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thread: Which Parenting books do you recommend?

  1. #1
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    in a super happy place!
    1,008

    Smile Which Parenting books do you recommend?

    I have recently been put in charge of the Pregnancy & Parenting section of my work (bookshop) which involves ordering stock and recommending products to customers. Just wanting to get a few ideas from people of books they have read and found helpful OR a total waste of money - whether it be for pregnancy, help with sleep issues or breastfeeding, starting solids and general parenting with babies,toddlers and teens.
    I used and really liked Birth (Catherine Price and Sandra Robinson), and Conception, Pregnancy and Birth (Miriam Stoppard) while I was pregnant. I have used and found helpful once my little chicken arrived - BabyLove (Robin Baker). I regreted buying What to Expect in the First Year. Starting solids I love BAby and Toddler Meal Planner (Annabel Karmel).

    Any ideas or comments would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance girls!

  2. #2
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    Raising Boys by Steve Biddulph is one of my faves

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Feb 2006
    NSW Central Coast
    5,301

    Although I haven't brought it myself, a friend has a copy of 'Feeding the Bump' (can't remember the author. It has some great nutritional info and recipes in it for preggi mums, but can also be used for general good eating habbits too.

  4. #4

    Mar 2004
    Sparta
    12,662

    Any of Steve Biddulph's books
    Raising Boys
    The Secret of Happy Children
    More Secrets of Happy Children

    Any of Dr Sears' books

    The Science of Parenting

    The Wonder Weeks

    Anything by Pinky McKay is brilliant.

    Waste of time - All the What to Expect series
    Save Our Sleep - Tizzie Hall (I actually hide that one if I see it in a bookshop - I move them and cover them with other books)

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    Off with the fairies
    129

    Haha...that is so funny that you hide that book. I bought it for a girlfriend and flicked through/had a bit of a read on the train on the way home and took it back the next day.

    I second the votes for Conception, pregnancy and Birth by Dr Stoppard, and Birth by Catherine Price.

    The Science of Parenting has been interesting so far.

    But that is it for me...the only other book I have had is BabyLove, which sometimes I love, sometimes I loathed.

    Will watch this thread with interest, i think I am in need of a good book now that he is developing into a real little person and isn't a baby anymore (stiffles a sniffle).

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    Brissy
    2,208

    NOT the Babywise books

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Nov 2005
    Where the heart is
    4,360

    Hate - Babywise (it's actually been blacklisted in the US amongst paediatricians and midwives)
    Babylove

    Love -
    Pinky Mackay, Pinky Mackay, Pinky Mackay!
    Alfie Kohn - Unconditional Parenting (such an awesome book with so much inspiration)
    The Breastfeeding Cafe (oh my goodness, this is a must read and so easy to read)
    The Natural Child
    Janet Balaskas books
    Gentle Birth, Gentle Mothering by Dr Sarah Buckley

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    Brissy
    2,208

    Mayaness - I didn't know babywise had been blacklisted! I know lots of ppl who love it unfortunately

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Nov 2005
    Where the heart is
    4,360

    I know one person who loves it - not surprisingly, her PIL are pastors in an evangelist church...they like their kids compliant and 'knowing their place'. It just also happens to see a lot of US kids present with severe dehydration because of the authors completely unqualified recommendations to feed 4 hourly and no less!! I did a google search one day, whilst researching for an assignment and found quite a few websites distancing themselves from the book in no uncertain terms. It should actually be banned, from everything I read about it, and from my own reading of the book (I had it lent to me by a friend - it was given to her and she hadn't read it herself, so I told her to burn it!).

  10. #10
    ♥ BellyBelly's Creator ♥
    Add BellyBelly on Facebook Follow BellyBelly On Twitter

    Feb 2003
    Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Australia
    8,982

    Wow what a GREAT opportunity to offer great reading material and influence what information people have exposure to - I would kill for a job like that in every book store...

    My suggestions - anything on the BB Reading list!!!

    https://www.bellybelly.com.au/misc/r...d-reading-list

    There are so many books but these ones I know well and offer excellent, updated, accurate advice.

  11. #11
    Registered User

    Sep 2006
    the mulberry bush
    895

    NOT- save our sleep by Tizzie Hall... i sold mine on ebay....

    i got a 'baby sleep' book by Dr Sears which i think i liked, might dig it out and have a look, its been a while since i've had to refer to it (yay!)...

  12. #12
    ♥ BellyBelly's Creator ♥
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    Feb 2003
    Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Australia
    8,982

    Sorry but I just need a second to at all the 'DO NOT GET's !!!!!!

