It's baseball season,and Charloie Brown is the team manager once again.How can he help his team win?Will he trade Snoopy or Lucy?
Hello, Parent! Hello Reader! books have been designed-- for parents to read to children for children to read to parents for children to read themselves to make your child a better reader. High-interest stories make reading fun! Stories have beentested for vocabulary and sentence length to help you makethe right choice! A letter from an education specialist givesyou valuable advice on how to read to your chPd and how tolisten to your child read to you!
Muffy is so sure that Francine cannot be nice for an entire week that she bets her Princess Peach watch on it, and now it is up to Francine to keep her temper.
After their defeat of the Morbuzakh and the shape-shifting Krahka, the Toa Metru expect to be hailed as heroes. Instead, they are betrayed by someone they thought they could trust. Three of the Toa are arrested. In prison, they meet a mysterious stranger who helps them to escape--and to learn more about their new powers. The remaining Toa are forced to flee through the city, avoiding security forces and the Dark Hunters who try to capture them. Can the Toa reunite and defeat their new enemy? Or has the their luck finally run out?
THE LADYBIRD PICTURE DICTIONARY IS AN IDEAL FIRST REFERENCE BOOK CONTAINING OVER 750 BASIC WORDS, DESIGNED TO DEVELOP CHILDREN'S READING, WRITTING AND SPELLING SKILLS. HUMOROUS COLOUR ILLUSTRATIONS MAKE IT EASY AND FUN FOR YOUNG READERS TO FIND THE WORDS THEY NEED.
Trace your favorite Harry Potter characters, crests, and magical objects.Then add your own splashes of color to the intricate black-and-white art based on the new Warner Bros. movie Harry Potterand the Chain her of Secrets.
Join the SCHOLASTIC READING CIRCLE-children will love to read together,read with assistance, and read alone!
The second of four deluxe coloring books for older kids, featuring sophisticated black & white line art, stencils and Harry Potter stickers. Older children will love coloring and tracing its intricate illustrations!
Put on your blue suede shoes and get ready for the latest title in the Who Was…? series! The King could not have come from humbler origins: Born in Tupelo, Mississippi, during the Depression, he grew up with the blues music of the rural South, the gospel music of local churches, and the country-western classics. But he forged a sound all his own—and a look that was all his own, too. With curled lip, swiveling hips, and greased pompadour, Elvis changed popular music forever, ushering in the age of rock and roll. Geoff Edgers’s fascinating biography of this icon of American pop culture includes blackand- white illustrations on nearly every spread.
name may be Fluffy, but the guinea pig in Ms. Day's class is determined to prove how mighty and brave he is by captaining a stormy boat, driving a police car, and flying a space ship!
When Mr. Carter mistakes the lovable,literal-minded Amelia Bedelia for the new teacher, class will never be the same again!
All new, easy-to-read riddles by Jean Marzollo are paired with fun photographs culled from previously published I Spy books to create an I Spy easy reader. With rhythm, rhyme, and picture clues, this book is written to support the newest reader.
City cats and country cats both like to play. But do they play in different ways? Find out in this easy-to-read book that's sure to please any new reader., , Mile 1 books entice brand-new readers with rhyme, rhythm, and repetition. The type is big, the words are easy, and the art is bright and bold.
our brand-new Arthur stories in 8x8 paperback format bring summer fun to the legions of Arthur's devoted fans. With his beloved TV PBS series still in the top five for the 2-5 age group, and the popularity of Arthur holding steady, these attractively priced books are sure to continue to make a splash!
Ladybird has published fairy tales for over forty years,bringing the magic of traditional stories to each new generation of children. These are based on the original Ladybird retellings,With beautiful new pictures of the kind children like best-full of irchness and detail. Children have always loved and will always remember these classic stories and sharing them together is an experience to treasure.
When Cam and Eric see strange lights above the trees, they're sure that U.F.O.s have landed. When they investigate, they find that there's more to the alien invasion than meets the eye. Between Eric's camera and Cam's photographic memory, can they prove what they see?
After learning about hibernation, George decides that the bestway to spend the cold winter months is the way that bears do it -fast asleep But first it's too bright in his room; then it's notcave-like enough; and then it's too loud. When George finally doesget to sleep, he wakes up to discover that he only slept one night,not the whole winter Will George be convinced that winter can be awonderland of fun after all? Includes a question-and-answeractivity on hibernation as well as a make-your-own teddy-bear-cavecraft project.
Slide open the secret drawer to find your CD, and sing along as you turn the pages. You will find the words to nine favourite action rhymes for you and your baby to enjoy together. The CD also includes the actions to go with each of the rhymes so that you and your baby can join in. With over 30 minutes of lively music and beautiful illustrations to share, this book and CD are sure to become a favourite.Illustrated by Lesley Horker
It''s time for the Bikini Bottm Hoedown and SpongeBob is ready to be the squaredance caller-not!Find out what happens in this swninging Ready-to-Read story!
A delicious treat about America's favorite fruit is now available in a Spanish bilingual format. Ana grows and sells apples, and she makes cider and applesauce and muffins. A glossary helps kids learn the names of Ana's delicious ingredients in both languages. With tie-ins to math and science curricula and units on autumn, this book will be especially welcomed by teachers. Truly the pick of the crop!
Clifford gets in trouble when he goes to play with his friends while Emily Elizabeth is in school.
Growing up in Kokomo, Indiana, Norman Bridwell was always drawing. "I was not good at sports and my high school shop teacher, after a few days of class, took my tools away, telling me 'Here's a pad of paper instead. You seem to like to draw: stick to that,'" Bridwell remembers. But not everyone believed his drawings or writing would someday delight millions of children (and parents and teachers) around the world, a point he likes to stress when he visits schools, something which he does frequently. "I always liked to draw," Bridwell tells children, "but I was never considered very good. In school there was always someone better than me; the art teacher always liked their work better than mine. Teachers didn't like my writing either." After high school, Bridwell wanted to turn his love of drawing into a career. He studied first at the John Herron Art Institute in Indianapolis and then moved to New York, where he took classes at another art school, Cooper Union, for two years. He then went to work as a commer