Cover Image: Have You Seen Bunny?

Have You Seen Bunny?

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Member Reviews

I think this would be a fantastic book for children that are learning sight words. The illustrations are also easily identifiable to match the sight words. The illustrations are also super adorable and very well thought out.

The only thing I want to know is also where Bunny was hiding

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<u>Have You Seen Bunny?</u> is an adorable little picture book about a kitten looking for her missing friend. The illustrations are wonderful and make this book perfect for read alouds to younger grade levels, as you can constantly ask them to look and ask them "do you see bunny"? (Hint: bunny is hiding on every page!) I also enjoyed the exploration of different rooms in a household and the objects found in each of them-so many discussions to be had with young readers over this cute little picture book!

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This is a lovely, cheerful book about Muffin the Cat looking for his friend Bunny.
The reader is lead through the story by playing a hide and seek game on each page in search of Bunny with Muffin.
This is a beautiful illustrated book with bright homely rooms depicted on each page.
My daughter had great fun spotting Bunny throughout the story and was overjoyed with the big hug at the end!
A delightful story for young children.

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Full disclosure: I love cats. Between the illustration style and all of the delightful cat objects in the book (The cat-foot tub! The tabby-stripe-handled pot! All the great cat patterned-furnishings!), it would have been very hard for this one not to have been a win for me. I think kids are going to love trying to find bunny in the illustrations (which present varying degrees of challenge), and the ending is cute. Honestly, I may buy this just to look at the illustrations.

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A pretty successful book, doing what it wants to do, with just one hiccup. We see Muffin look for her best friend, Bunny, all through the house – and all in vain, for Bunny is on a mission to stay hidden. It's a well-presented house, with everything having a face, or animal features, and a lot of detail in a quite unfussy way. The young book reader will probably be very happy to find Bunny at each stage of the mystery tour Muffin gets sent on – but the problem is, we come to it cold and so don't know what to look for on the first spread. Bunny has a specific design feature that is used to identify him every time, and I didn't know on page one that we were supposed to be successful in our own hunt. If the book relies on a guardian to suggest the first page has a puzzle as well it's a little to its detriment, but won't diminish much from the long-term fun that it could offer. I think it's still worth four stars.

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