100 Numbers to Count Board Book of Numbers 1 to 100 for PreSchool

by Penguin Books

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Cover of 100 Numbers to Count Board Book of Numbers 1 to 100 for PreSchool
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4.0

Based on 2,447 Amazon reviews

Book Details

Publisher:Penguin Select
Published:2025-09-02
Pages:16
Format:board book
Language:English
ISBN:9815127551

Reading Info

Age Range:3-5

About This Book

Gear up for a learning quest and learn to count the first 100 numbers. A book for budding scholars that will help them in developing counting skills. The numbers are represented by delightful illustrations of familiar objects that will help to improve word-picture association skills. The book is a part of 100 First Concepts series which consists of six picture books, each featuring 100 engaging and clearly labeled illustrations. These books are designed to help children in acquiring basic vocabu

Our Review

This board book takes the numbers 1 through 100 and gives each one a matching set of everyday objects to count, so a child isn't just memorizing number shapes but connecting each one to something they can point at and count themselves. It's part of Penguin's 100 First Concepts series, one of six picture books that each build vocabulary through 100 labeled illustrations, and this volume hands all 16 pages over to numbers specifically rather than splitting attention across letters, colors, and shapes the way a general concept book might. It's built for ages 3 to 5 and currently holds a 4-star average from 2,447 Amazon reviews.

Giving the whole book to one subject is the useful part: instead of a few pages of numbers wedged between animals and colors, a child gets one continuous counting sequence, which matters for building one-to-one correspondence, the actual skill of touching an object once per number said aloud rather than just reciting the sequence from memory. Using familiar objects for each count keeps the exercise grounded in things a preschooler already recognizes instead of abstract dots or shapes, so the book doubles as vocabulary-building alongside the math. A good next step once a child has the 1-to-10 basics down and is ready to push toward bigger numbers.

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Themes

Juvenile Nonfiction

Subjects

Juvenile Nonfiction