I have to read
  48. Get a cleaner
  49. Sell something on Etsy
  50. Send someone flowers, just because
  51. Take 1001 photographs
  52. Attend wine tasting
  53. Buy cakes from Betty’s
  54. Walk the York wall
  55. Read 100 books from 1001 books to read before you die list
  56. Lose the baby weight that I have put on
  57. Finish knitting gyermek’s blanket
  58. Finish putting our wedding photos into the album
  59. Learn how to use the DSLR camera properly
  60. Buy some artwork/photos for the walls
  61. Make use of Spotify more often
  62. Teach myself the basics of calligraphy
  63. Call my personal trainer and restart training
  64. Remember birthdays
  65. End the 1001 days with the same plants I started with
  66. Keep my desk at home tidy
  67. Buy a piece of secondhand furniture and renovate it
  68. Finish off the nursery (part 2)
  69. Learn CSS and update blog layout
  70. Visit Patagonia
  71. Travel somewhere by steam train
  72. Revisit the British Museum
  73. See a Formula One race live
  74. Take a trip to see the Norwegian fjords
  75. Buy a summer house
  76. Read five books that have won the Booker prize
  77. Take that large pile of clothes and shoes to the charity shop
  78. Have a difficult conversation instead of deflecting and avoiding when it arises
  79. Make eye contact and smile with each person I encounter for a day instead of looking away
  80. Organise wardrobe and give what I don’t want to charity
  81. Learn to ski properly
  82. Put away 101kr for each completed task – the total to be spent shopping at the end of my 1001 days
  83. Run Tjejmilen in Stockholm
  84. Comment on others’ blogs more
  85. Learn a new word in Swedish every day for 4 weeks
  86. See an opera here in Stockholm
  87. Revisit Budapest, taking the little one with us
  88. Drink champagne for breakfast
  89. See the Changing of the Guard in London
  90. Visit St Paul’s Cathedral
  91. Have a meal at The Fat Duck
  92. Have a meal at Noma in Copenhagen
  93. Have a meal at Mattias Dahlgren
  94. Start a photo blog – another challenge completed (English Mamma’s photos)
  95. Have a meal at Frantzen/Lindeberg
  96. Visit the Victoria & Albert Museum
  97. Learn how to use Photoshop properly
  98. Go mushroom picking
  99. Write birth plan – tick!
  100. Finish packing hospital bag – tick!
  101. Finish adding 101 tasks to this list! – tick!

Why not have a go too and let me know how you get on. I’ll be posting on my progress from time to time (4% done so far) up until my deadline of 2 January 2013.