
Ann Douglas (2) (1963–)
Author of The Mother of All Pregnancy Books: The Ultimate Guide to Conception, Birth, and Everything In Between (U.S. Edition)
For other authors named Ann Douglas, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Ann Douglas is an award-winning journalist and the author of The Mother of All Baby Books, The Mother of All Toddler Books, The Mother of All Parenting Books, and The Mother of All Pregnancy Organizers. Known for her lively anecdotes and real-world advice, Ann makes frequent appearances on both show more radio and television and is regularly quoted in such publications as Parenting, Parents, Fit Pregnancy, American Baby, and Working Mother. show less
Works by Ann Douglas
The Mother of All Pregnancy Books: The Ultimate Guide to Conception, Birth, and Everything In Between (U.S. Edition) (2002) 185 copies, 4 reviews
The Mother of All Pregnancy Books: An All-Canadian Guide to Conception, Birth and Everything in Between (2000) 56 copies, 1 review
The Mother of All Baby Books: The Ultimate Guide to Your Baby's First Year (U.S. edition) (2002) 39 copies
Canuck Chicks and Maple Leaf Mamas: Women of the Great White North--A Celebration of Canadian Women (2002) 24 copies
Sleep Solutions for Your Baby, Toddler and Preschooler: The Ultimate No-Worry Approach for Each Age and Stage (Mother of All Solutions) (2006) 23 copies, 2 reviews
The Mother of All Parenting Books: An All-Canadian Guide to Raising a Happy, Healthy Child From Preschool Through The Preteens (2003) 20 copies
Body Talk: The Straight Facts on Fitness, Nutrition, and Feeling Great About Yourself! (Girl Zone) (2002) 20 copies, 1 review
The Mother of All Toddler Books: An All-Canadian Guide to Your Child's Second and Third Years (2002) 19 copies
The Mother of All Parenting Books: The Ultimate Guide to Raising a Happy, Healthy Child from Preschool through the Prete (2004) 16 copies
Mealtime Solutions for Your Baby, Toddler and Preschooler: The Ultimate No-Worry Approach for Each Age and Stage (Mother of All Solutions) (2006) 16 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
Members
Reviews
As comprehensive as What to Expect but less stressful to read, this is the pregnancy book I've been coming back to every week as my pregnancy progresses. I skipped the long first part about getting pregnant and caught up with the week-by-week guide. Following the weekly guide is a section about prenatal testing that I found more helpful than anything else--not so much for the descriptions of the tests, but for its frank discussion of how to evaluate what tests you would like to have. The show more birth section is open-minded about all the options and, like the other sections, features quotes from mothers who had a variety of different experiences--those who said labor was excruciatingly painful, those who loved it, those who loved their epidurals, those who loved going natural. I have an interest in natural childbirth but am not quite a mothering.com type, and I'm finding this book quite balanced. Interspersed with the week-by-week guide is advice on exercise, work, travel, and more (so skim the whole guide ahead of time, or use index), and special chapters late in the book address high-risk pregnancy, pregnancy loss, and the postpartum period. While the new What to Expect is improved, this book is a great alternative. show less
This is worthy and well-meaning. If it had been me, I might have sacrificed some accuracy for flow (you can only read e.g. that the "doctor or midwife" did this or that so many times before it starts to feel pedantic even if it's not), but I like the focus on how much the parents love their baby and were excited that they knew s/he was coming, and the "close your eyes in the bath and imagine it's amniotic fluid"-type activities add sensory depth and make this a book that could eat up an hour show more or so. show less
Mealtime Solutions for Your Baby, Toddler and Preschooler: The Ultimate No-Worry Approach for Each Age and Stage (Mother of All Solutions) by Ann Douglas
This was decent, nothing too exciting or that I didn't really know. Some nice charts about how much is a serving, what a serving size is for various ages. Mainly just reiterates how I need to not freak out, offer lots of healthy choices, and let the kid decide how much to eat.
This is an excellent resource for Canadian women planning to get pregnant. I read it from cover to cover and still use it as a general reference book depending where I am in my quest for pregnancy. Well-written, humourous, and full of useful information.
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 33
- Members
- 762
- Popularity
- #33,390
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 12
- ISBNs
- 108
- Languages
- 2
- Favorited
- 1















