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My First Soccer Game - by Alyssa Satin Capucilli (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- Kids can learn all about what it's like to play soccer in this photographic 8x8 storybook with sweet text by Biscuit creator Alyssa Satin Capucilli!
- 3-5 Years
- 7.8" x 7.8" Paperback
- 32 Pages
- Juvenile Fiction, Interactive Adventures
- Series Name: My First
Description
About the Book
Playful text and striking photographic images take young readers through their very first soccer game. Cardstock pages with large fold-out panels feature detailed step-by-step soccer moves and instructions useful for aspiring players. Full color.
Book Synopsis
Kids can learn all about what it's like to play soccer in this photographic 8x8 storybook with sweet text by Biscuit creator Alyssa Satin Capucilli!
It's the first day of soccer practice, and it's going to be great! Young players put on their cleats, do warm-ups, and try to kick the ball into the goal. Score! The best part about soccer is being on a team and making new friends. Children will love seeing kids their age playing soccer in this adorable introduction to the sport!
Includes a special section of step-by-step instructions in the back with basic soccer moves--to be done with a parent or guardian's supervision!
About the Author
Alyssa Satin Capucilli is the award-winning creator and author of the Katy Duck series and the bestselling Biscuit series, which has sold over twenty-four million copies. A dancer as well as a writer, she lives with her family in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.
Leyah Jensen studied photography at the Rhode Island School of Design, but her journey in photography began much earlier. As a toddler of a professional photographer, she was often staged in tutus or with a finger in the nose. Growing older, she helped lug equipment to places like Tijuana, where her father was basing a children's book. Then in her teens she completed several photojournalism assignments abroad of her own, through children's organizations such as Compassion and other orphan relief agencies. Her own experiences as a child model have taught her that you can't capture the magic of childhood unless the subjects are free to truly be themselves.