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Baby books don't have to be boring! "The Food of Love" is a fresh and funny look at motherhood. Acclaimed author, cartoonist, and mother Kate Evans explores all aspects of attachment parenting, breastfeeding, and babycare using the perfect mix of words, pictures, personal insights, and humor. She explains everything you'll need to know to breastfeed successfully, and a lot more . . . So, what's so special about breastmilk, anyway? See step-by-step instructions for your first feeds. Learn how often to feed your baby. Breastfeed in your sleep. Beat the baby blues. Discover why babies cry. Find…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Baby books don't have to be boring! "The Food of Love" is a fresh and funny look at motherhood. Acclaimed author, cartoonist, and mother Kate Evans explores all aspects of attachment parenting, breastfeeding, and babycare using the perfect mix of words, pictures, personal insights, and humor. She explains everything you'll need to know to breastfeed successfully, and a lot more . . . So, what's so special about breastmilk, anyway? See step-by-step instructions for your first feeds. Learn how often to feed your baby. Breastfeed in your sleep. Beat the baby blues. Discover why babies cry. Find help for breastfeeding complaints. Check out "The Mama Sutra": breastfeeding positions. Bonus: the book is square, so it'll stay open, and you can read it when you've got both hands full!
Autorenporträt
Cartoonist and activist Kate Evans has been marrying words and images for political effect for eighteen years. Her award-winning comic reportage crosses a huge range of topics, including her best-selling guide to breastfeeding, The Food of Love, its companion, BUMP: How to Make, Grow and Birth a Baby, and her graphic guide to climate change Funny Weather, all published by Myriad. Her latest book, Don¿t Call Me Princess!, was published by New Internationalist. Her previous books include Copse, a cartoon history of the roads protest movement and Red Rosa, a graphic biography of Rosa Luxemburg. Her cartoons and comic strips have appeared in The Guardian and Independent, and many other publications. Her most comic Threads, a graphic report on her visit to the Calais refugee camp, has been made widely available.