Let's Talk About When Someone Dies: A Let’s Talk picture book to start conversations with children about death and bereavement

Let's Talk About When Someone Dies: A Let’s Talk picture book to start conversations with children about death and bereavement

by Molly Potter (Author), Molly Potter (Author), Sarah Jennings (Illustrator)

Synopsis

From Molly Potter, best-selling author of How Are You Feeling Today? and What's Worrying You?, comes a picture book for starting conversations with children about death, bereavement and what happens next. When someone dies, we can feel a whole host of different emotions and explaining them to a child isn't so easy. This book uses clear, easy-to-understand language to answer complex questions about death and how a child might feel when someone dies. It covers all manner of tricky subjects with sensitivity and honesty, from what death is to why people die. Each double page spread takes a child through how they might feel, what they might think and how they might behave. With engaging illustrations, gentle guidance and simple advice for parents and carers, Let's Talk About When Someone Dies fulfils an important but difficult need for starting conversations with children about death and bereavement, in an accessible and supportive way.

$13.29

Save:$3.15 (19%)

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 32
Publisher: Featherstone
Published: 04 Oct 2018

ISBN 10: 147295534X
ISBN 13: 9781472955340
Children’s book age: 0-5 Years
Book Overview: From best-selling author Molly Potter comes a picture book for starting conversations with young children about the tricky subject of death with sensitivity and honesty, from what death is to why people die. Let's Talk About When Someone Dies features engaging illustrations, gentle guidance and simple advice making it ideal for tackling the difficult topic of death and what happens next.

Author Bio
Molly Potter taught for 11 years in middle schools as a class teacher, science and PSHE co-ordinator. She then worked for several years as an SRE (Sex and Relationships Education) Development Manager, delivering teacher training and supporting primary schools in the development of their SRE programme and policy and many other aspects of PSHE. Molly now works as a teacher in a short-stay school with children that have been or at risk from being excluded from mainstream schools - putting much of her PSHE expertise into practice.