About this deal
It's great to see each of the bathroom items each getting their own page and the way each item uses the uses of it to its strength in the story is lots of fun like the toothbrush squeezing into it's dance. The various bathroom items have googly eyes, smiling mouths, and pipestem arms and legs, displaying a remarkable amount of personality .
Told in bouncing, rhythm and rhyme, and with the brightest of bright illustrations this will have everyone shaking it in the shower if not tap dancing on the taps! With simple text by Clare Foges and colorful illustrations by Al Murphy, this book will have you and your kids giggling. The shower creates a rain dance, whilst the mouthwash back-flips and the toothbrushes bop and rave to the hot tap’s funky beat!
Kitchen Disco was selected for BookTrust‘s ‘Time to Read’ campaign and there are currently 760,000 copies in print. A zany and hilarious rhyming picture book sequel to Kitchen Disco, with trademark cool artwork from Al Murphy.
However, the book is a little too similar to ‘‘Kitchen Disco’’, it follows the same format and even the song sounds similar – same tune, different lyrics.Bathroom Boogie is the zany and hilarious rhyming picture book sequel to Kitchen Disco, with exciting illustrations by Al Murphy. Most purchases from business sellers are protected by the Consumer Contract Regulations 2013 which give you the right to cancel the purchase within 14 days after the day you receive the item. Summary: All the items in the bathroom are having a bop and you are invited in this colourful and fun book that will have you tapping your feet in no time.
You can change your choices at any time by visiting Cookie preferences, as described in the Cookie notice.Whilst the Kitchen Disco concentrated on the fruit and vegetables getting down, Bathroom Boogie explores what happens with the shampoo and toothpaste when you are not at home. The combination of Foges and Murphy worked wonders in ‘‘Kitchen Disco’’ and ‘‘Bathroom Boogie’’ follows the same format. It would appear that I may not actually be to blame and that when I am at work all the bathroom items come out for a boogie. Foges provides an answer to the age old question "Do my toys come to life when I'm gone" but, instead, investigates the goings-on of the bathroom.