Author | Dorothy Kunhardt |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Children's story |
Publisher | Golden Books |
Publication date | 1940, re-issue May 1, 2001 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print paperback |
Pages | 20 |
ISBN | 0-307-12000-7 |
OCLC | 7375218 |
Followed by | Pat the Cat |
Pat the Bunny is the first[1] "touch and feel" interactive children's book, written and illustrated by Dorothy Kunhardt. Since its publication in 1940, it has been a perennial best-seller in the United States. Rather than follow a linear narrative, the book invites the reader to engage in tactile activities, such as patting the fake fur of a rabbit, feeling sandpaper that stands for "Daddy's scratchy face", trying on "Mummy's ring", reading a book within a book, playing peekaboo with a cloth, and gazing into a mirror.[2]
It was written and illustrated by author Dorothy Kunhardt. She created Pat the Bunny for her three-year-old daughter Edith, who went on to become a children's writer herself.[3] The New York Times considered it the first interactive books ever written.[1]
Child development experts, such as pediatrician Pierrette Mimi Poinsett, recommend the book due to its "sensory approach".[4][5]
The proceeds from Pat the Bunny support I Am Your Child, a national public awareness campaign created by the Reiner Foundation to stress the importance of early brain development.[6]