    You smart women
    Kelly xx

    Creator of BellyBelly.com.au, doula, writer and mother of three amazing children
    Author of Want To Be A Doula? Everything You Need To Know
    In 2015 I went Around The World + Kids!
    Forever grateful to my incredible Mod Team

  13. #13
    ♥ BellyBelly's Creator ♥
    Add BellyBelly on Facebook Follow BellyBelly On Twitter

    Feb 2003
    Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Australia
    8,982

    Sorry but I just need a second to at all the 'DO NOT GET's !!!!!!

    You smart women
    Kelly xx

    Creator of BellyBelly.com.au, doula, writer and mother of three amazing children
    Author of Want To Be A Doula? Everything You Need To Know
    In 2015 I went Around The World + Kids!
    Forever grateful to my incredible Mod Team

  14. #14
    Registered User

    Jan 2006
    Melbourne
    66

    I really liked the whole 'what to expect' series, Ive got them all and found them very easy to read, full of useful info and just quick and easy to refer to when I was a bit worried about things... I've got SOoooo many parenting books its not funny, my friends use me as a library.. why buy them when I've got them all?! lol

    I love 'Raising girls' and 'raising boys' SOOo practical especially as my kids have moved out of the baby toddler stage. I wasnt too keen on 'up the duff' personally but that seems to be a pretty popular one. I've got Babies and Toddler Taming and Beyond Toddlerdom for 5-12 yr olds by dr christopher green and found both of them light hearted yet informative. I've got Baby love and The mighty toddler but in all honesty I've barely touched them as I always go straight to my 'what to expect' set. For pregnancy I found 'ceasarean recovery' by Chrissie Gallagher-Mundy very helpful as I knew i'd be having a csect with my 3rd (and 3rd csect at that).

    I also love 'The nappy bag book' a FANTASTIC and well priced resource guide for all parents of 0 - 5 year olds.

    Also theres a book called 'When your child is ill' another one I refer to a lot if I'm at all concerned and the course of action for each concern has always been spot on to what I've been told by nurse on call if I called for more reassurance.

    Okay enough rambling, I love my parenting books.. I read them all from front to back and take from each what I find useful

  15. #15
    paradise lost Guest

    I don't read parenting books really, but i LOVE my pregnancy and birth books (secret midwife, lol) and would recommend:

    ANYTHING by Shiela Kitzinger, especially Birth Your Way and Pregnancy and Birth and Birth Trauma
    ANYTHING by Ina May Gaskin, especially Spiritual Midwifery and Pregnancy and Childbirth - both of those have masses of brilliant birth stories from a variety of women with a variety of births and outcomes. Both very inspiring to the aspiring natural birther and confidence-giving to the scared preggie mum-to-be.

  16. #16
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber
    Add sushee on Facebook

    Sep 2004
    Melb - where my coolness isn't seen as wierdness
    4,361

    My MUST-HAVE List

    The Science of Parenting
    The Wonder Weeks (if you can get you hands on it - every new mum should read it)
    Pinky McKay's books

    My NO List

    Save our Sleep

    Like Dach I shuffle the books around in the shops so that Save our Sleep is not the the first thing you see when you walk up to the shelf. :P Her marketing people must be guns at their work because her books are always front and centre .

  17. #17
    Registered User

    Nov 2005
    Where the heart is
    4,360

    I've got to say, I do have two 'What to Expect' books and I don't mind them. I have found them to be good references, and whilst I won't be living them word for word, I have taken what works for me. I wouldn't recommend them for other people, though, unless I thought they could take bits and not want to adopt the whole regime.
    I agree, Charmzy, I didn't think much of UTD when I read it the second time. I read it years before I fell pg and thought I remembered it being helpful, so I borrowed it again when pg. I was reading it after I'd done a HypnoBirthing course and decided on gentle methods from then on...and it didn't gel at all with how I approached pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period. Thankfully, by the time I was pg, I knew better than to take that book and subscribe to its ideas!
    I love 'Raising Boys' too, as well as The Science of Parenting - all up my alley kind of books!
    ETA: I thought I'd listed it, but Bec's reminded me - absolutely anything by Sheila Kitzinger! Birth Your Way is great.
    Last edited by Smoke Jaguar; May 2nd, 2008 at 11:13 PM.

  18. #18
    Life Member

    May 2003
    Beautiful Adelaide!
    2,877

    I would second what Dachloestar recommended: it appears we have pretty much the same books on our shelves!

    When I was first pg with Olivia I literally bought every pregnancy & childcare book I could lay my hands on. They then gathered dust for a while, but by the time she was about 4 months old I started reading them.

    As a result, I have now Ebayed most of them, but the ones I keep coming back to are:


    Any of Steve Biddulph's books
    Raising Boys
    The Secret of Happy Children
    More Secrets of Happy Children

    Any of Dr Sears' books

    The Science of Parenting

    The Wonder Weeks

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