First Words & Visual Learning
Bold visuals and words build that magical “I-know-what-that-is!” confidence. Perfect for tired parents can pronounce.
Touch & Explore
Perfect for curious little fingers, surprise textures, and sneakily adding second languages
What to Look for in Bilingual Books for Babies
Repetition
Yes, It’s Mind-Numbing. Yes, It’s Science. Your baby needs to hear “perro” 50-100 times before they’ll say it. These books do that work FOR you. You will have to only pronounce it.
Sensory Engagement
Textures, flaps, mirrors, squeaky things—these books are more interactive than most family WhatsApp calls. Your baby learns languages while exploring with fingers, mouths, and occasional headbutts.
Parallel Version
Dad reads it in English. Babushka reads it in Russian. You? You finally drink that cold tea in peace.
How to Read to a Baby
(Even If They’d Rather Chew the Book)
1. Start Early
Yes, even newborn-early. Their ears are open, their brains are buzzing, and they’re quietly judging your pronunciation. Read aloud, even if they’re more focused on your nose!.
2. Make it Interactive
Point, stroke, tap pages. Lift the flaps. Rub the textures. Gasp dramatically. This isn’t Shakespeare—it’s touch-and-feel bilingual theatre (featuring drool).
3. Consistency is Key
Five minutes is gold. Two minutes is fine. Half a page while changing a nappy? That counts too. No need to finish the book -your baby doesn’t care about plot development.
4. Follow Baby’s Lead
If your baby grabs the book and shoves it in their mouth, don’t panic. That’s engagement. If they giggle when you say “nos” in a funny voice, say it again. Then again. (Then text your mum about it, obviously.)








