Look, it's me!

Normalising disability and access needs

Tessa has short brown hair, blue eyes, and has a big smile. She is wearing a mustard colour knit and dangling pearl earrings in front of a plain cream background.

Review by: Tessa

Gold coloured stars for the rating - 5 stars.

Review by:
Tessa

Tessa has short brown hair, blue eyes, and has a big smile. She is wearing a mustard colour knit and dangling pearl earrings in front of a plain cream background.
Gold coloured stars for the rating - 5 stars.
This cover features a blue book cover with cartoon characters in various poses. In the centre of the image is a door, open with a family of five people - two adults and three children - and their dog! A girl in a wheelchair is waving at the reader and about to be welcomed into the house. Text on the cover includes the title and authors. The title "Come over to my house" is curved over the door as a welcoming sign.

Come over to my house

By Eliza Hull and Sally Rippon

Normalising disability and access needs

A journey through a young lens into diverse households. Good feel to the book, lovely illustrations. I thought it was a great look into how different people and different families function, normalising disability and access needs. Wonderful and simple, the concepts are easy to understand, and it does a great job of validating disabled parents. Also, a plus when it rhymes. I would recommend to parents as a learning tool. Very easy conversation stater, or just bringing in disability as normal from a young age.