It's So Amazing!: A Book about Eggs, Sperm, Birth, Babies, and Families

It's So Amazing!: A Book about Eggs, Sperm, Birth, Babies, and Families

It's So Amazing!: A Book about Eggs, Sperm, Birth, Babies, and Families

It's So Amazing!: A Book about Eggs, Sperm, Birth, Babies, and Families

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Overview

From the trusted team of Robie H. Harris and Michael Emberley, this classic resource for younger children receives its most ambitious update yet.

How does a baby begin and how is it born? How did I begin? Why are some parts of kids’ bodies different from some parts of other kids’ bodies? Most younger kids have questions about reproduction, babies, love, sex, and gender, too. Some also have concerns. For over twenty years, It’s So Amazing! has provided children age seven and up with the honest answers they’re looking for through age-appropriate, reassuring words and accurate, up-to-date, inclusive art. Throughout the book, two cartoon characters, Bird and Bee, are the voices of kids. They talk together to help children feel that they are not the only ones wondering how we all began. Rigorously vetted by experts and featuring updated and new facts on pregnancy, birth, adoption, bodies, sexuality, gender identity, OK touches, not-OK touches, straight and LGBTQ+ families and people, and many other topics, this comprehensive resource for kids, parents, librarians, teachers, booksellers, and healthcare providers is the book that can help younger kids and their families talk together and find answers to their many questions.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781536207231
Publisher: Candlewick Press
Publication date: 01/09/2024
Series: The Family Library
Pages: 88
Sales rank: 399,436
Product dimensions: 10.13(w) x 12.13(h) x 0.58(d)
Age Range: 7 - 10 Years

About the Author

About The Author
Robie H. Harris (1940-2024) is the New York Times best-selling author of the acclaimed Family Library series—It’s Perfectly Normal, It’s So Amazing!, and It’s Not the Stork!—illustrated by Michael Emberley; CRASH! BOOM! A Math Tale, illustrated by Chris Chatterton; and Somewhere, illustrated by Armando Mariño. She is also the author of the Let’s Talk About You and Me series, illustrated by Nadine Bernard Westcott, and many other books for young children.

Michael Emberley is the illustrator of numerous books for children, including the Family Library series. He lives in Ireland.

Read an Excerpt




Chapter One


MEET THE BIRD AND THE BEE

Do You Know What I Read?


(1)

CURIOUS? EMBARRASSED?
CONFUSED?

So How Do Babies Really Begin?


Have you ever looked at your baby pictures?


Have you ever wondered where babies come from -- or how babies are made -- or where you came from -- or how you really began?


Everyone -- grandparents, parents, sisters, brothers, cousins, aunts, uncles, friends, and even teachers, firefighters, librarians, gymnasts, astronauts, dentists, scientists, cooks, nurses, shopkeepers, doctors, bus drivers, pilots, police officers, hockey players, mayors, and rock stars -- every person in the whole wide world was a baby once. The arrival of a new baby is so amazing! Most kids -- but not all -- are curious about how such an amazing and wonderful thing could possibly happen.


You may think that by now you already know -- or that you should know -- exactly how a baby is made. But even if your mom or dad has talked to you about this, or even if you and your friends have talked about it -- it's still perfectly normal to have questions about where babies come from. Talking with a parent, a doctor, a nurse, or a teacher is a good way to find out answers to your questions.


Sometimes you may feel very private about your questions and thoughts and feelings about how babies begin. Or it may feel embarrassing or hard to ask questions about making babies. Feeling curious about this, or embarrassed, or private, or even confused, is perfectlynormal. And having lots of questions about where babies come from is also perfectly normal.


Since the beginning of time, people young and old have tried to figure out where babies come from and how a baby is made. But how a baby is made is not a simple thing. That's why learning about it can be interesting and even fun -- no matter how old you are.


(2)

EGG + SPERM = BABY

Reproduction


When a new baby animal or plant is made, scientists call that "reproduction." To reproduce means "to make again" -- to make the same thing again.


Reproduction is how plants and animals make new plants and animals like themselves.


One fact about making a human baby is quite simple. It takes a sperm and an egg to make a baby.


Sperm and eggs are cells. In fact, all plants and animals -- including humans -- are made up of cells. And the human body is made up of millions and millions and millions of cells.


