Bill Adler, Jr., won, and continues to win, accolades for his brilliant book, Outwitting Squirrels. Now, using some of the same practical, no-nonsense approaches that made the earlier work so appealing, Bill and his wife, Peggy Robin, have produced a masterpiece that will comfort, delight, and rescue today's often-outwitted parents."Outwitting Toddlers" is the book parents have been waiting for. Finally, they can throw away the theoretical tomes that advise against "damaging" practices like discipline, toilet-training, and keeping your pants on in the grocery store. Now, they can cope, with humor and dispatch, with toddlers who won't eat, won't sleep, won't put their clothes on, won't let go of your hand at the day-care door, and in general, act in an obnoxious fashion -- to say nothing of turning their backs on the potty chair.
Bill Adler, Jr., won, and continues to win, accolades for his brilliant book, Outwitting Squirrels. Now, using some of the same practical, no-nonsense approaches that made the earlier work so appealing, Bill and his wife, Peggy Robin, have produced a masterpiece that will comfort, delight, and rescue today's often-outwitted parents."Outwitting Toddlers" is the book parents have been waiting for. Finally, they can throw away the theoretical tomes that advise against "damaging" practices like discipline, toilet-training, and keeping your pants on in the grocery store. Now, they can cope, with humor and dispatch, with toddlers who won't eat, won't sleep, won't put their clothes on, won't let go of your hand at the day-care door, and in general, act in an obnoxious fashion -- to say nothing of turning their backs on the potty chair.