Sperm and eggs are the cells that can make a baby. The beginning cells of many animals -- but not all -- start to grow when an egg cell joins together with a sperm cell. This is the way humans make new babies. In fact, the beginning cells of a human baby can start to grow only when a sperm cell and an egg cell have joined together.


(3)

SAME AND DIFFERENT

Male -- Female


Another fact that's quite simple is that human babies -- like most other animals -- are born female or male. Girls and women are female. Boys and men are male.


Most parts of our bodies -- our toes, our fingers, our noses, our legs, our arms, our eyes, our hearts, our lungs, our stomachs, our buttocks -- are the same and look quite the same whether we are female or male.


The parts that are different are the parts that make each of us a female or a male. Some of these parts are on the outside of our bodies. Some are inside our bodies. Some are also the parts -- when a person's body grows up -- that can make a baby.


A male's sperm is needed to make a baby. Sperm are made in the male parts called "testicles." When a boy's body grows up, his two testicles will make an amazing amount of sperm -- about one hundred million to three hundred million each day.


A female's egg is needed to make a baby. Eggs are stored inside the female parts called "ovaries." When a baby girl is born, her two ovaries have all the eggs -- about one million to two million -- she will ever need to make a baby.


Although every boy is born with the parts that will make millions of sperm, and every girl is born with the parts that store millions of eggs, those parts cannot make a baby until a child's body has grown up. And that time is called "puberty."

Table of Contents

MEET THE BIRD AND THE BEE Do You Know What I Read?4-5
(1) CURIOUS? EMBARRASSED? CONFUSED? So How Do Babies Really
Begin?6-7
(2) EGG+SPERM=BABY Reproduction8-9
(3) SAME AND DIFFERENT Male--Female10-11
(4) GROWING UP Babies, Kids, Teenagers, Grownups12-13
(5) WHAT'S INSIDE? WHAT'S OUTSIDE? Female Parts14-15
(6) WHAT'S INSIDE? WHAT'S OUTSIDE? Male Parts16-17
(7) THE AMAZING EGG TRIP What Do Eggs Do?18-21
(8) THE AMAZING SPERM TRIP What Do Sperm Do?22-25
(9) WHAT'S SEX? Female or Male--Loving--Making Love--Making
a Baby26-29
(10) WHAT'S LOVE? Lots of Kinds of Love30-33
(11) THE BIG RACE! Sperm and Egg Meet34-39
(12) A WARM AND COZY WOMB Pregnancy40-45
(13) FRESH FOOD! FRESH AIR! Growing and Staying Healthy46-49
(14) STRETCH! PUNCH! KICK! HICCUP! BURP! The Growing Fetus50-53
(15) TWINS AND MORE! Twins, Triplets, Quadruplets,
Quintuplets54-55
(16) COME OUT, COME OUT, WHEREVER YOU ARE! Birth56-61
(17) WHAT MAKES YOU--YOU! Chromosomes and Genes--And Other
Things, Too!62-63
(18) BECOMING A FAMILY By Birth--ByAdoption64-67
(19) KEEPING SAFE "Okay Touches"--"Not Okay Touches"68-71
(20) TALKING ABOUT IT HIV and AIDS72-73
(21) GURGLES AND DROOLS Feelings about Babies--Fun with
Babies74-75
(22) LET'S CELEBRATE! Happy Birth Day! Happy Adoption Day!76-77
IT'S SO AMAZING! Still Talking!78
THANK YOU SO MUCH!79
INDEX80-81

What People are Saying About This

Alvin F. Poussaint

From Alvin F. Poussaint, M.D., consultant to Bill Cosby for The Cosby Show and other projects and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

[A]n excellent resource on sex education for young children . . . A book every family should own.

T Berry Brazelton

From T. Berry Brazelton, M.D., author of Touchpoints

This thoughtful, innovative, and comprehensive book helps children with issues that are on their minds anyway—and gives all of us the language we need to share with them.

Perri Klass

From Perri Klass, M.D., Parenting contributing editor and Medical Director of Reach Out and Read

[P]rovides an opportunity for children to find answers to their questions, with clarity of explanation, fabulous illustrations, and humor, together with [its] all-important sense of wonder.

Penelope Leach

An amazingly upbeat and caring books ... totally 'child-friendly.'

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